MillenniumPost
World

40 more Rohingya villages burnt in Myanmar: Report

Nay Pyi Taw: The Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Monday reported the burning of 40 additional Rohingya villages in Myanmar in a military campaign, which has led more than 655,000 people of this Muslim minority community to flee to Bangladesh.

The HRW used satellite images to identify the new incidents, recorded between October and November, raising the total number of villages completely or partially razed to 354 since the beginning of the military offensive on August 25, reports Efe news.
In a statement, the rights group said that some of the cases detected occurred the same week that the governments of Bangladesh and Myanmar signed a memorandum on November 23, to begin the repatriation of the hundreds of thousands of refugees who have crossed the border.
HRW Asia director, Brad Adams, said the continued destruction of Rohingya villages shows that the commitment signed to ensure the safe return of refugees is merely a public relations stunt.
"The satellite imagery shows what the Myanmar Army denies: that Rohingya villages continue to be destroyed. The Myanmar government pledges to ensure the safety of returning Rohingya cannot be taken seriously," said Adams.
The organisation accused the Myanmar Army of committing murders and rapes, among other abuses, during the military operation that began after several armed assaults by a poorly armed Rohingya insurgent group against security forces, which left 11 Myanmar security personnel dead.
The Myanmar Army denied all allegations of abuse despite the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights calling it a textbook example of ethnic cleansing.
The non-profit Doctors Without Borders reported last week that at least 6,700 Rohingya have died since August as a result of the violence.
Speaking to BBC's Panorama, which is due to air on Monday night, the UN's High Commissioner for Human Rights said it would not surprise him if genocide charges were one day brought before the country's leaders.
He said: 'The elements suggest you cannot rule out the possibility that acts of genocide have been committed.
'It's very hard to establish because the thresholds are high but it wouldn't surprise me in the future if the court were to make such a finding on the basis of what we see.'
If the country's leaders are aware of the violence - which has seen dozens of people raped, killed and maimed and received vast media coverage - they could be 'culpable', Al Hussein said.
Next Story
Share it