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Biden administration rules Myanmar army committed genocide tagainst Rohingya

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Biden administration rules Myanmar army committed genocide tagainst Rohingya

WORLD+BIZ

Reuters
21 March, 2022, 08:15 pm
Last modified: 21 March, 2022, 11:24 pm


Rohingya camp in Cox's Bazar. Photo: TBS
Rohingya camp in Cox's Bazar. Photo: TBS

Rohingya camp in Cox's Bazar. Photo: TBS

The Biden administration has formally determined that violence committed against the Rohingya minority by Myanmar's military amounts to genocide and crimes against humanity, U.S. officials told Reuters, a move that advocates say should bolster efforts to hold the junta that now runs Myanmar accountable.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken will announce the decision on Monday at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, U.S. officials said, which currently features an exhibit on the plight of the Rohingya. It comes nearly 14 months after he took office and pledged to conduct a new review of the violence.

Myanmar's armed forces launched a military operation in 2017 that forced at least 730,000 of the mainly Muslim Rohingya from their homes and into neighboring Bangladesh, where they recounted killings, mass rape and arson. In 2021, Myanmar's military seized power in a coup.

U.S. officials and an outside law firm gathered evidence in an effort to acknowledge quickly the seriousness of the atrocities, but then Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declined to make a determination.

Blinken ordered his own "legal and factual analysis," the U.S. officials told Reuters on condition of anonymity. The analysis concluded the Myanmar army is committing genocide and Washington believes the formal determination will increase international pressure to hold the junta accountable.

"It's going to make it harder for them to commit further abuses," said one senior State Department official.

Officials in Myanmar's embassy in Washington and a junta spokesperson did not immediately respond to emails requesting comment on Sunday.

Myanmar's military has denied committing genocide against the Rohingya, who are denied citizenship in Myanmar, and said it was conducting an operation against terrorists in 2017.

A U.N. fact-finding mission concluded in 2018 that the military's campaign included "genocidal acts," but Washington referred at the time to the atrocities as "ethnic cleansing," a term that has no legal definition under international criminal law.

"It's really signaling to the world and especially to victims and survivors within the Rohingya community and more broadly that the United States recognizes the gravity of what's happening," a second senior State Department official said of Blinken's announcement on Monday.

A genocide determination does not automatically unleash punitive U.S. action.

Since the Cold War, the State Department has formally used the term six times to describe massacres in Bosnia, Rwanda, Iraq and Darfur, the Islamic State's attacks on Yazidis and other minorities, and most recently last year, over China's treatment of Uyghurs and other Muslims. China denies the genocide claims.

Blinken will also announce $1 million of additional funding for the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM), a United Nations body based in Geneva that is gathering evidence for potential future prosecutions.

"It's going to enhance our position as we try to build international support to try to prevent further atrocities and hold those accountable," the first U.S. official said.

U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who led a congressional delegation to Myanmar and Bangladesh in 2017, welcomed the move.

"While this determination is long overdue, it is nevertheless a powerful and critically important step in holding this brutal regime to account," Merkley said in a statement.

FOCUS ON MILITARY

Days after U.S. President Joe Biden took office, Myanmar generals led by Commander in Chief Min Aung Hlaing seized power on Feb. 1, 2021, after complaining of fraud in a November 2020 general election won by democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi's party. Election monitoring groups found no evidence of mass fraud.

The armed forces crushed an uprising against their coup, killing more than 1,600 people and detaining nearly 10,000, including civilian leaders such as Suu Kyi, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), a campaign group, and setting off an insurgency.

Reuters was unable to independently verify the figures from the AAPP. The junta has said the group's figures are exaggerated and that members of the security forces have also been killed in clashes with those opposing the coup. The junta has not provided its own figures.

In response to the coup, the United States and Western allies sanctioned the junta and its business interests, but have been unable to convince the generals to restore civilian rule after they received military and diplomatic support from Russia and China.

Blinken's recognition of genocide and crimes against humanity refers mainly to events in 2017, before last year's coup. The step comes after two State Department examinations - one initiated in 2018 and the other in 2020 - failed to produce a determination.

