Myanmar: ICC arrest warrant request for military leader must be decisive step in breaking cycle of impunity
Sefa
Karacan/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
November 27, 2024
Myanmar:
ICC arrest warrant request for military leader must be decisive step in
breaking cycle of impunity
Responding to the announcement that the International Criminal
Court Prosecutor Karim Khan is seeking an arrest warrant for Myanmar military
leader Min Aung Hlaing for his responsibility for the crimes against humanity
of deportation and persecution of the Rohingya committed in both Myanmar and
Bangladesh, Agnès Callamard, Secretary General at Amnesty International, said:
“Today’s announcement by the ICC prosecutor is a decisive step
and an important signal – both for Myanmar and the rest of the world – that
those who are allegedly responsible for crimes under international law will be
sought to face arrest and trial, no matter how powerful they are or how long
they have escaped scrutiny.
“The cycle of impunity in Myanmar has to be broken now. No
senior leader has ever been held accountable for the atrocity crimes committed
against the Rohingya who lost their lives, homes and entire communities and
continue to face multiple crimes. In the absence of accountability, more
violations will occur. Min Aung Hlaing has been at the centre of multiple human
right catastrophes in Myanmar. He oversaw violent operations against the
Rohingya in 2016 and 2017, and he led the 2021 coup, which has led to the
killing of nearly 6,000 civilians and plunged Myanmar into economic, political
and social chaos.
“Though the arrest warrant sought in this case deals with the
2017 crisis, Rohingya people are still being persecuted and driven into
Bangladesh from Myanmar to this day. This year marked the worst year of
violence against the community since 2017, as Rohingya men, women and children
died in bombings or drowned while being trapped in the middle of an armed
conflict between the Myanmar military and the rebel Arakan Army.
“If the arrest warrant is granted, Min Aung Hlaing should be
subject to immediate arrest and surrender to the International Criminal
Court to face trial. In the meantime, more can be done to build on this
momentum and pursue accountability for Rohingya and all the peoples of Myanmar.
This should start with the UN Security Council referring the entire situation
in the country to the International Criminal Court.”
Background
The ICC prosecutor’s statement said that this is the first
application for an arrest warrant for a senior Myanmar military official but
that more will follow.
The ICC prosecutor’s office alleges that the crimes were
committed in a four-month period between 25 August 2017 and 31 December 2017.
Starting in August 2017, Myanmar’s military drove more than
740,000 Rohingya men, women and children into Bangladesh in a campaign that
Amnesty International said at the time amounted to crimes against humanity
under international law.
In a 2018 report, Amnesty identified 13 individuals
against whom the organization had gathered extensive, credible evidence of
direct or command responsibility for crimes against humanity. Min Aung Hlaing
was at the top of this list.
Amnesty International has also called for the United Nations
Security Council to refer the full situation in Myanmar to the International
Criminal Court Prosecutor, so that an investigation of all crimes committed in
Myanmar can be conducted.
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