AMNESTY SAYS ROHINGYA CRISIS CONSEQUENCE OF SOCIETY 'ENCOURAGED TO HATE'
The crisis in Myanmar and
reported massacres of Rohingya Muslims are the consequence of a society
encouraged to hate and a lack of global leadership on human rights, Amnesty International said on Thursday.
The human rights
group said in its annual report covering 159 countries that “hate-filled
rhetoric” by leaders was normalizing discrimination against minorities.
“We saw the ultimate
consequence of a society encouraged to hate, scapegoat and fear minorities laid
bare in the horrific military campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya
people in Myanmar,” said Salil Shetty, Secretary General of Amnesty.
Last week, the
United States urged the U.N Security Council to hold Myanmar’s military
accountable for what it said was the ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims.
Nearly 690,000Rohingya have fled Rakhine and taken refuge in neighboring Bangladesh since the
Myanmar military launched a crackdown on insurgents at the end of August,
according to the U.N..
More than 6,500
Rohingya are currently trapped on a strip of unclaimed land between Myanmar and
Bangladesh.
Amnesty said the
international community had failed to respond robustly to “crimes against
humanity and war crimes from Myanmar to Iraq, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen”.
It said that leaders
in countries such as the United States, Russia and China were not standing up
for civil liberties and instead were “callously undermining the rights of
millions”.
Amnesty said
President Donald Trump had taken backward steps on human rights that were
setting a dangerous precedent. Shetty described his move to ban people from
several Muslim-majority countries in January last year as “transparently
hateful”.
Last year’s report
accused Trump of “poisonous” rhetoric.
Free speech will be
a key issue for those concerned about human rights this year, the report said.
Amnesty said its
staff were arrested at an unprecedented rate in Turkey in 2017, which along
with Egypt and China was also among the biggest jailors of journalists.
Two Reuters
reporters in Myanmar were arrested while investigating the killing of Rohingya
Muslims. Court proceedings are ongoing.
“In 2018, we cannot
take for granted that we will be free to gather together in protest or to
criticize our governments. In fact, speaking out is becoming more dangerous,”
Shetty said.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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