26 July 2018

The Massacre of Inn Din: How Rohingya Are Lynched and Held Responsible

Rohingya village burned

[Photo: Rohingya – The Forgotten People.]

Ramzy Baroud, PhD

Editor's Note
There are people who become targets of state persecution. Generally speaking, there are on of two reasons why certain peoples are selected to be targets of state persecution. The “state” needs a low status, high bias target to blame for problems and set out for an angry populace on which to vent its rage, OR they are on top of (or in the way of) a desirable resource. First, they must be easily distinguishable from the general population. Second, there must be something that makes (or can be made up to seem like it makes) them culturally significant. Third, the must have little to no political power. Propaganda seeps in and with a whiff of mob psychology we have a scapegoat. Whether it was the Jews in Germany (and other countries – including the U.S.) in the 1930s and 40s, or the Roma (aka Romina or Gypsies), or Hispanic immigrants, or innumerable indigenous peoples, or the Rohingya, they have been targeted – often genocidally targeted.

Yunan pipeline, Rokhine, Rohingya
Shwe gas pipeline map from Environmental Justice Atlas modified by R. Wolf to highlight Rakhine.

The Rohingya of Burma/Myanmar are both culturally distinct, and their home in the Rakhine state of Burma is also the route for the variously named Sino-Myanmar pipelines, or Yunan pipelines. More specifically is a 479 mile (770 km) pipeline running from the Kyaukpyu port on the Bay of Bengal, to the landlocked state of Yunan, China:

The US$1.5 billion pipelines, which started construction in 2009, are designed to shift natural gas from Myanmar and crude oil from the Middle East and Africa through the Bay of Bengal to terminals in Myanmar. The pipelines then transfer the resources to Yunnan to feed refineries for the world’s second-biggest oil consumer, eliminating the 5,000-km shipping lanes of the pirate-infested Strait of Malacca and across the South China Sea.

The pipelines inside Myanmar, owned and built by Beijing under the One Belt, One Road policy, are designed to transfer 22 million tonnes of crude oil annually (around 442,000 bbl/day) and carry nearly 6 percent of China’s 2016 total energy imports. Today China is demanding up to 85 percent ownership of the strategic Kyaukpyu port at the western terminus. (Asia Sentinel)

While the Rohingya have been the victims of waves of persecution since 1948, I believe this most recent genocidal purge is tied directly to the pipeline on which construction began in 2009 (India Times). I would argue that this almost certainly explains why so many other nations refuse to even use the name Rohingya.

 

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13 March 2017

Native Nations Rise March: A Powerful, Emotional Uprising for Indigenous Rights

Native Nations Rise

[Photo: Oil Change International]

By Renae Ditmer

Editor's Note
There is something very special about the coming together of the nations. A decision was made but native peoples across the Americas to take a stand at Standing Rock. The Dakota Access Pipeline is not the only such conflict, but all the Nations came. That resistance has brought in others, and it has continued though bitter cold, and outright brutality at the hands of the authorities. I believe this resistance by the Native Nations has inspired those across the country to rise up to resist the agenda of white dominion nationalism coming out of Washington DC.

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Category: Activists, Environment, Guest, Indigenous Struggles and Rights, Rights, Trump & Administration | Comments Off on Native Nations Rise March: A Powerful, Emotional Uprising for Indigenous Rights
26 January 2017

Trump’s Push to Build Dakota Access & Keystone XL Pipelines is a Declaration of War

#NoDAPL, Winter #WaterProtectors at Standing Rock

[Photo: The efforts go on at the front lines of #NoDAPL ]

DemocracyNow! interviews Winona LaDuke

Editor's Note
This is an interview with Winona LaDuke, past Green Party Vice-President candidate, and Native American activist and author from t Ojibwe tribe and living on the White Earth Reservation in Minnesota. She has spent time as a #WaterProtector at the line with DAPL and continues the legal fight as shown below. She is an eloquent spokesperson and is one of several exceptionally powerful voices speaking out on this issue (see end of this post).

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5 December 2016

Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s Statement on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Decision to Not Grant Easement

Oceti Sakowin Standing Rock camp

[Photo: Sunrise at the Oceti Sakowin, Standing Rock tribe camp. Photo by Thane Maxwell.]

By Official Standing Rock Tribe Communication

Cannon Ball, N.D.— The department of the Army will not approve an easement that will allow the proposed Dakota Access Pipeline to cross under Lake Oahe. The following statement was released by Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Chairman Dave Archambault II.

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5 December 2016

Some Notes and a Song for Standing Rock

Supporting Standing Rock rally

[Photo: From a NY rally in support of the Standing Rock tribe. Joe Catron.]

By Mateo Pimentel

Editor's Note
The reports are that the people have won and DAPL will be redirected. While all are hopeful, people are holding their ground.
[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he powers that be are pulling out all the stops.

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Category: Environment, Guest, Hegemony, Indigenous Struggles and Rights | Comments Off on Some Notes and a Song for Standing Rock