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Myanmar Appoints Panel to Probe Human Rights Abuses in Rakhine State

The four-person commission will comprise two local members and two international members.
The four-person commission will comprise two local members and two international members.
Rohingya refugees, who crossed the border from Myanmar two days before, walk after they received permission from the Bangladeshi army to continue on to the refugee camps, in Palang Khali, near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh October 19, 2017. Credit: Reuters/Jorge Silva/File Photo
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Yangon: Myanmar has established a commission of inquiry to probe allegations of human rights abuses in conflict-torn Rakhine state, said authorities on Monday, as the country faces growing calls for accountability over accusations of ethnic cleansing against Rohingya Muslims.

The four-person commission will be comprised of two local members and two international members, the international members comprising Filipino diplomat Rosario Manalo and Japan's former ambassador to the UN Kenzo Oshima, said the Myanmar President's office in a statement. Manalo, 82, a former undersecretary of foreign affairs, will chair the commission.

The two local members are lawyer Mya Thein and economist and former UN official Aung Tun Thet. Thet was last year appointed by de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi to play a key role in Myanmar's response to the Rakhine crisis, and in April, Thet told a Bangladesh newspaper that Myanmar had "no intention of ethnic cleansing".

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"The Independent Commission will investigate the allegations of human rights violations and related issues, following the terrorist attacks by ARSA," said the office of President Win Myint, referring to the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), a Rohingya armed group.

More than 700,000 Rohingya have fled Myanmar's western Rakhine state after a military crackdown that started in August last year in response to attacks by ARSA on security posts. Myanmar has rejected accusations of ethnic cleansing and dismissed most accounts of atrocities, blaming Rohingya "terrorists".

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The statement on Monday called the panel "part of Myanmar's national initiative to address reconciliation, peace, stability and development in Rakhine."

The commission is one of several formed in recent months to address the situation in Rakhine state, which the UN has termed a "textbook example of ethnic cleansing".

(Reuters)

This article went live on July thirty-first, two thousand eighteen, at fifty-three minutes past eleven in the morning.

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