Grant UN Fact-Finding Mission Full Access to Rakhine
State
Human Rights Watch
May 24, 2017
(Rangoon) – The Burmese army announced on May 23, 2017,
that its investigation into alleged military abuses in Rakhine State uncovered
no wrongdoing except in two minor incidents, Human Rights Watch said today. The
army’s failure to find its troops responsible for any serious abuses against
ethnic Rohingya since October 2016 in northern Rakhine State demonstrates the
urgent need for Burma’s government to allow unfettered access to the United
Nations international fact-finding mission.
“The Burmese army’s denials of well-documented abuses
shows unvarnished contempt for truth, accountability, and respect for human
rights,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director. “The army’s approach
highlights the need for Aung San Suu Kyi’s government to allow the UN
fact-finding mission into Burma, and to call on the army to provide full access
to conflict areas.”
The army investigation team, led by Lt. Gen. Aye Win of
the Office of the Commander-in-Chief, reportedly interviewed approximately
2,875 villagers in 29 villages in Rakhine State’s Maungdaw Township from
February 10 to March 4. The team said it recorded the testimonies of 408
villagers, and interviewed more than 200 soldiers and members of the border
guard police. However, to have interviewed the number of villagers it claims to
have spoken to, the team would have had to interview at least 125 people each
day while in Rakhine State.
“The army’s approach highlights the need for Aung San Suu
Kyi’s government to allow the UN fact-finding mission into Burma, and to call
on the army to provide full access to conflict areas”. Phil Robertson, Deputy Asia Director
The army investigation reported finding two cases of
abuse. One involved the theft of a motorbike, for which a soldier was sentenced
to one year in jail and received a fine. The other involved military personnel
who beat villagers for allegedly not helping to extinguish a fire, for which
one officer was “penalized and warned” and two soldiers were sentenced to a
year in jail. The investigation team also concluded that the allegations
against the army in a report by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for
Human Rights were either “totally wrong” or “found to be untrue due to false
accusations and exaggerations.”
The UN, Human Rights Watch, and others have documented
numerous serious human rights violations committed by Burmese security forces
against the Rohingya in Rakhine State following the October 9, 2016, attacks on
three police outposts. Human Rights Watch documented extrajudicial killings,
the rape of women and girls, and the burning of at least 1,500 structures. The
violence caused massive displacement, with more than 70,000 fleeing to
Bangladesh and more than 20,000 temporarily internally displaced. A report
issued by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights on February 3,
concluded that the attacks against the Rohingya “very likely” amounted to the
commission of crimes against humanity.
The Burmese government established four separate
commissions to investigate the violence, none of which have been credible or
impartial. In March, the UN Human Rights Council passed a resolution
establishing an independent international fact-finding mission with a mandate
to investigate allegations of recent human rights abuses in Burma, especially
in Rakhine State. The Burmese government has not said whether it will grant
access to the mission.
Past Burmese government investigations have exposed deep
methodological flaws and lack of care for victims and the collection of
accurate testimonies. The Union-level investigation commission, led by Vice
President Myint Swe, has used methods that produced incomplete, inaccurate, or
false information. According to reports, testimony, and publicly released
footage, the Burmese investigators badgered villagers, argued with them, told
them not to say things, accused them of lying, and interviewed victims –
including rape survivors – in large groups where confidentiality was not
provided.
The Union-level commission released an interim report on
January 3 that summarily dismissed allegations of genocide, religious
persecution, and states that it was unable to find sufficient evidence of other
abuses. The commission has yet to issue its final report and there is no set
date for its release.
“Despite overwhelming evidence of mass atrocities, the
Burmese army has again failed to credibly investigate itself,” Robertson said.
“For there to be any hope of uncovering the truth, the Burmese army can no
longer be standing in the way of a serious international fact-finding mission.”
https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/05/24/burma-army-investigation-denies-atrocities
https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/05/24/burma-army-investigation-denies-atrocities