BFF-26 ‘Ongoing genocide’ against Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims: UN

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MYANMAR-UN-ROHINGYA-DIPLOMACY-CONFLICT

‘Ongoing genocide’ against Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims: UN

UNITED NATIONS, United States, Oct 25, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – A genocide against
Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims is still continuing, UN investigators said
Wednesday as they presented a report to the Security Council, calling for the
issue to be referred to an international tribunal.

Marzuki Darusman, chairman of the UN Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar, said
that beyond mass killings, the conflict included the ostracization of the
population, prevention of births, and widespread displacement in camps.

“It is an ongoing genocide,” he told a press conference.

“We consider the genocide intent can be reasonably inferred,” he said as
he presented the team’s report to a United Nations Security Council meeting.

The 444-page report, first made public last month, called on the council
to refer the issue to the International Criminal Court in The Hague, or to
create an ad hoc tribunal, as was done with the former Yugoslavia.

The explosive report said that Myanmar’s top generals, including
Commander-in-Chief Min Aung Hlaing, must be investigated and prosecuted for
genocide in Rakhine state.

Myanmar has rejected accusations that its military committed atrocities in
the crackdown last year that forced 720,000 Rohingya to flee over the border
to Bangladesh.

– ‘Grossly disproportionate’ –

The conflict has also seen about 390 villages destroyed and 10,000
Rohingya killed, Darusman said.

“The conditions are not in place for a safe, dignified and sustainable
return of the Rohingyas in Bangladesh” to Myanmar, he warned, adding any
attempt would just risk more deaths.

At the end of an October 10-20 visit to the country, the UN’s Special
Envoy to Myanmar, Christine Schraner Burgener, said that accountability and
“inclusive dialogue” were the two important pillars for national
reconciliation.

“Credible fact-finding is the first step towards accountability,” she
said.

The Myanmar government rejected the UN mission’s findings, questioning its
independence and pointing out that it had itself established an independent
investigative commission made up of Asian diplomats.

Darusman said however that Myanmar’s internal inquiries have “proven to be
ineffective failures” so far.

The Security Council meeting was called by Western powers but opposed by
China and Russia, allies who have friendly ties with Myanmar’s military and
have regularly shielded the nation from criticism.

Myanmar maintains that the violence in Rakhine was triggered by Rohingya
extremists who attacked border posts in August 2017.

The military has denied almost all accusations of genocide levelled
against it, insisting that “clearance operations” were necessary to fight
Rohingya militants.

But the UN fact-finding mission said there were reasonable grounds to
believe that the atrocities were committed with the intention of destroying
the Rohingya.

It found that the military’s tactics had been “consistently and grossly
disproportionate to actual security threats”, and that estimates that some
10,000 people were killed in the crackdown was likely a conservative figure.

Myanmar’s de facto leader Suu Kyi — once lionised by the international
community as a democracy icon — has seen a sharp fall from grace following
her refusal to speak out against the military.

The UN mission has pointed out that her government’s attempts to whitewash
facts had worsened the situation for the embattled Rohingya.

BSS/AFP/SA/ 1115 HRS