Some former U.S. officials told Reuters those were missed opportunities to send a firm message to the Myanmar generals who later seized power.

Activists believe a clear statement by the United States that genocide was committed could bolster efforts to hold the generals accountable, such as a case in the International Court of Justice where The Gambia has accused Myanmar of genocide, citing Myanmar's atrocities against the Rohingya in Rakhine state.

Myanmar has rejected the charge of genocide and urged the court's judges to drop the case. The junta says The Gambia is acting as a proxy for others and had no legal standing to file a case.

The International Criminal Court (ICC), a separate court at The Hague, is also investigating the deportation of Rohingya from Myanmar, and the IIMM in Geneva is gathering evidence that could be used in future trials.

Myanmar opposes the investigations and has refused to cooperate, asserting the ICC does not have jurisdiction and that its decision to launch a probe was swayed by "charged narratives of harrowing personal tragedies which have nothing to do with the legal arguments in question."

John Sifton, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch, said Myanmar's military has faced "few real consequences for its atrocities, whether against Rohingya or other ethnic minority groups in Myanmar."

As well as imposing more economic sanctions on the junta, the United States should press for a U.N. Security Council resolution that would refer all the military's alleged crimes to the International Criminal Court, Sifton said. If Russia and China veto a resolution, as is likely, Washington should lead action in the U.N. General Assembly, he said.

"Condemnations of Myanmar should be coupled with concrete actions," he said.

Before Blinken made the decision this month, officials debated whether blaming Myanmar's government - rather than specifically its military - for the atrocities could complicate U.S. support for the country's deposed democratic forces, according to a source familiar with the matter.

The State Department opted to pin the blame on the military, said the second senior department official.

"It's not clear to what degree the civilian leadership had control over actions that were happening in Rakhine State and so that's where the determination ends at this point," said that official, who did not comment on the internal deliberation.

Suu Kyi, forced to share power with the generals, traveled to the International Court of Justice in 2019 to reject the genocide charges brought by The Gambia.

She said the country would itself prosecute any soldiers found to have committed abuses, but maintained the alleged violations did not rise to the level of genocide, for which the specific intent to destroy a group has to be proven.

When they seized power, the generals put Suu Kyi on trial in nearly a dozen cases that could see her sentenced to more than 100 years in prison. She remains in detention.
 
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Myanmar army committed genocide against Rohingya, declares US​

Published: March 21, 2022 21:02:45

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken

The United States formally determined that Myanmar's army committed genocide and crimes against humanity in its violence against the Rohingya minority, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Monday.

Antony Blinken warned that as long as the junta was in power nobody in the country would be safe, reports Reuters.

Announcing the decision, Blinken said the attacks against Rohingya were ‘widespread and systematic’ and that evidence pointed to a clear intent to destroy the mainly Muslim minority.

In his speech at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, the top American diplomat readout tragic and chilling accounts of victims, who had been shot in the head, raped and tortured.

Myanmar's armed forces launched a military operation in 2017 that forced at least 730,000 of the mainly Muslim Rohingya from their homes and into neighbouring Bangladesh, where they recounted killings, mass rape and arson.

In 2021, Myanmar's military seized power in a coup.

"Since the coup, we have seen the Burmese military use many of the same tactics. Only now the military is targeting anyone in Burma it sees as opposing or undermining its repressive rule," Blinken said.

"For those who did not realise it before the coup, the brutal violence unleashed by the military since February 2021 has made clear that no one in Burma will be safe from atrocities so long as it is in power," he added.

Days after US President Joe Biden took office, Myanmar generals led by Commander in Chief Min Aung Hlaing seized power on February 1, 2021, after complaining of fraud in a November 2020 general election won by democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi's party. Election monitoring groups found no evidence of mass fraud.

The armed forces crushed an uprising against their coup, killing more than 1,600 people and detaining nearly 10,000, including civilian leaders such as Suu Kyi, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, an advocacy group, and setting off an insurgency.

 
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Myanmar army committed genocide against Rohingya, declares US​

Published: March 21, 2022 21:02:45

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken

The United States formally determined that Myanmar's army committed genocide and crimes against humanity in its violence against the Rohingya minority, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Monday.

