Human Rights Council Orders International Fact-Finding
Mission
MARCH 24, 2017
(Geneva) – The United Nations Human Rights Council on
March 24, 2017, took a key step toward preventing future abuses and bringing
justice for victims in Burma by adopting a strong resolution condemning
violations and making significant recommendations, Human Rights Watch said
today.
The resolution authorizes the council president to
urgently dispatch an independent, international fact-finding mission to Burma.
The mission would establish the facts and circumstances of alleged recent human
rights violations, particularly against Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine State, to
ensure “full accountability for perpetrators and justice for victims.”
“The Human Rights Council’s authorization of an
international fact-finding mission is crucial for ensuring that allegations of
serious human rights abuses in Burma are thoroughly examined by experts, and to
ensure that those responsible will ultimately be held accountable,” said John
Fisher, Geneva director. “Burma’s government should cooperate fully with the
mission, including by providing unfettered access to all affected areas.”
The fact-finding mission will examine allegations of
arbitrary detention, torture, rape and other sexual violence, and destruction
of property by Burmese security forces during “clearance operations” against
ethnic Rohingya Muslims in northern Rakhine State. The “clearance operations”
followed an October 9, 2016 attack by Rohingya militants on border guard posts
that reportedly killed nine police officers. The mission will include expertise
in forensics as well as on sexual and gender-based violence.
Human Rights Watch, along with other groups, has
documented widespread and serious abuses against Rohingya by Burmese military
and police in Rakhine State, including extrajudicial killings, systematic rape,
and the burning of numerous Rohingya villages. The UN estimates that more than
1,000 people died in the crackdown, from October through December.
The resolution also says that Burma should continue to
address systemic and institutionalized discrimination against the Rohingya and
other ethnic and religious minorities, amend or repeal all discriminatory
legislation and policies, and take measures for the safe return of all
internally displaced people and refugees. Approximately 120,000 Rohingya remain
displaced in Rakhine State as a result of violence in 2012. About 100,000 of
them are in closed camps near Sittwe, the state capital, where they are living
in squalid conditions, many of them in rice fields prone to seasonal flooding.
The violence since October has created an additional 25,000 internally
displaced people in Burma and led to the flight of 74,000 more to neighboring
Bangladesh.
The resolution also addresses other important human
rights concerns in Burma. These include the use of criminal defamation laws
against journalists, politicians, students, and social media users in violation
of their right to free expression; restrictions on peaceful assembly; and the
continued use of child soldiers by both state and non-state actors. The Human
Rights Council also cited the recent killings of constitutional expert and
National League for Democracy advisor U Ko Ni, environmental activist Naw Chit
Pan Daing, and journalist Soe Moe Tun. It called on Burma to reform all laws
restricting the rights to freedom of expression, assembly, and association;
release all remaining political prisoners; and ensure thorough, impartial, and
independent investigations into the recent killings.
“The violations occurring in Rakhine State threaten to
undo Burma’s hard-won progress toward a more rights-respecting and democratic
future,” Fisher said. “Burma’s government should make full use of the Human
Rights Council resolution to address the major human rights challenges ahead.”