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| Suu Kyi is a Nobel laureate who spent years in house arrest |
UN investigators called Tuesday for an expert evaluation of whether Myanmar's civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi can be legally implicated in the abuses committed against the country's Rohingya minority.
The
fact-finding mission to Myanmar, set up by the UN Human Rights Council, said
they were not equipped to determine what level of responsibility Suu Kyi should
shoulder for the Rohingya crisis.
"It
will become a legal issue whether or not there is an element of culpability
here," fact-finding mission chair Marzuki Darusman told reporters in
Geneva.
The Human
Rights Council recently created a panel to prepare criminal indictments over
atrocities committed in the country -- the so-called Independent International
Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM) -- which could have the expertise to determine
what responsibility Suu Kyi bears in the crisis.
"It is still an open-ended question to what extent she might be implicated," Darusman said.
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A Rohingya
child plays with a football inside a sewage pipe at a refugee camp
|
"It is still an open-ended question to what extent she might be implicated," Darusman said.
When asked
if the Nobel laureate might be implicated, he said "that is for the judicial
process to address," referring to the IIMM.
The
fact-finding mission last year branded the army operation in August 2017 as
"genocide" and called for the prosecution of top generals, including
army chief Min Aung Hlaing.
Some
740,000 Rohingya fled burning villages, bringing accounts of murder, rape and
torture over the border to sprawling refugee camps in Bangladesh, where
survivors of previous waves of persecution already languished.
And in a
damning report published Monday, the investigators warned that the 600,000
Rohingya still inside Myanmar's Rakhine state remain in deteriorating and
"deplorable" conditions and continue to face a "serious risk of
genocide".
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Some
740,000 Rohingya fled burning villages, bringing accounts of murder,
rape and
torture
|
The experts
told the rights council on Tuesday that they had a confidential list of some
150 names, including officials, suspected of being involved in genocide, crimes
against humanity and war crimes.
'Criminal
responsibility'?
Darusman
said that the investigators initially shied away from laying blame on Suu Kyi,
who spent years in house arrest before her party in 2015 won Myanmar's first
fully free vote for generations.
He said
that the fact-finding team had taken into account that Myanmar was "going
through a transition, a democratic transition, and therefore in our first
report we absolved Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi from any direct responsibility."
But while
it was likely that Suu Kyi was not aware in August 2017 of the army's
activities, "the issue now is that subsequently, there was no further
addressing of this issue on her part," Darusman said.
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Major
Rohingya refugee camp populations in Bangladesh, as of Aug 15, 2019
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Another
member of the fact-finding mission, Christopher Sidoti, acknowledged that
"it is clear that the civilian side of the government does not control the
military side of the government."
But
"the civilian side of the government has very substantial constitutional
responsibilities," he said.
"The
longer this goes on, the more impossible it is for the civilian side of the
government to escape international criminal responsibility for the human rights
situation in Myanmar."
The
fact-finding mission, which was never granted access to Myanmar, is expected to
wrap up its work during the ongoing session of the Human Rights Council, due to
end next week.
But the UN
Special Rapporteur on the rights situation in Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, should
continue monitoring the situation.




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