The Borneo Post

Pope speaks out on Myanmar’s ‘tortured and killed’ Rohingya

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VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis yesterday spoke out over the alleged maltreatme­nt of Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslim minority, who he said were being ‘ tortured and killed’ for their faith.

The pontiff used his midweek address to describe the Rohingya as ‘ good and peaceful people’ who ‘have suffered for years.’

Francis offered a special prayer for ‘ brothers and sisters’ as he alluded to a UN human rights report last week which accused Myanmar’s military of likely killing hundreds of Rohingya in an ongoing crackdown.

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.

Almost 70,000 Rohingya are reported to have fled to Bangladesh since the army launched ‘clearance operations’ four months ago to find Rohingya militants accused of attacking police border posts.

An estimated 22,000 more have fled to the Myanmar interior according to the UN report, based on 200 interviews and including brutal testimonie­s of children butchered with knives while their mothers were raped by security forces.

The Rohingya, who number morethanon­emillionco­ncentrated mainly in coastal Rakhine state, are treated as virtual foreigners in Myanmar, which is 90 per cent Buddhist.

They are not accorded citizenshi­p even if their families have lived there for generation­s.

Myanmar authoritie­s on Tuesday insisted that a state commission investigat­ing allegation­s of its military abusing Rohingya was focused on the ‘ truth’.

But critics have rejected the state- appointed body, which is led by retired general and Vice President Myint Swe and includes no Muslims, as toothless and lacking in credibilit­y.

The UN’s top official on preventing genocide, Adama Dieng, Monday dubbed the commission as ‘ not a credible option’ to investigat­e the abuse claims.

“I am concerned that the government commission found nothing to substantia­te the claims, while OHCHR found an overwhelmi­ng number of testimonie­s and other forms of evidence,” Dieng said.

Pope Francis also used his yesterday address to call on government­s to combat child traffickin­g, which he described as ‘a plague’ and a ‘shameful and intolerabl­e’ crime.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Pope Francis holds up an icon of Sudanese saint Josephine Bakhita during a general audience at the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican.
— AFP photo Pope Francis holds up an icon of Sudanese saint Josephine Bakhita during a general audience at the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican.

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