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Frank Almonte

Myanmar VP ‘concern’ over Rakhine

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Mr Van Thio said the “great majority” of Muslims had stayed in Myanmar

Myanmar’s Vice-President Henry Van Thio has said his government is “deeply concerned” about the exodus of people from Rakhine state into Bangladesh.

Speaking at the UN General Assembly, he said Myanmar was investigating “a problem of significant magnitude”.

But he repeated the government line that the reason for the upheaval was unclear and that the “great majority” of Muslims had stayed behind.

De facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi has also downplayed the crisis this week.

She is facing rising criticism after she delivered a speech in Myanmar on Tuesday that did not address allegations of rampant rights abuses by the army against the mostly Muslim Rohingya minority in Rakhine.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media captionThe BBC’s Jonah Fisher looks at Ms Suu Kyi’s speech

She said more than half of Rakhine’s Muslims – the Myanmar government does not use the term Rohingya – had stayed. She also claimed that there had been no acts of violence or village clearances since 5 September, which has been widely disputed.

On Wednesday Mr Van Thio repeated this view, saying: “I’m happy to inform you that the situation has improved.”

He was speaking at the UN General Assembly in place of Aung San Suu Kyi. She declined to attend the General Assembly in order to handle the crisis.

Image copyright Reuters Image caption Tens of thousands of Rohingya migrants are now in makeshift camps in Bangladesh with limited aid available

He said not just Muslims but other minority groups had fled, and security forces had been told to “take full measures to avoid collateral damage and the harming of innocent civilians”.

He also said aid would be distributed “without discrimination”.

The Rohingya are denied citizenship in Myanmar and are widely despised.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media captionDr Win Myat Aye said most Muslims had stayed in Rakhine

More than 400,000 have fled from Rakhine to neighbouring Bangladesh amid a military crackdown, launched shortly after a 25 August attack on police posts by Rohingya militants.

The Burmese military is widely accused of committing atrocities amounting to ethnic cleansing.

The military says its operations are aimed at rooting out terrorists and has repeatedly denied targeting civilians.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media captionWatch: Who are the Rohingya?

On Wednesday at a UN Security Council meeting, US Vice-President Mike Pence accused the military of showing “terrible savagery” towards the Rohingya, the strongest remarks from the US yet on the crisis.

He said the violence would “sow seeds of hatred and chaos that may well consume the region for generations to come and threaten the peace of us all”.

Other world leaders this week have also called for an end to the violence, with French President Emmanuel Macron calling it “genocide” and Bangladesh’s Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina saying it was an “unbearable human catastrophe”.

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Frank Almonte

Su pastor personal
El pastor, Frank Almonte es un reconocido comunicador y productor de medios de comunicación cristianos de la ciudad de Nueva York, donde junto con su esposa Rosemary, han estado pastoreando el Centro Cristiano Adonai por más de veinticinco años. Es Doctor en Divinidades de la Universidad Cristiana Logos en Jacksonville, Florida y en Filosofía (PhD) de Texas University of Theology. Es también entrenador y mentor en The John Maxwell University. Su pasión por ensanchar el Reino de Dios lo ha motivado a escribir varios libros, entre ellos, Gobierno Apostólico y Riquezas de las Naciones.