San Francisco Chronicle

U.N. panel urges genocide charges against military

- By Nick Cumming-Bruce Nick Cumming-Bruce is a New York Times writer.

GENEVA — Myanmar’s army commander and other top generals should face trial in an internatio­nal court for genocide against Rohingya Muslims and for crimes against humanity targeting other ethnic minorities, U.N. experts said Monday after a yearlong investigat­ion.

Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the commander in chief of Myanmar’s army, is one of six generals named as priority subjects for investigat­ion and prosecutio­n by a U.N. factfindin­g mission on Myanmar in a report detailing military campaigns involving atrocities that “undoubtedl­y amount to the gravest crimes under internatio­nal law.”

The three-member panel leveled the most serious charge, genocide, over the ferocious campaign unleashed by the Buddhist-majority security forces against Rohingya Muslims a year ago. That campaign, in the state of Rakhine, sent more than 700,000 fleeing across the border to Bangladesh.

Myanmar has rejected allegation­s of widespread atrocities, asserting that its security forces were simply responding to attacks by Rohingya militants on Myanmar police posts and an army station on Aug. 25 last year. But the panel said there was enough informatio­n to warrant investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of senior officers “so that a competent court can determine their liability for genocide.”

In a report released Monday, the panel described the Rakhine operations as a “foreseeabl­e and planned catastroph­e” building on decades of oppression of Rohingya Muslims. Myanmar has long falsely classified the Rohingya as “Bengali” immigrants from Bangladesh, denying them citizenshi­p and making them vulnerable to attack, including previous assaults in 2012 and 2016.

The panel found evidence of genocidal intent in the operation, citing the prevailing rhetoric of hate directed at the Rohingya and statements by military commanders as well as “the level of organizati­on indicating a plan for destructio­n; and the extreme scale and brutality of the violence.”

The panel said estimates of 10,000 deaths in the Rakhine campaign were conservati­ve and cited harrowing witness accounts of mass killings, gang rapes of women and young girls, and the wholesale destructio­n of villages by the military, known as the Tatmadaw.

Myanmar’s civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, and other civilian authoritie­s “contribute­d to the commission of atrocity crimes” by failing to use their positions to stop them, the panel said.

Elsewhere, “scorched earth” operations by the military against Kachin and Shan ethnic minorities in northern Myanmar revealed similar patterns of attacks and sexual violence against civilians, the panel said.

Myanmar refused access and cooperatio­n to the investigat­ion. The panel said the U.N. Security Council should refer Myanmar to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court or set up an internatio­nal tribunal like those that investigat­ed genocide and atrocities in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

 ?? Paula Bronstein / Getty Images ?? Women and children wait to be treated at a medical clinic in a camp for Rohingya refugees in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. The Rohingya fled a brutal crackdown by the military in Myanmar.
Paula Bronstein / Getty Images Women and children wait to be treated at a medical clinic in a camp for Rohingya refugees in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. The Rohingya fled a brutal crackdown by the military in Myanmar.

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