HEAD OF NEW CRISIS PANEL URGES ACCESS TO MYANMAR'S RAKHINE STATE
Rohingya refugee children play kites at Balukhali refugee camp, near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh January 6, 2018. REUTERS |
Humanitarian workers and journalists should be given free access to
Myanmar’s Rakhine State, where violence has prompted some 650,000 Rohingya
Muslims to flee to Bangladesh, the head of an incipient international advisory
panel on the crisis verbally expressed.
Surakiart Sathirathai, a former Thai peregrine minister, withal
expressed concern at the arrest of two Reuters reporter in Myanmar last month
and verbally expressed he hoped the case did not lead to broader restrictions
on the international media.
“I think press and humanitarian access to Rakhine are important issues
as well as free access to other stakeholders,”verbally expressed Surakiart in
an interview in Bangkok. “Legitimate press coverage is something that should be
enhanced.”
Myanmar has severely curtailed access to Rakhine, where an army
operation in response to attacks by Rohingya insurgents has been condemned by
the United Nations as ethnic cleansing - an accusation rejected by the Buddhist
majority country.
Surakiart, 59, was chosen last year by Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu
Kyi to head a 10-member board that will advise on how to implement the
recommendations of an earlier commission headed by former U.N.
secretary-general Kofi Annan.
Allowing free media coverage was one of the specific recommendations in
the 63-page report from Annan’s commission, which was appointed by Suu Kyi in
2016 to investigate how to solve Rakhine’s long-standing ethnic and religious
tensions.
Reuters reporter Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, who had worked on coverage of
the crisis in the western state, were arrested in Yangon on Dec. 12 on
suspicion of infringing Myanmar’s Official Secrets Act.
Surakiart verbally expressed he had raised concerns about their case
with Suu Kyi’s national security advisor Thaung Tun. He verbally expressed he
had asked for the case to be dealt with transparently and been assured that
opportune licit procedures would be followed.
“I hope that this would not snowball in adverse directions for both the
international press and the Myanmar regime,” Surakiart integrated. “I hope the
case will not lead to the Myanmar regime not welcoming the international press.
I optate this to be a categorical case and hope for an expeditious resolution
to it.”
BRIDGING THE GAP
The Annan-led panel distributed its recommendations - which withal
included a review of a law that links citizenship and ethnicity and leaves most
Rohingya stateless - just afore insurgent attacks on security posts on Aug. 25
triggered the latest crisis.
Surakiart verbalized there were concerns over the repatriation of those
who had since fled to Bangladesh and that the advisory board would require to
find an approach to ascertain people could return without fear, even if they
were not apperceived by subsisting law as Myanmar citizens.
Suu Kyi has faced international criticism for perceived inaction over
the crisis in Rakhine, but Surakiart said she was constrained by domestic
politics.
Buddhist nationalism has surged in Myanmar in recent years, and the
army campaign has wide support.
“Aung San Suu Kyi tried to address the issue by trying to build
consensus from within rather than finger-pointing,” said Surakiart.
“There is a big gap between domestic and international interpretations
of the situation in Rakhine. If we can’t bridge this gap then it will be an
obstacle for all of us who want to improve the situation.”
The former Thai foreign minister also said his advisory board would
seek to engage with all groups in Rakhine, including the military.
“The advisory board is not a mouthpiece to anyone,” Surakiart said. “We
are not a spokesperson for Myanmar or the international community.”
The board, which is made up of five members from Myanmar and five
international appointees including veteran former U.S. politician and diplomat
Bill Richardson, will meet the Myanmar government on Jan. 22 in the capital
Naypyitaw before making its first trip to Rakhine on Jan. 24.
“I do not want the advisory board to be just a talking shop,” Surakiart
said. “We want to help bring about tangible progress.”
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