Suu Kyi’s Nepal tour revitalises Rohingyas issue
Global rights watchdogs and Nepal’s national rights commission have asked Kathmandu to pressurise Myanmar for safe and dignified return of Rohingyas to their homeland as Myanmar’s state counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi began a two-day Kathmandu tour on Thursday.
‘Nepal should exert pressure on the Myanmar government through international collaboration for the safe return of the oppressed,’ Amnesty International director Nirajan Thapaliya said in a statement on the eve of the Myanmar leaders Kathmandu visit, reports the BSS.
The Amnesty earlier this month took back its highest honour, the Ambassador of Conscience Award, from Suu Kyi for her ‘apparent indifference’ to atrocities committed against the Rohingya and her increasing intolerance of freedom of speech.
Thapaliya reiterated the global watchdog’s revised observation about Suu Kyi saying she ‘colluded with the military crackdown and is reluctant in ensuring justice to the victims’.
Nepalese National Human Rights Commission spokesperson Mohna Ansari said the authorities in Kathmandu ‘should clearly talk to Suu Kyi’ for the safe return of the displaced people and fair investigation into the atrocities.
‘The geopolitical factors should not affect the human rights issue. The Nepal government must present its clear position on the matter,’ Ansari said, adding the Himalayan nation was also obligated to pressurise Myanmar on the issue being an incumbent UN Human Rights Council member.
Media reports earlier suggested some 400 Rohingyas also took refuge in Nepal although over a million of them found Bangladesh to be their makeshift abode on the face of brutal military crackdown at their homeland.