Santa Fe New Mexican

Myanmar generals escape consequenc­es of massacres

- By Hannah Beech

MYIN HLUT, Myanmar — On the eve of the anniversar­y of a military-led ethnicclea­nsing campaign against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, the nation’s commander in chief, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, was in Russia on an arms-buying expedition.

Starting a year ago, more than 700,000 Rohingya began fleeing Myanmar to neighborin­g Bangladesh, amid a frenzy of massacre, rape and arson by soldiers and Buddhist mobs, acts of violence that have been widely documented.

Yet since then, Min Aung Hlaing and Myanmar’s other leaders have escaped internatio­nal legal censure. And they are maintainin­g a campaign of denial and avoidance, as well as jailing and intimidati­ng reporters who have documented the attacks.

On Tuesday, while Myanmar’s commander in chief was shopping for weaponry in Russia, Aung San Suu Kyi, the country’s de facto civilian leader, gave a speech in Singapore in which she made no mention of the bloodletti­ng by the nation’s armed forces. Thousands of Rohingya are believed to have been killed in northern Rakhine state.

U.N. officials have raised the prospect that the violence could be considered genocide, and officials at the U.S. State Department have debated using the term, according to U.S. diplomats.

But Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, blamed the violence on “terrorist activities, which was the initial cause of events leading to the humanitari­an crisis in Rakhine.”

On Aug. 25, 2017, Rohingya militants, mostly armed with makeshift weapons, launched strikes on police posts and an army station in northern Rakhine, killing a dozen security forces. Myanmar’s military, which is known as the Tatmadaw, says its actions were “clearance operations,” in response to the Rohingya raids.

But human-rights groups have documented how the Tatmadaw dispatched truckloads of soldiers to northern Rakhine in the weeks preceding the Aug. 25 militant strike. Soldiers went house to house, confiscati­ng knives and tearing down fencing that could be used by the Rohingya to protect themselves, according to a report by Fortify Rights, a Bangkok-based human rights watchdog.

In a question-and-answer session after her lecture in Singapore, Suu Kyi, whose father founded Myanmar’s modern army, said she found the generals in her Cabinet to be “rather sweet.”

Sidesteppi­ng a question about the safety concerns Rohingya sheltering in Bangladesh had about returning home, Suu Kyi focused on Rakhine’s tourism potential, calling the state “the most beautiful region in Myanmar.”

“All of the foreigners I have ever met frequently told me that the beaches in Rakhine state are more attractive than those across the world,” she said.

The United States, Canada and the European Union have placed targeted sanctions on Myanmar military officers believed to have directed the violence against the largely stateless Rohingya last year. But Min Aung Hlaing and other top brass were spared.

Others are pushing for Myanmar to be formally investigat­ed for war crimes. On Friday, a group of 132 Southeast Asian lawmakers called on the U.N. Security Council to refer Myanmar to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, which rules on genocide and mass atrocity crimes.

“One year has passed since the Myanmar military launched its murderous operation in Rakhine state, yet we are no closer to seeing those responsibl­e brought to justice,” said Charles Santiago, a member of the Malaysian parliament. “As Myanmar is clearly both unwilling and unable to investigat­e itself, we are now at a stage where the internatio­nal community must step in to ensure accountabi­lity.”

Part of the focus on Myanmar’s actions has been its practice of razing whole Rohingya villages and leveling the landscape, in essence trying to erase history.

On a recent visit by journalist­s from The New York Times to one such village in Rakhine state, Myin Hlut, tropical foliage had reclaimed what was once a place of human habitation, vines curling up concrete posts and smothering the scorched foundation­s of homes. The road was lined by charred palm trees and the carcasses of burned-out mosques.

One Rohingya native of that village, Zahidullah Rahim, is now a refugee languishin­g in a camp in Bangladesh. In an interview there, he said he once hoped to become a lawyer to help represent his people. Now, he still struggles with the idea that the home he once knew had been obliterate­d, in an act by Myanmar authoritie­s this year that was documented by satellite imagery.

“Everything has disappeare­d,” he said, “even my dreams.”

Since Myanmar is not a signatory to the treaty that establishe­d the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, the Security Council has the power to begin the process of judicial action. On Monday, the Security Council is scheduled to discuss the ethnic cleansing in Myanmar.

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Rohingya refugees cross the Naf River in 2017 near Palong Khali, Bangladesh, as smoke rises from burning villages in Myanmar. In the year since thousands of Rohingya Muslims were believed killed, and hundreds of thousands driven out of Myanmar in a military-led campaign of ethnic cleansing, top officers have escaped any consequenc­es and are maintainin­g a campaign of denial and avoidance.
NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Rohingya refugees cross the Naf River in 2017 near Palong Khali, Bangladesh, as smoke rises from burning villages in Myanmar. In the year since thousands of Rohingya Muslims were believed killed, and hundreds of thousands driven out of Myanmar in a military-led campaign of ethnic cleansing, top officers have escaped any consequenc­es and are maintainin­g a campaign of denial and avoidance.

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