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Rohingya issue: A moment of truth in the Hague

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https://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/news/moment-truth-the-hague-1838140

12:00 AM, December 10, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:29 PM, December 10, 2019
MOMENT OF TRUTH in The Hague

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A watershed legal battle will take place at the UN’s highest court today to hold Myanmar accountable over the alleged genocide against its Rohingya minorities.

Myanmar leader and Nobel Peace prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who arrived in the Netherlands on Sunday, will defend her country’s record during three days of hearings initiated after a lawsuit was filed with the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

West African nation Gambia last month launched the case with the top UN court while rights groups filed a separate lawsuit in Argentina.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) also approved an investigation into the 2017 military crackdown that forced some 740,000 Rohingyas to flee into Bangladesh.

UN investigators last year branded the bloody expulsion a genocide, and called for the prosecution of top generals -- including the powerful army chief. They also accused one-time democracy icon Suu Kyi and her government of complicity in the atrocities.

Suu Kyi’s office posted a picture of her arrival at Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport where she was greeted by the ambassador to the Netherlands and then headed to The Hague, where the World Court is located.

The Kingdom of the Netherlands and Canada in a statement yesterday said The Gambia rightfully brought the case of Rohingyas to the ICJ.

They called upon all the state parties to the Genocide Convention to support The Gambia.

A 12-member Bangladesh delegation led by foreign secretary Shahidul Haque will be present as observers at the peace palace where the hearing is taking place.

A team of Rohingya representatives from cox’s bazar and some civil society members from Dhaka are also attending the hearing.

Several demonstrations are planned in coming days in the Dutch city by Rohingya survivor groups, as well as by government supporters.

GENERALS IN THE DOCK?
The International Criminal Court (ICC), also in The Hague, investigates war crimes but is focused on individual, not state, responsibility.

Myanmar has not signed up to the ICC, but last year the court launched preliminary investigations on the basis that Bangladesh -- where the Rohingya are refugees -- is a member.

On November 14, judges backed a request for a full probe into allegations of crimes against humanity over the crackdown. This could ultimately lead to arrest warrants being issued for Myanmar’s generals.

But the process is lengthy, requiring participation from Bangladesh and -- somewhat implausibly -- Myanmar to hand over suspects.

Another option could be for the ICC to create an ad hoc or mixed tribunal similar to ones created for Rwanda, Yugoslavia, Lebanon and Cambodia. But again this would, in theory, require cooperation from Myanmar authorities.

Besides, on November 13, a case was filed by rights groups in Argentina against members of the Myanmar military and, notably, Suu Kyi.

Under a legal principle called “universal jurisdiction”, the premise is that some crimes are so horrific they are not specific to one nation and can be brought to trial anywhere.

MEMORY OF RWANADA
The UN’s top court was set up after World War II to rule on disagreements between member states. It normally deals with issues of international law such as border disputes, but can also rule on alleged breaches of UN conventions.

Gambia, a tiny, mainly-Muslim state, filed a complaint on behalf of the 57-nation Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) accusing Myanmar of breaching the 1948 UN Genocide Convention.

Leading the charge is Gambian justice minister Abubacarr Tambadou, a former genocide prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.

The first hearings will be today and tomorrow, when the court is expected to order interim measures to prevent any further genocide or destruction of evidence. The case will likely take years.

A ruling against Myanmar could mean an order to remedy the genocide and to offer reparations to the Rohingya.

But it would be largely symbolic and difficult to enforce.

The genocide case brought against at the ICJ -- the first of its kind initiated since the 1990s -- may not have happened at all but for a scheduling conflict.

‘GENOCIDE WRITTEN’
In May last year, Gambia’s foreign minister pulled out at the last minute from the annual conference of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Bangladesh, sending Tambadou instead.

For Tambadou what he saw and heard in Bangladesh jogged some painful memories.

