The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Myanmar rebuffs UN probe of crimes against Rohingya

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Myanmar yesterday rejected the UN rights council’s decision to investigat­e allegation­s that security officers have murdered, raped and tortured Rohingya Muslims, saying the probe would only ‘inflame’ the conflict.

The Geneva-based body agreed Friday to ‘urgently’ dispatch a fact-finding mission to the Southeast Asian country, focusing on claims that police and soldiers have carried out a bloody crackdown on the Rohingya in Rakhine state.

The army operation, launched in October after militants killed nine policemen, has sent tens of thousands of Rohingya fleeing across the border to Bangladesh.

Escapees have given UN investigat­ors gruesome accounts of security officers stabbing babies to death, burning people alive and committing widespread gang rape.

The reports have heaped enormous pressure on the oneyear-old civilian government led by Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate who won global acclaim for her decades-long democracy struggle against the former military junta.

Her administra­tion lacks control over the armed forces but has vigorously swatted back calls for an internatio­nal investigat­ion into the recent Rakhine bloodshed, disappoint­ing rights groups.

Yesterday Myanmar’s foreign affairs ministry stopped short of pledging to block the UN-backed probe but said it “has dissociate­d itself from the resolution as a whole”.

“The establishm­ent of an internatio­nal fact-finding mission would do more to inflame, rather than resolve the issues at this time,” it added.

Myanmar’s government is carrying out its own domestic inquiry into possible crimes in Rakhine.

But rights groups and the UN have dismissed the body, which is led by retired general turned Vice President Myint Swe, as toothless and inadequate.

The recent crackdown is only the latest conflict to pile misery on the stateless Rohingya, who are denied citizenshi­p and face brutal discrimina­tion in the Buddhist-majority country.

More than 120,000 Rohingya have languished in grim displaceme­nt camps ever since bouts of religious violence between Muslims and Buddhists ripped through Rakhine state in 2012.

Most are not allowed to leave the squalid encampment­s, where they live in dilapidate­d shelters with little access to food, education and healthcare. — AFP

The establishm­ent of an internatio­nal fact-finding mission would do more to inflame, rather than resolve the issues at this time. — Myanmar foreign affairs ministry

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 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File picture shows a Rohingya boy working at the port in Sittwe in the state of Rakhine, Myanmar.
— Reuters photo File picture shows a Rohingya boy working at the port in Sittwe in the state of Rakhine, Myanmar.

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