Times Colonist

MPs vote to strip Suu Kyi of her honorary citizenshi­p

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OTTAWA — MPs have unanimousl­y endorsed a motion to revoke the honorary Canadian citizenshi­p of Myanmar’s de facto leader, Aung San Suu Kyi.

The vote, on a Bloc Québécois motion, followed Thursday’s question period and came one day after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said it was up to Parliament to decide whether to strip the honour given to Suu Kyi in 2007.

The once-celebrated Burmese reformer has been widely criticized for not speaking out against the atrocities being committed against her country’s Rohingya people.

Trudeau’s Liberals had faced pressure to revoke the honour, but had refused to say whether they would consider such a step.

A spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Thursday that the government made up its mind to support the idea in response to Suu Kyi’s silence on the crimes in Myanmar.

“Our government supported this motion in response to her continued failure to speak out against the genocide of the Rohingya, a crime being committed by the military with which she shares power,” Adam Austen wrote in an emailed statement.

“We will continue to support the Rohingya people through humanitari­an assistance, targeted sanctions against Myanmar’s generals and by pushing for accountabi­lity for those responsibl­e through an appropriat­e internatio­nal body.”

The Opposition Conservati­ves called the vote to remove her citizenshi­p a “step in the right direction,” but pressed the government to do more for the Rohingya people “than make a symbolic gesture.”

There is no formal procedure required for making someone an honorary citizen — it is a purely political decision — but precedent has been set for a joint resolution to be passed by the House of Commons and Senate in order to grant someone the honour.

The Bloc MP who put forward the motion to strip Suu Kyi of the honorary citizenshi­p was happy to attract cross-party support, but he was uncertain — as many were — about the exact process the government must now follow.

“What I know [is that] it is the House that can give this honorary citizenshi­p and now it has also the power to remove it. That’s what we’ve just done,” Gabriel SteMarie, who represents the riding of Joliette north of Montreal, told reporters after the vote.

Suu Kyi is one of six people who have been granted honorary citizenshi­p by the federal government, and the only one who wasn’t presented with the honour at a ceremony in Canada.

She received her honorary citizenshi­p during a 2012 visit to Myanmar by then foreign affairs minister John Baird of the former Conservati­ve government.

 ??  ?? John Baird, then Canada’s foreign affairs minister, hands Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi a certificat­e of her honorary Canadian citizenshi­p during his visit to Yangon, Myanmar, in March 2012.
John Baird, then Canada’s foreign affairs minister, hands Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi a certificat­e of her honorary Canadian citizenshi­p during his visit to Yangon, Myanmar, in March 2012.

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