New York - Arab Today
The UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, has called for urgent action by the Government of Myanmar to end the suffering of the Rohingya population in the country.
Concluding a four-day visit to parts of Bangladesh, where she met with members of Myanmar's Rohingya community who fled the violence there following attacks on a border post in early October, and the ensuing military operations, she said, "The magnitude of violence that these families have witnessed and experienced is far more extensive than I had originally speculated".
She recounted several allegations of horrific attacks including the slitting of some people's throats, indiscriminate shootings, houses being set alight with people tied up inside and very young children being thrown into the fire, as well as gang rapes and other sexual violence.
Earlier this month, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, OHCHR, issued a flash report, based on its interviews with the people who fled Myanmar, in which it documented mass gang-rape, killings, including of babies and young children, brutal beatings, disappearances and other serious human rights violations by the country's security forces.
In addition to the alleged human rights violations occurring within the context of the security operations that followed the 9th October attacks, Ms. Lee also highlighted how the Government of Myanmar appears to have taken, and continues to take, actions which discriminate against the Rohingya and make their lives even more difficult.
"I urge the Government of Myanmar to immediately cease the discrimination that the community continues to face, to act now to prevent any further serious rights violations and to conduct prompt, thorough, independent and impartial investigations into those already alleged to have occurred," said the UN rights expert.
"We all owe it to those I have met and their fellow community members to do everything in our power to ensure this is done and to give the Rohingya people reason to hope again," she added.