The Press

Suu Kyi ‘complicit’ in slaughter: UN

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MYANMAR: The United Nations investigat­or of human rights in Myanmar has accused Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi of ‘‘complicity’’ in the slaughter of Rohingya Muslims, an event which has the ‘‘hallmarks of genocide’’.

Yanghee Lee, a leading child rights expert appointed to the UN post in 2014, said it is possible that Myanmar’s defacto leader could eventually face charges relating to genocide or crimes against humanity in an internatio­nal tribunal.

‘‘She cannot not be accountabl­e,’’ Lee told Britain’s Channel 4 News.

‘‘Complicity is also part of accountabi­lity,’’ she said.

In the UN’s strongest condemnati­on yet of the one-time hero of democratic rights, Lee said Suu Kyi is either in denial or far removed from the Myanmar military’s atrocities against Rohingya in the country’s Rakhine State, including mass killings, rapes and the burnings of children, which have been extensivel­y documented.

‘‘I’m afraid she has been a role model for everyone, including me, and an angel,’’ Lee said.

‘‘And it is really disappoint­ing.’’ Lee said Suu Kyi should never have been put on pedestal.

‘‘She was never a Goddess of democracy and human rights … she was a politician and is still a politician,’’ she said. Suu Kyi, the 72 year-old daughter of Myanmar’s independen­ce hero Aung San, has borne the brunt of internatio­nal outcries over the atrocities and been stripped of a welter of honours from her days fighting for democracy.

On Friday Thailand awarded Myanmar’s army chief Min Aung Hlaing a royal decoration despite ordering a brutal military crackdown on Rohingya insurgents last August that prompted almost 700,000 of the stateless minority to flee to squalid refugee camps in Bangladesh.

Min Aung Hlaing posted a photograph to his official Facebook page of him smiling alongside his Thai counterpar­t as he received the ‘‘Knight Grand First Class of the Most Exalted Order of the White Elephant.’’ in Bangkok.

The Royal Thai Armed Forces said in a statement the award was to ‘‘show the long and close relations’’ between the two countries.

A Thai Defence Ministry spokesman said ‘‘it’s tradition to give a royal decoration to supreme commanders of foreign countries.’’

Thailand also invited Myanmar as observers to military exercises in Thailand, prompting criticism from rights groups who questioned why a military accused of ethnic cleansing was being given access.

Despite overwhelmi­ng evidence against Myanmar soldiers, the Turnbull government has also refused to cut military ties with Myanmar or to condemn its generals.

The ties include the hosting of two dozen Myanmar military officers for training in Australia, as well as providing other support.

In the interview with British TV Lee, who was banned from visiting Myanmar in January, after making previous visits, said conditions are not safe for almost one million Rohingya in Bangladesh to go home.

"I'm afraid she has been a role model for everyone, including me, and an angel."

Yanghee Lee, UN human rights investigat­or

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