Literature
Malala calls on world leaders to save Rohingya Muslims
London, June 8
Nobel Peace Prize winner and
educational activist Malala Yousafzai on Monday spoke up for the rights
of Rohingya Muslims, urging influential world leaders to take action
against the persecution of the minority group.
"I stand with the
Rohingyas, and I encourage people everywhere to do so,†, Dawn reported
quoted Malala as saying in a statement released by the Malala Fund.
“I
call on the leaders of Myanmar and the world to take immediate action
to halt the inhuman persecution of Burma's Muslim minority Rohingya
people," she said.
She stressed the right of Rohingyas to
citizenship in their country of birth, saying they deserved equal rights
and opportunities.
"The Rohingyas deserve citizenship in the
country where they were born and have lived for generations. They
deserve equal rights and opportunities," statement added.
The
17-year-old said Rohingya Muslims "deserve to be treated like we all
deserve to be treated - with dignity and respect. Today and every day."
Malala
is currently in the Britain completing her studies at the Edgbaston
High School, a private school in an upmarket part of Birmingham. After
being shot by the Taliban in October 2012, Malala was treated at a
hospital in Birmingham. She started at her school in the city in March
last year.
She became a leading education campaigner since
surviving the assassination attempt, but has not returned to Pakistan
since owing to security concerns.
Malala and her father, Ziauddin
Yousafzai, set up the Malala Fund in 2013 to fight on behalf of 62
million girls around the world denied access to secondary education, and
work in Pakistan, Nigeria, Jordan, Lebanon, Sierra Leone and Kenya.
Last
year, she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her education
campaigning, jointly with Indian children's rights activist Kailash
Satyarthi.
In recent years, sectarian violence and a thicket of
discriminatory laws against the Rohingya in Buddhist-majority Myanmar
have sparked the region’s largest exodus of boat-people since the
Vietnam War.
More than 25,000 people, including many Rohingya but
also economic migrants from Bangladesh, made the dangerous sea journey
south from the Bay of Bengal between January and March this year, the UN
says.