AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Myanmar: Abuses against Rohingya erode human rights progress
© UNHCR/Y Saita
Six weeks after a state of emergency was declared in Myanmar’s Rakhine
State, targeted attacks and other violations by security forces against
minority Rohingyas and other Muslims have increased, Amnesty
International said today.
Communal violence in the state has also continued, the organization said.
“Declaring
a state of emergency is not a license to commit human rights
violations,” said Benjamin Zawacki, Amnesty International’s Myanmar
Researcher.
“It is the duty of security forces to defend the
rights of everyone – without exception or discrimination – from abuses
by others, while abiding by human rights standards themselves.”
The
Myanmar government declared a state of emergency in Rakhine State on 10
June, following an outbreak of communal violence the previous week
among the Buddhist Rakhine, Muslim Rakhine, and Muslim Rohingya
communities. It remains in effect in several areas.
Since then,
Myanmar’s Border Security Force (nasaka), army, and police have
conducted massive sweeps in areas that are heavily populated by
Rohingyas. Hundreds of mostly men and boys have been detained, with
nearly all held incommunicado, and some subjected to ill-treatment.
While
the restoration of order, security, and the protection of human rights
is necessary, most arrests appear to have been arbitrary and
discriminatory, violating the rights to liberty and to freedom from
discrimination on grounds of religion.
“In six weeks, Myanmar has
not only added to a long litany of human rights violations against the
Rohingya, but has also done an about-turn on the situation of political
imprisonment,” said Zawacki.
“After more than a year of
prisoner amnesties and releases, the overall number of political
prisoners in Myanmar is again on the rise.”
Anyone arrested since
10 June must be either charged with an internationally recognized
offence and be remanded by an independent court, or released. Any
judicial proceedings must meet international standards of fairness and
must not include the imposition of the death penalty.
Amnesty
International has also received credible reports of other human rights
abuses against Rohingyas and other Rakhine Muslims– including physical
abuse, rape, destruction of property, and unlawful killings – carried
out by both Rakhine Buddhists and security forces. The authorities
should stop these acts and prevent others from occurring.
On 3
June, a large group of local Rakhine Buddhists killed 10 Muslims in
Taung Gouk township in Rakhine State, who were returning by bus to their
homes in Yangon.
Myanmar’s National Human Rights Commission said
on 11 July that at least 78 people have been killed since the violence
began, but unofficial estimates exceed 100.
Between 50,000 and
90,000 people – with lower figures coming from the government and higher
ones from UN agencies– are estimated to have been displaced.
The
discrepancy between the figures is largely due to the Myanmar
authorities allowing extremely limited access to independent and
international monitors as well as humanitarian aid workers.
“The
human rights and humanitarian needs of those affected by the violence
depend on the presence of monitors and aid workers,” said Zawacki.
“The
Myanmar authorities are compounding the error by exacerbating the
suffering of those displaced by the violence and violations.”
Amnesty
International is calling on Myanmar’s Parliament to amend or repeal the
1982 Citizenship Law to ensure that Rohingyas are no longer stateless.
“Under
international human rights law and standards, no one may be left or
rendered stateless. For too long Myanmar’s human rights record has been
marred by the continued denial of citizenship for Rohingyas and a host
of discriminatory practices against them,” said Zawacki.
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