The Nile on eBay The Rohingyas by Azeem Ibrahim
Ibrahim's searing book documents the slow-motion genocide of the Muslim Rohingyas and exposes the culpability of the Buddhist clergy in fomenting the religious cleansing of Myanmar.
FORMATPaperback LANGUAGEEnglish CONDITIONBrand New Publisher Description
According to the United Nations, Myanmar's Rohingyas are one of the most persecuted minorities in the world. Only now has the media turned its attention to their plight at the hands of a country led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. Yet the signs of this genocide have been visible for years.For generations, this Muslim group has suffered routine discrimination, violence, arbitrary arrest and detention, extortion, and other abuses by the Buddhist majority. As horrifying massacres have unfolded in 2017, international human rights groups have accused the regime of complicity in an ethnic cleansing campaign against them. Authorities refuse to recognise the Rohingyas as one of Myanmar's 135 'national races', denying them citizenship rights in the country of their birth and severely restricting many aspects of ordinary life, from marriage to free movement.In this updated edition, Azeem Ibrahim chronicles the events leading up to the current, final cleansing of the Rohingya population, and issues a clarion call to protect a vulnerable, little known Muslim minority. He makes a powerful appeal to use the lessons of the twentieth century to stop this genocide in the twenty-first.
Author Biography
Azeem Ibrahim has a PhD from the University of Cambridge. He has been a Research Fellow with the International Security Program at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, a World Fellow at Yale, Fellow and member of the board of directors at the Institute for Social Policy Understanding, and an Adjunct Research Professor at the Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College. He founded and chairs a private grant-giving foundation focusing on innovative community projects, and served as a reservist in the UK's 4th Battalion Parachute Regiment.
Table of Contents
List of Acronyms List of Key Individuals List of Figures & Tables Map of Myanmar Foreword Introduction A History of Burma to 1948 From Independence to Democracy (1948 - 2010) The Return to Democracy (2008 - 2015) Implications for the Rohingyas (2008 - 2015) Genocide and International Law Current Station What Can Be Done Conclusion Epilogue Appendices Glossary Notes References Index
Review
`The persecution of Rohingyas rests on a belief that they are outsiders ... Ibrahim debunks these claims in his essential new book, claiming that Rohingyas were in Arakan well before 1784, and may even have arrived there before the Buddhist Rakhine. Ibrahim offers a credible genealogy that links Rohingyas to Indo-Aryan groups who arrived from the Ganges Valley as early as 3000 BC.' * London Review of Books * `Ibrahim dwells on the history of the Rohingya in order to give an account of how and why they have come to arouse such fear and loathing. ... [his] analysis is excellent.' * Literary Review *
Long Description
According to the United Nations, Myanmar's Rohingyas are one of the most persecuted minorities in the world. Only now has the media turned its attention to their plight at the hands of a country led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. Yet the signs of this genocide have been visible for years. For generations, this Muslim group has suffered routine discrimination, violence, arbitrary arrest and detention, extortion, and other abuses by the Buddhist majority. As horrifying massacres have unfolded in 2017, international human rights groups have accused the regime of complicity in an ethnic cleansing campaign against them. Authorities refuse to recognise the Rohingyas as one of Myanmar's 135 'national races', denying them citizenship rights in the country of their birth and severely restricting many aspects of ordinary life, from marriage to free movement. In this updated edition, Azeem Ibrahim chronicles the events leading up to the current, final cleansing of the Rohingya population, and issues a clarion call to protect a vulnerable, little known Muslim minority. He makes a powerful appeal to use the lessons of the twentieth century to stop this genocide in the twenty-first.
