The Manila Times

‘Crimes vs humanity seen rising in Myanmar’

GENEVA, Switzerland: United Nations investigators on Tuesday reported mounting evidence of crimes against humanity, including murder, torture and sexual violence, committed in Myanmar since last year’s coup.

According to the global organization’s Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM), women and children were particularly being targeted.

“There are ample indications that since the military takeover in February 2021, crimes have been committed in Myanmar on a scale and in a manner that constitutes a widespread and systematic attack against a civilian population,” the investigators said in a statement.

Myanmar’s military seized power on Feb. 1, 2021, ousting the civilian government of Aung Sang Suu Kyi and arresting her.

The junta has waged a bloody crackdown on dissent, with the violence leaving more than 2,100 civilians dead and nearly 15,000 arrested, according to a local monitoring group.

The investigation team warned in its annual report that in the 12 months to the end of June, “the scope of potential international crimes taking place in Myanmar has broadened dramatically.”

The IIMM was established by the UN Human Rights Council in September 2018 to collect evidence of the most serious international crimes and prepare files for criminal prosecution.

It cooperates with the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Court, among others.

Sexual crimes

“Perpetrators of these crimes need to know that they cannot continue to act with impunity,” IIMM chief Nicholas Koumjian said.

The report said evidence had shown that “sexual and genderbased crimes, including rape and other forms of sexual violence, and crimes against children have been perpetrated by members of the security forces and armed groups.”

Koumjian said the investigators were focusing in particular on crimes committed against women and children, which are “among the gravest international crimes, but they are also historically underreported and underinvestigated.”

Children in Myanmar had been killed, tortured and arbitrarily detained, including as proxies for their parents, the report found.

They had also been subjected to sexual violence and conscripted and trained by security forces and armed groups.

The team, which has never been permitted to visit Myanmar, said it had nonetheless collected nearly 3 million “information items,” including interview statements, documents, photographs and geospatial imagery.

The investigators said the evidence they had gathered indicated that “several armed conflicts are ongoing and intensifying” in the Southeast Asian nation.

They also said they were drawing up case files on specific incidents of war crimes committed in the context of those conflicts, including intentional attacks directed at civilians, indiscriminate killings and the widespread burning of villages and towns.

Nature of crimes ‘expanding’

Other UN experts and the IIMM itself had already warned that war crimes and crimes against humanity were being committed.

But on Tuesday, the investigators cautioned that more regions were becoming engulfed in the violence, and that “the nature of the potential criminality is also expanding.”

They pointed to the junta’s execution of four political prisoners last month — including a former lawmaker from Suu Kyi’s National League of Democracy party and a pro-democracy activist — marking the first deaths of their kind in the country in decades.

The IIMM also highlighted the ongoing plight of Myanmar’s Muslim Rohingya minority, five years after a bloody 2017 crackdown that resulted in the displacement of nearly a million people.

Most of the about 850,000 Rohingya who were driven into camps in neighboring Bangladesh are still there, while another 600,000 are in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

“While the Rohingya consistently express their desire for a safe and dignified return to Myanmar, this will be very difficult to achieve unless there is accountability for the atrocities committed against them, including through prosecutions of the individuals most responsible for those crimes,” Koumjian said.

Last month, the ICJ in the Hague, Netherlands threw out objections from Myanmar’s military rulers and decided to hear a landmark case accusing the country of genocide against the Rohingya.

Asia And Oceania

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2022-08-11T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-11T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://digitaledition.manilatimes.net/article/281960316526913

The Manila Times