Nusa Dua, Indonesia: The UN human rights chief called on Myanmar on Friday to allow Muslim Rohingya to become citizens after deadly sectarian violence in recent months in the western state of Rakhine.
The group's statelessness is at the heart of two major outbreaks of unrest between Buddhist and Muslim communities that has left 180 dead and forced more than 110,000, mainly Rohingya, into makeshift camps since June.
The Rohingya have no legal status, with the government and many Burmese regarding them as illegal immigrants from neighbouring Bangladesh.
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay added her voice to calls for the problem to be resolved and urged a change in the law, saying the Rohingya had been excluded from the reform process.
"This should include a review of the citizenship law to ensure that Rohingya have equal access to citizenship," Pillay said at the Bali Democracy Forum in Indonesia.
She also warned that the violence could hinder Myanmar's much-heralded reform drive.
"While we can positively commend the government for the progress made towards democratic transition and national reconciliation, the communal violence, if not resolved, can undermine the reform process," she said.
Local authorities in Rakhine said on Wednesday they had begun a process of verifying the nationality of all the state's Muslims, amid widespread calls for those deemed "illegal" to be sent to another country.
The precise goal of the survey was unclear.
The 800,000 Rohingya in the state are considered by the UN to be one of the most persecuted minorities in the world.
Separately, Pillay said she pressed Myanmar's Deputy Foreign Minister U Thant Kyaw at the Bali meeting to secure the release of a local UN refugee agency employee detained in Myanmar for almost five months. He gave her no response.
"If the government detains UN people carrying out their professional functions, it doesn't sit very well with their reform agenda," she said.
Vivian Tan, a spokeswoman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, said that the agency had asked Myanmar for details of the charges but received no response.
Other UN aid workers were detained earlier this year over their alleged roles in the sectarian unrest, but have since been released.
The group's statelessness is at the heart of two major outbreaks of unrest between Buddhist and Muslim communities that has left 180 dead and forced more than 110,000, mainly Rohingya, into makeshift camps since June.
The Rohingya have no legal status, with the government and many Burmese regarding them as illegal immigrants from neighbouring Bangladesh.
"This should include a review of the citizenship law to ensure that Rohingya have equal access to citizenship," Pillay said at the Bali Democracy Forum in Indonesia.
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"While we can positively commend the government for the progress made towards democratic transition and national reconciliation, the communal violence, if not resolved, can undermine the reform process," she said.
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The precise goal of the survey was unclear.
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Separately, Pillay said she pressed Myanmar's Deputy Foreign Minister U Thant Kyaw at the Bali meeting to secure the release of a local UN refugee agency employee detained in Myanmar for almost five months. He gave her no response.
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Vivian Tan, a spokeswoman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, said that the agency had asked Myanmar for details of the charges but received no response.
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