The
International Criminal Court said Thursday it had jurisdiction to probe the
forced exodus of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar as a possible crime against
humanity.
The ICC's
"pre-trial chamber... decided by majority the court may exercise
jurisdiction over the alleged deportations of the Rohingya people from Myanmar
to Bangladesh," the Hague-based tribunal said in a statement.
The Myanmar
government on Thursday declined to comment on the announcement when contacted
by AFP.
Some
700,000 people from the stateless Muslim minority have fled Myanmar's northern
Rakhine state into neighbouring Bangladesh since August last year to escape a
bloody military crackdown.
The violence
has left a trail of torched villages in its wake, amid allegations of murder
and rape at the hands of troops and vigilantes.
In an
unprecedented move in April, the ICC's chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda asked
judges at the world's only permanent war crimes court to rule whether she can
investigate the deportations as a crime against humanity.
It is a
legally complicated request, as Myanmar is not a signatory and member of the
Rome Statute which underpins the ICC.
Bangladesh,however,
is a signatory and Bensouda argued that should give her office jurisdiction to
investigate the plight of the Rohingya.
She likened
deportation to "a cross-border shooting", arguing the crime "is
not completed until the bullet (fired in one state) strikes and kills the victim
(standing in another state)".

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