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Myanmar’s nationalist Buddhist monks shout slogans during a protest rally in Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, May 27, 2015. About 300 protesters, led by radical Buddhist monks, rallied claiming boat people washing onto Southeast Asian shores were not Rohingya Muslims, a religious minority the government and many others in the predominantly Buddhist nation say “do not exist.” Image Credit: AP

Yangon: Several hundred Buddhists protested in Yangon on Wednesday against mounting international pressure for Myanmar to stem the exodus of Muslim Rohingya migrants and aid those still stranded at sea.

Demonstrators, including Buddhist monks, shouted ‘Don’t insult our country!’ and ‘There are no Rohingya in Myanmar’ in angry chants aimed mainly at the United Nations.

The migrant crisis in Southeast Asia has shone a spotlight on the dire conditions and discrimination faced by the roughly one million Rohingya in western Myanmar, a group widely seen as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

“This 1.3 million people are not from our country. I do not accept there is a Rohingya ethnicity here,” said protester Kyaw Htet, 31.

The protesters, many wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the slogan ‘Boat people are not Myanmar. Stop blaming Myanmar’, converged at a busy junction in Yangon before making a short march through city streets.

More than 3,500 Bangladeshi economic migrants and stateless Rohingya from Myanmar have arrived on Thai, Malaysian and Indonesian soil in recent weeks.

The UN’s refugee agency believes hundreds more could still be stranded at sea with diminishing supplies of food and water after a crackdown in southern Thailand disrupted a major human trafficking network.

Myanmar’s navy last week found exhausted and hungry men and boys, mainly thought to be from Bangladesh, crammed in the rusting hull of a smugglers’ boat off its coast.

 

Deeply segregated

 

They have been held in a border region of the western state of Rakhine, where Rohingya live in abject conditions after 2012 communal violence that left the region deeply segregated and sparked a deadly wave of anti-Muslim attacks.

But calls to help the group have stirred outrage among Buddhist nationalists, who have been increasingly prominent in Myanmar in recent years.

“Those helping the illegal migrant Bengalis are our enemies!” protesters shouted Wednesday in a sign of the depth of feeling on the issue among some in Myanmar.

At a press conference about its election plans Suu Kyi’s opposition party sought to play down the problems in Rakhine, saying it was just one of many issues for the impoverished country to solve as it creeps out of the shadow of military rule.

“We understand that it is an issue internationally,” said National League for Democracy MP Win Htein, adding that it was the responsibility of Myanmar’s government.

“We know that we have to handle this problem some day,” he said.

Noble Peace Prize winning opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been reluctant to speak out on the migrant crisis. Observers say she fears alienating voters in the Buddhist-majority nation before elections in November.