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Morocco’s King Mohammed VI sent food, tents and medicine aid to Rohingya Muslims

After the active and great help provided by Turkey, we are seeing more countries sending aid to Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh.

Read: Turkey’s first lady visiting Rohingya Muslims in Bangladesh as the country sending 10,000 tons of aid supplies

On Monday, Morocco dispatched an emergency humanitarian assistance to Rohingya Muslim refugees fleeing their country Myanmar as reported by Morocco World News.

The Moroccan Foreign ministry said the aid was sent upon instruction of King Mohammed VI to alleviate the sufferings of this Muslim minority and support the efforts made by Bangladesh, which is providing shelter to these refugees.

The Moroccan assistance, consisting of tents, blankets, basic foodstuffs and medicines, will be delivered by military aircraft of the Royal Armed Forces.

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In June the monarch took another humanitarian action by giving instructions to send food supply to Qatar following the decision of four Arab countries to cut ties and impose an embargo on the Gulf state, which is depends on food imports.

“This humanitarian action aims at assissting the efforts of a brother country to face the massive influx of the Muslim minority of the Rohingya, coming from Myanmar,” said the release.

Read: For Rohingya refugees, alongside Muslim charities, Sikh charity workers providing food aid at Myanmar-Bangladesh border

According to a senior UN human rights official, Myanmar’s treatment of its Muslim Rohingya minority appears to be a “textbook example” of ethnic cleansing.

In an address to the UN human rights council in Geneva, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein denounced the “brutal security operation” against the Rohingya in Rakhine state, which he said was “clearly disproportionate” to insurgent attacks carried out last month.

More than 310,000 people have fled to Bangladesh in recent weeks, with more trapped on the border, amid reports of the burning of villages and extrajudicial killings.

“I call on the government to end its current cruel military operation, with accountability for all violations that have occurred, and to reverse the pattern of severe and widespread discrimination against the Rohingya population,” Hussein said.

The latest crackdown against the Muslim minority was triggered on 25 August when a Rohingya insurgent group attacked more than two dozen security sites and killed 12 people.

Militia groups, local security forces and the Burmese army responded with “clearance operations” that have forced refugees into Bangladesh and left tens of thousands more displaced inside the state.

Bangladesh’s foreign minister accused the Myanmar government of committing genocide against the Rohingya, while the Dalai Lama, a Nobel peace prize laureate, urged the Burmese forces involved in attacks on the ethnic Muslim minority to “remember Buddha”.

In Washington, White House spokesperson Sarah Huckabee said:

“The United States is deeply troubled by the ongoing crisis in Burma where at least 300,000 people have fled their homes in the wake of attacks on Burmese security posts on 25 August.

We reiterate our condemnation of those attacks and the ensuing violence.”

Scores of refugees in Bangladesh have given accounts of arson by Burmese security forces. Human Rights Watch said on Sunday that satellite analysis had shown evidence of fire damage in urban areas populated by Rohingya as well as in isolated villages.

Written by Adeel Malik

Born in Hong Kong, grew up in Scotland and ethnically Pakistani, Adeel primes himself to be a multicultural individual who is an advent social media user for the purpose of learning and propagating Islam while is also a sports fan. Being an English teacher himself, he envisions a bright future for Muslims which he strongly believes can only be done with education.

For Rohingya refugees, alongside Muslim charities, Sikh charity workers providing food aid at Myanmar-Bangladesh border

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