Edited News | HRC
Myanmar: Intensified war crimes and crimes against humanity committed, says top rights panel
Serious international crimes continue to be inflicted against the people in Myanmar by the country’s military junta and affiliate militias, while armed conflict has intensified substantially, top UN-appointed independent rights experts maintained at the UN Human Rights Council on Monday.
“Tragically, the frequency and intensity of war crimes and crimes against humanity has only increased in recent months,” said Nicholas Koumjian, head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM).
Presenting the panel’s fifth annual report to the forum in Geneva, Mr. Koumjian noted that the past year had seen “more brazen aerial bombings and indiscriminate shelling, resulting in the deaths of innocent civilians including children”.
The report covers the activities carried out by the Mechanism between 1 July 2022 and July 2023. It notes a rise in the number of arrests without due process. The mechanism also has gathered credible evidence that some detainees have been subjected to torture, sexual violence, and other severe mistreatments.
“We have collected compelling evidence of the widespread burning of Rohingya villages and the assaults and killings of civilians. I have been particularly horrified by the numerous accounts of sexual crimes that we have collected,” said Mr. Koumjian, in reference to one of Myanmar’s ethnic minorities who were forced to flee a military crackdown in their hundreds of thousands in 2017.
Established by the Human Rights Council on 27 September 2018, the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM)’s role is to collect, consolidate, preserve and analyse evidence of the most serious international crimes and violations of international law committed in Myanmar since 2011.
Six years since the mass exodus of Rohingya from Myanmar to Bangladesh, the Muslim ethnic minority group is considered to be the world’s largest stateless population that has been denied citizenship rights under the 1982 Citizenship Law in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.
According to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), more than 960,000 mainly Rohingya people now shelter in Bangladesh with a majority living in the Cox Bazar’s region - home to one of the world’s largest refugee camps.
“The quantity of evidence and information we have been able to collect in the past year from individuals and organizations is unprecedented and frankly, unanticipated,” said the IIMM head.
Although the investigators’ repeated requests for information and access have been ignored by the military authorities, cutting-edge technology has been employed to analyse and verify large quantities of material, such as videos, photographs and other information posted on social media. The investigators are also using geospatial imagery to determine damage to villages before and after attacks.
“We have also begun a dedicated inquiry into financial information related to entities and individuals that have contributed to, or benefitted from, the serious international crimes committed in Myanmar,” said Mr. Koumjian. “We are looking at weapon supply chains, and the dispossession of land, homes, and businesses, particularly during the clearance operations in Rakhine State.”
The Human Rights Council-appointed mechanism intends to use the evidence to facilitate justice and accountability in courts and tribunals that are willing and able to prosecute these cases. “We are currently sharing information and evidence with three ongoing proceedings focused on crimes committed against the Rohingya at the International Court of Justice, the International Criminal Court and in courts in Argentina,” said Mr. Koumjian.
The estimated 600,000 Rohingya who remain in Rakhine State are subject to persecution and violence, confined to camps and villages without freedom of movement, and cut off from access to adequate food, health care, education, and livelihoods.
Volker Türk, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, told the Council that “human rights are, and must be, politically neutral. All States have accepted their responsibility to realise all rights and my mandate and ambition are to help every country advance and uphold the full range of human rights – without distinction as to their political system, alliances or stage of development.”
Mr Türk reiterated that “the human rights cause in all its facets has the potential to unify us, at a time when we urgently need to come together to confront the existential challenges that face humanity. This is ultimately about building trust and restoring hope, including through the work of this Council. All of us need to play our part.”
Amid ongoing violence in Myanmar more than 18 months since the country’s military seized power, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) warned that youngsters have been impacted worst. “Myanmar is contaminated with landmines and unexploded ordnance. In the first six months of 2023, 556 casualties were reported nationwide due to landmines and explosive remnants of war,” said Anne Grandjean, UNICEF’s human rights specialist. “This is 143 per cent of the total casualties reported last year. Children make up 20 per cent of these casualties.”
