The National - News

UN: Rohingya face serious threat of genocide recurring

- ARTHUR MacMILLAN

The head of a UN fact-finding mission on Myanmar said that “there is a serious risk of genocide recurring” against the Rohingya Muslim minority still living in the country.

“If anything, the situation of the Rohingya in Rakhine state has worsened,” Marzuki Darusman told the UN General Assembly’s human rights committee on Wednesday.

Mr Darusman said the minority still suffered discrimina­tion, segregatio­n, restricted movement, insecurity and a lack of access to land, jobs, education and health care.

The government of the Buddhist-majority nation has refused to recognise Rohingya as citizens or even as one of its ethnic groups, rendering the vast majority stateless.

Myanmar’s military began a campaign against the Rohingya in August 2017 in response to an insurgent attack.

More than 700,000 Rohingya fled to neighbouri­ng Bangladesh to escape what has been called an ethnic cleansing campaign involving mass rape and killing, and burning of their homes.

An estimated 600,000 remain in Myanmar.

The Independen­t Internatio­nal Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar, which Mr Darusman led, said in its final report last month that Myanmar should be held responsibl­e in

internatio­nal legal forums for genocide against the Rohingya.

“There is a strong inference of continued genocidal intent on the part of the state in relation to the Rohingya and there is a serious risk of genocide recurring,” he said on Wednesday.

“Myanmar is failing in its obligation­s under the Genocide Convention to prevent genocide, to investigat­e genocide and to enact effective legislatio­n criminalis­ing and punishing genocide.”

Mr Darusman said the fact-finding mission handed 1,227 interviews with victims and witnesses of crimes against the Rohingya to another UN body, the Independen­t Investigat­ive Mechanism for Myanmar.

He said the material included “a list of more than 150 people suspected of involvemen­t in several internatio­nal crimes”.

Mr Darusman called on countries to support the investigat­ion by the prosecutor of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court of alleged crimes on the

Bangladesh-Myanmar border.

He also called for backing on plans for Gambia, on behalf of the Organisati­on for Islamic Co-operation, to pursue a case against Myanmar before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice for breaching the 1948 Genocide Convention.

In the absence of a referral by the UN Security Council of the situation in Myanmar to the

ICC, he said: “These initiative­s are all the more important.”

Mr Darusman urged the assembly to also consider additional measures, including the establishm­ent of a tribunal such as that set up by the UN for crimes in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

Myanmar’s UN ambassador, Hau Do Suan, said his government did not recognise the fact-finding mission, calling its views one-sided and based on “misleading informatio­n and secondary sources”.

He said the mission ignored the situation of the Hindu minority and other ethnic minorities in Rakhine state.

Mr Suan said Myanmar took its accountabi­lity seriously and that perpetrato­rs of all human rights breaches “causing the large outflow of displaced persons to Bangladesh must be held accountabl­e”.

But Yanghee Lee, the UN’s independen­t investigat­or on Myanmar, told the assembly that an independen­t commission of inquiry formed by Myanmar’s government “does not represent a possible end to this impunity”.

“It has not produced a single report after nearly 15 months,” Ms Lee said.

She urged the internatio­nal community to impose sanctions on companies owned by Myanmar’s military and on “its commanders most responsibl­e for serious violations”.

Ms Lee said there was no discernibl­e improvemen­t in the human rights situation in Myanmar.

 ?? AFP ?? Rohingya refugee children near Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh. The UN was asked to consider forming a tribunal to investigat­e crimes against the Rohingya in Myanmar
AFP Rohingya refugee children near Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh. The UN was asked to consider forming a tribunal to investigat­e crimes against the Rohingya in Myanmar

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