The Sun (Malaysia)

Suu Kyi denies ethnic cleansing of Rohingyas

> Nobel prize winner says term ‘too strong to use’

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YANGON: Aung San Suu Kyi has denied security forces have carried out ethnic cleansing of Rohingyas in Myanmar, speaking to the BBC after the UN rights council agreed to probe allegation­s of rape, murder and torture against the army.

Rights groups say hundreds of the stateless group were killed in a months-long army crackdown following deadly attacks on Myanmar border police posts.

Almost 75,000 Rohingya have fled to neighbouri­ng Bangladesh where they have related grisly accounts of army abuse.

Myanmar’s de facto leader Suu Kyi, a Nobel Laureate whose internatio­nal star as a rights defender is waning over the treatment of the Rohingyas, has not spoken out in defence of the persecuted minority.

She has also not condemned the crackdown, which UN investigat­ors who spoke to escapees said likely amounted to ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.

Instead she has called for space to handle the incendiary issue in a country where the more than one million Rohingyas are widely vilified as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

“I don’t think there is ethnic cleansing going on,” Suu Kyi said in a rare interview televised on Wednesday.

“I think ethnic cleansing is too strong an expression to use for what is happening,” she said.

Most Rohingyas are denied citizenshi­p. Tens of thousands have languished in displaceme­nt camps since 2012 when religious violence tore through the state of Rakhine, which borders Bangladesh.

The latest violence unfurled in October last year when scores of armed militants claiming to represent Rohingya rights ambushed police border posts, prompting the army to lockdown a remote wedge of land during extensive air and ground “clearance” operations.

Last month the UN rights council agreed to send a fact-finding mission to examine allegation­s of torture, murder and rape allegedly committed by troops.

Suu Kyi told the BBC there was “a lot of hostility” in Rakhine.

“It is not just a matter of ethnic cleansing. It is a matter of people on different sides of a divide, and this divide we are trying to close up. As best as possible and not to widen it further,” she said.

Myanmar has launched its own domestic probe into possible crimes in Rakhine and appointed former UN chief Kofi Annan to head a commission tasked with healing longsimmer­ing religious divisions. – AFP

 ?? AFPPIX ?? Emergency service personnel watch as the double-decker tram is lifted by crane after it tipped over in Hong Kong early yesterday.
AFPPIX Emergency service personnel watch as the double-decker tram is lifted by crane after it tipped over in Hong Kong early yesterday.

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