The Borneo Post

Myanmar rejects UN ‘genocide’ charge

UN probe detailed evidence of genocide, crimes against humanity ‘perpetrate­d on a massive scale’

- — AFP

YANGON: Myanmar rejected yesterday the findings of a UN probe alleging genocide by its military against the Rohingya, after the US and other countries joined growing calls for the accused to face justice.

Myanmar has come under immense pressure this week over last year’s military crackdown that pushed more than 700,000 of the Muslim minority into Bangladesh.

On Monday, a UN probe detailed evidence of genocide and crimes against humanity “perpetrate­d on a massive scale” towards the Rohingya Muslim minority, including acts of rape, sexual violence and mass killings.

In a session of the UN Security Council a day later several countries – including the US, Britain, France and Sweden – called for Myanmar’s military leaders to be held accountabl­e.

But Myanmar rejected the UN mission’s findings in a typically defiant defence of its response to a crisis that has heaped internatio­nal opprobrium on both its military and civilian leadership.

“We didn’t allow the FFM ( the UN Fact- Finding Mission) to enter into Myanmar, that’s why we don’t agree and accept any resolution­s made by the Human Rights Council,” said government spokesman Zaw Htay, according to yesterday’s state- run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper.

He pointed to the formation of Myanmar’s own Independen­t Commission of Enquiry, which he said was set up to respond to “false allegation­s made by the UN agencies and other internatio­nal communitie­s”.

The country has “zero tolerance for human rights violations”, Zaw Htay said, but he added that “strong evidence” including records and dates of any alleged abuses must be provided before investigat­ions are undertaken.

The government would take “legal action against any violation of human rights,” he said.

Zaw Htay also lashed out at

We didn’t allow the FFM (the UN Fact-Finding Mission) to enter into Myanmar, that’s why we don’t agree and accept any resolution­s made by the Human Rights Council. Zaw Htay, Myanmar government spokesman

Facebook for pulling down the pages of Myanmar’s army chief and other top military brass on Monday, saying that the move could hamper the government’s efforts with ‘ national reconcilia­tion’.

The social media giant has admitted it was too slow to react to the crisis, which saw its platform – wildly popular in Myanmar – become an incubator of hate speech against the Rohingya.

Much of Myanmar’s Buddhistma­jority public has vilified the Rohingya since the army’s crackdown, with little sympathy for a minority who have for years been stripped of citizenshi­p and denied free movement, access to healthcare and education within the country.

Myanmar’s military retain significan­t constituti­onal and political power and are essentiall­y free of civilian oversight.

But the country’s civilian leaders, including Nobel laureate and de facto head of state Aung San Suu Kyi, have repeatedly defended the military crackdown as a proportion­ate response to Rohingya insurgents in Rakhine state who stormed police posts.

But rights groups allege parts of the violent military campaign were already being prepared before the attacks.

Around a million Rohingya now languish in refugee camps in Bangladesh, which has struggled to deal with such a huge inf lux into an already impoverish­ed country.

Bangladesh and Myanmar has signed a deal to repatriate last year’s wave of refugees but there has been little progress given Rohingya fears of returning without guarantees for their safety.

Meanwhile the drumbeat of calls for accountabi­lity is getting louder, with UN investigat­ors calling on the Security Council to refer the Myanmar crisis to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court ( ICC) or to create an ad hoc tribunal.

Several Security Council members threw support behind the idea while also calling for a mechanism to “collect and preserve proof” of abuses.

Myanmar’s ambassador to the UN Hau Do Suan questioned the UN report’s findings, reiteratin­g that Myanmar “did not accept the mandate of the mission because we have our concern about the mission’s impartiali­ty.”

China and Russia, holding veto powers as permanent members of the Security Council, have said they prefer to engage in “dialogue” with Myanmar’s leadership to resolve the conflict.

The ICC is soon due to rule on whether it has jurisdicti­on over the crisis because it spilled across the border into Bangladesh.

Myanmar is not a signatory to the court.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? This file photo shows Rohingya refugees carrying a woman over a canal after crossing the Naf River as they flee violence in Myanmar to reach Bangladesh in Palongkhal­i near Ukhia.
— AFP photo This file photo shows Rohingya refugees carrying a woman over a canal after crossing the Naf River as they flee violence in Myanmar to reach Bangladesh in Palongkhal­i near Ukhia.
 ??  ?? The United Nations Security Council meets to discuss the situation in Myanmar at the UN headquarte­rs in New York. — Reuters photo
The United Nations Security Council meets to discuss the situation in Myanmar at the UN headquarte­rs in New York. — Reuters photo

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