UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told the ASEAN
leaders that the unfolding humanitarian crisis can cause regional instability
and radicalization. Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi sat close to him but looked mostly
at a wall screen showing the UN leader.
By JIM GOMEZ (The Associated Press)
MANILA, PHILIPPINES — The United Nations chief expressed
alarm over the plight of Rohingya Muslims in remarks before Burma’s Aung San
Suu Kyi and other leaders from a Southeast Asian bloc that has refused to
criticize her government over the crisis.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said late Monday
that the unfolding humanitarian crisis can cause regional instability and
radicalization. He met with leaders from the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations on the sidelines of its summit in Manila.
“I cannot hide my deep concern with the dramatic movement
of hundreds of thousands of refugees from Myanmar (Burma) to Bangladesh,”
Guterres told the ASEAN leaders. Suu Kyi sat close to him but looked mostly at
a wall screen showing the UN leader.
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Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have fled Burma’s
Rakhine state since late August, when the military launched what they called
“clearance operations” in response to insurgent attacks. The refugees say
soldiers and Buddhist mobs attacked them and burned their villages to force
them to flee.
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In its most forceful denial so far, however, Burma’s
military issued a statement late Monday saying security forces did not commit
atrocities during “clearance operations.” It cited an internal investigation
that it said had absolved it of any wrongdoing in a crisis that has triggered
Asia’s largest refugee exodus in decades.
The report contradicts consistent statements from
Rohingya refugees now in Bangladesh — some with gunshot wounds and severe burns
— who have described massacres, rapes, looting and the burning of hundreds of
villages by Burma’s army and civilian mobs.
Suu Kyi does not have the power to stop Burma’s military,
but has defended it from international condemnation, drawing harsh criticism
and damaging her image as a democracy activist and human rights campaigner.
Gutteres said at the United Nations in September that the
attacks against the Rohingya appeared to be “ethnic cleansing.” He said Friday
that it was “an absolutely essential priority” to stop all violence against
Rohingya Muslims, allow them to return to their homes and grant them legal
status. But his remarks were more measured in front of his ASEAN audience and
he did not use the word “Rohingya” itself, a term that angers people in Burma
who do not consider them a recognized ethnic group.
“It is a worrying escalation in a protracted tragedy and
a potential source of instability in the region, and radicalization,” Guterres
said, welcoming ASEAN efforts to provide humanitarian aid.
Since the crisis began, Guterres said he has called for
“unhindered humanitarian access to affected communities and the right to safe,
voluntary and dignified return of those who fled, to their places of origin.”
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also raised the Rohingya
issue in a meeting with the ASEAN leaders, including Suu Kyi, in Manila on
Tuesday. Trudeau said he has deployed a special envoy to find out how Canada
can support the Muslim minorities and pledged to support ASEAN efforts to help
resolve the problem.
“This is of tremendous concern to Canada and many, many
other countries around the world,” Trudeau said of the Rohingya crisis at a
news conference. “Again, we are always looking at not how we can sort of shake
our finger and yell at people, but how we can help, how we can move forward in
a way that reduces violence, that emphasizes the rule of law, that ensures
protection for all citizens.”
The conservative ASEAN, which includes Burma and other
countries critical of its handling of the Rohingya crisis like Malaysia, has
refused to formally discuss the crisis as a bloc in a strongly critical manner.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s spokesperson, Harry Roque, however, said
at least two leaders raised the issue Monday during the bloc’s annual summit.
Founded in 1967 in the Cold War era, ASEAN has a bedrock
policy of non-interference in each of its members’ domestic affairs and decides
by consensus, meaning just one member can shoot down any initiative by other
members. Those principles have allowed erring governments to parry criticisms while
being involved in an internationally recognized regional grouping.
In a draft of a post-summit communique seen by The
Associated Press, the leaders included a brief line on the issue, praising an
ASEAN disaster-response centre for the delivery of relief goods to recent flood
and landslide victims in Vietnam, displaced Filipinos in the southern
Philippine city of Marawi and “affected communities” in Rakhine in Myanmar.
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