Tuesday 27 January 2009

Aye Chan again selling anti Rohingya old snake oil in the new bottle

Dr. Abid Bahar Ph.D.

The Rakhine xenophob Aye Chan is active again and sending out emails about his new discovery. He is not a rocket scientist to discover a new star in the distant horizon. As a xenophob he is crying wolf again. Aye Chan who earned his popularity among people in the anti democracy movement for his anti-Rohingya activities by writing a book called "Influx viruses" identifying the Burmese Rohingya people as being viruses to be exterminated is active again against the Rohingya people with an old piece of paper he found to put down the entire Rohingya people. This time he claims that he found a leaflet he claims produced by a splinter group of the Rohingya community. With this discovery he is vainly identifying this suffering community as being Islamic terrorists. This is not a new revelation by him, please see his previous works where he use to make people surprised about Rohingya people as being "dangerous" in this practice he does pass along old wine in his new bottle. This time he is not even selling wine but snake oil to be precise.

Thursday 15 January 2009

Mystery behind the Chakma and the Rohingya’s linguistic similarities

For "What is this" a Chakma would say "Yian ki?" in Rohingyalish, it is the same "Yian ki." Were the Chakma and the Rohingya ancestors the citizens of the ancient Chandra kingdom of Arakan?                                                                         
CHAPTER 4
Mystery behind the Chakma and the Rohingya’s linguistic similarities
(This excerpt is from Abid Bahar’s book Burma’s Missing Dots-the Emerging Face of Genocide, Ch. 4)
Chakmas are the largest racially Mongoloid people of the Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh. Thanchingya’s are the close cousin of the Chakmas. Both of the above tribal groups speak in Chittagonian dialect. There is Chakma population also in Burma’s Arakan who also speak in Chittagonian dialect. History of the Chittagonian Chakma shows that they originally arrived from Arakan to Chittagong in the 14th century during the Sultani period. Due to their origin in Arakan, the language was believed to be influenced by Rakhine or the Burmese language, but surprisingly it is a corrupted Chittagonian Bangali.