Gulf News

A Nobel Peace Prize winner’s shame

Suu Kyi is presiding over an ethnic cleansing in which Myanmar villages are burned, women raped and children butchered

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or the last three weeks, Buddhistma­jority Myanmar has systematic­ally slaughtere­d civilians belonging to the Rohingya Muslim minority, forcing 270,000 to flee to neighbouri­ng Bangladesh — with Myanmar soldiers shooting at them even as they cross the border.

“The Buddhists are killing us with bullets,” Noor Symon, a woman carrying her son, told a Times reporter. “They burned houses and tried to shoot us. They killed my husband by bullet.”

Aung San Suu Kyi, the widow who defied Myanmar’s dictators, endured a total of 15 years of house arrest and led a campaign for democracy, was a hero of modern times. Yet today Suu Kyi, as the effective leader of Myanmar, is chief apologist for this ethnic cleansing, as the country oppresses the darker-skinned Rohingya and denounces them as terrorists and illegal immigrants. And “ethnic cleansing” may be an understate­ment. Even before the latest wave of terror, a Yale study had suggested that the brutality toward the Rohingya might qualify as genocide. The US Holocaust Museum has also warned that a genocide against the Rohingya may be looming.

For shame, Suu Kyi. We honoured you and fought for your freedom — and now you use that freedom to condone the butchery of your own people? “My two nephews, their heads were cut off,” one Rohingya survivor told Smith. “One was 6 years old and the other was 9.”

Other accounts describe soldiers throwing infants into a river to drown, and decapitati­ng a grandmothe­r. Hannah Beech, my Times colleague who has provided outstandin­g coverage from the border, put it this way: “I’ve covered refugee crises before, and this was by far the worst thing that I’ve ever seen.”

It’s not that Suu Kyi is organising the killings (she does not control the military), or that they are entirely one-sided. The latest slaughter began after Rohingya militants attacked police stations and a military base on August 25; the Myanmar security forces responded with scorched-earth fury against Rohingya civilians.

Hundreds are believed to have been killed, but Suu Kyi has not criticised the slaughter. Rather, she blamed internatio­nal aid groups and complained about “a huge iceberg of misinforma­tion” aiming to help “the terrorists” — presumably meaning the Rohingya.

When a Rohingya woman bravely recounted how her husband had been shot dead and how she and three teenage girls had been gang-raped by soldiers, Suu Kyi’s Facebook page mocked the claims as “fake rape.”

“We applauded Aung San Suu Kyi when she received her Nobel Prize because she symbolised courage in the face of tyranny,” noted Ken Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. “Now that she’s in power, she symbolises cowardly complicity in the deadly tyranny being visited on the Rohingya.” Myanmar tries to keep foreigners out of the Rohingya areas, but I’ve managed to get there twice in the last few years, and even then Rohingya were confined to concentrat­ion camps or to remote villages. Many were systematic­ally denied medical care, and children were barred from public schools. It’s a 21st-century apartheid.

I saw a 23-year-old woman, Minura Begum, lose her baby because she needed a doctor; I met a brilliant 15-year-old girl whose dream of becoming a doctor is collapsing because she is confined to a concentrat­ion camp; I met a 2-year-old boy, Hirol, who was starving after his mother died for lack of medical care.

Suu Kyi and other Myanmar officials refuse to use the word “Rohingya,” seeing them as just illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, but that’s absurd. A document from 1799 shows that even then, the Rohingya was well-establishe­d.

We know that the Myanmar government responds to pressure, because that’s what won Suu Kyi her freedom. Yet there has been far too little outcry for the Rohingya; bravo to Pope Francis for being an exception among world leaders and speaking up for them. A basic lesson of history: Ignoring a possible genocide only encourages the persecutor­s.

There are petitions online calling for Suu Kyi to be stripped of her Nobel. In fact, there is no mechanism to take away the prize, but I do wish that the prize money could be recovered and go to feed the widows and orphans being created on her watch.

Nicholas Kristof is an American journalist, author and a winner of two Pulitzer Prizes.

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