Naypyidaw: Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi will lead a fresh
effort to bring peace and development to the impoverished, troubled Rakhine
state in Myanmar, where violence between majority Buddhists and minority
Muslims has cast a shadow over democratic reform.
Sectarian violence in Rakhine State in 2012 killed more than 160 people and
140,000 people were displaced, and the two communities have remained segregated
since then.
Suu Kyi holds the rank of State Counsellor in Myanmar (formerly Burma),
where she is considered de facto leader after a landslide election win in
November but is barred from holding the presidency because of rules imposed by
the military junta, which still wields considerable power in the southeast
Asian nation.
“In order to ensure successful implementation of works of the central
committee on implementation of peace, stability and development of Rakhine
state, working committees on implementation of peace, stability and development
of Rakhine state have been formed,” the president’s office said in a statement
online. The committee is made up of 27 officials, including all government
cabinet members as well as Rakhine state government representatives.
“For now, I cannot talk in detail about the committee’s operations, but
can say it has started work,” Zaw Htay, the president’s office spokesman said,
adding that the central committee would go to Rakhine state “very soon”.
In the run-up to Suu Kyi’s appointment to a leadership role in the
government, there was fresh optimism that tense relations between Myanmar’s
ethnic groups might improve.
This was boosted by news from the United Nations, which said that about
25,000 members of the Rohingya have left camps for displaced people in the west
Myanmar and returned to the homes they fled after the violence that erupted
between them and local Buddhists in 2012.
No comments:
Post a Comment