Paris city
will strip Aung San Suu Kyi of her honorary freedom of the French capital over
her failure to speak out against a crackdown on Myanmar's Rohingya minority, a
mayor's spokeswoman said Friday.
Mayor Anne
Hidalgo decided to revoke the honour because of the "multiple violations
of human rights recorded in Myanmar and the violence and persecution by
Myanmar's security forces against the Rohingya minority," the spokeswoman
told AFP.
The move,
which follows similar decisions by Glasgow, Edinburgh and Oxford, would make
Myanmar's de facto leader the first person to lose the freedom of the French
capital, a purely symbolic award.
The move
will be finalised by the city council at a meeting in mid-December, the
spokeswoman said.
Nobel peace
laureate Suu Kyi, once feted as a democracy icon in the mould of Nelson Mandela
for leading opposition to Myanmar's military junta, has fallen out of favour in
the West over her inaction in the face of the crackdown on the mostly Muslim
Rohingya.
More than
700,000 Rohingya fled violence in the Buddhist-majority country last year,
mostly to neighbouring Bangladesh.
A UN rights
team found evidence of widespread murder, rape, torture and arson and called
for top generals to be prosecuted for genocide, war crimes and crimes against
humanity.
Hidalgo's
office said the mayor wrote to Suu Kyi late last year to "express her
concern and call for respect for the rights of the Rohingya minority", but
that the letter went unanswered.
Suu Kyi's
supporters argue that she has no powers to rein in the army.
She has
already been stripped of her honorary Canadian citizenship and her Amnesty
International's "Ambassador of Conscience Award".

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