UN, ASEAN urged to act to save Rohingyas from further genocide in Myanmar
UNB
Publish: 19 May 2024, 02:15 AM
Dhaka,
May 18 (UNB) - Parliamentarians from Southeast Asia on Saturday urgently called
on the United Nations, ASEAN, and the wider international community to take
immediate action in order to prevent the mass killing of Rohingyas who are
under siege by the Arakan Army in northern Rakhine State.
"We are extremely
alarmed and concerned by reports that the Arakan Army is indiscriminately
attacking Rohingya civilians in northern Rakhine State," ASEAN
Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR) Chair and Indonesian Member of
Parliament Mercy Chriesty Barends said.
"It is imperative
that the international community act quickly in order to prevent further
catastrophic loss of life and potential genocide."
According to reports
received by APHR from reliable sources, Rohingya civilians in Buthitaung town
and surrounding villages have been under attack from heavy weapons by the
Arakan Army since Friday, May 17.
According to an
eyewitness, Buthitaung Town was arsoned by the Arakan Army, who also forced
Rohingya to leave the town.
Several Rohingya houses,
including the house of U Shwe Maung, APHR Board Member and former MP of
Buthitaung township, was burned down.
There have also been
unconfirmed reports that the Arakan Army is conducting mass killings of
Rohingya in Tatmin Chaung, Kyauk Phyu Taung, Letwedat Pyinshay, Ngakyi Dauk
village tracts in Buthitaung township.
Previously, in 2017,
Myanmar security forces conducted a "clearance operation" in Rakhine
State in which whole villages were massacred, tortured, raped, and burned -
resulting in tens of thousands of deaths, as well as the displacement of over
730,000 people.
In 2019, Gambia, with
the backing of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), filed a case
against Myanmar at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), accusing them of
violating the Genocide Convention.
In January 2020, the ICJ
adopted provisional orders ordering Myanmar to prevent all genocidal acts
against the Rohingya.
Neither the Myanmar
military junta, nor the Arakan Army, is abiding by these provisional measures,
according to a message received from Jakarta.
"There is no doubt
that if no action is taken, countless lives will be lost, with even more
displaced from their homes, further exacerbating the refugee crisis in the
region," said Barends.
"The Rohingya
people have already experienced so much adversity for so long; allowing further
atrocities against them to go unanswered would be an unforgivable abandonment
of the principles of decency and humanity that the international community
profess to uphold. We urgently call on the UN, ASEAN, ASEAN member states and
all countries that claim to value human life to take immediate action to put a
stop to this barbarity."
END/UNB/MK/FH/1314 Hrs
