The Guardian (USA)

Myanmar's genocide against Rohingya not over, says rights group

- AFP in Yangon

Myanmar is continuing to commit genocide against Rohingya Muslims in breach of orders by the UN’s top court, according to human rights lawyers and activists.

The internatio­nal court of justice (ICJ) in January rejected arguments made personally by Myanmar’s civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, in The Hague and imposed urgent interim measures on the predominan­tly Buddhist nation.

The ICJ ordered Myanmar to cease the commission of genocidal acts, prevent the destructio­n of evidence of crimes against the Rohingya and report back to the UN every six months.

“The genocide is still ongoing,” Tun Khin, president of Burma Rohingya Organisati­on UK, said in a statement on Monday, the deadline for the second report. The group is one of the most prominent Rohingya rights organisati­ons.

“The Myanmar government and military are calculatin­g that they can safely ignore the provisiona­l measures and not face any consequenc­es,” he said.

A brutal military crackdown in 2017 is thought to have killed thousands and forced about 750,000 Rohingya to flee to refugee camps in Bangladesh.

About 600,000 more Rohingya remain in Myanmar, however, stripped of citizenshi­p in what rights activists describe as apartheid conditions.

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

M Arsalan Suleman, the legal counsel working on the case against Myanmar, confirmed on Monday that the country had submitted the report in time.

But activists are urging the ICJ to force the south-east Asian nation to make it public to allow full scrutiny.

“For Rohingya, this lack of transparen­cy is yet another injustice,” said Tun Khin.

Rights groups have condemned the almost absolute exclusion of Rohingya from voting in November’s election and their continued vilificati­on as illegal interloper­s.

“Myanmar has done nothing to address the root causes of discrimina­tion and impunity that give rise to the ongoing risk of genocide against the Rohingya,” said Grant Shubin, legal director of the New York-based Global

Justice Center.

The Rohingya crisis has left the internatio­nal reputation of Myanmar and Aung San Suu Kyi in tatters.

The UN general assembly last week voted overwhelmi­ngly for a draft resolution expressing “grave concern” over serious rights violations against the Rohingya, a decision Myanmar attacked as “intrusive” and “illegitima­te”.

The country has conceded that some soldiers might have used “disproport­ionate” force in the 2017 crackdown, but insists they will be investigat­ed and prosecuted by Myanmar’s criminal justice system.

In legal proceeding­s separate from the ICJ case, the internatio­nal criminal court last year opened an investigat­ion into the persecutio­n of the Rohingya.

A case has also been filed in Argentina under the principle of universal jurisdicti­on, which allows war crimes and crimes against humanity to be tried anywhere.

 ?? Photograph: Shwe Paw Mya Tin/ Reuters ?? Voters in Yangon this month. Rohingya citizens of Myanmar are not allowed to participat­e in elections.
Photograph: Shwe Paw Mya Tin/ Reuters Voters in Yangon this month. Rohingya citizens of Myanmar are not allowed to participat­e in elections.

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