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Saturday, December 10, 2022

Justice, accountability must for Rohingya, speakers say in The Hague

Dhaka Tribune 
Tribune Desk
December 9, 2022

Courtesy

International community and States Parties of Rome Statute need to stand resolutely with Bangladesh in securing sustainable return of the Rohingya people to their homeland, Myanmar, speakers told a discussion in the city.

They underlined it at an event during the 21st (annual) Assembly of the States Parties of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the Hague on Friday, said a press release.

The event titled “Justice for the Rohingyas and No Peace without Justice” was co-hosted by the Bangladesh Embassy to the Netherlands, the Government of Gambia.
Bangladesh Ambassador to the Netherlands M Riaz Hamidullah, Deputy Prosecutor of ICC, Nazhat Shameem Khan, President of Burma Rohingya Organization UK, Tun Khin, former member of the Advisory Commission on Rakhine State, Amb Laetitia Van Den Assum, and Gambian Solicitor General, Hussein Thomasi, spoke at the event.

Ambassador Hamidullah said that in securing lasting solution within new federal structure of Myanmar, issues relating to the Rohingya people as also other ethnic minorities in Myanmar merit attention in inclusive and transparent ways.

As the regional grouping, civil society actors, think-tank, academia within ASEAN region need to look at situation in Myanmar to ensure the region's collective stability and prosperity.

Aside humanitarian assistance, political solution should be equally in focus, he added.

The Rohingya leader Thun Khin appreciated Bangladesh for hosting Rohingya and in their fight for justice for the Rohingya. He shared the significance of the universal jurisdiction investigation in an Argentine Court a key step in securing justice for the Rohingyas; and urged more countries to consider such case.

Deputy Prosecutor Nazhat Khan shared the progress on investigation on the ICC Case inquiring war crimes against Rohingyas.

The Gambian Solicitor General said that The Gambia itself had been a victim of two decades' of authoritarian rule and thus valued the Rohingya issue in initiating the procedure at the ICJ as a member of the Genocide Convention.

Ambassador Laetitia Assum said that the ground situation in Myanmar continues to escalate since the coup déta two years since.

She viewed that as most Asean countries do not share a border with Myanmar, they do not sufficiently understand the bear the burden on the neighboring countries.
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