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| Suu Kyi no longer deserved to be called a democracy activist, Lee said (AFP Photo/Jung Yeon-je) |
Seoul (AFP) - Myanmar's civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi has washed her hands of the Rohingya crisis, a UN rights investigator said Tuesday ahead of a meeting between South Korea's President Moon Jae-in and the tarnished democracy icon.
Yanghee
Lee, a university professor in Seoul who is the United Nations Special
Rapporteur on human rights to Myanmar, said Suu Kyi was "terribly
misguided and misinformed" about the abuses against the stateless Muslim
minority in her country.
The Nobel
laureate was under house arrest for years when Myanmar was a military
dictatorship before her party won elections in 2015 by a landslide, in the
first fully free vote for generations.
Hopes were
high that she would usher in a new era of freedom, but more than 740,000
Rohingya have since been driven out of the Buddhist-majority country and into
Bangladesh in a 2017 army crackdown.
The US in
July banned Myanmar's army chief Min Aung Hlaing and other officers for their
role in the campaign of "ethnic cleansing".
Suu Kyi was
spared from the sanctions but no longer deserved to be called a democracy
activist, Lee told AFP.
"She
should step up and really speak out for the treatment that the Rohingya had
suffered for decades," she told AFP.
"It's
time for her to speak out and use the word, call them the way they identify
themselves as the Rohingya."
Myanmar
calls the persecuted minority "Bengali", treating them as illegal
interlopers from Bangladesh and refusing to grant them citizenship or basic
rights.
Lee -- who
has been banned from entering Myanmar over her criticism of its government --
was speaking as South Korea's Moon, a former democracy activist himself, was
due to meet Suu Kyi later Tuesday as part of a tour of Southeast Asia.
South Korea
is the sixth largest foreign investor in Myanmar, but Lee said that meant Seoul
was "inadvertently contributing" to rights violations against
Rohingya and urged Moon to be "principled" during the encounter.
"Our
president enjoys a great history of being a human rights lawyer," said
Lee. "But I'm afraid he hasn't been really speaking out for human rights
for people.
"I
think it's a shame that we are joining the bandwagon of other countries that
looks out for... their countries' economic interest before the suffering of the
people," she said, describing the Rohingya crisis as the "worst case
of ethnic genocide in the 21st century".

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