The Ma Ba Tha organization's charismatic leader, the monk Wirathu, responded Wednesday by calling the country's de facto leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, a "dictatorial woman."
The Sangha Council, a state institution that oversees Buddhist monastic discipline, declared Tuesday that it did not recognize Ma Ba Tha as a member of the country's Buddhist order.
Last week, the government's minister for Yangon, Phyo Min Thein, said the group shouldn't exist, rejecting Ma Ba Tha's demands on official policy toward the Muslim Rohingya minority. The group planned, then called a protest against the minister.
Even Suu Kyi disappointed admirers of her decades-long nonviolent struggle for democracy by failing to crack down on the group, which has been blamed for stirring up deadly violence.
Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party took power in March, and she was named State Counselor, a position created just for her because the military-drafted constitution bars her from being president.
"I've realized that the ruling party and the new government are targeting me as their 'enemy number one' to dismantle the whole Ma Ba Tha," Wirathu said in his Wednesday statement.
Ma Ba Tha more formally known as Association for the Protection of Race and Religion "was never recognized as a real Buddhist organization," Win Htein, a spokesman for Suu Kyi's ruling party and government legal affairs expert said today.
"Now the Sangha Council finally has to denounce them because they have become uncontrollable."
He said the government was reluctant to act ahead of the council's action, but now was less constrained.
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