The Trudeau government is facing mounting pressure from
across the country to take more international action to hold Myanmar to account
for the genocide of the Rohingya people.
Thirty-four senators and more than 100 human-rights
organizations and advocates sent a joint letter to Foreign Affairs Minister
Chrystia Freeland this week urging Canada to initiate proceedings before the
International Court of Justice for breaching the United Nations convention
against genocide.
This letter follows several similar letters that have
also been sent to Freeland in recent weeks, including one from an all-party
group of MPs who also called for Canada to take international legal action.
In addition, Toronto and Montreal city councils have
passed unanimous motions and several other Canadian mayors and rights
organizations have sent their own letters to Freeland urging Canada to seek
justice for the mass killing and atrocities perpetrated against the Rohingya
people in Myanmar.
Last year, Canada became the first country in the world
to officially recognize the crimes against the Rohingya as a genocide.
That’s why senators and advocates say in their letter
this week that Canada has a moral and legal obligation to take the next step
and invoke the UN genocide convention to hold Myanmar responsible.
Source: The Globe and Mail
Source: The Globe and Mail