NEW YORK: US President Donald Trump wants the United Nations to take a 'stronger and faster' action to end violence against Rohingya's ethnic communities in Myanmar now being oppressed. Its Vice President, Mike Pence at a Security Council meeting on Wednesday also declared the crisis as a threat to the world. Pence said the Myanmar army responded to militant attacks on government buildings with a terrible reaction of cruelty, burning villages and dumping ethnic Rohingya from their homes.
He once again urged Myanmar's military to end terrorism and support diplomatic efforts for a long-term solution to the Rohingya issue. "Trump President and I have also called for the United Nations Security Council to take decisive and quick action to end the crisis and help the Rohingya people in times of trouble," Pence told 15 members Tore Council The Security Council has met twice in private since the crisis began on August 25 and issued an unofficial statement to the newspaper last week condemning Myanmar's actions and urging Myanmar authorities to end violence. "If this violence does not cease on the demands of justice, it will worsen, and it will give rise to the nature of hatred and disorder that can destroy the region for future generations and threaten our peace of mind, "Pence said
- This is the reaction of the most rigorous US government-related violence in Myanmar's Rakhine state on 25 August apart from forcing more than 422,000 Rohingya to flee to Bangladesh. The fighting began when Rohingya rebels were charged with raiding about 30 policemen and soldiers, as well as killing about 12 Myanmar security personnel.
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