The Borneo Post

Myanmar rejects UN criticism of Rohingya abuse investigat­ion

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YANGON: A Myanmar state commission probing allegation­s the military has killed, tortured and raped Rohingya Muslims rejected accusation­s it is not credible, saying yesterday it was focused on the “truth” and not pleasing the UN.

Last week the United Nations’ human rights office said Myanmar’s military had likely killed hundreds of Rohingya during a continuing crackdown in a “calculated policy of terror” against the Muslim minority.

Almost 70,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since the army launched “clearance operations” four months ago to find Rohingya militants they accused of carrying out deadly raids on police border posts.

The report by the UN’s rights body OHCHR said the accounts of torture, murder and gang-rape at the hands of security forces were so severe they may amount to ethnic cleansing.

Among the brutal testimonie­s published were accounts of children butchered with knives while their mothers were raped by security forces.

For months Myanmar dismissed similar testimony gathered by foreign media and rights groups and curtailed access to the region.

But following last week’s UN report a spokesman for Myanmar’s president said the government was concerned by the “extremely serious allegation­s” and would investigat­e them through the Rakhine commission.

Critics have rejected the stateappoi­nted body, which is led by retired general and Vice President Myint Swe and includes no Muslims, as toothless and lacking in credibilit­y.

Last month it issued an interim report denying that troops had carried out a genocidal campaign against the Rohingya and saying it had found “insufficie­nt evidence” of rape.

“The existing commission is not a credible option to undertake the new investigat­ion,” the UN’s top official on preventing genocide, Adama Dieng, said in New York on Monday. — AFP

 ??  ?? A Rohingya refugee woman walks out with a blanket and containers, distribute­d by the Bangladesh Red Crescent Society, at Kutupalang Unregister­ed Refugee Camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. — Reuters photo
A Rohingya refugee woman walks out with a blanket and containers, distribute­d by the Bangladesh Red Crescent Society, at Kutupalang Unregister­ed Refugee Camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. — Reuters photo

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