Myanmar's
neighbours in Southeast Asia have urged the country to hold those responsible
for the Rohingya crisis "accountable", Singapore said Tuesday, in a
rare call for justice from within the region.
Around
700,000 Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar's western Rakhine state have fled across
the border to Bangladesh since August last year following a military campaign
that allegedly involved murder, rape, torture and razing villages.
The UN has
accused Myanmar's military of committing "genocide" against the
Muslim minority.
As global
pressure has mounted over the atrocities, Myanmar formed an "Independent
Commission of Enquiry", which is chaired by former Philippine deputy
foreign minister Rosario Manalo -- but gave no details of the commission's
remit, powers or how long it would take to complete its investigation.
Critics
have blasted the commission for its toothlessness after Manalo said her
commission will not be "blaming" or "finger pointing"
anybody.
Singapore
Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said he and his counterparts from the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) met on September 29 on the
sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York and discussed the situation in
Rakhine.
"We
expressed our grave concern with these alleged acts of violence that have led
to loss of lives, injuries, destruction of homes and displacement of large
numbers of people," he said in parliament.
"To be
brutally honest, this is a man-made humanitarian disaster and something which
should not be happening in this day and age."
He said the
ministers told Myanmar that the commission "should be given a full mandate
to investigate and to hold all those responsible fully accountable".
Myanmar's
military has denied nearly all wrongdoing, justifying its crackdown as a
legitimate means of rooting out Rohingya militants.
But after a
fact-finding mission, the United Nations set up a panel to prepare indictments
against Myanmar's army chief and five other top military commanders for crimes
against humanity and genocide.
Much of
Myanmar's majority Buddhist society regards the Rohingya as illegal immigrants
from Bangladesh and has for decades systematically stripped them of their
rights.
Balakrishnan
noted that Myanmar cannot be compelled by ASEAN to act as the 10-nation
grouping makes decisions by consensus, which effectively gives each member veto
powers.
The bloc
however can influence Myanmar through "persuasion, through transparency
and keeping this on the agenda" of their annual meetings, he said.
ASEAN
members typically steer clear of openly criticising each other's domestic
policies.
Singapore,
the current chair of ASEAN's rotating leadership, will host a summit of the
group's leaders in November.
The bloc's
other members are Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Thailand and Vietnam.

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