Asia/South Asia
6 years ago

ICC decision on crimes against Rohingyas offers real hope: UN  

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UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said the decision by the Pre-Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) offers real hope for accountability for the crimes committed against Rohingyas in Myanmar.

"Although the decision doesn't specifically address the crime of genocide, it offers real hope for accountability for the crimes committed," she said while addressing the 39th Session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday.

Bachelet welcomed last week's decision by the Pre-Trial Chamber of the ICC, which found that the Court has jurisdiction over the deportation from Myanmar of Rohingya, and possibly other crimes, reports UNB.

She, while making her statement at the high-level panel to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, said support for the Court is indispensable for both justice and deterrence.

"I urge all States to support the Court, and in this, the year we commemorate the 20thanniversary of its founding with the Rome Statute, I call upon all remaining countries to sign or ratify the Statute," said the UN human rights chief in a statement a copy of which the news agency received from Geneva.

Bachelet said genocide is always shocking but it is never committed without clear, multiple warning signs: a pattern of abuse against a group, intent to harm, a chain of command and finally a brutal and horrifying outcome.

"In the case of the Rohingya, warning signs abounded: a people oppressed from birth to death, an army answerable to no one, and systematic, state-led human rights violations that went unpunished for decades, including arbitrary deprivation of nationality," she said.

Bachelet said States have the primary responsibility for prosecuting perpetrators, but the Court's use is wholly appropriate in cases where the State is unwilling or unable to deliver justice.

She said the Council's Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar issued its shocking report on the military-led campaign of murder, rape and assault against the Rohingya people of Rakhine State.

"A conservative estimate of 10,000 dead, countless more bereaved, maimed, raped and traumatised, and nearly three-quarters of a million people forced to flee to Bangladesh," she mentioned.

Bachelet said this leaves them in no doubt that the genocide convention matters as much today as it did on December 9, 1948, the day it became the very first human rights treaty to be adopted by the General Assembly - followed the next day by the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

"These twin events marked the start of a new era of human rights: a vision of a world where the genocide of the Holocaust and the stripping of multiple human rights that it represented, would never happen again," she said.

"Seventy years on, we must take stock of the gravity of recent acts, perpetrated against the Rohingya and Yazidis - and we must do everything possible to hold those responsible to account," she added.

Bachelet said accountability matters - not only because it provides justice for victims and punishment for perpetrators.

"It matters because ending impunity is central to ending genocide. Prevention and punishment - the explicitly stated twin aims of the genocide convention - can never be seen in isolation from each other. Punishment is key to prevention. Impunity is an enabler of genocide: accountability is its nemesis," she added.

The report's central message is clear: transitional justice processes help to prevent violations of human rights and international humanitarian law, and in particular genocide, war crimes and ethnic cleansing.

They deliver truth, justice and reparations - and are therefore a vital tool in breaking the cycles of impunity, discrimination and marginalisation and the risk of recurrence.

 

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