NOBEL PEACE LAUREATES TO AUNG SAN SUU KYI: 'END ROHINGYA GENOCIDE OR FACE PROSECUTION'
Three Nobel peace laureates
urged Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi and the military on Wednesday to end the
“genocide” of Rohingya Muslims now or face prosecution.
The United Nations
and human rights organizations have collected evidence of widespread abuses by
the Myanmar military against the largely stateless Rohingya, including murder,
rape and arson, prompting nearly 700,000 to flee to neighboring Bangladesh, and
have called the crackdown ethnic cleansing.
“She (Suu Kyi) must
stop turning a deaf ear to the persecution of the Rohingya or risk being
complicit in the crimes,” Yemeni activist Tawakkol Karman told a press
conference in Dhaka after visiting refugee camps at Cox’s Bazar on the southern
tip of Bangladesh.
“Wake up or face
prosecution,” said Karman, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011.
“If she fails to do
so, her choice is clear: resign or be held accountable, along with the army
commanders, for the crimes committed,” she added.
Since coming to
power in 2016, Suu Kyi - who won the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize for her
decades-long pro-democracy fight - has failed to condemn abuses against the
Rohingya which began on Aug. 25 after insurgents attacked police and military
outposts.
Buddhist-majority
Myanmar denies the abuse charges and says its security forces are fighting a
legitimate campaign against “terrorists” it blames for the attacks on the
security forces.
Northern Irish
activist Mairead Maguire said she heard accounts of women who had been raped
repeatedly and families murdered and stories of children being thrown into
fires and drowned in rivers.
“The torture, rape
and killing of any one member of our human family must be challenged, as in the
case of the Rohingya genocide,” said Maguire, who was awarded the Nobel peace
prize in 1976.
“This is genocide.
We can’t remain silent. Silence is complicity,” she said.
The laureates called
for those responsible to be brought before the International Criminal Court.
“With over a million
Rohingya displaced, countless dead or missing, and rape and sexual violence
being used as a weapon of war, it is well past the time for the international
community to act,” said Iranian lawyer Shirin Ebadi, who in 2003 became the
first Muslim woman to win the peace prize.
Replying to a
question, Karman said the three planned to visit Myanmar and they had sent
several messages to their friend Suu Kyi but she had not replied.
“We need to see
what’s happening there.”
SOURCE: REUTERS
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