Yahoo - AFP, Catherine MARCIANO, Phyo Hein KYAW, 28 November 2017
Pope Francis urged respect for rights and justice in a keenly-watched address in Myanmar on Tuesday, but refrained from any mention of the Rohingya or the alleged ethnic cleansing that has driven huge numbers of the Muslim minority from the country.
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| The pope's trip to Myanmar has so far avoided explicit mention of the country's Rohingya Muslim minority |
Pope Francis urged respect for rights and justice in a keenly-watched address in Myanmar on Tuesday, but refrained from any mention of the Rohingya or the alleged ethnic cleansing that has driven huge numbers of the Muslim minority from the country.
Sharing a
stage with Myanmar's leader Aung San Suu Kyi in the capital Naypyidaw, the
pontiff tip-toed around the humanitarian emergency of the Rohingya.
Peace can
only be achieved through "justice and a respect for human rights", he
said in a broadly-framed speech that also called for "respect for each
ethnic group and its identity".
The word
"Rohingya", an incendiary term in a mainly Buddhist country where the
minority are denied citizenship and branded illegal "Bengali"
immigrants, was entirely absent from his speech.
Francis has
repeatedly defended the group, 620,000 of whom have fled from Myanmar's Rakhine
state to Bangladesh since August.
Rights
groups had urged him during his four-day visit to confront Myanmar about its
actions, but the local Catholic Church cautioned him against straying into the
Rohingya issue.
Also on
Tuesday, the UN Human Rights Council announced it will hold a special session
next week to discuss the situation facing the Rohingya and other minorities in
Rakhine.
The
December 5 session "is being convened per an official request submitted
today by Bangladesh and Saudi Arabia" that has been supported by 73
states, the rights council said in a statement.
Widespread loathing
Suu Kyi, a
Nobel Peace Prize winner, has been ostracised by a global rights community that
once adored her but is now outraged at her tepid response to the crisis.
She spoke
of the challenges her country faces as it creeps out of the shadow of five
decades of military rule, but also did not reference the Rohingya.
The
government aimed to build the nation by "protecting rights, fostering
tolerance, ensuring security for all", she said in a short speech, that
gave a nod to the "situation in the Rakhine."
The pope's
peace mission is strewn with pitfalls in Myanmar, where a monk-led Buddhist
nationalist movement has fostered widespread loathing for the Rohingya.
In
recognition of those tensions his public speech was "very carefully
worded", Myanmar-based political analyst Richard Horsey told AFP,
speculating "he is likely to have been more forthright in private meetings
with Myanmar's leaders."
But the
pontiff's words were of little comfort to Rohingya stuck in dire conditions in
Bangladesh.
"We
are very much disappointed that he did not mention the Rohingya crisis,"
said activist Mohammad Zubair from Kutupalong refugee camp, speaking of a
religious leader who previously "even held prayers for the Rohingya".
The Pope,
The Lady and a General
Late on
Monday the 80-year-old pontiff received a "courtesy visit" from
Myanmar's powerful army chief -- whose troops, according to the UN and US, have
waged a campaign of ethnic cleansing in Rakhine.
Senior
General Min Aung Hlaing has firmly denied allegations of widespread brutality
by his forces, despite the flight of hundreds of thousands who have recounted
rape, murder and arson.
His office
said the general told the pope there was "no discrimination" in
Myanmar, and he praised his military for maintaining "the peace and
stability of the country".
Known
fondly as The Lady, in Myanmar, Suu Kyi finally came to power after elections
in 2015 but has fallen from grace abroad for not doing more to stand up to the
army in defence of the Rohingya.
Rights
groups have clamoured for Suu Kyi to be stripped of her Nobel prize. Oxford,
the English city she once called home, on Monday removed her Freedom of the
City award for "inaction" in the face of oppression of the Rohingya.
Just days
before the papal visit, Myanmar and Bangladesh signed a deal to start repatriating
Rohingya refugees within two months.
But details
of the agreement -- including the use of temporary shelters for returnees, many
of whose homes have been burned to the ground -- raise questions for Rohingya
fearful of returning without guarantees of basic rights.
The pontiff
has received a warm welcome in Myanmar, whose Catholic community numbers just
over one percent of a 51 million population.
But around
200,000 Catholics from all corners of the country are pouring into the
commercial capital Yangon ahead of a huge, open-air mass on Wednesday morning.
Francis
will travel on to Bangladesh on Thursday.
Pope Francis called for respect for rights and justice in a keenly-watched address in Myanmar but refrained from any mention of the Rohingya pic.twitter.com/A5w10lfAEW— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 28, 2017
Pope Francis wraps up a high-stakes Asia tour dominated by the plight of the Rohingya, with a visit to a hospital in Dhaka run by the order of Mother Theresa https://t.co/KoeAJL2QAo pic.twitter.com/OqrIp3OoC6— AFP news agency (@AFP) December 2, 2017



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