The Province

Canada’s Freeland says government will speak up for Rohingya Muslims

- Michelle McQuigge

Canada’s foreign affairs minister says the government is very concerned about the plight of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar and plans to speak up on their behalf.

Chrystia Freeland says both she and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau plan to “focus” on the issue at this week’s United Nations General Assembly in New York.

She did not elaborate on the specific actions she or Trudeau plan to take.

Freeland also told a Toronto rally in support of the Rohingya that she also discussed the issue with Kofi Annan, the former UN Secretary-General who is currently leading a commission investigat­ing the crisis unfolding in Myanmar.

She says another key focus for Canada is getting the ambassador into the area of heaviest conflict to report first-hand on the situation.

Myanmar’s powerful military is accused of torching the homes of 400,000 Rohingya Muslims, forcing them to flee to neighbouri­ng Bangladesh as refugees. Myanmar’s leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, has come under harsh internatio­nal criticism for failing to speak out against the violence, with some arguing she should be stripped of both her Nobel Peace Prize and her honorary Canadian citizenshi­p.

Freeland did not address those concerns, but told the rally that Trudeau expressed his “very strong condemnati­on” of the treatment of the Rohingya directly to Suu Kyi earlier this week.

Freeland said Trudeau also asked Suu Kyi to “raise her voice” on behalf of the Muslim minority in her country.

“I want you to know that this is an issue that matters to me very, very much,” she told the crowd. “It’s an issue that matters very much to the prime minister.”

Officials speaking on condition of anonymity have said Canada has been reluctant to overtly blame Suu Kyi for the violence against the Rohingya because it believes Myanmar’s military is using it to undermine her global reputation.

Canada believes elements in Myanmar’s powerful military see the current crisis as an opportunit­y to weaken Suu Kyi’s ambitions to bring democracy to their country.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Desperate Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar continue to arrive on Bangladesh’s Shah Pari Island on Saturday as land crossings become more difficult for refugees.
— GETTY IMAGES Desperate Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar continue to arrive on Bangladesh’s Shah Pari Island on Saturday as land crossings become more difficult for refugees.

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