Antony Blinken warned that as long as the junta was in power nobody in the country would be safe, reports Reuters.

Announcing the decision, Blinken said the attacks against Rohingya were ‘widespread and systematic’ and that evidence pointed to a clear intent to destroy the mainly Muslim minority.

In his speech at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, the top American diplomat readout tragic and chilling accounts of victims, who had been shot in the head, raped and tortured.

Myanmar's armed forces launched a military operation in 2017 that forced at least 730,000 of the mainly Muslim Rohingya from their homes and into neighbouring Bangladesh, where they recounted killings, mass rape and arson.

In 2021, Myanmar's military seized power in a coup.

"Since the coup, we have seen the Burmese military use many of the same tactics. Only now the military is targeting anyone in Burma it sees as opposing or undermining its repressive rule," Blinken said.

"For those who did not realise it before the coup, the brutal violence unleashed by the military since February 2021 has made clear that no one in Burma will be safe from atrocities so long as it is in power," he added.

Days after US President Joe Biden took office, Myanmar generals led by Commander in Chief Min Aung Hlaing seized power on February 1, 2021, after complaining of fraud in a November 2020 general election won by democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi's party. Election monitoring groups found no evidence of mass fraud.

The armed forces crushed an uprising against their coup, killing more than 1,600 people and detaining nearly 10,000, including civilian leaders such as Suu Kyi, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, an advocacy group, and setting off an insurgency.


Perks of becoming a US lackey.
 
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They just trying to woo the silent Muslims into taking a side in the Ukraine-Russian War, we should just stay neutral in this war. Don't buy into this non-sense after 10+ years and no military action it makes no difference. Still not changing my support from Russians ballistic missile the Ukrainians and dragging the Europeans into a conflict.
 
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The US and the European Parliament and has recognized the fake NUG (based in India) as the legitimate government of Myanmar. The wyte lunatic started recognizing random US backed groups and people as gov now,like juan guaido in Venezuela and NUG in myanmar.This is next lvl interference . US is supporting terrorism in Myanmar right now.
 
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Jew Biden is a little too late to recognize the genocide isn't he?
 
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Jew Biden is a little too late to recognize the genocide isn't he?

Why do say that?

The ink on the signed documents ACSA & GSOMIA has not even dried before US recognized this.

Sanctions on RAB will also be removed as soon as BD starts supporting Ukraine.


 
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How much of USA ruling count for anything at all?

Especially when we all see the background of USA

USA is in no position to judge anything or make any ruling when the history
of USA created paths of destruction and death at every turn.


images



CXN1v03VAAE8o7T
 
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Look too at Ukraine and how that war there was started.

It was the billions poured into Ukraine from USA and the instigation of USA that caused the conflict there.

USA GOT NO MORAL STANDING TO MAKE ANY RULINGS OF ANY KIND

FOcXyScXoAIzyfk
 
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Opinion: Five years after the genocide against the Rohingya, horrors go on in Myanmar​

Image without a caption

By Editorial Board
Yesterday at 5:07 p.m. EDT

The scorched-earth brutality against the Rohingya Muslims in northern Rakhine state in Myanmar five years ago left a trail of death and terror, and sent more than 740,000 people to Bangladesh. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Monday properly designated it a genocide and crimes against humanity. He made the declaration after viewing an exhibit recounting the horrors at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. Yet the noble mission of making sure the past does not become prologue remains unfinished in Myanmar, where a murderous military continues to rain hell down upon those who oppose it.

Mr. Blinken’s announcement marks the eighth time the United States has designated a genocide, and the barbarity against the Rohingya in 2016 and 2017 surely qualifies. The military in Myanmar carried out two waves of violence, triggered by attacks on Myanmar security forces by a Rohingya insurgent group. The second wave in 2017 “targeted civilians indiscriminately and often with extreme brutality,” according to a State Department report. The military, known as the Tatmadaw, raped, murdered and tortured the Rohingya while burning their villages to the ground. On Sept. 2, the Tatmadaw and Buddhist villagers massacred 10 captive Rohingya men who were bound together and then buried in a mass grave. A month later, none of the 6,000 Rohingya who once lived in the coastal village of Inn Din were still there. This was just one episode in a military operation that forced Rohingya into a mass exodus. “The attack against Rohingya was widespread and systematic, which is crucial for reaching a determination of crimes against humanity,” Mr. Blinken said. “The evidence also points to a clear intent behind these mass atrocities — the intent to destroy Rohingya, in whole or in part.”