He joined an OIC delegation visiting overcrowded refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar, where some of the hundreds of thousands of Rohingyas who had fled Buddhist-majority Myanmar since August 2017 recounted how, they said, security forces had burnt Rohingya children alive, raped women and killed men.

“I saw genocide written all over these stories,” Tambadou said in an interview in Gambia’s capital, Banjul.

Tambadou introduced a resolution to create an OIC committee to examine alleged abuses against the Rohingya, and this year convinced the 57-member organisation to back a formal case against Myanmar - thrusting his tiny West African homeland into the centre of one of the most high profile international legal cases in a generation.

When arguments are presented in The Hague next week, Gambia’s legal team will face off against a Myanmar delegation led by Suu Kyi.

Tambadou will ask the judges to immediately order Myanmar to cease violence against Rohingya civilians and preserve evidence that could eventually form the basis of a finding that Myanmar committed genocide. Myanmar has vowed to contest the case.

Authorities in Myanmar reacted swiftly to Gambia’s submissions, which cite UN investigators’ findings that Myanmar’s military acted with “genocidal intent”.

The country has long denied accusations it committed ethnic cleansing or genocide. It insists its own investigative committees are adequate to look into alleged atrocities -- even though critics dismiss the panels as toothless and biased.

The country also refuses to recognise the authority of the ICC, reiterating that the investigation is “not in accordance with international law”.

‘USE OUR VOICE’
Gambia’s role in the case would have been unthinkable until three years ago.

For 22 years, former President Yahya Jammeh’s security forces had killed and tortured scores of real or perceived political opponents, according to evidence presented to an ongoing truth commission.

But a 2016 election unexpectedly ended in defeat for Jammeh, who fled into exile. Opposition leader Adama Barrow took power promising to restore human rights and stem corruption.

“Twenty-two years of a brutal dictatorship has taught us how to use our voice,” said Tambadou, seated behind a desk stacked with legal texts, his shirtsleeves rolled up as he sweated through a power cut.

“We know too well how it feels like to be unable to tell your story to the world, to be unable to share your pain in the hope that someone out there will hear and help.”

The son of a businessman from Banjul, the 46-year-old Tambadou studied law in Britain before returning to Gambia in the late 1990s to practice.

In April 2000, security forces killed 14 student protesters, an event Tambadou credits with pushing him toward human rights work.

Friends tried to steer him away from the kind of work that could have landed him in one of Jammeh’s notorious jails or worse, but Tambadou was committed, said Emmanuel Joof, who co-founded a coalition of human rights defenders with him in 2000.

In 2003, he left Gambia to join the United Nations’ Tanzania-based International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), where he successfully prosecuted some of the genocide’s most notorious figures, including former army chief Augustin Bizimungu, who was sentenced in 2011 to 30 years in prison.

As justice minister since 2017, his decisions have occasionally put him at odds with former colleagues, such as when he ordered members of a Jammeh-era hit squad released from prison on technical grounds.

“Sometimes we don’t agree with him,” said Joof, who is now chairman of the independent National Human Rights Commission. “But the fact that it’s (a) person who is passionate about these issues gives someone like me great comfort.”

Tambadou said that after several years in which Myanmar had refused to engage with international organisations over its handling of the Rohingya crisis, he was pleased his initiative had elicited such a strong response.

“I am glad that very senior members of the government will be at the court,” he said.

“It shows the seriousness ... with which they are taking this case.”
 
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01:00 AM, December 10, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:39 AM, December 10, 2019
Canada, Netherlands to assist Gambia in ICJ against Myanmar
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Star Online Report

Canada and the Netherlands today expressed their intention to jointly assist Gambia at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the alleged acts of genocide committed against Rohingyas by Myanmar.

The ICJ, also called the World Court, is set to start hearing from tomorrow on Rohingya genocide drawing Myanmar to dock

In a joint statement, the two countries welcomed The Gambia’s application against Myanmar before the ICJ on the alleged violation of the Convention on the prevention and punishment of the crime of genocide (Genocide Convention).