Lotte Knudsen, head of the EU delegation to the UN in Geneva, emphasized that the bloc “calls on the Myanmar armed forces to immediately hold the use of violences against civilians, create the conditions for safe and dignified return of Rohingya to Myanmar, facilitate the unhindered delivery of humanitarian aid, adopt a moratorium on the death penalty, release political detainees and allow the population to exercise their rights including their freedom of expression and assembly.”
From the Bangladesh delegation, Mohammad Sufiur Rahman, Permanent Representative of Bangladesh to the UN in Geneva, noted that his country appreciated the Mechanism’s close engagement to the ICJ, ICC and the court in Argentina to facilitate justice for the Rohingyas” and expressed willingness to continue to cooperate with the IIMM. “The Mechanism’s success in Myanmar is important for the on-the-ground investigations. We ask Myanmar to fully cooperate with IIMM.”
-ends-
STORY: Myanmar report: Special Rapporteur and Human Rights Chief, HRC54 - 11 September 2023
DURATION (TRT): 4:13"
SOURCE: UNTV CH
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH/NATS
ASPECT RATIO: 16/9
DATELINE: 8 September 2023, GENEVA SWITZERLAND
FORMAT: HYBRID PRESS BRIEFING
1
1
1
Edited News | OCHA , UNHCR , WHO
The past two months of intensifying Israeli bombardment in Lebanon have been the “deadliest and most devastating” in decades as communities uprooted from the front line have continued to flee across the border to Syria, UN humanitarians said on Friday.
2
1
3
Edited News | UNOG
“State of Silence”: Diego Luna brings the fight to protect the press to the UN in Geneva
Mexican actor, producer and director Diego Luna has brought his fight to protect journalists all the way to the United Nations, in Geneva. Together with documentary director Santiago Masa, he is putting a spotlight on the silencing of investigative journalism in his country, and on the incredibly high price that many journalist have to pay in pursuit of truth.
1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG
“Today marks the grim milestone of 1,000 days since the Russian Federation launched its full-scale armed attack on Ukraine. Our Office has verified that at least 12,162 civilians have been killed since 24 February 2022, among them 659 children. At least another 26,919 civilians have been injured,” UN Human Rights spokesperson Jeremy Laurance told the bi-weekly press briefing in Geneva.
1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG
With COP29 in Baku now in its second - and final - week, UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk has reiterated his call for urgent human rights-based climate action.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNIFIL , UNICEF , WHO
Lebanon: Increased violence along Blue Line and ‘horrific new normal’ for children
In southern Lebanon, peacekeepers have witnessed “shocking” destruction of villages along the Blue Line and ever-deeper Israeli ground incursions, while the situation of children across the country is becoming increasingly desperate, the UN said on Tuesday.
2
1
2
Press Conferences , Edited News | UNRWA
The head of the UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA, confirmed on Monday that a large convoy of humanitarian aid was looted inside Gaza at the weekend, amid a near-total a breakdown in law and order and harassment of the agency’s staff by Israeli soldiers.
1
1
1
Edited News | OCHA
In the nearly 1,000 days since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, thousands of civilians have been killed, the country’s energy infrastructure is on the brink and drones terrify communities on the front line, the UN’s top aid official in the country said on Friday.
2
1
2
Press Conferences , Edited News | OHCHR
Mexican actor, producer and director Diego Luna took a break from the big screen on Thursday to highlight the dangers faced by journalists in his country and beyond, condemning murders of reporters everywhere as “a scandal”.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNRWA
Gaza: ‘People are losing hope’ as aid access is refused to north, warns UNRWA
Besieged northern Gaza is a place of dead bodies lying in the streets and hospitals running out of blood packs – a situation that’s “nothing short of catastrophic”, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) said on Tuesday.
1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR
UN Human Rights Spokesperson Jeremy Laurence & Ajith Sunghay, Head of UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, on Gaza
1
1
1
Edited News | UNHCR
Sudan’s displaced have endured “unimaginable suffering” in their search for shelter from the country’s ongoing war, UN humanitarians warned on Friday.
1
1
1
Edited News | WHO
‘Exceptional achievement’: Humanitarians reach over 105,000 with polio vaccine in north Gaza
Despite ongoing attacks and access challenges, humanitarians have managed to inoculate over 105,000 children in north Gaza with the second and final dose of the oral polio vaccine, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.