At the time, Myanmar was a struggling, nascent democracy led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who shared power with the Tatmadaw. When the military blitz against the Rohingya took place, she seemed unwilling or unable to stop it, perturbing those who had admired her stoic leadership of a democracy movement through years under house arrest. In 2019, she personally defended Myanmar against charges of “genocidal acts” before the International Court of Justice. Then her government was overturned by a coup in February 2021, led by Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, who had overseen the military’s Rohingya atrocity, and who remains commander in chief. The savagery of the Rohingya campaign is being repeated as the army, struggling to hold on to power, is fighting insurgency elsewhere in Myanmar with the same inhuman tactics.

Much more needs to be done. The United States has imposed targeted sanctions on 65 individuals and 26 entities that support the junta, but it must also attempt to stanch the flow of dollars through banks that sustain the regime and continue to press for an international tribunal to hold the junta to account for its crimes. As Mr. Blinken declared, “The day will come when those responsible for these appalling acts will have to answer for them.” By calling those acts what they were — genocide — the rest of the world can help bring that day about sooner.

The Post’s View | About the Editorial Board​

Editorials represent the views of The Washington Post as an institution, as determined through debate among members of the Editorial Board, based in the Opinions section and separate from the newsroom.
Members of the Editorial Board and areas of focus: Deputy Editorial Page Editor Karen Tumulty; Deputy Editorial Page Editor Ruth Marcus; Associate Editorial Page Editor Jo-Ann Armao (education, D.C. affairs); Jonathan Capehart (national politics); Lee Hockstader (immigration; issues affecting Virginia and Maryland); David E. Hoffman (global public health); Charles Lane (foreign affairs, national security, international economics); Heather Long (economics); Molly Roberts (technology and society); and Stephen Stromberg (elections, the White House, Congress, legal affairs, energy, the environment, health care).

Editorial Board of the Washington Post.

Interesting timing of everything.
 
.

Opinion: Five years after the genocide against the Rohingya, horrors go on in Myanmar​

Image without a caption

By Editorial Board
Yesterday at 5:07 p.m. EDT

The scorched-earth brutality against the Rohingya Muslims in northern Rakhine state in Myanmar five years ago left a trail of death and terror, and sent more than 740,000 people to Bangladesh. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Monday properly designated it a genocide and crimes against humanity. He made the declaration after viewing an exhibit recounting the horrors at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. Yet the noble mission of making sure the past does not become prologue remains unfinished in Myanmar, where a murderous military continues to rain hell down upon those who oppose it.

Mr. Blinken’s announcement marks the eighth time the United States has designated a genocide, and the barbarity against the Rohingya in 2016 and 2017 surely qualifies. The military in Myanmar carried out two waves of violence, triggered by attacks on Myanmar security forces by a Rohingya insurgent group. The second wave in 2017 “targeted civilians indiscriminately and often with extreme brutality,” according to a State Department report. The military, known as the Tatmadaw, raped, murdered and tortured the Rohingya while burning their villages to the ground. On Sept. 2, the Tatmadaw and Buddhist villagers massacred 10 captive Rohingya men who were bound together and then buried in a mass grave. A month later, none of the 6,000 Rohingya who once lived in the coastal village of Inn Din were still there. This was just one episode in a military operation that forced Rohingya into a mass exodus. “The attack against Rohingya was widespread and systematic, which is crucial for reaching a determination of crimes against humanity,” Mr. Blinken said. “The evidence also points to a clear intent behind these mass atrocities — the intent to destroy Rohingya, in whole or in part.”

