‘Suu Kyi should have resigned’, says UN human rights chief
The outgoing UN human rights chief says Myanmar’s de-facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi should have resigned over the military’s violent campaign against the Rohingya Muslim minority last year, reports the BBC.
Zeid Ra’ad al Hussein told the BBC the Nobel Peace prize winner’s attempts to excuse it were ‘deeply regrettable’, reports the UNB.
His comments come after a UN report said Myanmar’s military leaders should be prosecuted for possible genocide.
Myanmar rejected this, saying it had no tolerance for human rights violations.
The army of the Buddhist-majority nation - which has been accused of systematic ethnic cleansing - has previously cleared itself of wrongdoing.
The UN report, published on Monday, blamed Suu Kyi, a long-term leader of the pro-democracy movement, for failing to prevent the violence.
‘She was in a position to do something,’ Hussein said in an interview with the BBC’s Imogen Foulkes. ‘She could have stayed quiet - or even better, she could have resigned.’
‘There was no need for her to be the spokesperson of the Burmese military. She didn’t have to say this was an iceberg of misinformation. These were fabrications,’ he said.
‘She could have said look, you know, I am prepared to be the nominal leader of the country but not under these conditions.’
On Wednesday, the Nobel committee said Suu Kyi could not be stripped of the Peace Prize she was awarded in 1991.
What has Aung Sun Suu Kyi said?
While it is acknowledged that the 73-year-old does not control the military, she has faced international pressure to condemn the army’s alleged brutality.
For decades, she was hailed as the heroine of the human rights community - most noted for enduring 16 years of house arrest for her pro-democracy activism during a brutal military dictatorship.
When communal violence broke out in 2012 and displaced more than 100,000 Rohingya people, Suu Kyi sought to reassure the international community and pledged to ‘abide by our commitment to human rights and democratic value’.
‘Musli have been targeted but Buddhists have also been subjected to violence,’ she told the BBC at the time. ‘This fear is what is leading all the trouble.’
She said that it was down to the government to bring an end to the violence, explaining: ‘This is the result of our suffering under a dictatorial regime.’
In 2015, her National League for Democracy party won a landslide election victory and she became the country’s de-facto leader.
As the Rohingya crisis continued, Suu Kyi’s comments on the situation tended to play it down or suggest that people were exaggerating the severity of the violence.
The last time she spoke to the BBC in April 2017, she said: ‘I don’t think there is ethnic cleansing going on. I think ethnic cleansing is too strong an expression to use for what is happening.’
Since an outbreak of violence started in August 2017, Suu Kyi has missed several opportunities to speak publicly about the issue, including the UN General Assembly in New York last September.
She later claimed the crisis was being distorted by a ‘huge iceberg of misinformation’ - but then also said she felt ‘deeply’ for the suffering of ‘all people’ in the conflict.
Myanmar, she said, was ‘committed to a sustainable solution... for all communities in this state.’