Washington, Aug 4 (ANI): Islamist groups in Pakistan are exaggerating
the incidences of ill-treatment of Muslims in Myanmar to recruit people
for their cause and fund their own agendas, a report has said.
The international community recently raised concerns about human
rights abuses against Muslim Rohingyas following their clashes in June
with the Buddhist community.
Human rights activists slammed the Burmese government for failing to
protect Rohingyas and to stop the violence that left 78 dead.
But on the streets of Pakistan, the rhetoric runs much hotter with
protesters claiming ‘thousands’ of Rohingyas are being slaughtered in
western Myanmar, The Christian Science Monitor reports.
According to the report, a series of doctored and misidentified
photographs are circulating widely in Pakistani social media that show
violence against Rohingyas.
It cited one photo posted on a Facebook page originating from
Pakistan showing Buddhists dressed in their traditional red robes
standing in the middle of two rows of dead bodies, with the caption
reading: “Bodies of Muslims killed by Buddhists.”
In reality, this picture was from an earthquake incident in China in
2010, where Tibetan monks came to help with the rescue efforts, the
report said.
Shahzad Ahmad, the Pakistan country director for the global online
activism group called Bytes for All, pointed out that stories of Muslim
victimization around the world are exaggerated in Pakistan by Islamist
groups on the Internet.
“They use such campaigns not only to fund themselves but also to gain
more political ground and recruit people for their cause,” the paper
quoted Ahmad, as saying.
“Our research shows that there are many fake photographs being used
to propagate [stories of] atrocities against Muslims on many of the
Facebook pages which originate from Pakistan,” he added.
According to the paper, among the groups involved in stirring the
activism are Jamat-ud-Dawa, Jamat-e-Islami and Jamiat-e-Ulema Islam,
three Islamist groups which hold significant street power in the
country. (ANI)
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