UPDATE 28 September 2017: Scroll down for an open letter to the UN from 87 civil society organizations urging immediate action on the crisis in Myanmar.
The UN Security Council must do everything it can to end the crimes against humanity and ongoing ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya civilian population in Myanmar, including by imposing a comprehensive arms embargo on the country, Amnesty International said.
The Council is holding a public session on the situation in Myanmar on Thursday, when Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will brief members on the current crisis in Rakhine state.
The Myanmar military is forcibly displacing and killing Rohingya, a campaign of crimes against humanity that amounts to ethnic cleansing. When they meet on Thursday, UN member states must ask themselves what side of history they want to be on and do everything they can do end this nightmare.
Tirana Hassan, Amnesty International’s Crisis Response Director
“The Myanmar military is forcibly displacing and killing Rohingya, a campaign of crimes against humanity that amounts to ethnic cleansing. When they meet on Thursday, UN member states must ask themselves what side of history they want to be on and do everything they can do end this nightmare. Together, they do have the power to pressure Myanmar to end the violence,” said Tirana Hassan, Amnesty International’s Crisis Response Director.
“The Security Council should put an immediate end to the transfer of all arms, munitions and related equipment to Myanmar by imposing a comprehensive arms embargo. This should cover both direct and indirect supply, and also ensure that training and other assistance to the Myanmar army ends.”
The Security Council meeting comes almost exactly a month after the Myanmar military launched a brutal operation in Rakhine State. This was in response to attacks carried out on dozens of security posts, killing at least 12 members of the security forces, for which the Rohingya armed group, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, claimed responsibility.
Since then, almost half a million refugees have poured across the border into Bangladesh, meaning that almost half of the 1.2 million people living in Rakhine state have fled their homes and scores have been killed in little more than a month.
Amnesty International has documented how Myanmar security forces have torched whole villages inside Rakhine state and fired on people trying to flee, a widespread and systematic attack on the civilian population that constitutes crimes against humanity. Despite the Myanmar government’s claims that the military operations have stopped, the organization was also able to confirm new burnings of villages as late as last week.
The situation is made all the worse by the severe restrictions Myanmar has imposed on aid groups in northern Rakhine State. Amnesty International has received credible reports that fear of starvation, as well as the attacks by the military, is driving more people from their homes, as many Rohingya are stranded in villages with little or no access to food.
“This crisis is far from over, and there is no question that violations are continuing unabated inside Rakhine state. More than ever, the world needs to take a strong stand and push Myanmar and its security forces to end the horrors they are inflicting on the Rohingya population,” said Tirana Hassan.
“We want the Security Council to issue a public statement condemning the atrocities in Rakhine state, while urging an end to violence and immediate and unfettered access for humanitarian aid groups.”
Open letter
UN member states should act to pressure Myanmar to end crimes against humanity
We, a global coalition of 87 civil society organizations, urgently call upon UN member states to take immediate steps to address the human rights abuses and humanitarian catastrophe engulfing Myanmar’s ethnic Rohingya population. UN Secretary-General António Guterres and UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al Hussein have described the Myanmar security forces’ ongoing campaign against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine State as ethnic cleansing. As more evidence emerges, it is clear that the atrocities committed by Myanmar state security forces amount to crimes against humanity. The United Nations and its member states need to take urgent action.
We urge UN delegations, especially those from the 114 countries committed to the Accountability, Coherence and Transparency (ACT) Code of Conduct, who made a pledge to support “timely and decisive action” to prevent or end the commission of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes, to immediately undertake efforts to adopt a resolution in the UN General Assembly addressing the situation, and call upon the UN Security Council to consider measures to be imposed on the Myanmar government.
Over 400,000 Rohingya have fled across the border into Bangladesh since August 25, when Myanmar security forces launched operations in response to coordinated attacks by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) in Rakhine State. These operations, involving widespread killing, laying of landmines, looting, and arson targeting the Rohingya, have resulted in the mass destruction of more than 200 villages, according to satellite imagery and eyewitness testimony. Tens of thousands of people from other ethnic minorities have also been displaced as a result of the violence.
Strong condemnations by the UN and world leaders have not brought an end to Myanmar’s atrocities. In his opening statement to the Human Rights Council on September 11, al Hussein noted that in 2016 he “warned that the pattern of gross violations of the human rights of the Rohingya suggested a widespread or systematic attack against the community, possibly amounting to crimes against humanity.” Civil society organizations have warned that the campaign of Myanmar’s security forces against the Rohingya since August 25 amounts to crimes against humanity. It is crucial for UN members to take concrete action and place direct pressure on Myanmar’s military and civilian leaders.