Review Quote
"The persecution of Rohingyas rests on a belief that they are outsiders . . . Ibrahim debunks these claims in his essential new book, claiming that Rohingyas were in Arakan well before 1784, and may even have arrived there before the Buddhist Rakhine. Ibrahim offers a credible genealogy that links Rohingyas to Indo-Aryan groups who arrived from the Ganges Valley as early as 3000 BC."-- London Review of Books "One of the few accessible primers on this battered group." --Washington Monthly "Exhaustively researched book does a valuable job of recording the group''s suffering in painful detail, and he is right to urge the world to pay even closer attention to what is happening in Arakan." -- The National Interest "In the last decade of the twentieth century the genocides in Rwanda and Bosnia could have been prevented by earlier active engagement by the international community. Azeem Ibrahim has issued a clarion call to protect a vulnerable and little-known Muslim minority in his compelling and throughly researched book. He makes a powerful appeal to use the lessons of the twentieth century to prevent a foreseeable genocide in the twenty-first." -- John Shattuck, President of the Central European University, former US Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, and author of Freedom on Fire: Human Rights Wars and America''s Response "Myanmar (also known as Burma) recognizes 135 ethnic minorities and treats many of them badly. But the 1.3 million Rohingyas are treated worst of all... This analytic but passionate book makes a strong case that Myanmar stands ''on the brink of genocide.''" --Foreign Affairs "Ibrahim dwells on the history of the Rohingya in order to give an account of how and why they have come to arouse such fear and loathing. . . [his] analysis is excellent." -- Literary Review "[An] excellent book." --The Scotsman "In exploring and exposing the treatment of the Rohingya people of Burma Azeem Ibrahim has done great service to the truth about the terrible oppression which they are enduring, and has issued a call to all free people to secure international action to uphold their basic human rights." -- Baroness Kinnock of Holyhead, Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Burma "Ibrahim''s brilliantly researched book exposes the dark underbelly of this emerging state. Discrimination against minorities is rampant, but most acutely against the Muslim Rohingyas who are persecuted at the hands of the vast Buddhist majority. This important book exposes very great suffering that even Myanmar''s now elected leaders have little or no interest in combatting."-- Jon Snow, Channel 4 News "Time and time again, experience has shown that what minorities who live under the threat of annihilation need most is a voice that cannot be ignored. The Rohingyas promises to provide desperately needed awareness at a critical turning point in the history of Burma -- awareness provided by a renowned and accomplished scholar and policy advisor, Dr. Azeem Ibrahim." -- Steven Kiersons, Team Lead, Burma, The Sentinel Project for Genocide Prevention "In Ibrahim''s The Rohingyas, the author wonderfully details how a historical canard is used as a pretext to completely erase them from Myanmar. The book also explores the fact that among 135 ethnic minorities, Rohingyas are the worst treated, stripped of all rights as citizens, depleted of wealth and property, pushed to the edge, and systematically exterminated." -- Dhaka Tribune "Dr Ibrahim makes a strong case for naming the situation facing the Rohingya a genocide and convincingly shows the urgent need for immediate action to alleviate ongoing suffering as well as to arrest any escalation. He does an excellent job of dismantling the arguments made by some commentators that the Rohingya, as a group, did not exist in Myanmar in the past."-- Dr Jonathan Saha, Academic Fellow in the History of Race and Empire University of Leeds
New Feature
List of Acronyms List of Key Individuals List of Figures & Tables Map of Myanmar Foreword Introduction A History of Burma to 1948 From Independence to Democracy (1948 - 2010) The Return to Democracy (2008 - 2015) Implications for the Rohingyas (2008 - 2015) Genocide and International Law Current Station What Can Be Done Conclusion Epilogue Appendices Glossary Notes References Index
Details ISBN1849049734 Author Azeem Ibrahim Pages 256 Publisher C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd Year 2018 ISBN-10 1849049734 ISBN-13 9781849049733 Format Paperback Imprint C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd Subtitle Inside Myanmar's Hidden Genocide Place of Publication London Country of Publication United Kingdom DEWEY 305.697 Publication Date 2018-02-22 Language English UK Release Date 2018-02-22 NZ Release Date 2018-02-22 Edition Description Revised ed. Audience General AU Release Date 2018-02-21 We've got this
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