Asia/South Asia
6 years ago

Suu Kyi could face genocide charges: UN envoy

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Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi could be held accountable for crimes against humanity, said UN Special Envoy Yanghee Lee in an interview with the UK’s Channel 4 News.

She said that Suu Kyi could be found guilty of what the interviewer said as “very very serious crimes.”

The State Counsellor of Myanmar has been facing criticism for failing to stand up against 'systematic targeting and persecution' since August last year.

Lee said, “Either she is denying or she is really far away moved.”

Asked whether there has been an effort to destroy the very identity of Rohingyas, which appears to suggest genocide was occurring, her reply was, “Absolutely.”

“One has to be legally correct to determine genocide and it has to be through a process of legal procedures. So, therefore, I can only say it bears a hallmark of genocide,” said the UN envoy.

Over the Myanmar leader’s years of reputation of what the interviewer described as “a sort of goddess of democracy and human rights”, the UN envoy said, “She was never a goddess of human rights ... She was a politician and she is a politician.”

Lee had been in the past prevented from going to Rakhine and after the latest exodus of Rohingyas, she has been barred from visiting the country.

“Well, they say I was biased and unfair. And every time I asked what was it that I was unfair and biased about, there was no clear answer,” Lee said during the interview.

“When I said, well…Rohingyas this and that, the government said ‘We don’t have any Rohingyas’. I cannot accept that in principle. And that’s being biased?”

“When I declare that there’s been extrajudicial killing and arbitrary arrests, or rape, they (Myanmar government) would say ‘no we have never done that’.”

According to bdnews24, the UN envoy said the Rohingyas in Bangladesh cannot be safely repatriated under the existing conditions.

“I have been stating that unless the discriminatory and oppressive laws against the Rohingya population are dismantled, you are going to see the same things happen again. Even, after they return.”

Buddhist-majority Myanmar has treated Muslim Rohingyas like “herding cattle through a small alley”, which has been happening for years, said Lee.

“And this is what happened metaphorically and physically to the Rohingya population. They have been herded into a small area, emotionally and physically.

“And with all kinds of barriers put on, infringements on their human rights. And where they are at a point, there’s nowhere to go,” the UN envoy said. 

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