Arab News

Suu Kyi won’t back Rohingyas

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UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, last week appealed to Aung San Suu Kyi to “open your eyes, listen, feel with your heart, and please use your moral authority before it is too late.” Prof. Lee was referring to a newly published report by the UN on the risk to the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya still remaining in Myanmar, who were described as being at “serious risk of genocide.”

Is the UN really expecting Suu Kyi to change her views and behave differentl­y at this stage? After she not only remained silent but provided cover for the military in 2016 while it was busy driving out more than 700,000 Rohingya into neighborin­g Bangladesh in a brutal, genocidal campaign.

Suu Kyi’s long history of racism against the Rohingya has been well documented and was further confirmed in former UK Prime Minister David Cameron’s just-released memoirs. When Cameron told her “the world is watching,” her only response was “they are not really Burmese. They are Bangladesh­is,” thus repeating the racist accusation that the Rohingya are illegal interloper­s from Bangladesh and do not belong in Myanmar.

The internatio­nal response to the unfolding events in Myanmar has been paralyzed by the fear that exceedingl­y robust criticism would undermine Suu Kyi’s position in the country, and doing so would hand untrammele­d power back to the erstwhile military junta.

The West watched patiently as more and more Rohingya refugees poured over the border to Bangladesh, in the hope that Suu Kyi would eventually find a way to assert herself and intervene on behalf of the Rohingya. The problem with that patience — in the face of genocide, remember — is the underlying premise that Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, was, deep down, on the side of the Rohingya. There has been scant evidence of Suu Kyi ever having had much concern for this Muslim minority in what she regards as a naturally Buddhist state. But, if ever she had such concern for this minority among her people, now is the time to prove it.

Suu Kyi should be given an opportunit­y to fully redeem herself and her country and live up to the ideals of the Nobel Prize that made her a global human rights icon. There is already a template for exactly what she needs to do to rectify the situation. It is set out in the UN Advisory Commission’s “Final Report,” which was published before the current crisis, under the direction of the late Kofi Annan. The Rohingya need

Suu Kyi to fully implement the recommenda­tions of the Annan report, including granting them full citizenshi­p.

It is time to ensure that what remains of the Rohingya community is protected, and that those who committed this genocide against them be held accountabl­e. Suu Kyi must now turn the tables on the military and help the internatio­nal community bring the perpetrato­rs of genocide to justice — or herself be prosecuted as an accomplice and enabler of genocide. However, I, just like the UN, may be being naive.

 ??  ?? DR. AZEEM IBRAHIM
DR. AZEEM IBRAHIM

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