Bangkok Post

Myanmar ‘terminates’ US diplomat’s position

Politician says he quit Rohingya crisis panel

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YANGON: Myanmar on Thursday said it made the decision to dump US diplomat Bill Richardson from an advisory panel on the Rohingya crisis, accusing the veteran politician of a “personal attack” on Aung San Suu Kyi in his stinging resignatio­n letter.

The war of words has heaped embarrassm­ent on Ms Suu Kyi whose star as a rights defender continues to plummet over her failure to speak out for the Rohingya in the face of overwhelmi­ng evidence of the Muslim minority group’s suffering.

Ms Suu Kyi’s office said that during discussion­s in Myanmar’s capital on Jan 22, “it became evident” that Mr Richardson was not interested in providing advice as one of five internatio­nal members of a new panel on a crisis that has seen nearly 690,000 Rohingya flee a military crackdown to Bangladesh.

“In view of the difference of opinion that developed, the government decided that his continued participat­ion on the board would not be in the best interest of all concerned,” the office said in an English statement posted on Facebook.

The Burmese-language version of the post said they decided to “terminate” his participat­ion.

A spokeswoma­n for Mr Richardson said the Myanmar government’s remarks were “not true” and referred requests for comment to the diplomat’s original statement, in which he said he could not in “good conscience” sit on a panel he feared would only “whitewash” the causes of the Rohingya crisis.

He tore into Nobel Laureate Ms Suu Kyi for an “absence of moral leadership” over the problem, and described her “furious response” to his calls to free two

Reuters journalist­s arrested while covering the crisis.

A Myanmar government spokesman hit back earlier on Thursday, accusing the former New Mexico Governor of oversteppi­ng the mark.

“He should review himself over his personal attack against our State Counsellor,” government spokesman Zaw Htay said, using Ms Suu Kyi’s official title.

Urging understand­ing instead of blame, Zaw Htay said the issue of the arrests was beyond Mr Richardson’s mandate and he should not have brought it up at his meeting with Ms Suu Kyi.

The heated discussion left Myanmar’s leader “quivering” with rage, Mr Richardson said.

The Reuters j ournalists, Myanmar nationals Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, face a possible 14 years in prison under the Official Secrets Act for allegedly possessing classified documents that they say were given to them by two policemen.

They had been reporting on the crisis in Rakhine state, where Myanmar troops are accused of waging a vicious ethnic cleansing campaign against the Rohingya that has prompted accusation­s of murder, rape and arson at the hands of troops and vigilante mobs.

The military operations started after Rohingya insurgents attacked police posts in August.

Though Myanmar says it is ready to start repatriati­ng refugees, many fear returning, and some 300 more families crossed the border in recent days after several houses were burned down in Buthidaung township, said Chris Lewa from the Arakan Project, a monitoring group.

Ms Suu Kyi’s tepid response to the crisis and failure to openly rebuke the military has punctured her reputation as a rights icon.

Myanmar analyst Khin Zaw Win said Mr Richardson’s words could deliver a “muchneeded jolt for Aung San Suu Kyi and for the people around her who are not reporting the truth to her”.

Aaron Connelly from the Lowy Institute for Internatio­nal Policy said that the descriptio­n of the conversati­on between Mr Richardson and Ms Suu Kyi should “finally dispel the myth that she privately holds views which she cannot express publicly”.

Mr Richardson joined the Myanmar board as a private citizen, but the US State Department said the Washington administra­tion shares many of his concerns.

After his three-day visit to Myanmar, the diplomat said he was shocked by the panel members’ disparagem­ent of the media, the UN, human rights groups and the internatio­nal community.

Mr Richardson could not be reached for comment on Thursday.

Fellow members of the advisory board, which included five Myanmar nationals, defended their work on Thursday and denied participat­ing in a whitewashi­ng of the crisis.

“Bill Richardson was making his comments too early and it’s very unfortunat­e from that angle,” South African national and panel member Roelof Petrus Meyer told reporters in Yangon.

 ??  ?? Former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson was apparently dropped from an internatio­nal advisory board on the crisis of Rakhine state in Yangon, Myanmar.
Former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson was apparently dropped from an internatio­nal advisory board on the crisis of Rakhine state in Yangon, Myanmar.

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