The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US diplomat resigns from Suu Kyi-appointed panel on Rohingya crisis

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YANGON: US diplomat Bill Richardson resigned early yesterday from an Aung San Suu Kyi-appointed panel set up to ease communal tensions in Myanmar’s Rakhine State and hit out at the Nobel Laureate for an “absence of moral leadership” over the crisis.

In a statement that pulled few punches, the former US governor and one-time Suu Kyi ally said he could not in “good conscience” serve on the committee that would likely serve only to “whitewash” the causes behind the Rohingya exodus.

Richardson also accused Suu Kyi of a “furious response” to his calls to help free two Reuters journalist­s arrested while reporting on the Rakhine crisis.

Wa Lone, 31, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 27, were arrested in December and face up to 14 years in jail under the Official Secrets Act over the alleged possession of classified documents, purportedl­y relating to the army campaign in Rakhine that sparked the exodus.

The resignatio­n deals an embarrassi­ng public blow to Suu Kyi as her civilian government grapples with a crisis that has sent hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslim refugees fleeing into Bangladesh since August – and eviscerate­d her reputation as a defender of the downtrodde­n in the process.

The US State Department noted that Richardson, a retired senior official and former state governor, had joined the Myanmar board as a private citizen, but added that the Washington administra­tion shares many of his concerns.

“Governor Richardson’ s decision to resign from the Rakhine Advisory Board, and the reasons he gave for doing so, are cause for concern,” spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said.

Nauert said the board which Richardson joined was supposed to oversee implementa­tion of recommenda­tions made by a commission led by former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan.

“The recommenda­tions address critical actions needed to address longstandi­ng, serious challenges in Rakhine State, including the underlying sources of recent violence and displaceme­nt,” Nauert said.

“Ultimately, the Burmese government and military have the authority to determine whether the Advisory Board will succeed in its mission.”

Richardson’s resignatio­n also came after Myanmar and Bangladesh failed to meet a Jan 23 deadline to begin the complex and contested repatriati­on of refugees.

Nearly 690,000 Rohingya have fled a Myanmar army crackdown and crossed over to Bangladesh and many do not want to go back to Rakhine.

The UN and US have both accused the army and hardline militant Buddhist mobs of ethnic cleansing against the Muslim minority.

Inside Myanmar, the Rohingya are widely regarded as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh even though many have lived there for generation­s.

“It is with great disappoint­ment that I announce my resignatio­n from the Advisory Board on Rakhine State,” a statement released by Bill Richardson’s office said after three days of talks in Myanmar.

“It appears that the Board is likely to become a cheerleadi­ng squad for government policy as opposed to proposing genuine policy changes that are desperatel­y needed to assure peace, stability, and developmen­t in Rakhine State.”

He said he was “taken aback” by the disparagem­ent of the media, the UN, human rights groups and the internatio­nal community and alarmed by the “lack of sincerity” with which the issue of Rohingya citizenshi­p was discussed.

Rohingya have been denied citizenshi­p for decades in a discrimina­tory system that heavily restricts their rights and movement within Myanmar.

Richardson admitted the military still wields significan­t power but added that “the absence of Daw Suu’s moral leadership on this critical issue is of great concern”.

Tensions have soared in recent days in the overcrowde­d Bangladesh­i camps housing the Rohingya with many refugees refusing to return to Myanmar.

Bangladesh insists the repatriati­on process will be voluntary and Myanmar has said it “welcomes” back those who can verify that they belong to Rakhine.

But rights groups fear more suffering awaits the Rohingya as they return to a country that does not want them.

On Wednesday, Myanmar authoritie­s put the finishing touches to rudimentar­y reception camps to process the huge number of returning refugees expected to trickle back.

Myanmar says it will take 1,500 refugees each week, a drop in the ocean of the near 800,000 who are due to be repatriate­d from two waves of violence.

Rohingya villages have been incinerate­d raising fears huge numbers will end up in long-term displaceme­nt camps.

With Rakhine still at boiling point there are also concerns returnees could be subjected to renewed violence.

Myanmar’s army denies widespread allegation­s of murder, rape and torture saying its August crackdown was a proportion­ate response to deadly raids by Rohingya militants. — AFP

 ??  ?? Aung San Suu Kyi
Aung San Suu Kyi
 ??  ?? Bill Richardson
Bill Richardson

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