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YANGON (Reuters) - A government-appointed
panel established in Myanmar to probe allegations of abuses in Rakhine state in
2017 that drew global outrage said on Monday they had found no evidence of
genocide against the Rohingya Muslim minority.
More than 730,000 Rohingya fled Rakhine state
during weeks of brutal violence, during which the United Nations says gang
rapes and mass killings were carried out with “genocidal intent”. Hundreds of
villages were burnt to the ground and later razed and scraped.The commission of inquiry said there were
“reasonable grounds” to conclude members of the security forces among “multiple
actors” were responsible for possible war crimes and serious human rights
violations during a military-led crackdown against the group in 2017.These included the “killing of innocent
villagers and destruction of their homes”, it said.But in its statement, issued to mark the
finalization of a full report based on interviews with villagers and members of
the security forces, the panel blamed Rohingya militants for attacking 30
police posts and “provoking” the crackdown and described the situation as an
“internal armed conflict”.“The ICOE has not found any evidence suggesting
that these killings or acts of displacement were committed pursuant to an
intent or plan to destroy the Muslim or any other community in northern Rakhine
State,” the panel’s statement read.“There is insufficient evidence to argue, much
less conclude, that the crimes committed were undertaken with the intent to
destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group,
or with any other requisite mental state for the international crime of
genocide.”The statement said the panel had submitted the
report to the government but it did not say whether it would be made public.
In Bangladesh, where hundreds of thousands of
Rohingya who fled Myanmar have taken refuge, a Rohingya leader, Dil Mohammed,
described the report as a whitewash.“We have been persecuted for decades. So many
of our people were killed, our women were raped, our children were thrown into
fire and our homes were torched. If it is not genocide, what is it?” he said.The International Court of Justice, the
highest U.N. court, will this week issue a decision on a request for emergency
measures in a genocide case against the country.
Gambia filed the suit in November alleging
Myanmar was committing “an ongoing genocide” against the Rohingya.The commission of enquiry was formed in 2018
as the country faced growing calls for accountability. The government appointed
two local and two international members – Filipino diplomat Rosario Manalo and
Kenzo Oshima, a former Japanese ambassador to the United Nations.
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