UK'S JOHNSON URGES 'INDEPENDENT' PROBE OF ROHINGYA CRISIS IN SUU KYI TALKS
Britain's Foreign Minister
Boris Johnson met with Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi in the capital Naypyidaw. The
meeting followed Johnson's visit to a refugee camp in Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar
district, where nearly 700,000 Rohingya have sought sanctuary.
Britain's Foreign
Minister Boris Johnson stopped off in Myanmar on Sunday to press Aung San Suu
Kyi on the need for an independent probe into violence in Rakhine state, as the
country faces mounting pressure to punish troops accused of atrocities against
the Muslim Rohingya.
Johnson met with the
embattled Myanmar leader, whose reputation among the international community
has crumbled over her handling of the Rohingya crisis, in the capital Naypyidaw
while on a four-day Asian tour.
The meeting followed
Johnson's visit to a refugee camp in Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar district, where
nearly 700,000 Rohingya have sought sanctuary after fleeing a Myanmar army
crackdown launched in northern Rakhine last August.
The UN has accused
Myanmar security forces of driving the Muslim minority across the border in an
ethnic cleansing campaign.
Doctors Without
Borders estimates at least 6,700 Rohingya died in the first month of violence.
But Myanmar has
staunchly denied the charges and blocked UN investigators from the conflict
zone, souring relations with a host of western allies.
"I underlined
the importance of the Burmese authorities carrying out a full and independent
investigation into the violence in Rakhine, and to hold to account those
responsible for human rights violations," Johnson said in a statement,
using the alternative name for Myanmar, released after the meeting and a brief
trip to northern Rakhine.
It added that he had
stressed the "urgency" of creating the conditions in the state that
could make it a "safe place for the Rohingya refugees to return to, free
from fear".
Fresh reports of
mass graves in Rakhine - and the arrest of two Reuters journalists
investigating an alleged massacre - have heightened pressure on Suu Kyi to
condemn the army, with whom she is in a delicate power-sharing arrangement.
But the Nobel
laureate has refused to change tack and is accused by critics of adopting a
siege mentality.
Johnson's statement
said he had "raised the plight" of the two arrested Reuters
journalists with Suu Kyi.
Myanmar's foreign
ministry announced in a Facebook post alongside photos of the pair meeting that
they had "discussed in an open and friendly manner the latest developments
in Rakhine State, including planning for the reception of returnees who
fled".
Myanmar and
Bangladesh have inked a deal to bring back refugees, but repatriation has yet
to begin.
Many Rohingya do not
feel safe returning to a country where they have faced violent persecution and
decades of discrimination at the hands of a country that has denied them
citizenship.
Others have no home
to return to after their villages were torched in the military crackdown.
After months of
denying any abuses by its troops, Myanmar's military admitted in January that
security officers had assisted with the killing of 10 Rohingya men in Rakhine's
Inn Din village.
That public
admission followed the arrests of the two Myanmar journalists who were
investigating the massacre and are now facing up 14 years in prison on charges
of possessing secret documents.
Johnson was
scheduled to fly on to Bangkok later Sunday for a visit that will include
meetings with junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha and the Thai chairman of an
advisory board on the Rohingya crisis.
The panel was thrown
into the spotlight last month after veteran US diplomat Bill Richardson
published a withering resignation letter, saying he could not in "good
conscience" sit on a board he feared would only "whitewash" the
causes of the Rohingya crisis.
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