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9 - Myanmar's Other Muslims: The Case of the Kaman

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2018

Nyi Nyi Kyaw
Affiliation:
Postdoctoral Fellow at Centre for Asian Legal Studies at the Faculty of Law at the National University of Singapore.
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The story of rather chronic discrimination and persecution by successive governments of Myanmar meted out against Muslims — especially the worldfamous statelessness of the Rohingya — before and after transition started in 2010 is taken for granted. Questions relating to eligibility, recognition, and protection of Muslims’ citizenship have therefore been raised. Largely informed by a meta-narrative of the plight of the Myanmar Muslim minority, those questions have been answered by making generalizing arguments that governments and Buddhists in Myanmar discriminate against and/or persecute a Muslim minority. This tendency has unfortunately led to lack of sophistication and nuance in making academic and/or journalistic arguments about Myanmar's Muslims.

By conducting a case study of the Kaman that is now the only governmentrecognized Muslim ethnic group in Buddhist Myanmar, this article suggests that there are two or more Muslim minorities with different relationships with the state and society in Myanmar that have significant impact on their identity and citizenship in Myanmar. Attention to those intra-communal differences even within the so-called Muslim minority of Myanmar is expected to contribute not only to research on Muslims in the country but also to policy advice for betterment of diverse minority groups that constitute Myanmar's Muslims.

ANTI-MUSLIM VIOLENCE AS CHALLENGE OF TRANSITION

Myanmar's political and social liberalization post-2011 could be traced back to the sham general elections in november 20102 held by the previous military regime (state law and order restoration council/state peace and development council [slorc/spdc]). the quasi-civilian government headed by president u thein sein, ex-general and ex-prime minister during the previous military rule, came to power in late march 2011. after the election the government initiated a series of political reforms, including the release of nobel laureate daw aung san suu kyi from house arrest on 13 november (six days after the election, following a period of detention of fifteen years from 1989).

Type
Chapter
Information
Citizenship in Myanmar
Ways of Being in and from Burma
, pp. 279 - 300
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2017

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