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Human rights group accuses Myanmar of committing crimes against humanity

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YANGON — Myanmar is committing crimes against humanity in its campaign against Muslim insurgents in Rakhine state, Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday, calling for the United Nations Security Council to impose sanctions and an arms embargo.

The UN refugee agency called for a redoubling of internatio­nal aid for the 480,000 refugees — 60% of them children — who have fled to Bangladesh since Aug. 25 to escape the violence.

A Myanmar government spokesman rejected the accusation of crimes against humanity, saying there was no evidence.

The US government, which has worked hard to establish close ties with Myanmar’s civilian government in the face of competitio­n from strategic rival China, did not comment directly on the Human Rights Watch charge.

However a spokeswoma­n said: “We are closely monitoring the situation and the facts on the ground as they continue to unfold.”

“We are deeply troubled by reports of extrajudic­ial killings, sexual violence, and burning of Rohingya villages by security forces and non-Rohingya individual­s.”

US Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan told the US House Foreign Affairs Committee that the US ambassador to Myanmar would visit the border of Rakhine, to look into the crisis “within the next two days.”

Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi invited foreign diplomats to visit the area in a speech last week. Myanmar has also rejected UN accusation­s that its forces are engaged in ethnic cleansing against Rohingya Muslims in response to coordinate­d attacks by Rohingya insurgents on the security forces on Aug. 25.

Refugees arriving in Bangladesh have accused the army and Buddhist vigilantes of trying to drive Rohingya out of Buddhistma­jority Myanmar.

“The Burmese military is brutally expelling the Rohingya from northern Rakhine state,” said James Ross, legal and policy director at New York-based Human Rights Watch.

“The massacres of villagers and mass arson driving people from their homes are all crimes against humanity.”

Myanmar, also known as Burma, says its forces are fighting insurgents responsibl­e for attacking the police and the army, killing civilians and torching villages.

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court defines crimes against humanity as acts including murder, torture, rape and deportatio­n “when committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population, with knowledge of the attack.”

Human Rights Watch said its research, supported by satellite imagery, had found crimes of deportatio­n, forced population transfers, murder and rape.

The UN Security Council and concerned countries should impose targeted sanctions and an arms embargo, it said.

Government spokesman Zaw Htay said no Myanmar government had ever been as committed to the promotion of rights as the current one. “Accusation­s without any strong evidence are dangerous,” he told Reuters. “It makes it diff icult for the government to handle things.”

A coordinati­ng group of aid organizati­ons said the total number of refugees who have fled to Bangladesh since Aug. 25 had been revised up to 480,000 after 35,000 people in two camps were found to have been missed out of the previous tally.

“The massive influx of people seeking safety has been outpacing capacities to respond, and the situation for these refugees has still not stabilized,” Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR), said in Geneva.

“UNHCR is calling for a redoubling of the internatio­nal humanitari­an response in Bangladesh.”

The violence and the refugee exodus is the biggest crisis the government of Nobel peace laureate Suu Kyi has faced since it came to power last year in a transition from nearly 50 years of military rule.

Myanmar regards the Rohingya as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and bouts of suppressio­n and violence have flared for decades. Most Rohingya are stateless.

Ms. Suu Kyi has faced scathing criticism and calls for her Nobel prize to be withdrawn.

She denounced rights violations in an address to the nation last week and vowed that abusers would be prosecuted. She also said the government was trying to determine why so many people fled.

Seven UN experts, including Yanghee Lee, special rapporteur on rights in Myanmar, called on Suu Kyi to meet Rohingya to hear for herself the reasons for their exodus.

“No one chooses, especially not in the hundreds of thousands, to leave their homes and ancestral land, no matter how poor the conditions, to flee to a strange land to live under plastic sheets and in dire circumstan­ces, except in life- threatenin­g situations,” they said.

Ms. Suu Kyi has little, if any, control over the security forces under a military-drafted constituti­on that also bars her from the presidency and gives the military veto power over political reform.

Myanmar has seen a surge of Buddhist nationalis­m in recent years, and the public is supportive of the campaign against the insurgents.

Since Sunday, the army has unearthed the bodies of 45 members of Myanmar’s small Hindu community who authoritie­s say were killed by the insurgents soon after the violence erupted. The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, which has claimed attacks on the security forces since October, denied killing the villagers. Some Hindus have fled to Bangladesh. Others have fled to Myanmar towns, accusing the insurgents of attacking them on suspicion of being government spies. —

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