The Borneo Post

UN investigat­ors demand ‘full, unfettered’ access to Myanmar

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GENEVA: UN human rights investigat­ors on Tuesday said they needed ‘full and unfettered’ access to Myanmar to investigat­e a grave and ongoing crisis, but the government renewed its rejection of the probe.

“It is important for us to see with our own eyes the sites of these alleged violations”, the head of UN-backed fact-finding mission, Marzuki Darusman, told the Human Rights Council, asking for “full and unfettered access to the country.”

“There is a grave humanitari­an crisis underway that requires urgent attention”, he added.

The council set up the mission in March to investigat­e possible violations across Myanmar, with a particular focus on alleged crimes committed against Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine state.

Myanmar’s civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi has repeatedly denounced the UN probe as unhelpful and vowed that her government would not cooperate with it.

Suu Kyi earlier yesterday delivered a nationally televised address on the Rohingya crisis, appealing for outside observers to visit Myanmar and see the situation for themselves, in a speech aimed at appeasing an internatio­nal community horrified by the army-led violence in Rakhine.

But hours after that speech, Myanmar’s UN ambassador Htin Lynn re-asserted his government’s “position of disassocia­ting herself from the resolution” that set up the fact-finding mission.

“We continue to believe that institutin­g such a mission is not a helpful course of action in solving the already int rica ted Rakhine issue”, he told the council.

Darusman had upped the pressure on Myanmar to grant access, arguing it was “in the government’s interest and in the interests of the people of Myanmar to communicat­e their views and evidence directly to the ( UN) mission.” He added that the probe “had urgently dispatched a team to Bangladesh”, where more than 400,000 Rohingya have fled army operations in recent weeks. The UN investigat­or, an Indonesian national and veteran of past UN investigat­ions including a ground- breaking report on slave labour in North Korea, warned that Myanmar had the “danger signs” of a crisis that could worsen. He noted reports that some in majority Buddhist Myanmar had spread propaganda that “compared the Rohingya to pests”.

 ??  ?? Marzuki Darusman
Marzuki Darusman

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