Rohingya Oppressed, Anies Ask laureate Aung San Suu Kyi Revoked

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INTERNASIONAL - Jakarta governor candidate Anies Baswedan condemn violence against Rohingya tribe that caused more than 30 thousand Muslims living in Rakhine province, Myanmar to flee the country.

In a video uploaded on a social account Instagram @aniesbaswedan, Anies also deplored the savagery going on in front of the regime de facto led by Nobel Peace Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

"The world condemns, mad world. I demand that the Nobel Committee in Oslo (Norway) to revoke the prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi on pendiamannya against this brutality," said Anies in a one-minute video was quoted as saying by Antara on Saturday (26/11 / 2016).

Anies call outrages committed against ethnic Rohingya can not be accepted by common sense and heart of anyone in the world.

Former Minister of Education and Culture was also called preachers at Friday prayers around the world to get together to pray for Muslims who persecuted mercilessly in Myanmar.

Condemnation of violence against ethnic Rohingya continue to flow from various parties, including from Parliament, Komnas HAM, the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI), NGOs and student organizations.

Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi said Indonesia continues to monitor the condition of ethnic Rohingya in Myanmar and expresses the level bilateral talks in Indonesia and the Government of Myanmar has been done since before the current government.

"From the past we always clicking engage Myanmar government to provide capacity building, provide technical assistance on issues considered to be very important and huge for the Myanmar government needs to improve the security situation and well-being in Rakhine State," said Retno.

To the foreign media, some Rohingyas claimed to be raped, tortured, or witnessed the burning of their homes and their family members were killed.

Approximately one million Rohingyas live in Rakhine where they are considered a minority who do not have a country because the government of Myanmar does not recognize the Rohingya citizenship when ethnicity is already settled in Myanmar for generations.

The UN refugee agency officials in Bangladesh John McKissick even called the Rohingya as "the most oppressed human beings in the world."

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