The Welland Tribune

Rae urged to pressure Myanmar’s neighbours to stop Rohingya crackdown

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — Canada’s special envoy for the Rohingya crisis, Bob Rae, should enlist some of Myanmar’s influentia­l Asian neighbours to help stop attacks against its minority Muslim population, says a former United Nations disaster response chief.

Jan Egeland, who was UN undersecre­tary general for humanitari­an affairs and emergency relief at the height of some of the world’s most recent crises, said he applauds Rae’s appointmen­t.

But he said Rae should expand the scope of his diplomacy beyond Bangladesh, which has absorbed the hundreds of thousands of fleeing Rohingya Muslims, and Myanmar, whose military leaders are being blamed for what has been branded as ethnic cleansing.

“My humble advice to the Canadian envoy is to get countries like China, India, Japan, Singapore to put pressure on the military and security services in Myanmar,” Egeland said in an interview.

“It’s not like they don’t travel, that they do not have bank accounts abroad. They are reliant on the rest of the world.”

Egeland held key posts at the UN during the Darfur crisis, the enslavemen­t child of soldiers in South Sudan and Uganda and Israel’s war on Hezbollah in Lebanon in 2006. He also helped organize the peace process between Israel and the Palestinia­n Liberation Organizati­on that led to the 1992 Oslo Accord and a ceasefire agreement that ended Guatemala’s civil war in 1996.

Though he is now head of the Norwegian Refugee Council, which has tried to provide aid to the Rohingya in Myanmar’s now-scorched Rakhine state, Egeland said humanitari­an assistance will not be enough to end the suffering of one of the world’s most vulnerable population­s.

“Special envoys are indisputab­ly important to get attention, get initiative­s, get energy into internatio­nal diplomacy, which is often the only the way. The way out of a humanitari­an crisis is not first and foremost with humanitari­an aid,” said Egeland.

“We are Band- Aid on an open wound and the wound can be healed by internatio­nal solutions and internatio­nal diplomacy.”

On Friday, Rae began a two- day tour of Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, where 600,000 fleeing Rohingya Muslims from neighbouri­ng Myanmar have sought refuge since a crackdown by that country’s security forces in late August.

He is to talk to Myanmar government officials during two days of meetings that start Monday, said a government official who spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing the sensitive nature of Rae’s travels.

The former interim Liberal leader is to meet Myanmar government officials from ministries such as border affairs and health.

The official said Friday that Rae will brief Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on his first round of meetings in Bangladesh and Myanmar at next week’s Asia Pacific Economic Co- operation leaders’ summit in Vietnam.

No meeting with Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi is planned, but officials say that Rae is not ruling out a meeting with the honorary Canadian citizen and Nobel laureate who has faced widespread internatio­nal criticism for not speaking out against the violence against her country’s Muslim minority.

After giving Trudeau a face- toface update, Rae will also use the 21- member APEC bloc to meet other regional players to push for a co- ordinated solution to the crisis that has so far forced 900,000 Rohingya into exile in Bangladesh.

Rae will not accompany Trudeau to the Associatio­n of Southeast Asia Nations summit in the Philippine­s afterwards, a 10- country regional club that includes Myanmar, the official said.

Meanwhile, other government officials, who briefed journalist­s Friday on Trudeau’s two- country, two- summit Asian trip, couldn’t say whether the prime minister planned to press the Rohingya issue with Myanmar’s leaders directly.

Egeland urged Canada to use the ASEAN summit discuss solutions to the crisis.

“Those ASEAN actors and powers have great influence and need to be told in no mistaken terms that they need to help solve this,” he said.

Canada is interested in talking to Asian countries about the crisis, which is why Rae is spending time at APEC and met the foreign minister of Indonesia on his way to Bangladesh earlier this week, officials said.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canada’s special envoy to the Rohingya crisis Bob Rae speaks during a press conference in Ottawa on Oct. 23. Rae will brief Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on his talks in Myanmar at next week’s APEC summit in Vietnam.
SEAN KILPATRICK/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada’s special envoy to the Rohingya crisis Bob Rae speaks during a press conference in Ottawa on Oct. 23. Rae will brief Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on his talks in Myanmar at next week’s APEC summit in Vietnam.

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