Is
Genocide Underway in Myanmar?
A new legal analysis released this week presents strong evidence that it
is.
Does
Myanmar’s systematic persecution of its ethnic Rohingya population legally
constitute genocide? And, if so, who should be held accountable?
New legal
analysis by Yale Law School’s Lowenstein Clinic in conjunction with rights
group Fortify Rights presents strong evidence to suggest that genocide is being
committed against the Muslim minority group by Myanmar state actors, including
the army, police and a recently disbanded border security force known as
Nasaka.
The
research, launched on Thursday at a press event in Bangkok, applies the 1948
Genocide Convention’s checklist of criminal elements to the Rohingya’s
situation in Myanmar’s Rakhine State. The findings confirm that the Rohingya
qualify as a protected group, that they have suffered acts defined under the
convention as genocide, and that the state-sponsored acts have been committed
with the intent to destroy the Rohingya as a distinct ethnic group, in whole or
in part.
While
acknowledging the Rohingya suffered discrimination and abuses under previous
military rule, the Yale analysis focuses on abuses committed from 2012 to
present under President Thein Sein’s quasi-civilian administration. These
include documented cases of arbitrary detention, forced labor, sexual violence,
restrictions on free movement and population control policies the report’s
researchers likened to “biological genocide.” The study follows a 2013 Human
Rights Watch report that characterized the persecution as “ethnic cleansing”, a
non-legal term that lacks the criminal ramifications of genocide accusations.
The Yale
research also argues that the dire condition of 140,000 internally displaced
Rohingyas now being held in over 60 internment camps with limited access to
food, clean water, sanitation, medical care and education represents genocidal
intent. The ongoing persecution and poor conditions in IDP camps has caused as
many as 160,000 Rohingya to flee Myanmar since 2012, according to Matthew
Smith, Fortify Rights’ executive director. Thousands have fled by boat, often
at the mercy of ruthless human trafficking gangs that have maintained death
camps in Malaysia and Thailand. Despite these revelations, analysts expect a
new exodus by sea when this year’s monsoon rains lift.
The
analysis, however, falls short of asserting that genocide has unequivocally
occurred, but could provide the legal foundation for building future legal
cases against individual state actors, including potential indictments at the
International Criminal Court in The Hague. Fortify Rights advocates for the
United Nations to follow-up the Yale findings with an independent Commission of
Inquiry tasked to investigate reports of violence, identify perpetrators,
determine authoritatively if the acts constitute genocide, and recommend means
for holding individuals accountable under both international human rights and
criminal law.
If the
Yale Lowenstein Clinic and Fortify Rights’ findings have legal merit, then
Thein Sein would be a prime candidate for prosecution – although the report
does not arrive at that explicit conclusion. While Thein Sein’s authority over
the army is questionable under the current political configuration, his command
control over the Nasaka is not in doubt. In July 2013, Thein Sein disbanded the
joint agency under presidential order, just months after the United Nations
identified the unit as responsible for committing various atrocities against
the Rohingya, including extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrest and torture.
Local
press reports quoted Minister of Information and Presidential Spokesman Ye Htut
denying the report’s findings, saying that the government “rejects the
accusation completely.” He said that both ethnic Rohingyas and Rakhines have
suffered and that the government is handling cases “equally” and “fairly” under
local law. Ye Htut said the report’s release was intentionally timed to
complicate the situation in western Rakhine State ahead of general elections
scheduled for November 8. Nearly one million Rohingyas were arbitrarily
stripped of their voting rights earlier this year, while over 100 Rohingya
candidates have been barred from running in the polls by the military-appointed
election commission.
The Yale
report’s findings and analysis will make for uncomfortable reading among E.U.
and U.S. officials. Both have richly rewarded Thein Sein’s political and
economic reforms by lifting or suspending the previous sanctions they each
imposed on Myanmar’s previous ruling junta’s poor rights record. The Obama
administration in particular has touted its strong engagement with Thein Sein’s
quasi-civilian regime, driven largely by the geostrategic imperative of
counter-balancing China’s rise in the region, as one of its top foreign policy
successes.
Before
the diplomatic warming trend, Obama had called in 2010 for the establishment of
a U.N. Commission of Inquiry into war crimes allegations against Myanmar’s top
leaders for their roles in abusive counter-insurgency operations. The U.S.-led
motion, later blocked by China, was launched in punitive response to
indications the November 2010 elections would be rigged in favor of military
candidates. With Western hopes now pinned on a democratic transition at the
ballot box and even stronger ties with a new elected government, any calls for
a U.N. genocide inquiry will likely be met, at least for now, by a steely
silence in Brussels and Washington. By Shawn
W. Crispin
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