Sunday, August 25, 2013

1,000-strong Burmese Buddhist mob burns Muslim homes and shops

What we are seeing here is what we will be seeing more of in the non-Muslim world in the near future.  That the Burmese Buddhists are fighting back against 1,300 years of Islamic attacks is no surprise.  What is surprising is that it has taken so long since the latest wave of Jihadism began some 40 years ago.  Unlike the clueless West, the Burmese are well aware that all of Afghanistan and most of Pakistan were majority Hindu and Buddhist until they were subjugated and driven out by the Muslim invasions 1,200 years ago.  It is well that they are finally fighting to maintain their freedom from Sharia and Muslim dominance. 

If only the rest of the non-Muslim world would join the Burmese Buddhist's fight instead of clasping the asp of Islam to our bosom. 


FROM INDEPENDENT.CO.UK:

1,000-strong Burmese Buddhist mob burns Muslim homes and shops

35 houses and 12 shops destroyed before calm was restored


Robin McDowell

Rangoon

Fresh sectarian violence struck north-western Burma yesterday when a 1,000-strong Buddhist mob burned down dozens of Muslim homes and shops following rumours that a young woman had been sexually assaulted by a Muslim man, the police said.

A crowd surrounded the police station late on Saturday and then went on an hours-long rampage after authorities refused to hand over the assault suspect, a police officer from the area told the Associated Press.

About 35 houses and 12 shops – most belonging to Muslims – were destroyed before calm was restored, he said. There were no reported injuries.

The radical monk Ashin Wirathu, whose anti-Muslim rhetoric has placed him at the centre of rising religious violence in the predominantly Buddhist nation, posted news of the riot in the outskirts of the town of Kanbalu on his Facebook page.

Burma has been grappling with sectarian violence since the country’s military rulers handed over power to a nominally civilian government in 2011.

The unrest – which has killed more than 250 people and left 140,000 others displaced – began last year in the western state of Rakhine, where Buddhists accuse the Rohingya Muslim community of illegally entering the country and encroaching on their land.

The violence, on a smaller scale but still deadly, spread earlier this year to other parts of the country, fuelling deep-seeded prejudice against the Islamic minority and threatening this country’s fragile transition to democracy.

Almost all of the victims have been Muslims, often attacked as security forces stood by.

Myint Naing, an opposition politician who represents constituents in Kanbalu, was outraged by the latest violence. He said Muslims and Buddhists have lived side by side in the area for many years.

“There is a mosque in almost every village in our township and we live a peaceful co-existence,” he said as he headed to the scene, adding that at least one mosque was burnt down in the violence.

“I cannot understand why the authorities were unable to control the crowd when it originally started,” he said.

Details about the riot were still being collected yesterday. The local Daily Eleven newspaper, which had a reporter at the scene, said 1,000 people were involved in the violence.