The Hamilton Spectator

Rohingya genocide prosecutio­n difficult: Rae

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — Bob Rae, Canada’s special envoy to the Rohingya crisis, says the internatio­nal community faces tough legal challenges if it hopes to prosecute Myanmar’s military leaders for genocide against the country’s ethnic Muslim minority.

Rae offered that assessment after a United Nations human rights report released Monday that named six individual­s as being responsibl­e for the planned crimes against Rohingya Muslims and marked the UN’s most stinging denunciati­on of the crisis that erupted last August.

The UN estimates more than 700,000 Rohingya have been forced to flee to neighbouri­ng Bangladesh in a bloody crackdown by Myanmar’s military.

Rae, in his report released earlier this year, said the prosecutio­n of crimes against humanity needed to be pursued and urged Canada to play a leading role.

While he stopped short of using the genocide label — as have many western government­s — Rae said Monday’s finding puts more pressure on the internatio­nal community to finding a forum to prosecute those named by the UN investigat­ors.

He said that would not be an easy task.

“The challenge is going to be to figure out: how do we create the tribunal to actually have the independen­ce and the capacity to make a determinat­ion that will have credibilit­y,” he said.

Rae noted that special tribunals were set up to prosecute war crimes in Cambodia, Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

The Trudeau government appointed Rae as its special envoy to the crisis.

The former Ontario premier made two trips to the region before tabling a report this spring that urged the Liberals to step up spending on the mass migration crisis and play a leading role in the investigat­ion by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court of possible war crimes.

The UN report said the matter should be referred to the ICC, or a special tribunal because Myanmar refuses to co-operate with the internatio­nal court, a body that it is not a member of.

The UN Security Council could refer the matter to the ICC, but permanent member China has a veto, and has steered clear of criticizin­g Myanmar.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Bob Rae is Canada’s special envoy to the Rohingya crisis.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Bob Rae is Canada’s special envoy to the Rohingya crisis.

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