Rangoon, Burma (BBN)- A United Nations envoy, Vijay Nambiar, has wrapped up a visit to Burma, officially known as Myanmar, during which he was able to meet with people displaced by the inter-communal violence this year in Rakhine state, as well as discuss with the government how to address the problems facing the communities there.
 
Several waves of clashes between ethnic Rakhine Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims, the first of which occurred in June, have left 115,000 people displaced, as well as more than 100 dead, according to UN estimates.
 
Mr. Nambiar, the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Myanmar, accompanied the Minister for Immigration and Population Affairs, U Khin Yi, on a visit to Rakhine state, located in the Asian nation’s west.
 
“This visit helped the Special Adviser see the current conditions of the internally displaced persons from both communities in the area and also allowed him to participate in the discussions which the Minister was holding with the representatives of the two communities, together and separately,” said a press statement on Thursday.
During those discussions, the Minister presented some ideas on the way forward, especially on a framework for addressing the problems afflicting the communities there.
 
In his comments to the communities, Mr. Nambiar underlined his initial impression that the Minister’s outline of his proposal was “forward-looking and realistic, while taking into account the dignity and essential interests of the affected communities.”
 
Mr. Nambiar’s visit, which began on 16 December, was at the invitation of the Burmese government, which has pledged to take measures to address the violence in Rakhine.
 
BBN/SSR/AD-21Dec12-6:10 pm (BST)