The Sun (Malaysia)

OIC seeks global pressure on Myanmar

> Committee formed to address Rohingya crisis

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DHAKA: Islamic foreign ministers on Sunday launched a campaign to mobilise internatio­nal support for action against Myanmar over the Rohingya refugee crisis, officials said.

Foreign ministers and diplomats of the 53-member Organisati­on of Islamic Conference (OIC) set up a campaign committee during two days of talks in the Bangladesh capital Dhaka.

OIC secretary-general Yousef bin Ahmed Al-Othaimeen called the move a key step towards ending a crisis caused by the exodus of about 700,000 Rohingya from Myanmar into camps in Bangladesh.

He said the new committee would “mobilise and coordinate internatio­nal political support for accountabi­lity for human rights violations against the Rohingya community”.

“This is very important. This is one of the concrete steps that has been taken to alleviate the problem for our (Rohingya) brothers and sisters,” he said.

A military campaign launched in Myanmar’s Rakhine in August last year set off the massive influx of the Muslim minority into Bangladesh where they joined 300,000 refugees already living in squalid camps following previous violence.

The United Nations and the United States have said the crackdown amounted to ethnic cleansing.

The Myanmar army has said it only targeted militants.

Rohingya civilians have told of murders and rapes as they fled.

They say the army burned hundreds of Rohingya villages to the ground.

Al-Othaimeen said Muslim nations had to “pressure the internatio­nal community”.

“This is not religious, this is human basic rights of our brothers and sisters in the last 50 years,” he said.

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court prosecutor has already called for the tribunal to rule on whether it can investigat­e the allegation­s of mass rape and killings.

Bangladesh has put huge diplomatic effort into pressuring Myanmar to take back the refugees in safety.

The two nations signed a repatriati­on deal in November, but nobody has since returned.

The Rohingya have been persecuted for decades in Myanmar, where they are regarded as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and denied citizenshi­p.

Last month, a UN Security Council delegation visiting the camps called for the safe return of the Rohingya and an end to discrimina­tion against them.

Canada’s foreign minister Chrystia Freeland also called for “accountabi­lity” when she toured the Rohingya camps this week.

Bangladesh foreign minister A. H. Mahmood Ali said the OIC meeting had urged “strong action against the Myanmar government” on the Rohingya crisis. – AFP

 ?? AFPPIX ?? ... Russian military personnel parade past Red Square during the general rehearsal of the Victory Day parade in Moscow on Sunday. Russia marks the 73rd anniversar­y of the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in World War II on Wednesday.
AFPPIX ... Russian military personnel parade past Red Square during the general rehearsal of the Victory Day parade in Moscow on Sunday. Russia marks the 73rd anniversar­y of the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in World War II on Wednesday.

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