Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi asked Annan to help find ways to resolve long-standing ethnic and religious tensions between the Rohingya and the country's Buddhist majority. The area was the scene of intense intercommunal violence in 2012 that left hundreds dead and drove 140,000 people into camps for the internally displaced.
Annan's visit is his second since his appointment by Suu Kyi in August to head a special commission that will write and present a report of its findings to the government early next year.
Bijan Farnoudi, a spokesman for Annan's foundation, tweeted that Annan said in Rakhine today that "Security operations must not impede humanitarian access where there is need."
"I'm not saying there are no difficulties," Suu Kyi told Singapore's Channel NewsAsia network today, "but it helps if people recognize the difficulty and are more focused on resolving these difficulties rather than exaggerating them so that everything seems worse than it really is."
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Although many have lived in Rakhine for generations, they are often treated as being in the country illegally.
"It's not just Muslims who are nervous and worried," Suu Kyi told Channel NewsAsia during a visit to Singapore.
Rakhine Buddhists "are worried too, they are worried about the fact that they are shrinking as a Rakhine population percentage-wise, and of course, we cannot ignore the fact that the relationship between the two communities has not been good and we want to try to make it better," she said.
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