A panel of monks known locally by the acronym Ma Ba Tha, said the headscarves were “not in line with school discipline”.
Ma Ba Tha came together and held a conference in Rangoon over the weekend. More than 1,300 monks from monasteries around the country gathered to discuss plans to promote a nationalist agenda as the country heads toward landmark elections later this year.
In a report in the Guaridan, Ma Ba Tha prepared a list of recommendations, and have told its members to lobby the government to put insist on further restrictions on the country’s Muslims, and included references to the wearing of either headscarves or burqas.
Ma Ba Tha monk U Pamaukkha said: “When they [Muslims] live in Myanmar, they need to obey the law and regulations of the country. We are not targeting or attacking their religion.”
The group also said it was showing that the "show the people the right track” when it came to the elections, expected in November, encouraging people to vote for candidates who “will not let our race and religion disappear”.
The group issued a statement saying that it would keep monitoring “crimes by non-Buddhists” and using Facebook to spread news about alleged threats to Buddhism in Myanmar.
Source: World Bulletin