The Borneo Post

Lawmakers urge US to call Rohingya campaign genocide

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WASHINGTON: Leaders of the US House of Representa­tives Foreign Affairs Committee called on the Trump administra­tion on Wednesday to declare the Myanmar military’s campaign against the country’s Rohingya Muslim minority a genocide, days after a State Department report stopped short of that descriptio­n.

“Making a formal determinat­ion of genocide must be the next step for the US,” Representa­tive Ed Royce, the committee’s chairman, told a hearing on the issue. “Defining these atrocities for what they are is critical to building internatio­nal public awareness - and support - to stop them.”

The US Department of State, which would make the determinat­ion, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Royce’s statement at the hearing.

Royce held the hearing, titled ‘Genocide Against the Burmese Rohingya’, just two days after the State Department released a report finding that the military in Myanmar, also known as Burma, waged a ‘well-planned and coordinate­d’ campaign of mass killings, gang rapes and other atrocities against the Rohingya.

But the report, which could be used to justify further US sanctions against Myanmar authoritie­s, did not describe the actions as genocide or crimes against humanity.

US officials said use of language that stopped short of genocide was the subject of fierce debate within the administra­tion that delayed the report for nearly a month. United Nations investigat­ors issued a report a month ago accusing Myanmar’s military of acting with ‘genocidal intent’.

Representa­tive Eliot Engel, the top committee Democrat, said the administra­tion should take action, such as referring the matter to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court. The ICC said earlier this month it had begun an examinatio­n of whether the alleged forced deportatio­ns of Rohingya could

Making a formal determinat­ion of genocide must be the next step for the US. Ed Royce, US House of Representa­tives Foreign Affairs Committee representa­tive

constitute war crimes or crimes against humanity.

Many members of Congress, including President Donald Trump’s fellow Republican­s as well as Democrats, have called for a stronger response to the crisis, in which almost 700,000 Rohingya have fled to neighborin­g Bangladesh.

A declaratio­n of genocide by the US government could have legal implicatio­ns of committing Washington to stronger punitive measures against Myanmar. This has made some in the Trump administra­tion wary of issuing such an assessment but pressure from members of Congress, particular­ly Republican­s like Royce, could help influence a decision.

Several lawmakers have also asked the administra­tion to press for the release of Reuters reporters Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, who were convicted on Sept 3 under the colonial- era Official Secrets Act in a case seen as a test of democratic freedoms in Myanmar.

The reporters, who pleaded not guilty, said they were handed papers by police shortly before they were detained, and a police witness testified that they had been set up. They had been investigat­ing the killing of 10 Rohingya men and boys as part of a military response to insurgent attacks.

Separately, two members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, ranking Democrat Bob Menendez and Republican Todd Young, asked Secretary of State Mike Pompeo whether he had asked the Office of the Legal Adviser at the State Department for a formal legal determinat­ion of genocide.

“We ask that you provide a formal legal determinat­ion regarding the actions of the Burmese military to Congress without delay,” they said in a letter seen by Reuters yesterday.

The State Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the letter.

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 ?? —AFP photo ?? Greta Van Susteren (left), television news commentato­r with Voice of America, and Stephen Pomper, programme director at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, testify during a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing concerning the genocide against the Burmese Rohingya, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.
—AFP photo Greta Van Susteren (left), television news commentato­r with Voice of America, and Stephen Pomper, programme director at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, testify during a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing concerning the genocide against the Burmese Rohingya, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.

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