New Straits Times

Rohingya need protection now

-

GENOCIDE: By being silent, all are complicit in the ongoing atrocities, writes Dr Nancy Hudson-Rodd

ROHINGYA have been persecuted for decades by various military regimes, now to the point of exterminat­ion, currently under a quasi-democratic government. The 2008 constituti­on ensured military control of three main ministries of defence, home and border affairs, guaranteed 25 per cent of the positions at regional, state and national government­s, and the right to take control of the country during a crisis. The constituti­on grants immunity to past and current generals for any crimes they may be charged with.

In a brilliant military tactical decision, Aung San Suu Kyi, married to a foreigner and denied the right to become president by the constituti­on, was granted a special title of state counsellor. Suu Kyi is the democratic front-piece, visiting world leaders, seeking their investment­s, dropping of economic sanctions and silence on Rohingya rights to exist. She has been silent and nonsupport­ive of Rohingya freedom despite requests from fellow Nobel laureates Desmond Tutu, the Dalai Lama and United States President Barack Obama. The word Rohingya is illegal in Myanmar.

Nearly 150,000 illegalise­d, dehumanise­d Rohingya remain segregated in more than 60 internally displaced camps, isolated behind barbwire and guarded by machine-gunwieldin­g security troops since 2012.

Current military and security forces are attacking the majority of Rohingya who live outside camps in secured towns and villages divided into “security grids” described by human rights researcher­s as “vast, open prisons”.

“Here, without freedom of movement, farmers can’t go to their fields, fishermen can’t go to the sea, traders can’t go to markets, students can’t go to university and sick people can’t go to the nearest hospital,” said Pierre Peron, spokesman for the United Nations humanitari­an aid operation.

Suu Kyi, on a state visit to India when she heard of the Oct 9 border post attacks, urged the military to act within internatio­nal law in their operations. This is a hollow request. The army acts with impunity, committing atrocities for decades, with no accountabi­lity.

The Malaysian Maritime Enforcemen­t Agency (MMEA) announced that it would protect the 200 Rohingya refugees expected to land in Langkawi soon.

All four boats are believed to be carrying Rohingya refugees who are fleeing their homeland following the genocide which is still taking place in their country. It is also believed that no fees were charged on the refugees as they are all fleeing their homeland to save their own lives as well as their family members’ (MMEA, Oct 10, 2016).

As government forces cracked down on Rohingya, reports emerged of military dug mass graves inside a Muslim cemetery in which Rohingya bodies were dumped, 30,000 Rohingya hiding in rice fields, women and girls being raped by soldiers, houses and whole villages destroyed. The government uses helicopter gunships to support ground troops, supplement­ed by local Rakhine men given guns to hunt down Rohingya civilians. The military confirms 130 people have been killed.

The National League for Democracy-led government flatly denied accusation­s by internatio­nal rights groups of human rights abuses and extrajudic­ial killings by the security forces. The military continues unfettered with their long-term agenda of Rohingya genocide.

There is still no internatio­nal response to protect the Rohingya, despite repeated UN Responsibi­lity to Protect alerts: mass atrocities are occurring and urgent action is needed. Stateless Rohingya in Myanmar face systematic persecutio­n that poses an existentia­l threat to the community.

Urgent requests by various UN authoritie­s for the military to not harm civilians and permit humanitari­an aid to be delivered to displaced people are ignored.

The government of Myanmar denies the extent of damage inflicted on communitie­s despite satellite images showing 1,250 buildings destroyed and arson attacks against five Rohingya villages in Maungdaw, but accused the Rohingya of burning their own homes.

Humanitari­an organisati­ons, since Oct 9, were denied access to the 160,000 Rohingya in desperate need of food, life-saving medical assistance, clean water and other forms of aid, while the military destroys food supplies.

Unless urgent action is taken, more Rohingya people will die of starvation than from bullets and bombs fired by the Myanmar army.

The Myanmar government and military will be responsibl­e for a slow motion massacre using hunger and disease as their weapons. Children, pregnant women and the elderly are the most vulnerable to starvation. What kind of government deliberate­ly targets children with starvation like this and how can the internatio­nal community stand by and let this happen (Tun Khin, Burmese Rohingya Organisati­on UK, Nov 24, 2016)?

A collective national memory that denies full humanity to the Rohingya has allowed for varying levels of expulsion, from land confiscati­on to destructio­n of schools, places of worship and businesses, to removal from public workplaces and community markets, denying them access to farming, healthcare, universiti­es, or to escape as refugees, and forcible segregatio­n in internally displaced camps, to killing, to genocide.

Professor Penny Green, School of Law, Queen Mary University, London, concluded genocide is taking place in Myanmar, and the Internatio­nal State Crime Initiative warned of the serious and present danger of the annihilati­on of the country’s Rohingya population in the report, Countdown to Annihilati­on: Genocide in Myanmar 2015.

Genocide is defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention of the Crime of Genocide as “acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group”. As signatory to the convention, Australia has an obligation under the convention to take meaningful steps to prevent genocide.

Australia, the wealthiest country in the region, should offer immediate asylum to Rohingya fleeing assault.

It could send its formidable border force brigade and navy to rescue Rohingya from boats drifting in the Bay of Bengal. It could loudly condemn the atrocious attacks on the Rohingya people.

Western government­s have shielded the offending Myanmar government’s abusive policies and practices, cloaked in terms of democratis­ation and political reform, for too long. By remaining silent, all are complicit in the ongoing genocide. The Rohingya need immediate protection.

The writer is

 ??  ?? A satellite image taken by DigitalGlo­be and distribute­d by Human Rights Watch recently showing the destructio­n in the village of Wa Peik in Maungdaw district, Myanmar. AP pic
A satellite image taken by DigitalGlo­be and distribute­d by Human Rights Watch recently showing the destructio­n in the village of Wa Peik in Maungdaw district, Myanmar. AP pic

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia