Al-Azhar observatory: In the age of human rights, Myanmar’s Muslims still have no life

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Arakan News Agency

The Al-Azhar Observatory published a report stating that in the era of the United Nations and human rights, a Muslim man in Myanmar still lacks the most basic elements of life, a place to shelter for himself and his family; it is the age of double standards; Thousands, and nearly half a million people left their homeland to face their inevitable fate.

The report criticizes some parties, both inside and outside Myanmar, trying to paint a picture of the Rohingya Muslim crisis as if the crisis between two rival parties was right, and the Myanmar army is portrayed as a representative of the state on the one side versus the Rohingya Salvation Army in Arakan on the other; In an attempt – seen by the Observatory – aims to inform the follower of the cause as if the state is trying to defend itself against the rebels seeking to undermine it, but the observatory in its report says: But the follower of the crisis from the beginning knows, without bother or further research, that this vision is false, and even fabricated.

The Observatory pointed out that before the situation worsened, Al-Azhar sought to reach a settlement between the two sides and invited all the parties in Myanmar to a conference under the patronage of Al-Azhar under the chairmanship of Prof. Dr. Ahmed Al-Tayeb, Sheikh of Al-Azhar. However, over the course of thirty full days, since the systematic violence against the Rohingya minority, which began with large-scale raids by the Myanmar army and supported by Buddhist militants, broke out on the areas of the Rohingya Muslim population in the state of Arakan, the Myanmar army launched raids on Rohingya and burned many of them.

 

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