By Amanda Connolly
(Global News)
In a tweet posted Jan. 1 — and quickly deleted —
Ambassador Peter MacArthur said that his “first day of 2018 unfolded on a
Myanmar beach where the great surf is pleasingly turquoise coloured, warm,
clean and clear — perfect for snorkelling to visit with nature and the fish.”
READ MORE: 43,000 sign petition demanding Canada revoke
Myanmar leader’s honorary citizenship https://lnkd.in/d88AwhW
Roughly 600,000 Rohingya refugees have fled what United
Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called a “humanitarian and human
rights nightmare” late last summer, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointed
former Liberal leader Bob Rae as Canada’s special envoy to Myanmar amid the
violence.
Trudeau also met with Aung Sung Suu Kyi, the civilian
leader of Myanmar and an honourary Canadian citizen, at the APEC summit in
November amid a chorus of calls for him to revoke her citizenship for failing
to stop or mitigate the attacks by the country’s military against the Rohingya.
The Rohingya are an ethnic Muslim minority group of about
one million people living largely in the western Rakhine state of Myanmar.
Most have now fled into refugee camps in neighbouring
Bangladesh, which Rae has described as “deplorably overcrowded.”
READ MORE: Rohingya refugee camps ‘deplorably
overcrowded’: Bob Rae https://lnkd.in/dtJmbxA
The military began its sweeping campaign of rapes,
killings and destruction of Rohingya villages after a militant group known as
the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army attacked police and army posts.
“What happens when there is an insurgent attack by this
group called ARSA [Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army], the [Myanmar] army really
overdoes it,” said Rae in an interview with CBC’s
The Current in November. https://lnkd.in/daba5z8
“You know the army just responds with — to put it mildly
— a very very heavy hand and a great deal of brutality.”
Global Affairs Canada confirmed the tweet was made by
MacArthur and said he was advised to take it down shortly after posting.
Canadian officials also told Global News that MacArthur
had not been on government business in Myanmar but that he was on a private
visit to the country to visit a family member who works for the Canadian
government there.