The Sun (Malaysia)

Army chief defends Rakhine crackdown

-

YANGON: Myanmar’s army chief defended a military crackdown in Rakhine state yesterday after the UN pledged to probe claims security forces carried out a campaign of killing and torture against Rohingya Muslims there.

Almost 75,000 people from the persecuted minority have escaped to Bangladesh after the military launched operations in the north of the restive state to find Rohingya militants who raided police border posts in October.

UN investigat­ors believe security forces may have committed crimes against humanity.

Last week the UN Human Rights Council agreed to dispatch an independen­t internatio­nal fact-finding mission, with a view to “ensuring full accountabi­lity for perpetrato­rs and justice for victims”.

Myanmar has long faced criticism for its treatment of the more than one million Rohingyas who live in Rakhine.

They are rejected as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh or “Bengalis” despite many living there for generation­s.

Speaking to crowds assembled in the capital for armed forces day, army chief Min Aung Hlaing yesterday defended the military campaign.

“The Bengalis in Rakhine state are not the Myanmar nationalit­ies but the immigrants,” he said, according to an official translatio­n.

“The terrorist attacks which took place in October 2016 resulted in political interferen­ces.”

Myanmar’s civilian government led by Aung San Suu Kyi has meanwhile rebuffed the UN probe, saying any internatio­nal fact-finding mission “would do more to inflame, rather than resolve, the issues at this time”.

The country’s powerful military until recently ruled Myanmar with an iron fist and built up a notorious reputation for rights abuses, especially when conducting operations against restive ethnic insurgents.

Almost all Rohingyas are denied citizenshi­p and forced to live in apartheidl­ike conditions, while tens of thousands of them have been confined to dire camps since violence drove them from their homes in 2012.

This month a commission led by former UN chief Kofi Annan to resolve issues in Rakhine recommende­d the camps be closed and said restrictio­ns on freedom of movement should be lifted. – AFP

 ?? REUTERSPIX ?? ... A law enforcemen­t officer climbs on a lamp pole to detain opposition supporters during a rally in Moscow on Sunday. About 700 people including top Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny were arrested as thousands of Russians defied bans to stage protests...
REUTERSPIX ... A law enforcemen­t officer climbs on a lamp pole to detain opposition supporters during a rally in Moscow on Sunday. About 700 people including top Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny were arrested as thousands of Russians defied bans to stage protests...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia