Bangkok Post

UN to ‘urgently’ send rights probe to Myanmar

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>> GENEVA: The UN rights council agreed to “urgently” launch an investigat­ion into violations against Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims, including torture, murder and rapes allegedly committed by troops.

The Geneva-based body decided to “dispatch urgently an independen­t internatio­nal fact-finding mission” to Myanmar, particular­ly focused in northern Rahkine state, in a resolution adopted by consensus. The mission must provide an oral update in September and a full report by this time next year, said the resolution backed by the European Union.

The decision marks a partial diplomatic victory for Myanmar’s new civilian government led by Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. The United Nations special rapporteur on rights in Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, had urged the council to set up a Commission of Inquiry — the world body’s highest level probe — to document anti-Rohingya violations. But Mr Lee’s call found little support, including among EU powers with major influence in the council.

Earlier this month, Mr Lee told reporters that European leaders wanted to give Ms Suu Kyi’s nascent government more time before launching a top-level inquiry, which may have implicated top military officials in crimes against humanity. Myanmar has been staunchly opposed to a Commission of Inquiry. The country’s rights council ambassador, Htin Lynn, also called the move to send a lower level investigat­ion “unacceptab­le”. Myanmar has launched its own domestic probe into possible crimes in Rahkine and appointed former UN chief Kofi Annan to head a commission tasked with healing long-simmering divisions between Buddhists and Muslims.

Japan, which supported the resolution, said in a statement that the UN should wait until the national probe led by Vice-President U Myint Swe reports and only dispatch internatio­nal investigat­ors “if necessary”.

Rohingya who have fled to Bangladesh have told the UN rights office that soldiers executed babies in front of their mothers in Rakhine state as part of campaign to terrorise the Muslim minority. Myanmar has long faced internatio­nal condemnati­on for its treatment of the Rohingya, whom many in the Buddhist majority reject as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

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