New Straits Times

‘Rohingya crisis could spark regional conflict’

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JAKARTA: The United Nations human rights chief warned yesterday that possible acts of “genocide and ethnic cleansing” against Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslim minority could fuel a religious-based conflict that spreads beyond the country’s borders.

“Myanmar faces a very serious crisis — with a potentiall­y severe impact on the security of the region,” UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said here.

His remarks follow the publicatio­n of a report last week about mass graves of Rohingya i n Myanmar’s crisis-hit Rakhine State, where government troops have been accused of waging an ethnic cleansing campaign against the minority.

Nearly 700,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since last August.

Myanmar denied the mass grave report and wider allegation­s of rights abuses, saying it launched a proportion­ate crackdown on Rohingya rebels.

But it has blocked reporters and UN investigat­ors from independen­tly accessing the conflict zone and investigat­ing refugee claims about a genocide.

Zeid yesterday said Myanmar had enjoyed strong growth, including a focus on socio-economic developmen­t in the Rakhine region, but that this could not mask “institutio­nalised discrimina­tion” against the minority.

The UN rights chief is due to meet with Indonesian President Joko Widodo, as well as top government officials and rights groups during his three-day visit.

Among the issues expected to be discussed is a crackdown on the LGBT community in Indonesia.

Parliament is set to pass a longdorman­t bill to make sex outside marriage illegal. AFP

 ??  ?? Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein

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