Kyrgyzstan scraps Myanmar football match over ‘terror’ threat

Kyrgyzstan scraps Myanmar football match over ‘terror’ threat
This picture taken on August 25, 2017 shows ethnic Rakhine people fleeing from a conflict area at the Yathae Taung township in Rakhine State in Myanmar. The impoverished western state of Rakhine neighbouring Bangladesh has become a crucible of religious hatred focused on the stateless Rohingya Muslim minority, who are reviled and perceived as illegal immigrants in Buddhist-majority Myanmar. (AFP)
Updated 04 September 2017 11:52
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Kyrgyzstan scraps Myanmar football match over ‘terror’ threat

Kyrgyzstan scraps Myanmar football match over ‘terror’ threat

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan: Muslim-majority Kyrgyzstan on Monday canceled an international football match with Myanmar over “a potential terror act,” as fears grow for the Southeast Asian country’s Rohingya Muslims.
At least 87,000 Muslims have arrived in Bangladesh after fleeing clashes in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, according to the UN.
Social media users in Kyrgyzstan had suggested staging a peaceful protest against the violence in Buddhist-dominated Myanmar ahead of Tuesday’s Asian Cup qualifying match.
“The match was canceled according to the decision of Prime Minister Sapar Isakov and because of the potential threat of a terrorist act,” a spokeswoman for Kyrgyzstan’s football federation told AFP by telephone.
The head of Kyrgyzstan’s football federation Semetei Sultanov said the match may be held in another country.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has warned of a looming “humanitarian catastrophe” in western Myanmar and urged the country’s security forces to show restraint after 400 people — most of them Rohingya Muslims — died in communal violence.
Reports of massacres and the systematic torching of villages by security forces — as well as by militants — have raised fears that the violence in Rakhine is spinning out of control.