Myanmar’s Muslims, Hindus sidelined in elections
One of Myanmar’s five million young adults, May Thandar Maung had been excited to cast her ballot for the very first time in November’s election.
But the 18-year-old is Muslim and says that means she will remain voiceless. "My religion means I haven’t been able to get an ID card," she tells AFP in her hometown of Meiktila in central Myanmar -- and no ID means no vote.
She describes how local officials have obstructed her attempts for over a year, while Buddhist peers faced no such delays, in a town where memories of brutal inter-communal violence in 2013 are still raw.
The majority-Buddhist nation is widely expected to return Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party to power on November 8 in the second polls since Myanmar emerged from outright military rule in 2011.
The country’s Rohingya Muslims -- whether in Bangladeshi refugee shelters or confined to camps and villages in Myanmar -- will nearly all be completely disenfranchised. But Myanmar also has many more Muslims of other ethnic heritage -- about four percent of the population -- whom the country, in theory, accepts as citizens.
In practice, however, it can be very different. Muslims complained to AFP of systemic corruption, detailing how they are forced to pay backhanders of hundreds of dollars -- exorbitant rates in a country where a quarter of the population lives in poverty. Three members of Maung Cho’s family had to pay US$370 each, the 53-year-old says, many times higher than the token sums of ‘tea money’ demanded of Buddhists.
Their experiences are echoed by Muslims across the country, says Yangon-based analyst David Mathieson. "Anti-Muslim sentiment is ever-present with discrimination in schools, the workplace and access to government jobs," he says.
Challenges continue even for those who obtain an ID in a country where these cards state the holder’s ethnicity. Many Muslims say false ethnic identities, usually from South Asia, are increasingly being foisted on the community.
Maung Cho’s family has lived in Myanmar for generations, yet when his renewed ID card came back, it labelled him as "Indian-Muslim". "It must have been my beard," he tells AFP, ruefully.
Like other so-called "mixed bloods", he now faces extra scrutiny at every ID check and must even stand in a separate queue at immigration offices. Myanmar Hindus -- who number about 250,000 -- are also often branded as "mixed bloods" and face similar problems.
Yangon-based Tun Min, 28, tells AFP it took him 10 years to get an ID card. Last week he chose to speak out, posting a video on Facebook explaining the discrimination his community faces.
-
Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt's Daughter, Shiloh Makes Surprise Music Video Debut -
‘Very Angry’ Sarah Ferguson Finally Willing To Sell Out The King & Firm?: Inside Revenge Plans -
Blac Chyna Escalates Legal Battle With Multi-million Dollar Cross-complaint Against Twin Hector -
Meghan Markle Reacts To Patrick J Adams 'jam' Complaint -
Why Attorney Says Justin Baldoni 'not Off The Hook' Despite Court Ruling? Report -
'Abuses' Shouted At Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor As Protesters Breach Security -
Jenna Dewan Reveals Mindset She Follows When Life Gets 'nuts' -
Erika Kirk Dating Claims Surface As She Reclaims Charlie Kirk's Legacy -
Karoline Leavitt Joins Erika Kirk At Washington Event -
Lizzo Reveals Major Update About Her Sobriety Journey -
Princess Beatrice’s Husband Edo ‘questioning Marriage’: ‘His Standing & Status Is Impacted’ -
Petition To Strip Blake Lively Of 'It Ends With Us' PGA Credit Gains Massive Support -
New Development In Blake Lively Lawsuit After Judge Dismisses Major Claims -
Blake Lively, Taylor Swift Texts Resurface After Court Ruling -
Prince Harry’s Behavior Towards Queen Elizabeth Gets Exposed: ‘He Drove Her To Paranoia’ -
Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni's Legal Case Receives Latest Update