Feb 02, 2023 13:13 UTC
  • UN expert calls on international community to protect Rohingya population

The UN’s special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar has called on the international community to stand firm against Myanmar’s military junta and to “do a lot more” to protect the vulnerable Rohingya population in the country’s Rakhine State.

Tom Andrews, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, presented a critical report at a briefing at the UN Headquarters in New York on Tuesday, the eve of the second anniversary of a coup in the country.

He called on the international community to stand firm against military rule, create a coalition of member states to enforce strong, coordinated sanctions, and support the so-called National Unity Government of Myanmar.

Andrews warned that the same forces who committed “those genocidal attacks” are now in control of the country and “their priority is not the human rights of the Rohingya people,” referring to a brutal campaign of genocide against the Rohingya about six years ago.

Rohingya Muslims have suffered decades of violence, discrimination and persecution in Myanmar. Beginning in August 2017, Myanmar’s military launched brutal operations targeting them in the northern Rakhine State. At the time, the junta torched entire villages, killing thousands and forcing more than 700,000 people, half of them children, to flee to Bangladesh, where almost one million Rohingya now live in crowded refugee camps.

Andrews added that more than 600,000 Rohingya continued to live in Rakhine State, 130,000 of them in makeshift internment camps, but “even those villages are surrounded.” “The people are prisoners in their own home villages. They have virtually no rights whatsoever,” he said.

MG

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