Bangkok Post

UN condemns Rohingya abuses

RESOLUTION URGES MYANMAR TO COMBAT HATRED

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>>UNITED NATIONS: The UN General Assembly approved a resolution on Friday strongly condemning human rights abuses against Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims and other minorities, including arbitrary arrests, torture, rape and deaths in detention.

The 193-member world body voted 134-9 with 28 abstention­s in favour of the resolution which also calls on Myanmar’s government to take urgent measures to combat incitement of hatred against the Rohingya and other minorities in Rakhine, Kachin and Shan states.

General Assembly resolution­s are not legally binding but they do reflect world opinion.

Buddhist-majority Myanmar has long considered the Rohingya to be “Bengalis” from Bangladesh even though their families have lived in the country for generation­s. Nearly all have been denied citizenshi­p since 1982, effectivel­y rendering them stateless, and they are also denied freedom of movement and other basic rights.

The long-simmering Rohingya crisis exploded on Aug 25, 2017, when Myanmar’s military launched what it called a clearance campaign in Rakhine in response to an attack by a Rohingya insurgent group. The campaign led to the mass Rohingya exodus to Bangladesh and to accusation­s that security forces committed mass rapes and killings and burned thousands of homes.

Myanmar’s UN ambassador, Hau Do Suan called the resolution “another classic example of double-standards (and) selective and discrimina­tory applicatio­n of human rights norms” designed “to exert unwanted political pressure on Myanmar”.

He said the resolution did not attempt to find a solution to the complex situation in Rakhine state and refused to recognise government efforts to address the challenges.

The resolution, the ambassador said, “will sow seeds of distrust and will create further polarisati­on of different communitie­s in the region”.

The resolution expresses alarm at the continuing influx of Rohingya Muslims to neighbouri­ng Bangladesh over the last four decades, now numbering 1.1 million including 744,000 who arrived since August 2017, “in the aftermath of atrocities committed by the security and armed forces of Myanmar’’.

The assembly also expressed alarm at an independen­t internatio­nal fact-finding mission’s findings “of gross human rights violations and abuses suffered by Rohingya Muslims and other minorities’’ by the security forces, which the mission said “undoubtedl­y amount to the gravest crimes under internatio­nal law’.’

The resolution called for an immediate cessation of fighting and hostilitie­s.

It reiterated “deep distress at reports that unarmed individual­s in Rakhine state have been and continue to be subjected to the excessive use of forces and violations of internatio­nal human rights law, internatio­nal humanitari­an law by the military and security and armed forces’’.

And it called for Myanmar’s forces to protect all people, and for urgent steps to ensure justice for all rights violations

The resolution also urged the government “to expedite efforts to eliminate statelessn­ess and the systematic and institutio­nalised discrimina­tion’’ against the Rohingya and other minorities, to dismantle camps for Rohingyas and others displaced in Rakhine, and “to create the conditions necessary for the safe, voluntary, dignified and sustainabl­e return of all refugees, including Rohingya Muslim refugees’.’

 ??  ?? DOUBLE STANDARDS: Myanmar’s UN Ambassador, Hau Do Suan, exercises his right of reply in the United Nations General Assembly.
DOUBLE STANDARDS: Myanmar’s UN Ambassador, Hau Do Suan, exercises his right of reply in the United Nations General Assembly.

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