Canada and the Netherlands strongly believe this is a matter that is rightfully brought to the ICJ to provide international legal judgment on whether acts of genocide have been committed.

“We call upon all States Parties to the Genocide Convention to support The Gambia in its efforts to address these violations,” the statement said.

In order to uphold international accountability and prevent impunity, Canada and the Netherlands hereby express their intention to jointly explore all options to support and assist The Gambia in these efforts, it said.

The Genocide Convention embodies a solemn pledge by its signatories to prevent the crime of genocide and hold those responsible to account.

As such, Canada and the Netherlands consider it their obligation to support The Gambia before the ICJ, as it concerns all of humanity.

In 2017, the world witnessed an exodus of over 700,000 Rohingya from Rakhine State. They sought refuge from targeted violence, mass murder and sexual and gender based violence carried out by the Myanmar security forces, the very people who should have protected them.

For decades, the Rohingya have suffered systemic discrimination and exclusion, marred by waves of abhorrent violence.

These facts have been corroborated by several investigations, including those conducted by the UN Independent Fact Finding Mission for Myanmar and human rights organisations.

They include crimes that constitute acts described in Article II of the Genocide Convention, the statement reads.
 
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https://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/news/stop-genocide-1838632
12:00 AM, December 11, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:08 AM, December 11, 2019
STOP GENOCIDE

Rohingya genocide hearing begins in The Hague; The Gambia lawyers say Suu Kyi ‘in it together’ with Myanmar army

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MOMENT OF TRUTH in The Hague


“To stop these acts of barbarity and brutality that have shocked and continue to shock our collective conscience. To stop this genocide of its own people,” he said.

Around 740,000 Rohingyas fled to neighbouring Bangladesh after a bloody crackdown by the Myanmar military in 2017 that UN investigators have already described as genocide.

The Gambia is arguing that Myanmar’s forces carried out widespread and systematic atrocities that constituted genocide, and that in doing so Myanmar violated its obligations under the 1948 Genocide Convention, writes Reuters.

It asked the court to order special measures to protect the Rohingyas. The so-called provisional measures would act as a kind of restraining order for the Myanmar military until the case is heard in full.

“I stand before you to awaken the conscience of the world and arouse the voice of the international community,” said Tambadou, a former prosecutor at the tribunal into the Rwanda’s 1994 genocide.

“In the words of Edmund Burke, ‘The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing’.”

“Another genocide is unfolding right before our eyes yet we do nothing to stop it,” he pointed out. “This is a stain on our collective conscience. It’s not only the state of Myanmar that is on trial here, it’s our collective humanity that is being put on trial.”

Tambadou went on, “Every day of inaction means more people are being killed, more women are being raped and more children are being burned alive. For what crime? Only that they were born different.”

Suu Kyi is set to speak in Myanmar’s defence today. She is expected to argue that her country was conducting legitimate operations against Rohingya militants and that the ICJ has no jurisdiction in the case.

Her decision to personally lead the southeast Asian nation’s case at the world court has proved popular at home, where the Rohingyas are widely regarded as illegal immigrants despite having lived there for decades.

During the hearing, Gambia’s lawyers yesterday said the appearance of huge billboards across Myanmar in recent weeks featuring pictures of Suu Kyi with three smiling generals showed she was “in it together” with the army that once held her captive.

“It can only have been intended to show that they are all in it together and that Myanmar has absolutely no intention of holding its emboldened military leadership accountable,” lawyer Paul Reichler told the court.

Myanmar faces a number of legal challenges over the fate of the Rohingyas, including a probe by the International Criminal Court -- a separate war crimes tribunal in The Hague -- and a lawsuit in Argentina.

The country has previously denied almost all allegations made by refugees against its troops, including of mass rape, killings and arson, and promised to punish any soldiers involved in what it says were isolated cases of wrongdoing.

‘GAMBIA! GAMBIA!’