At the time, Myanmar was a struggling, nascent democracy led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who shared power with the Tatmadaw. When the military blitz against the Rohingya took place, she seemed unwilling or unable to stop it, perturbing those who had admired her stoic leadership of a democracy movement through years under house arrest. In 2019, she personally defended Myanmar against charges of “genocidal acts” before the International Court of Justice. Then her government was overturned by a coup in February 2021, led by Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, who had overseen the military’s Rohingya atrocity, and who remains commander in chief. The savagery of the Rohingya campaign is being repeated as the army, struggling to hold on to power, is fighting insurgency elsewhere in Myanmar with the same inhuman tactics.

Much more needs to be done. The United States has imposed targeted sanctions on 65 individuals and 26 entities that support the junta, but it must also attempt to stanch the flow of dollars through banks that sustain the regime and continue to press for an international tribunal to hold the junta to account for its crimes. As Mr. Blinken declared, “The day will come when those responsible for these appalling acts will have to answer for them.” By calling those acts what they were — genocide — the rest of the world can help bring that day about sooner.

The Post’s View | About the Editorial Board​

Editorials represent the views of The Washington Post as an institution, as determined through debate among members of the Editorial Board, based in the Opinions section and separate from the newsroom.
Members of the Editorial Board and areas of focus: Deputy Editorial Page Editor Karen Tumulty; Deputy Editorial Page Editor Ruth Marcus; Associate Editorial Page Editor Jo-Ann Armao (education, D.C. affairs); Jonathan Capehart (national politics); Lee Hockstader (immigration; issues affecting Virginia and Maryland); David E. Hoffman (global public health); Charles Lane (foreign affairs, national security, international economics); Heather Long (economics); Molly Roberts (technology and society); and Stephen Stromberg (elections, the White House, Congress, legal affairs, energy, the environment, health care).

Editorial Board of the Washington Post.

Interesting timing of everything.

Their trying to curry favor to the wider Islamic world. But it’s not going to work as we’ve all seen their blonde hair and blue eye mentality.
 
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At the time, Myanmar was a struggling, nascent democracy led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who shared power with the Tatmadaw. When the military blitz against the Rohingya took place, she seemed unwilling or unable to stop it, perturbing those who had admired her stoic leadership of a democracy movement through years under house arrest. In 2019, she personally defended Myanmar against charges of “genocidal acts” before the International Court of Justice. Then her government was overturned by a coup in February 2021, led by Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, who had overseen the military’s Rohingya atrocity, and who remains commander in chief. The savagery of the Rohingya campaign is being repeated as the army, struggling to hold on to power, is fighting insurgency elsewhere in Myanmar with the same inhuman tactics.

The West still can't accept their darling Aung San participated in the genocide of Rohingya. Let's call spade a spade, she was unwilling. Not unable. She had enough sway over the west to stop the genocide. If she was genuinely a good human being, she would make it a point to stop the injustice. But no, she defended Burmese position in ICJ. She got exactly what she deserved.

US is now shedding tears for Rohingya, when they have bombed an entire country for the tiniest of reasons. They could have clearly done that in Myanmar if they really cared for poor, brown, Muslim refugees. But suddenly now they feel for the Rohingya because they have a self interest at play.

If Bangladesh ends up joining the US camp, it will be nothing but foolishness. We should remain neutral and not choose sides.
 
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How much of USA ruling count for anything at all?

Especially when we all see the background of USA

USA is in no position to judge anything or make any ruling when the history
of USA created paths of destruction and death at every turn.


images



CXN1v03VAAE8o7T
dude you should see the videos of Burmese army burning entire villages, killing random people just because of who they are...
 
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The West still can't accept their darling Aung San participated on the genocide of Rohingya. Let's call spade a spade, she was unwilling. Not unable. She had enough sway over the west to stop the genocide. If she was genuinely a good human being, she would make it a point to stop the injustice. But no, she defended Burmese position in ICJ. She got exactly what she deserved.
this is a prelude to sanctions. and i gotta say , the military and the civilian govt. deserved it
not that the sanctions will really have an effect after what's happening

PDf generals like @Hakikat ve Hikmet said that MIGHTY TATMADAW would retake Chittagong :rofl:and march on Dhaka !
meanwhile ,
 
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