Media Release by Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK (BROUK)
For Immediate Release
Tuesday 16th May 2017
Burned, Stabbed and Shot – Physical Evidence of
Atrocities Committed against the Rohingya.
Physical evidence of atrocities commited by Burmese army against innocent Rohingya- photo BROUK |
A new report, Burned, Stabbed and Shot – Physical
Evidence of Atrocities Committed against the Rohingya; published today by
Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK documents physical evidence of atrocities
committed against the Rohingya by the Burmese Army.
On October 9th 2016, the long saga of oppression endured
by Myanmar’s Rohingya minority entered a new phase. For the first time in a
generation, members of the group staged an armed attack, on this occasion
against three Border Guard posts, killing nine.
The assault was answered with months of systematic and
widespread violence perpetrated by Myanmar’s military. A “flash report”
released by the UN’s Office for the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR)
on February 3 concluded that these operations likely involved crimes against
humanity; the paper detailed acts of “devastating cruelty” including systematic
rape, torture and killing.
The report contains further evidence advances the
civilian population was targeted in an organised manner by state forces which
systematically targeted civilians, including children, in a campaign of killing
and cruelty.
What is new about the material contained in this report
is that it documents, through photographs, testimony and forensic analysis,
physical evidence of attacks against civilians.
One case study is of a boy aged 8 who was burnt when
soldiers set fire to his home after killing his father.
Another case study is of a 16 year old who was shot in
the back whilst running away when the Burmese Army attacked his village.
The report argues that the international community must
not allow the obstruction of the Fact Finding Mission by the government of
Burma to lead to further impunity for crimes being committed. If obstructed by
the government, the Mission must collect evidence by other means, and this
report demonstrates that it is possible to collect evidence in neighbouring
countries.
The report contains detailed practical recommendations of
steps the government of Burma should take to address the situation.
“For the past 20 years the international community has
failed to act when the government of Burma has ignored recommendations about
the Rohingya in UN General Assembly Resolutions, UN Human Rights Council
Resolutions, and by Special Rapporteurs,” said Tun Khin, President of the
Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK. “This must not be allowed to happen again
after the Fact Finding Mission reports. This time we need action or we’ll keep
seeing these kinds of abuses over and over again.”
For more information please contact Tun Khin: +44
7888714866