AUSTRALIA AG REJECTS LAWYERS' BID TO PROSECUTE MYANMAR’S AUNG SAN SUU KYI
Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi arrived in
Canberra on Monday to be met by a military honor guard and Australian Prime
Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who has said he will raise human rights issues
during her visit.
Suu Kyi has been in
Australia since Friday, attending a special summit of Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN) leaders in Sydney, where her presence drew street
protests and a lawsuit accusing her of crimes against humanity.
Australia’s Attorney
General has said he would not allow the lawsuit, lodged by activist lawyers in
Melbourne on behalf of Australia’s Rohingya community, to proceed because Suu
Kyi had diplomatic immunity.
Since coming to
power in 2016, Suu Kyi, who won the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize for her struggle for
democracy in Myanmar, has faced growing criticism for failing to condemn or
stop military attacks on her country’s minority Rohingya Muslims.
U.N. officials say
nearly 700,000 Muslim Rohingya have fled Buddhist-majority Myanmar to
Bangladesh after militant attacks on Aug. 25 last year sparked a crackdown, led
by security forces, in Rakhine state that the United Nations and United States
have said constitutes ethnic cleansing.
The U.N. independent
investigator on human rights in Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, said in Geneva this month
she saw growing evidence to suspect genocide had been committed.
Myanmar denies the
charges and has asked for “clear evidence” of abuses by security forces.
Neither Suu Kyi nor
Turnbull made public remarks before their meeting, but the Australian leader
said on Sunday that Suu Kyi spoke “at considerable length” during the ASEAN
meeting about Rakhine State, appealing to her Southeast Asian neighbors for
humanitarian help.
Suu Kyi had been
scheduled to give a speech and answer questions at a foreign policy think-tank
event in Sydney on Tuesday but canceled because she was not feeling well, event
organizers said, without giving more details.
Suu Kyi’s spokesman
Zaw Htay declined comment and referred questions to the Myanmar embassy in
Canberra. A Reuters call to the embassy went unanswered.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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