Yahoo – AFP,
Caroline Henshaw, November 25, 2016
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| Aung San Suu Kyi (right) steered her National League for Democracy into power after championing a decades-long struggle against military rule (AFP Photo/Don Emmert) |
Nobel Peace
Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi on Friday stood accused of failing to protect
Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims from what rights groups say is a systematic campaign
of abuse by the army.
The
democracy icon, garlanded by the international community as a moral force
during the junta years, has remained near-silent despite mounting evidence of
army abuses in Rakhine State.
The United
Nations has said recent security operations amount to "ethnic
cleansing" of the Muslim Rohingya minority, with thousands fleeing to
neighbouring Bangladesh.
Suu Kyi,
Myanmar's de facto leader, has seen her halo start to slip since her party took
power this year after winning the country's first free elections in a
generation.
Her failure
to speak out in support of the Rohingya "is baffling to an international
audience that persists in casting her as a human rights icon," said David
Mathieson of Human Rights Watch.
"One
version to explain her silence is callous indifference, another is calculated
limited messaging... but the most likely is she simply has no control over the
Burmese army."
Thousands
of Rohingya have fled the army lockdown in Rakhine to Bangladesh, bringing with
them horrifying stories of gang rape, torture and murder at the hands of
Myanmar's military.
Rights
groups say the military has used attacks on police border posts last month as
an excuse for a crackdown on the Rohingya, a Muslim group reviled by many
Myanmar Buddhists.
The
government flatly denies the allegations, saying troops are defending the
country from an armed insurgency.
It has
barred investigators and foreign journalists from the locked-down area and
lashed out at reports of abuse as "fabrications".
'Legitimising genocide'
Suu Kyi,
who has travelled to India and Japan during the six-week crisis, has commented
only to say a probe into the attacks was underway in accordance with the law.
But she has
faced growing criticism for her inaction.
The UN
special rapporteur on Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, has slammed the lockdown as
"unacceptable".
Researchers
at Queen Mary University London said her silence amounts to "legitimising
genocide" and entrenching "the persecution of the Rohingya
minority".
"Despite
the fact that this is the most significant test of Suu Kyi's leadership, the
country's de facto leader has remained remarkably indifferent," they said
this week.
Even though
she led her party to power Suu Kyi is hampered by a junta-era constitution that
gives the army a quarter of parliamentary seats and control over security.
She is also
cramped by the prevailing view among many Myanmar Buddhists that the Rohingya
are illegal immigrants, meaning any moves to support them would risk a public
backlash.
"The
government's response suggests that it either has no control over the
still-powerful military, or considers protecting the ethnic minority as too
politically charged," said risk analysts Verisk Maplecroft.
But inside
the conflict zone, Rohingya still invest hope in Suu Kyi's star power.
"The
international community must put serious pressure on Aung San Suu Kyi or the
problem will not be solved," said one man, describing how troops stormed
into a neighbouring village on Friday shooting indiscriminately.


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