Eastern Eye (UK)

Rohingya refugees will testify against Myanmar

COURT IN ARGENTINA TO BUILD A GENOCIDE CASE

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ROHINGYA refugees expelled from Myanmar in a bloody crackdown are to testify in court for the first time on Tuesday (17) to urge a full judicial investigat­ion into allegation­s of war crimes committed against them.

A military campaign in Myanmar in 2017 is believed to have killed thousands and forced some 750,000 members of the Muslim minority to flee to refugee camps in Bangladesh, bringing accounts of rape, murder and arson.

The witnesses will testify remotely to a court in Argentina, which is considerin­g invoking the principle of “universal jurisdicti­on” to bring a case against Myanmar’s leaders for genocide and crimes against humanity.

The legal premise holds that some acts – including war crimes and crimes against humanity – are so horrific they are not specific to one nation and can be tried anywhere.

Argentina’s courts have taken up other universal jurisdicti­on cases in the past, including in relation to exdictator Francisco Franco’s rule in

Spain and the Falun Gong movement in China.

Proceeding­s against Myanmar and its leaders are already under way at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and the UN’s Internatio­nal Court of Justice.

But Tuesday’s hearing “will be the first time... that the Rohingya will have the opportunit­y to tell a court of all the atrocities they suffered”, former UN Special Rapporteur on Myanmar Tomas Ojea said.

Five survivors of sexual violence will testify to the Federal Criminal Appeal Court in Buenos Aires remotely from refugee camps in Bangladesh, according to activist group Burmese Rohingya Organisati­on UK.

“For decades, the Myanmar military has with impunity tried to wipe the Rohingya out as a people,” said Tun Khin, president of the group, which petitioned the Argentine government to open the case.

“With Myanmar both unwilling and

unable to investigat­e itself - especially since the coup - the internatio­nal community must step in and support all justice efforts.”

Myanmar still denies committing genocide, justifying the 2017 operations as a means of rooting out Rohingya militants.

The Myanmar public was largely unsympathe­tic to the Rohingya’s plight, while activists and journalist­s reporting on the issues faced vitriolic abuse online.

 ??  ?? ON THE MOVE: Rohingya
refugees in Bangladesh
ON THE MOVE: Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh

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