Bangkok Post

Tillerson says no Myanmar sanctions yet

US calls for neutral Rohingya probe

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NAY PYI TAW: Washington’s top diplomat said he would not yet push for sanctions against Myanmar over the Rohingya refugee crisis, but he called for an independen­t investigat­ion into “credible” reports that soldiers committed atrocities against the Muslim minority.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was speaking after a one-day stop in Nay Pyi Taw, as global outrage builds over impunity for a military accused of waging an ethnic cleansing campaign against the Rohingya.

Speaking by his side, Myanmar’s de facto civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi hit back at global criticism that she has been silent over the refugee crisis, saying she has instead focused on speech that avoids inflaming sectarian tensions.

More than 600,000 Rohingya have fled the mainly Buddhist country since the military launched a counter-insurgency operation in northern Rakhine state in late August.

While the army insists it has only targeted Rohingya rebels, refugees massing in grim Bangladesh­i camps have described chilling and consistent accounts of widespread murder, rape and arson at the hands of security forces and Buddhist mobs.

Speaking after meetings with the army chief and Ms Suu Kyi, Mr Tillerson said that broad economic sanctions are “not something that I’d think would be advisable at this time”.

“We want to see Myanmar succeed,” he told reporters. “You can’t just impose sanctions and say therefore the crisis is over.”

But he said Washington was “deeply concerned by credible reports of widespread atrocities committed by Myanmar’s security forces and vigilantes” and urged Myanmar to accept an independen­t investigat­ion into those allegation­s, after which individual sanctions could be appropriat­e. “The scenes of what occurred out there are just horrific,” he added.

Both the army and Ms Suu Kyi’s administra­tion have dismissed reports of atrocities and refused to grant entry to UN investigat­ors charged with probing allegation­s of ethnic cleansing. But Washington has been careful to focus blame on the military rather than Ms Suu Kyi, whose civilian administra­tion is in a delicate power-sharing arrangemen­t with the army.

Though she lacks any say in security policy, the Nobel laureate has become a punching bag for rights groups disappoint­ed by her failure to publicly criticise the military or defend Rohingya against rising Islamophob­ia, partly because she was so outspoken during the junta years.

Ms Suu Kyi, who rarely holds press conference­s, addressed those criticisms yesterday.

“I have not been silent... what people mean is what I say is not interestin­g enough,” she told reporters. “What I say is not meant to be exciting, it’s meant to be accurate.”

Her defenders say she must tread lightly to avoid provoking a powerful army that could roll back democratic gains at any time.

The US was a major ally in the democratic opening that eventually led to Ms Suu Kyi taking office after free elections in 2015, ending five decades of military dictatorsh­ip.

Washington rolled back junta-era trade bans and sanctions on military cronies at key points in the transition to encourage progress. But the Rohingya crisis has pushed US lawmakers to propose a renewal of targeted military sanctions, including import bans on a jade trade run mostly by junta-era cronies.

 ?? AP ?? Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi, right, shakes hands with visiting US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson after their press conference at the Foreign Ministry office in Naypyitaw on Wednesday.
AP Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi, right, shakes hands with visiting US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson after their press conference at the Foreign Ministry office in Naypyitaw on Wednesday.

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