
YANGON (AFP) -
Myanmar's
outgoing government on Tuesday lifted a state of emergency in
conflict-hit Rakhine, a parting gesture that coincides with turbulent
relations between Aung San Suu Kyi's new administration and the western
state's powerful Buddhist political party.
Rahkine is deeply
scarred by communal violence between Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims that
began in 2012, presenting one of the most acute challenges for
Myanmar's first popularly elected government in decades.
In a
surprise move Tuesday outgoing president Thein Sein announced the
removal of the emergency order, which had been in place since unrest
left scores dead and tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims confined to
miserable displacement camps.
"According to the Rakhine State
government, there is currently no threat of danger to people's lives,"
said a statement in state media announcing the order, which will see the
military step back from providing day-to-day security in the region.
While
Rakhine has not seen a serious outbreak of violence in more than two
years, the state remains fractured on religious lines. Most Muslims are
trapped either in camps or in heavily regulated areas near the border
with Bangladesh.
A rising tide of Buddhist nationalism in Myanmar
has fuelled discrimination against the Muslim minority, seen by many as
illegal immigrants from neighbouring Bangladesh.
A web of
citizenship rules has rendered many Rohingya effectively stateless and
unable to vote in last November's landmark polls.
Tens of thousands have fled persecution and poverty for neighbouring countries like Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.
But
the tide appears to have slowed this year after a Thai crackdown on
people-smuggling in 2015 led boat captains to abandon many Rohingya on
land and at sea, spurring a regional crisis.
"We think the
situation is good. But any politician can see that Rakhine State is very
sensitive and it would be easy for it to explode at any time," said Aye
Maung, chairman of the Arakan National Party (ANP), which represents
ethnic Rakhine Buddhists.
The president's order comes a day after
Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy faced protests by lawmakers
from the ANP -- one of Myanmar's strongest minority parties -- over the
NLD decision to appoint a candidate from its own party to be the state's
chief minister.
Around 18 ANP lawmakers, many wearing black stickers on their jackets, walked out of the Rakhine regional legislature Monday.
It
is not clear what is behind the lifting of the state of emergency by
Thein Sein. The former general has steered Myanmar's dramatic reforms
since 2011 but has also presided over growing Buddhist nationalism.
"If
you are going to leave you might as well take credit for it and the
consequences will be left to the next government," said political
analyst Khin Zaw Win.
© 2016 AFP
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