The Citizen (KZN)

‘War crimes but not genocide’

FINDINGS: MYANMAR PROBE BLAMES INDIVIDUAL SOLDIERS

- Yangon

Military operations from August 2017 forced 740 000 Rohingya to flee.

AMyanmar-appointed panel concluded on Monday that some soldiers are likely to have committed war crimes against its Rohingya Muslim community but the military was not guilty of genocide, findings condemned by rights groups.

The “Independen­t Commission Of Enquiry (ICOE)” released the results of its probe just ahead of a ruling tomorrow by the UN’s top court on whether to impose urgent measures to stop alleged ongoing genocide in Myanmar.

It conceded some security personnel had used disproport­ionate force and committed war crimes and serious human rights violations, including the “killing of innocent villagers and destructio­n of their homes”.

But the crimes did not constitute genocide, the panel decided.

“There is insufficie­nt evidence to argue, much less conclude, that the crimes committed were undertaken with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical (sic), racial or religious group.”

Military operations from August 2017 forced about 740 000 Rohingya to flee over the border into sprawling camps in Bangladesh.

Buddhist-majority Myanmar has always maintained the crackdown by the armed forces, or Tatmadaw, was justified to root out Rohingya insurgents after a series of attacks left a dozen security personnel dead.

But refugees carried consistent accounts of widespread murder, rape, torture and arson with them and have so far largely refused to return for fear of their safety.

This is the furthest any Myanmar investigat­ion so far has gone in accepting atrocities occurred.

But Burmese Rohingya Organisati­on UK dismissed the findings as a “blatant public relations exercise” to deflect attention from the Internatio­nal Court of Justice’s ruling.

“Myanmar’s deeply flawed investigat­ion into human rights abuses in Rakhine State is another attempt to whitewash the Tatmadaw’s brutal violence against the Rohingya,” said spokespers­on Tun Khin.

The report seems to scapegoat individual soldiers rather than place responsibi­lity on the military command, said Phil Robertson from Human Rights Watch, calling for the immediate release of the full report.

Insufficie­nt evidence that crimes were committed to destroy

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