The Borneo Post

Red Cross chief urges Myanmar to allow more access to conflict areas

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YANGON: The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross has asked Myanmar to let aid workers get access to people caught up in conflicts that have displaced tens of thousands despite a transition that brought Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi to power.

Authoritie­s have blocked the ICRC from areas under the control of ethnic minority forces and from visiting some prisoners, the organisati­on’s president, Peter Maurer, told reporters late on Wednesday in the commercial capital, Yangon.

“We would like to have access to all the people in need in order to do proper assessment­s, to help ease according to needs,” he said.

Maurer visited the northweste­rn state of Rakhine, where he toured camps set up almost five years ago to house those displaced by communal clashes between Rohingya Muslims and ethnic Rakhine Buddhists.

He did not visit the north of the state, where a security operation in response to insurgent attacks in October sent an estimated 74,000 people fleeing to Bangladesh.

Troops and police have been accused of killing and raping Rohingyas, who are denied citizenshi­p in Myanmar and widely viewed as interloper­s from Bangladesh.

The government only recently allowed internatio­nal aid workers to visit affected villages, under the condition that they are accompanie­d by government officials, the UN humanitari­an agency said on May 1.

A separate ICRC delegation visited detainees in the area last month.

Maurer was set to visit Kachin State in the north yesterday, but the government denied a request to visit the Kachin Independen­ce Army (KIA) stronghold of Laiza.

The ICRC is assisting a civilian hospital there, but staff have not been able to visit since fighting between the KIA and government forces broke out eight months ago. Maurer travels to the capital, Naypyidaw today to meet officials and he will meet Suu Kyi in Beijing during an internatio­nal conference there next week, he said.

Former political prisoner Suu Kyi won a landslide in elections before becoming the de facto head of the civilian administra­tion in April 2016 after decades of military rule.

But her priority of securing peace with autonomy- seeking minority insurgents has been set back by fighting that has displaced an estimated 160,000 more people since the transition, according to UN data. Suu Kyi’s spokesman, Zaw Htay, could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

Maurer said access to conflict areas was “always a difficult equation of security considerat­ions versus needs of people for assistance and protection,” but he was ‘unsatisfie­d’ by the limits in place in Myanmar.

Granting more access was in the interests of the government and the armed forces, he said.

“At the end of the day there is no more effective tool to ease tensions than to offer fluid procedures for access to humanitari­an organisati­ons like us,” he said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows Myanmar riot police patrolling along a street in Yangon’s Mingalar Taung Nyunt township after scuffles broke out between Buddhist nationalis­ts and Muslims. — AFP photo
File photo shows Myanmar riot police patrolling along a street in Yangon’s Mingalar Taung Nyunt township after scuffles broke out between Buddhist nationalis­ts and Muslims. — AFP photo

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