THAILAND DECORATES MYANMAR'S ARMY CHIEF AMID ROHINGYA CRISIS
Myanmar military commander-in-chief, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing |
Thailand awarded Myanmar’s
army chief a royal decoration on Friday amid allegations of crimes by Myanmar
security forces against Rohingya Muslims that have prompted international
condemnation.
Nearly 700,000Rohingya have fled Myanmar’s Rakhine state and crossed into Bangladesh since
last August, when attacks on security posts by insurgents triggered a military
crackdown that the United Nations has said amounts to ethnic cleansing, with
reports of arson attacks, murder and rape.
Myanmar army commander-in-chief
Senior General Min Aung Hlaing was granted the Knight Grand Cross (First Class)
of the Most Exalted Order of the White Elephant at a ceremony in Bangkok,
according to the general’s official website.
The website also
showed a picture of the commander-in-chief shaking hands with his Thai
counterpart, General Tarnchaiyan Srisuwan.
Buddhist-majority
Thailand often gives royal decorations to army chiefs of other countries who
are supportive of Thailand’s army, Thai army spokesman Lieutenant General
Nothapol Boonngam said.
“He received the
honor because of our military relations. We support each other’s missions and
exchange visits. Our armies have many joint activities,” Nothapol told Reuters,
adding that the Thai army had requested Hlaing’s award since last year.
“This is a separate
issue from human rights.”
The Burma Human
Rights Network said Thailand had crossed a “red line” by granting the award to
Hlaing because Thailand is seen as a place of refuge by many Rohingya and other
minority groups fleeing persecution in Myanmar, also a Buddhist-majority
country.
“This kind of person
doesn’t deserve to win this great award,” Kway Win, the group’s executive
director, told Reuters.
Earlier this week,
Thailand and the United States kicked off the annual Cobra Gold military drills
in Thailand - the largest such exercises in the Asia-Pacific region.
Thailand invited
Myanmar as observers to the disaster relief and humanitarian assistance
portions of Cobra Gold, prompting criticism from rights groups who questioned
why a military accused of ethnic cleansing was being given access.
The U.S. Embassy in
Bangkok this week said Myanmar was not a participant in any of the exercises.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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