SBS News
Myanmar authorities have denied that the Rohingya
minority was being persecuted in Rakhine state following reports by the United
Nations.
Myanmar authorities have denied that the Rohingya
minority was being persecuted in Rakhine state following reports by the United
Nations that there was evidence of genocide and ethnic cleansing.
"Myanmar continues its efforts at putting Rakhine
state back on the road to development and stability while still facing
terrorism, funded and inspired from abroad," government mouthpiece Global
New Light of Myanmar said in an editorial on Wednesday.
The newspaper said that it was an attack by the militants
of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) that had led to military
operations in Rakhine in August 2017, which prompted the exodus of people,
mostly Rohingya Muslims, to Bangladesh.
It also suggested that, according to interviews conducted
by Myanmar officials in Rakhine, many people left their homes owing to lack of
jobs, food and threats from the ARSA.
"There were tensions and there was fighting in
Rakhine State, but there was no genocide. The term genocide should not be used
in Myanmar, nor in other countries, without clear evidence," the article
said.
On Monday, UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights
situation in Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, said in Geneva that the Myanmar government,
led by Aung San Suu Kyi, must be held accountable, together with the military,
for the crimes committed against the Rohingyas.
Myanmar's army has been accused of murder, raping women
and girls and burning Rohingya villages during the military operation in August
2017, which has led over 680,000 people to flee.
The exodus of Rohingyas from Rakhine comes after at least
70,000 Rohingyas fled the same area amid alleged attacks by the military
following a similar assault on border posts by Rohingya insurgents in October
2016.