The European Union, until recently, was the chief sponsor of an annual resolution on human rights in Myanmar at the General Assembly. Last year, the EU decided to stop the effort even in the midst of government violence against the Rohingya beginning in October 2016. Now, we urge members of the EU to work with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, as well as other concerned states to jointly revive this resolution as a means of pursuing decisive action by the General Assembly in response to the gravity of the ongoing situation in Rakhine State and the evolving human rights and humanitarian crisis.
A General Assembly resolution should demand an immediate end to the abuses, that humanitarian aid agencies have immediate and unhindered access to populations in need, and for the UN Fact-Finding Mission authorized by the Human Rights Council in Geneva to be allowed unfettered access into and within Myanmar to investigate alleged human rights abuses across the country. It should also demand that the Myanmar authorities commit to ensuring that all Rohingya and other refugees and displaced people are able to return to their places of origin safely, voluntarily, and with dignity, and to dismantling the institutional discrimination and segregation of Rohingya and other Muslims in Rakhine State that forms the backdrop to the current crisis. The resolution should also urge member states and the Security Council to explore possible avenues to bring perpetrators of crimes under international law to justice.
We also urge members of the Security Council to add to the pressure on Myanmar authorities by seriously considering options such as an arms embargo against the military and targeted financial sanctions against individuals responsible for crimes and serious abuses.
All concerned UN member states should also consider bilateral, multilateral, and regional actions they can take to place added pressure on the Myanmar government. In particular, we call on all states to immediately suspend military assistance and cooperation with Myanmar.
If governments, UN officials and diplomats simply hold meetings and make speeches as atrocities continue in Myanmar, they bear the risk of failing to use every diplomatic tool at their disposal to stop the ethnic cleansing campaign and further crimes against humanity. In the face of mass destruction, killings and hundreds of thousands displaced, inaction should not be an option.
AFL-CIO
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American Jewish World Service
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Amnesty International
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ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR)
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Asociación Pro Derechos Humano – Peru (APRODEH)
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Asylum Access
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Avaaz
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Burma Campaign UK
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Burma Human Rights Network (BHRN)
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Burma Task Force
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Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK
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Canadian Centre for the Responsibility to Protect
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Center for Civilians in Conflict
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Center for Development of International Law
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Christian Solidarity Worldwide
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Coalition for Justice and Accountability (COJA)
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Coalition for the Rights of Refugees and Stateless Persons (CRSP)
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Council for Humanitarian Networking of Sheikul Islam Office
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CREDO Action
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Cross Cultural Foundation (CRCF)
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Development and Justice Initiative, India
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Equal Rights Trust
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Fortify Rights
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Foundation for Rural Development (FRD)
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Front Mahasiswa
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Genocide Watch
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Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect (GCR2P)
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Global Progressive Hub
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Human Rights and Development Foundation (HRDF)
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Human Rights Now
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Human Rights Watch
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Indonesia Legal Aid Foundation (YLBHI)
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Institute for Asian Democracy
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Institute on Statelessness and Inclusion
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International Campaign for the Rohingya
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International Coalition for the Responsibility to Protect
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International Detention Coalition
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International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH)
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International Justice Project
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International Organization for Victim Assistance
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International State Crime Initiative
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Islamic Society of North America (ISNA)
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Jewish Alliance of Concern Over Burma
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Jewish Council for Public Affairs
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Jiyan Foundation for Human Rights
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Justice Centre Hong Kong
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Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
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Migrant 88
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Migrant Working Group (MWG)
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Minority Rights Group International
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Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies
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National Council of Churches
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National Religious Campaign Against Torture
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Odhikar
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Pan African Lawyers Union’s (PALU)
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Partners Relief & Development
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Pemuda Anti Kekerasan Acheh
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Persatuan Darul Fitrah Terengganu
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Persatuan Ulama Kedah
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Physicians for Human Rights
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Presbyterian Church (USA)
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Progressive Voice Myanmar
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PROHAM (Society for the Promotion of Human Rights Malaysia)
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Refugees International
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Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism
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Restless Beings
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SANRIM
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SHARP-Pakistan
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Society for Rights of Indigenous People of Sarawak
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Society for Threatened Peoples-Germany
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STAND Canada
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STAND: The Student-Led Movement to End Mass Atrocities
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Suaka Indonesia
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Swedish Burma Committee
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The Arakan Project
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The Episcopal Church
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The Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights
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The Stanley Foundation
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Ummatee
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Union for Reform Judaism
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Unitarian Universalist Service Committee
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United Nations Association – UK
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US Campaign for Burma
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Win Without War
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World Federalist Movement – Canada
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World Federalist Movement-Institute for Global Policy
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Yateem TV
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