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Ironically, this issue comes in a period when Myanmar has been experiencing its best momentum, having been opened to the world, where many foreign and regional players have important vested interests like China, India, having important international companies in many strategic sectors and fields of development like oil, gas, infrastructure, trade, foods, health been poured millions of dollars, taking advantage of this situation.
Thus, this was right after the time when former President Barack Obama lifted sanctions held against former Burma when it was ruled by the State Development Council ( the Junta as it was commonly known) after it found its democratic path and held its first elections, bringing the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi to power, but who's now facing what might be her toughest task ever and that could be determinant for the future of the country, now already under intense pressure from the international community claiming for a better handling of this situation, which could reach levels of genocide, allegedly sponsored by the government, based on a pure ethnic and religious logic, and already causing displaced people from the rohingyas to neighbouring countries like Bangladesh.
In this sense, in a moment where islamic extremism and radicalism as an added threat, is significantly expanding into southeast asia being reduced and diminished in Syria and Iraq, these actions against the muslims of the Rohingyas might cause the radicalisation of members of this community and their joining to the ranks of ISIS or Al Qaeda, exacerbating the threats already existing in the region in hotspots of islamic radicalism like Indonesia, Philippines, Malaysia, representing more pressure to the regional stability of the continent, already under an important political and security turmoil, and where the main regional players have many elements and assets at stake, being Myanmar the ultimate scenario where political risks once again are rising, and if this issue of the rohingyas is not properly dealt with, then the promise of a renewed future for the country might be shattered and could become into another Darfur, the humanitarian disaster in Somalia.
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In this sense, it will be interesting to watch and see what the islamic community will do now that Turkey announced to take measures to safeguard the lives of the rohingyas. Are we living some sort of a clash of civilisation that nobody wants to acknowledge?
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