UN human rights chief calls for new
“mechanism” to try crimes in Myanmar
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| Michelle Bachelet, the new United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, at the 39th session in Geneva on Sept. 10,2018.- AFP |
Michelle Bachelet, the new High Commissioner for Human
Rights on September 10 called for a new body to collect evidence with a view to
prosecute crimes against minorities in Myanmar.
The new chief of the United Nations top human rights body
called on Monday for a new quasi-judicial body to collect evidence with a view
to future prosecution of crimes against Muslim Rohingya and other
minorities in Myanmar.
In her first speech to the Geneva-based UN’s Human
Rights Council (UNHRC) since taking office on Sept. 1, Michelle
Bachelet of Chile said that attacks and persecution, including murder and
torture, appear to continue against minorities in Myanmar’s Rakhine and Shan
states.
An independent 3-member fact-finding mission appointed by
the UNHRC to investigate human rights abuses in Myanmar said on August 27 that
the country military leaders should be prosecuted for genocide
against Rohingya Muslims and other minorities. It identified six
military leaders by name.
Violations in Kachin, Shan, Rakhine states
Bachelet said “the mission has determined that many of the
gross human rights violations, and serious violations of international
humanitarian law, in Kachin, Shan and Rakhine states amount to the gravest
crimes under international law.” “In addition to crimes against
humanity and war crimes – reported to have been committed in all three states –
there is strong evidence indicating genocide, extermination and deportation of
the Rohingya.”
"The persistence of these patterns of violations
underscores the total impunity accorded to the Myanmar
security forces," Bachelet told the 47-member Council on September 10 at
the start of its three-week session.
Bachelet welcomed a decision by the prosecutor of the
International Criminal Court (ICC) last week that it has jurisdiction over
alleged deportations of Rohingya from Myanmar to Bangladesh as a possible crime
against humanity.
Independent international mechanism
She also welcomed the efforts of member states and the
Council for an independent international mechanism for Myanmar, to collect,
consolidate, preserve and analyze evidence of the most serious international
crimes, in order to expedite fair and independent trials in national
and international courts.
"I urge the Council to pass a resolution and refer the
matter to the General Assembly for its endorsement so that such a mechanism can
be established."
The Myanmar government has rejected the report by the UN
fact-finding team saying it not visit the country. It has so far signaled
it does not intend to cooperate with the international court.

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