Published on 12:00 AM, April 28, 2014

Obama warns Myanmar

Obama warns Myanmar

US President Barack Obama warned yesterday that ethnic and religious conflicts could move Myanmar in a "very bad direction."
Obama praised the "courageous process" of political reform taking place in a country formerly led by a military junta, but warned that democratisation after years of repression brought its own perils.
"Myanmar won't succeed if the Muslim population is oppressed," Obama said at a "town hall" meeting during a visit to Muslim-majority Malaysia.
Obama was referring to Myanmar's Muslim Rohingya minority in Rakhine state which has been subject to persecution at the hands of Buddhist nationalists.
"The danger now that they are democratising is that there are different ethnic groups and different religions inside Myanmar," Obama said.
"If people start organising politically around the religious identity or their ethnic identity... then you can actually start seeing conflicts... that could move Myanmar in a very bad direction."
"In particular, you have a Muslim minority inside Myanmar right now that the broader population has historically looked down upon and whose rights are not fully being protected."
Buddhist-dominated Myanmar has been by plagued by religious unrest in recent years with at least 250 people killed in Buddhist-Muslim clashes since 2012. Thousands more people have been displaced.
About 1.3 million Rohingya live in the predominantly Buddhist country of 60 million, almost all of them in Rakhine state. Myanmar considers them illegal immigrants from neighbouring Bangladesh, though some families have lived here for generations.
Obama made a triumphant visit to Myanmar in November 2012 and his administration has offered strong support to the government of President Thein Sein as it seeks to cement civilian rule.