The Daily Telegraph

UN expert condemns Suu Kyi as ‘fig leaf for genocide’

- By Nicola Smith ASIA CORRESPOND­ENT

A LEADING United Nations human rights investigat­or has criticised Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma’s civilian leader, for acting as a “fig leaf for military atrocities” against the Rohingya Muslim minority.

In an interview ahead of tomorrow’s release of a 400-page report on alleged “genocidal” crimes, Australian lawyer Chris Sidoti said that Nobel laureate Ms Suu Kyi could not escape responsibi­lity for failing to act over the violence. The report, by three independen­t experts including Mr Sidoti, provides the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva with harrowing details of mass killings and rape by Burma’s military that prompted more than 700,000 Rohingya to flee to Bangladesh last year.

“The very first thing she could have done was not provide cover for the military by dismissing the overwhelmi­ng number of reports of mass rape as fake,” Mr Sidoti said. “She could have refused to provide a fig leaf for military atrocities of the most serious kind… she has enormous moral authority, she won 80 per cent of the popular vote in the 2015 election.”

The presentati­on of the final investigat­ion to the Swiss-based council will mark a crucial step on the long road to obtaining justice for thousands who lost their lives or their homes or who were brutalised during the merciless operation by Burmese troops.

A preliminar­y report released last month by Mr Sidoti, Marzuki Darusman, Indonesia’s former attorney general, and Radhika Coomaraswa­my, a Sri Lankan lawyer and women’s rights expert, called for Burma’s senior generals to be prosecuted for genocide.

Based on 875 interviews with victims and eyewitness­es plus satellite imagery, it documents the shooting and stabbing of children, the scorching of Rohingya villages and gang rape on an enormous scale. Mr Sidoti told The

Daily Telegraph: “The level of trauma in the camps in Bangladesh is beyond anything I have ever seen.”

Last month, the Burmese government dismissed the UN investigat­ors’ findings as “false allegation­s”. However, the UN panel has recommende­d a referral to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague as an option, which has already won support from some quarters. Last week, more than 160 British MPS signed a letter urging Prime Minister Theresa May and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt to refer Burma’s military to the court.

An ICC trial was only one way to push for justice, Mr Sidoti added, explaining that other options could include a specialise­d criminal tribunal or an individual country exercising its rights to universal jurisdicti­on for crimes of this magnitude.

Tuesday’s report will also remind the internatio­nal community of its obligation­s to take action, and will explicitly include a call for a ban on arms sales and on “high level exchanges and training” with the Burmese military until it has been reconstitu­ted.

According to Mr Sidoti, the reluctance of the internatio­nal community to act sooner is “the most haunting question of all”.

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