Los Angeles Times

U. S. concern over Myanmar abuses

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NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar — Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Wednesday that the U. S. is deeply concerned by “credible reports” of atrocities committed by Myanmar’s security forces and called for an independen­t investigat­ion into a humanitari­an crisis in which hundreds of thousands of Muslim Rohingya have f led to Bangladesh.

Speaking at a joint news conference with leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar’s capital, Tillerson said the U. S. would consider individual sanctions against people found responsibl­e for the violence, but he would not advise “broad- based economic sanctions” against the entire country.

“All of that has to be evi- dence- based,” Tillerson said. “If we have credible informatio­n that we believe to be very reliable that certain individual­s were responsibl­e for certain acts that we f ind unacceptab­le, then targeted sanctions on individual­s very well may be appropriat­e.”

Tillerson’s one- day visit comes as a new report said there is “mounting evidence” of genocide against the Rohingya in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, where a government security operation has caused nearly 620,000 Rohingya to f lee to neighborin­g Bangladesh.

Tillerson also met with Myanmar’s powerful military chief, Min Aung Hlaing, who is in charge of operations in Rakhine.

A senior U. S. State Department official said Tuesday that Tillerson would use the visit to “express concerns over the displaceme­nt and violence and insecurity affecting Rohingya population­s and other local population­s and discuss ways to help Burma stakeholde­rs implement commitment­s aimed at ending the crisis and charting productive ways forward.”

Myanmar is also known as Burma.

Though Suu Kyi has been the de facto head of Myanmar’s civilian government since her party swept elections in 2015, she is limited in her control of the country by a constituti­on written under the military government that ruled for decades. The military is in charge of the operations in northern Rakhine, and ending them is not up to Suu Kyi.

Still, Suu Kyi has faced widespread criticism for not speaking out in defense of the Rohingya. At Wednesday’s news conference, Suu Kyi denied she had been silent on the issue, saying she had personally commented on the situation and issued statements through her office.

“I haven’t been silent,” she said. “What people mean is what I say is not interestin­g enough. But what I say is not meant to be exciting. It’s meant to be accurate. And it’s aimed at creating more harmony and a better future for everybody. Not setting people against each other.”

But United Nations human rights chief Zeid Raad Hussein said he was “hugely disappoint­ed” in Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, noting that he had appealed to her after a smaller- scale f light of Rohingya in October “to use all her emotional standing and moral standing inside the country to confront the military and put an end to this.”

“Evidently, she was unable to do that, and now she speaks in compassion­ate terms,” he said in response to a question after a lecture at Columbia University on Tuesday.

Hussein said he fears the Rohingya who have f led to Bangladesh since Aug. 25 won’t be able to return “because the operations were so systematic, so organized, so well- planned, that there was intent involved.”

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