TEHRAN(Basirat): Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces Major General Mohammad Hossein Baqeri and Pakistan’s Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa expressed concern about the ongoing Rohingya Muslim crisis in Myanmar, calling for Muslim world action to help end the plight of the Muslim minority.

In a telephone conversation on Sunday, the two top generals discussed
ways to enhance cooperation between the two countries’ armed forces to
help the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.
They also called on the
Muslim world to do more and help stop the "unfavorable” and "inhumane”
situation of the Rohingya community in the Southeast Asian country.
Baqeri
and Bajwa further said that military and non-military organizations of
Muslim countries could mobilize their forces and facilities to speed up
the dispatch of humanitarian relief to the persecuted Muslims in
Myanmar.
The Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar have long faced severe
discrimination and were the targets of violence in 2012 that killed
hundreds and drove about 140,000 people from their homes to camps for
the internally displaced.
On September 12, the UN refugee agency
said the number of Rohingya Muslim refugees that have fled recent
violence in Myanmar has spiked to about 370,000.
Earlier, the UN
top human rights official accused Myanmar of carrying out "a textbook
example of ethnic cleansing” against Rohingya Muslims.
Zeid Ra’ad
al-Hussein, the UN high commissioner for human rights, said the
military’s "brutal” security campaign was in clear violation of
international law, and cited what he called refugees’ consistent
accounts of widespread extrajudicial killings, rape and other
atrocities.
Source: newsnow