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| Aung San Suu Kyi has seen her reputation among the international community crumble over her handling of the Rohingya crisis |
Three Nobel
Peace Prize winners Monday urged fellow laureate Aung San Suu Kyi to speak out
about violence against the Rohingya minority, warning she otherwise risks
prosecution for "genocide".
The trio --
Tawakkol Karman, Shirin Ebadi and Mairead Maguire -- implored the embattled
Myanmar leader to "wake up" to the atrocities after visiting squalid
camps in Bangladesh home to nearly one million Rohingya refugees.
"This
is clearly, clearly, clearly genocide that is going on by the Burmese
government and military against the Rohingya people," Maguire said Monday,
using another name for Myanmar.
"We
refuse this genocide policy of the Burmese government. They will be taken to
the ICC (International Criminal Court) and those who are committing genocide
will be held responsible."
The UN has
described the systematic violence by Myanmar against Rohingya Muslims in
Rakhine state as possible genocide and ethnic cleansing, but has stopped short
of outright accusing the army of war crimes.
Suu Kyi,
once a global rights icon, has witnessed her reputation among the international
community crumble over her handling of the Rohingya crisis.
Critics
have called for the Nobel prize she won under house arrest in 1991 to be
revoked.
Her fellow
three female laureates issued a personal appeal to the beleaguered leader as
they toured the overcrowded camps in Cox's Bazar district on Sunday and Monday,
hearing firsthand stories of rape and murder against the Muslim minority.
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Nobel Peace
Laureates Mairead Maguire (C) from Northern Ireland and Tawakkol
Karman (L)
from Yemen walk during their visit to Kutupalong refugee camp in Ukhia
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Karman, a
Yemeni rights activist, warned Suu Kyi that she risked being hauled to the ICC
if she did not intervene.
"If
she will continue her silence, she will be one of them," said Karman,
fighting back tears, after meeting Rohingya refugees.
"It's
an appeal to our sister Aung San Suu Kyi to wake up, otherwise she will be
betrayed (as) one of the perpetrators of this crime."
Myanmar has
staunchly denied the charges and blocked UN investigators from the conflict
zone in Rakhine state, souring relations with a host of western allies.
Nearly
700,000 Rohingya have sought sanctuary in Cox's Bazar after fleeing a Myanmar
army crackdown launched last August, sparking a humanitarian emergency in the
Bangladesh border district.
Critics
have accused Suu Kyi of adopting a siege mentality as global condemnation has
mounted.
Myanmar
considers the Rohingya illegal "Bengali" immigrants but has signed an
agreement with Bangladesh to repatriate some 750,000 refugees back across the
border.
The process
has stalled, as the UN warns any returns must be voluntary and rights groups
warn Rohingya could be forced into ghettoes once in Myanmar.


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