The
National Commission on Human Rights and lawmakers have asked the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations to help end the alleged slaughter in Myanmar of
minority Rohingya Muslims.
Ifdal Kasim, chief of the commission known as
Komnas Ham, said on Sunday that his office had sent a letter urging the Asean
human rights commission to quickly gather its members so that concrete steps
could be taken to end the mass killings of Rohingyas.
“The Asean commission must speak and call a
meeting so we can take immediate action,” Ifdal said. “They have the authority
to do so.”
Ifdal said the killings severely damaged
Asean’s human rights image on the global stage and should not be viewed as Myanmar’s
domestic affair. “The killings are already a regional problem,” he said.
Separately, the National Awakening Party
(PKB) issued a statement calling for Asean and the United Nations to intervene.
Hanif Dhakiri, the secretary of PKB’s faction
at the House of Representatives, said the events in Myanmar constituted a gross
human rights violation and the systematic destruction of the Rohingyas.
“That’s why the PKB demands that the UN
actively get involved to stop the massacre,” he said.
Hanif called on Asean to quickly hold an
emergency meeting to decide how to respond to the issue.
Predominantly Buddhist Myanmar does not
recognize the Rohingyas as citizens, saying they migrated from Bangladesh
during British colonial rule. Bangladesh has also disavowed the group, saying
they are Myanmar’s problem.
Amnesty International has reported that
hundreds of Rohingyas have been killed, raped, beaten and arbitrarily arrested
since Myanmar declared a state of emergency in northern Rakhine state, on the
border with Bangladesh.
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi
last week called for laws to protect the rights of the country’s ethnic
minorities in her inaugural address to the country’s fledgling Parliament.
The ongoing violence has driven Rohingyas
from their homes in Myanmar’s northern and western states, and they have turned
up in waves as asylum seekers and refugees in neighboring Southeast Asian
countries, including Indonesia.
Asean secretary general Surin Pitsuwan said
last week that the association was seeking an explanation from member state
Myanmar about the recent ethnic violence targeting the Rohingya group.
The explanation, he said, would be given at
the United Nations headquarters in New York in September on the sidelines of
the UN General Assembly.
Surin said the Asean secretariat had held
talks with Myanmar’s foreign minister, U Wunna Maung Lwin, but added: “We
haven’t heard anything specific or concrete on the matter.”
Meanwhile, Indonesian charity organization
Rapid Relief Action (ACT) dispatched a lone mission on Sunday to visit Rohingya
refugees in camps in Myanmar and Bangladesh.
“We will be represented by Andhika Purbo
Swasono, who departs this afternoon,” ACT spokesman Feri Kuntoro told the
Jakarta Globe on Sunday. “He will conduct a field assessment on the needs of
the refugees.”
Andhika was originally scheduled to depart
with a medical professional, Rio Pranata, but Rio’s visa was not approved. “We
want to represent Indonesia’s humanitarian diplomacy,” Feri said. “Last year we
were the first team from Indonesia to go to Mogadishu [in Somalia].”
Neither President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
nor Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa have spoken out on the killings in
Myanmar, although both are known for their quick comments on issues relating to
human rights.
Many observers have said they are holding
their comments because they fear criticism would derail Myanmar’s
democratization progress.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Michael Tene only
said, “We hope that the commitment from the Myanmar government for national
reconciliation continues.”
Rangga Prakoso, Ulma Haryanto & Markus
Junianto Sihaloho
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