Outside the court, dozens of Rohingyas demonstrated to demand justice for victims. Hours earlier in Yangon, Myanmar’s commercial capital, thousands of people had rallied in support of Suu Kyi.

Once feted in the West, Suu Kyi has faced mounting international criticism over the Rohingya crisis. But she has remained popular at home since coming to power in 2016 as part of the transition to democracy after decades of military rule.

In the Bangladeshi refugee camps yesterday, hundreds gathered on a hilltop and chanted, “Gambia! Gambia!”, pumping their fists. Some offered special prayers at mosques in the camps and many others were fasting.

“Our people were killed, our children were thrown into fire, our women were raped, our houses were burnt down. All we want is a fair trial,” said Nurul Amin, 30.

A group of some 50 pro-Rohingya protesters gathered outside the gates of the ICJ for the hearing, carrying banners saying: ‘Say yes to Rohingya, justice delayed is justice denied” and “Stop Burma military attack Rohingya.”

“Today is the start for our right to justice,” said Mohammed Harun, 49, who travelled from London for the hearings. “It’s international justice day for Rohingya,” he told AFP.

A small group of Suu Kyi supporters also unfurled a banner outside the court with the Myanmar leader’s face on it saying: “ We love you, we stand with you!”

“Suu Kyi is the only person who can solve this problem,” supporter Swe Swe Aye, 47, told AFP.

‘GENOCIDAL INTENT’

This week’s proceedings, before a panel of 17 judges, will not deal with whether Myanmar is guilty of the most “serious international crime”, but will focus on Gambia’s request for provisional measures. A decision on that request is expected within weeks.

The tribunal has no enforcement powers, but its rulings are final and carry significant legal weight. Its judges have only once before ruled that genocide was committed -- in the 1995 Srebrenica massacre in Bosnia.

The Gambian legal team aimed to prove that this was not just sporadic violence, it was ethnic cleansing that stemmed from unjustifiable intolerance.

Andrew Lowenstein, a partner at Foley Hoag LLC, the legal team representing The Gambia, presented the massacres of the villages of Tula Toli and Chut Pyin as an example.

“The first round of shooting was like a rain of bullets. The second round was slow as the soldiers killed the men individually. They aimed a gun at each man and shot,” Lowenstein stated, reading out descriptions of the Tula Toli massacre from the UN fact-finding mission’s report.

“Soldiers then turned to the women and children who, after being separated from the men, were forced to sit in a lowered area on the shore. Some of the children were shot, some thrown into the river, and others thrown onto a fire.”

He then continued to describe how the women were gang-raped, locked inside their houses and the houses then set on fire.

The lawyer also presented satellite images captured during the time when these villages were burning to prove how only Rohingya homes were being set on fire, while Buddhist Rakhine homes were being spared.

“The fact that Myanmar has genocidal intent is shown by its toleration for hate rhetoric and public hatred of the Rohingya,” he said.

“The fact-finding mission also concluded that Myanmar’s genocidal intent is evident in its lack of remorse. The Tatmadaw’s actions are glorified.”

Another lawyer, Tafadzwa Pasipanodya, presented how the Rohingyas placed in internment camps, long before the violence of 2017.

Again citing the UN report, the lawyer described how after the 2012 violence in the Rakhine State, the population was cordoned off into military-controlled camps surrounded by barbed wires, and they were not allowed freedom of movement.

“We believe that the evidence is not just sufficient, but it is overwhelming. The court has never had such comprehensive or such compelling evidence of the commission of genocidal acts as it has before it now,” commented Paul Reichler, the head of the legal team.

“The genocide in Rwanda was a failure of humanity that can easily happen again. Mr President, tragically, it has happened again, in Myanmar. The time to prevent further genocide is now, because nothing less will protect the Rohingya from further destruction as a group,” he concluded.
 
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Burmese govt needs to be held to account for what they have done to Royingas. Similarly Chinese to what they are doing to Uighurs.

Only thing good about Chinese is that they have not raped and killed thousands and driven most of the rest out of their homeland.
 
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