The plight of Myanmar's estimated 800,000
Rohingya, has been in the headlines since reports
of serial abuse of the migrants by the Thai military.
The United States wants Mynamar to
stop hounding Rohingya Muslims, a stateless minority
from the former Burma's northwest region, Assistant
Secretary of State Richard Boucher said on Sunday.
"It's a matter of concern and
the U.S wants that Myanmar stops the persecution of
Rohingyas," Boucher said during a visit to Bangladesh.
He said attention had been drawn to
the plight of the boat people landing in Thailand
and Indonesia over the past weeks.
"The U.S. was aware of the fleeing
of Rohingyas from Myanmar for persecution and economic
reasons," Boucher told a news conference before
leaving Bangladesh after a two-day visit.
The plight of Myanmar's estimated
800,000 Rohingya, has been in the headlines since
reports of serial abuse of the migrants by the Thai
military.
According to the U.N. High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), 230,000 Rohingya now live a
precarious, stateless existence in Bangladesh, having
fled decades of abuse and harassment at the hands
of Myanmar's military rulers.
Indonesia last week detained 198 Rohingyas
after finding them floating in a boat off the coast
of Aceh. They had been at sea for 21 days.
Last month the Thai army admitted
towing hundreds far out to sea before abandoning them,
but insisted they had food and water and denied reports
the boats' engines were sabotaged.
Of 1,000 Rohingya given such treatment
since early December, 550 are thought to have drowned.
Asian task force to fight "terrorism"
Boucher said he visited Dhaka to see
how the new U.S. administration could work with the
new government and opposition in Bangladesh.
He met Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina,
several ministers and Begum Khaleda Zia, former prime
minister and now leader of the opposition.
"The U.S. wants to work with
Bangladesh against terrorism and corruption,"
he said. "We also want to see regional response
to Bangladesh proposal to form a South Asian task
force to fight terrorism."
Hasina assumed power on Jan. 6 following
a landslide win in the Dec. 29 election. She had floated
the idea of a regional task force after Mumbai attacks
in November, in which 179 people were killed.
Reuters