Rohingya Genocide Press Release-
full official text.
United Nations expert says there are “elements of genocide” against Myanmar’s Rohingya
28 April 2014, London
The United Nations Special Rapporteur for Human Rights, Tomás Ojéa
Quintana has said “There are elements of genocide in Rakhine with
respect to Rohingya.”
Speaking at the London Conference on Decades of State-Sponsored Destruction of Myanmar’s
Rohingya, Ojéa added “It is crimes against humanity. The possibility
of a genocide needs to be discussed. This conference is very important
as it does just that.”
The conference marked the first time top
legal experts, academics and activists have met at the London School of
Economics And Political Science (LSE) and initiated the public debate
on whether the persecution of the Rohingya by Myanmar should be
considered genocide under international law.
Other speakers
included Professor Daniel Feierstein, President of the International
Association of Genocide Scholars; and Professor Gianni Tognoni, General
Secretary, Permanent People’s Tribunal, Rome.
International
legal experts presented definitions of genocide, mechanisms and models
for justice. Leading human rights researchers and academics as well as
Rohingya refugees offered evidence of decades of systematic persecution
of Muslim Rohingya in Myanmar.
Dr Zarni, chair of the conference
and visiting fellow at the LSE, made a case for what he called “the slow
burning genocide” of Myanmar’s Rohingya since 1978 based on three years
of extensive archival research and interviews with military officers
and Rohingya victims.
The conference concluded with a call for
the immediate end to Myanmar’s persecution of Rohingya, which it says
amounts to genocide. The message is supported by dozens of concerned
individuals and organisations including: Prudentienne Seward, a survivor
of the Rwanda genocide against Tutsis and Founder of PAX (Peace for the
African Great Lakes), Professor Noam Chomsky of Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, Columbia University Professor Gayatria Chakravoty
Spivak, Oxford University Professor Emeritus and founder of Refugee
Studies Barbara Harrell-Bond, London School of Economics Professor Mary
Kaldor and Executive Director Youk Chhang of the Documentation Center of
Cambodia.
The call notes, “Every aspect of their (Rohingya)
lives, including marriage, childbirth and ability to work, is severely
restricted. Their right to identity and citizenship is officially
denied; in other words, they are not recognized as humans before the
law… Rohingya are profoundly vulnerable to all forms of oppression and
atrocities.”
It points out that alone of all the country’s more
than 130 ethnic groups, only Rohingya are subjected to a policy of
forced population control. By denying the Rohingya legal existence,
designing extensive structures of discrimination and depriving a large
segment of Rohingya population even basic humanitarian services such as
provision of water, food and medicine the Myanmar government and people
are destroying an entire people.
“Our people have been subject
to a national policy of discrimination, persecution and eventual
destruction at the hands of security forces and local extremists for the
past nearly 40 years. I appeal to the world not to let another Rwanda
repeat for Rohingya,” said Tun Khin, President of BROUK, which sponsors
legislation at the US Congress calling for the end to persecution of
Rohingya.
“The United Nations has taken 20 years to apologise
for its failure to recognise and prevent the Rwandan genocide; the
international community should not repeat the same mistake in Myanmar,”
said Prudentienne Seward.
#end text#
Contacts:
Dr Zarni : fanon2005@gmail.com
Tun Khin: tunkhin80@gmail.com
Burma, America, The World, Art, Literature, Political Economy through the eyes of a Permanent Exile. "We must take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the oppressed. Sometimes we must interfere. . . There is so much injustice and suffering crying out for our attention . . . writers and poets, prisoners in so many lands governed by the left and by the right." Elie Wiesel, Nobel Peace Prize Speech, 1986, Oslo. This entire site copyright Kyi May Kaung unless indicated otherwise.
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