This Article is From Sep 21, 2018

Myanmar Not Listening To Us: US On Rohingya Crisis

Rohingya crisis: UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres weighed in on the arrest and sentencing of two Reuters journalists in Myanmar, saying it is not acceptable.

Myanmar Not Listening To Us: US On Rohingya Crisis

Nikki Haley restated her position on Aung San Suu Kyi's response at the World Economic Forum (File)

New York:

A few days at the United Nations Headquarters in New York and anyone would tell you the two most prominent voices are that of the Secretary General Antonio Guterres and US Ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley.  As both briefed the media on Thursday ahead of what is the most important week of the United Nations, one got a preview of what position the 'parliament of humanity', the UN,  is likely to take against Myanmar.

The Secretary General weighed in on the arrest and sentencing of two Reuters journalists in Myanmar saying, "It is not acceptable to have the journalists of Reuters in jail for what they were doing. It is my deep belief that should not happen and I hope that the Government will be able to provide a pardon to release them as quickly as possible.''

Nikki Haley restated her position on Aung San Suu Kyi's response at the World Economic Forum discussion earlier on the arrest and sentencing of two Reuters reporters in Myanmar.

 ''We have to figure out how we are going to bring back the Rohingyas to Burma in a way that is safe. I don't think the government has done enough; the military has not accepted responsibility. The fact that Aung San Suu Kyi basically acknowledged the fact that the reporters were right to be detained and imprisoned is a real problem, and so we have a communication problem. What they are saying no one understands and what we are saying they are not listening to. At some point the international community has to speak in one voice and not be okay with them being in Bangladesh," she said.

The two reporters were investigating the killing of Rohingyas by the military last August. Ms Suu Kyi said at a forum in Hanoi last week that the case had nothing to do with freedom of expression. She said the reporters were sentenced for handling official secrets and "were not jailed because they were journalists."

Both the Secretary General (Guterres) and the US Ambassador to the UN confirmed further developments that are all set to put pressure on Myanmar over the Rohingya crisis.

Ms Haley called the crisis a 'hot topic' and revealed that she would be taking active part in a high level meeting during the UNGA on the issue.

 ''I'm personally going to be in a ministerial meeting hosted by the UK on the status of the Rohingyas. It will have multiple international counterparts and that is a hot topic right now''

 The Secretary General also confirmed that the International Criminal Court (ICC) will take up the case. Since the UN and the ICC work together yet independently, the process could see Myanmar cornered and liable to proving its case on the international stage.

 ''There was an initiative already by Bangladesh in relation to the ICC. So, the question is already on the table. And, as far as I understand, the ICC has recognized its capacity to deal with the issue. So, I think that this is already on course''.

India has 40,000 Rohingya refugees and senior ministers in the Modi government have said they will be deported.

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