Reference Text
Time Left10:00
Myanmar's
Suu
Kyi
says
terrorism
in
Rakhine
State
a
threat
to
region.
The
Nobel
peace
prize
laureate,
once
seen
as
the
face
of
Myanmar's
struggle
for
democracy,
has
been
criticised
for
her
failure
to
speak
out
against
the
military
crackdown,
which
the
United
Nations
has
called
'ethnic
cleansing'.
Terrorism
remains
a
threat
in
Myanmar's
Rakhine
State
and
could
have
'grave
consequences'
for
the
region,
the
Southeast
Asian
country's
leader,
Aung
San
Suu
Kyi,
said
on
Tuesday.
In
a
lecture
in
Singapore,
Suu
Kyi
did
not
mention
by
name
the
Rohingya
Muslims,
more
than
700,000
of
whom
who
have
fled
the
north
of
Rakhine
state
since
an
army
crackdown
that
began
a
year
ago
after
attacks
on
security
posts
by
Rohingya
insurgents.
The
Aug.
25
attacks
were
launched
by
the
Arakan
Rohingya
Salvation
Army
(ARSA),
which
Myanmar
says
is
a
terrorist
group.
'The
danger
of
terrorist
activities,
which
was
the
initial
cause
of
events
leading
to
the
humanitarian
crisis
in
Rakhine
remains
real
and
present
today,'
she
said.
Aung
San
Suu
Kyi
has
the
power
to
help
the
Rohingya
people,
UN
chief
Antonio
Gutteres
tells
the
BBC.
'Unless
this
security
challenge
is
addressed
the
risk
of
inter-communal
violence
will
remain.
It
is
a
threat
that
could
have
grave
consequences,
not
just
for
Myanmar
but
also
for
other
countries
in
our
region
and
beyond.'
Buddhist-majority
Myanmar
and
Bangladesh
reached
an
agreement
late
last
year
on
the
repatriation
of
Rohingya,
most
of
whom
are
stateless
and
subjected
to
restrictions
in
Myanmar.
Suu
Kyi
said
spaces
have
been
mapped
out
for
the
resettlement
of
people
who
fled
to
Bangladesh,
where
they
live
in
refugee
camps.
However,
she
said
it
was
difficult
to
set
a
time
frame
for
their
return
as
the
two
countries
had
to
work
together
to
agree
on
the
process,
suggesting
the
onus
was
on
Dhaka
for
the
process
to
get
started.
Myanmar
has
rejected
accusations
of
ethnic
cleansing
and
dismissed
most
accounts
of
atrocities,
blaming
Rohingya
'terrorists'.
The
Rohingya,
who
regard
themselves
as
native
to
Rakhine
State,
are
widely
considered
as
interlopers
by
Myanmar's
Buddhist
majority
and
are
denied
citizenship.
Myanmar's
Suu
Kyi
says
terrorism
in
Rakhine
State
a
threat
to
region.
The
Nobel
peace
prize
laureate,
once
seen
as
the
face
of
Myanmar's
struggle
for
democracy,
has
been
criticised
for
her
failure
to
speak
out
against
the
military
crackdown,
which
the
United
Nations
has
called
'ethnic
cleansing'.
Terrorism
remains
a
threat
in
Myanmar's
Rakhine
State
and
could
have
'grave
consequences'
for
the
region,
the
Southeast
Asian
country's
leader,
Aung
San
Suu
Kyi,
said
on
Tuesday.
In
a
lecture
in
Singapore,
Suu
Kyi
did
not
mention
by
name
the
Rohingya
Muslims,
more
than
700,000
of
whom
who
have
fled
the
north