Bangkok Post

Fresh case against Myanmar junta

Refugees file criminal report in Germany

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BERLIN: A group of people from Myanmar have filed a criminal complaint in Germany accusing their country’s military of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity, a rights organisati­on said yesterday.

The case was lodged with Germany’s Federal Public Prosecutor General under the principle of universal jurisdicti­on, which allows the prosecutio­n of certain grave crimes regardless of where they took place, and has been used to try Syrians over atrocities committed during the civil war.

The 16 complainan­ts live in several countries, including Myanmar, and are drawn from a cross-section of the country’s numerous ethnic groups — including Rohingya, the dominant Burman and minority Chin communitie­s.

Their accounts date from 2017, when the country was run by a civilian government, to 2021, after the coup that brought the current junta to power.

“They [the army] don’t think of us as people and treat us like animals”, said Thi Da, a 35-year-old ethnic Chin.

Her husband disappeare­d in September, following the 2021 army coup.

The 215-page complaint alleges the military “systematic­ally killed, raped, tortured, imprisoned, disappeare­d, persecuted, and committed other acts that amount to genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes,” the campaign group Fortify Rights, which is leading the legal case, said in a statement.

The complaint draws on more than 1,000 interviews conducted by Fortify Rights since 2013, as well as leaked documents and informatio­n from the Myanmar army and deserters, said the rights group.

It alleges that senior military officials “knew about their subordinat­es’ crimes, and failed to take any action to prevent the crimes from happening and to punish the perpetrato­rs”.

The complaint asks the German prosecutor to open an investigat­ion into specific officials and others liable for mass atrocity crimes.

It also addresses the army’s actions during a violent crackdown against the Rohingya in 2017, which forced more than 740,000 to flee.

One Rohingya woman, identified by the initials FK, survived an attack by soldiers and non-Rohingya on her northern Rakhine village in August 2017.

“As a Rohingya woman, I want justice for the genocide so that it does not happen again,” FK said.

Cases are currently being heard by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, and another universal jurisdicti­on case in Argentina for crimes committed during the military crackdown on the Rohingya.

Germany has repeatedly prosecuted atrocities committed abroad, including the war in Syria.

In January last year, a German court jailed a former Syrian colonel for life for overseeing the murder of 27 people as well as the torture of 4,000 others at a Damascus detention centre a decade ago.

 ?? NYT ?? A Rohingya refugee leads his blind son and other family members after crossing the Naf River near Palong Khali, Bangladesh in 2017.
NYT A Rohingya refugee leads his blind son and other family members after crossing the Naf River near Palong Khali, Bangladesh in 2017.

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