His real
name was Abdullah ibn Qays bin Saleem bin Hadar bin Harb b. 'Amir b. 'Unz b.
Bakr b. 'Amir b. 'Udhr but he was and continues to be known as Abu Musa
al-Ashari. He was short statured of medium build and sported a thin beard. He
left his native land, the Yemen, for Makkah immediately after hearing that a
Prophet had appeared there who was a man of rare insight, who called people to
the worship of One God and who insisted on the highest standards of morality. At Makkah, he stayed in the company of the Prophet and
1991 Nobel Peace Prize winner, Aung San Suu
Kyi, has once again shown stern resistance to criticize the persecution of the
Rohingya Muslims when in an interview with BBC on Wednesday 5 April she
asserted that the global media is lying to the world on the Rohingya Muslims issue.
Suu Kyi in the interview when asked if she would be remembered as the Nobel
Peace Prize winner who ignored ethnic cleansing in her own country said, “I don't think there is ethnic cleansing
going on I think ethnic cleansing is too strong an expression to use for what
is happening, I think there is a lot of hostility there—it is Muslims killing
Muslims as well, if they think they are co-operating with the authorities.” According
to a report issued by the UN earlier this year, based on facts gotten from interviews
with 220 Rohingya Muslims who are among the 75,000 who have fled to Bangladesh
since October 2016, Burma’s security forces have committed mass killings and
gang rapes in a campaign thatamounted
to crimes again humanity and ethnic cleansing. Prior to the current waves of
violence against the Rohingya Muslims in the Rakhine state of Burma, the UN had
declared the Rohingya Muslims the world’s most persecuted minorities. Observers
used to believe Aung San Suu Kyi’s silence or indifference to the plight of the
Rohingyas was political, but a series of invents are pointing to the fact that
the 71 year old like most Burmese Bhuddists might have a special hatred towards
Muslims. Suu Kyi told reporters after receiving a ‘peace’ award in 2012 that
she did not know if the Rohingya Muslims could be called Burmese citizens.
According to Suu kyi’s biographer, Peter Popham, after an interview with BBC
correspondent, Mishal Husain, Suu Kyi expressed anger at being interviewed by a
Muslim. The Burmese government insists that the Rohingya Muslims are Migrants
to Burma but historical facts show that the Rohingya have been living in Arakan
(Rohingya word for Rakhine) since the 8th century and only became
part of Burma when Arakan was annexed by Burmese forces in 1785.