Showing posts with label Report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Report. Show all posts
Monday, July 6, 2020
Wednesday, July 1, 2020
Saturday, June 20, 2020
Saturday, May 30, 2020
Myanmar Submits First Report To ICJ Concerning Rohingya Genocide
The Organization for World Peace
28 May, 2020
Sochea Chhay
28 May, 2020
Sochea Chhay
Last Sunday, Myanmar submitted its first report to the International Court of Justice, elaborating on the measures it has taken to protect the Rohingya ethnic minority from genocide. The ICJ had issued a provisional order on Myanmar in January following a call to action made by The Gambia, urging Myanmar to take all necessary means to prevent genocide acts and incitement from happening.
In 2017, Myanmar’s military launched a clearance operation in the Rakhine state in response to an offensive attack by an armed Rohingya group. The violent aftermath that followed this crackdown has forced more than 750,000 Rohingya minority to flee to Bangladesh, languishing in squalid conditions in the world’s largest refugee camp. Another 600,000 Rohingya citizens still reside in the Southern area of Myanmar.
In 2017, Myanmar’s military launched a clearance operation in the Rakhine state in response to an offensive attack by an armed Rohingya group. The violent aftermath that followed this crackdown has forced more than 750,000 Rohingya minority to flee to Bangladesh, languishing in squalid conditions in the world’s largest refugee camp. Another 600,000 Rohingya citizens still reside in the Southern area of Myanmar.
Sunday, April 5, 2020
Friday, March 13, 2020
Wednesday, March 11, 2020
Friday, February 28, 2020
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Monday, February 17, 2020
Friday, February 7, 2020
Monday, February 3, 2020
Behind Myanmar’s Military Alibi: A Path for Compliance with the ICJ’s Order to Protect Rohingya
JUST SEURITY
Grant Shubin and
Akila Radhakrishnan
February 3, 2020
Grant Shubin and
Akila Radhakrishnan
February 3, 2020
In the wake of the ruling from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ordering Myanmar to prevent genocide against the Rohingya going forward, the initial excitement was tempered by pragmatics—how this important court order can be enforced so that it actually protects the 600,000 Rohingya who remain in Rakhine State.
Sunday, February 2, 2020
Wednesday, January 22, 2020
လြတ္လပ္ေသာစုံစမ္းစစ္ေဆးေရးေကာ္မရွင္၏ အၿပီးသတ္ အစီရင္ခံစာႏွင့္ စပ္လ်ဥ္း၍ သတင္းထုတ္ျပန္
ျပန္ၾကားေရးဝန္ႀကီးဌာန
ေနျပည္ေတာ္
JANUARY 22, 2020
ျပည္ေထာင္စုသမၼတျမန္မာနိုင္ငံေတာ္အစိုးရ
ျပည္ေထာင္စုေရွ႕ေနခ်ဳပ္႐ုံး
သတင္းထုတ္ျပန္ခ်က္
၁၃၈၁ ခုႏွစ္၊ ျပာသိုလျပည့္ေက်ာ္ ၁၃ ရက္
(၂၀၂၀ ျပည့္ႏွစ္၊ ဇန္နဝါရီလ ၂၂ ရက္)
ျပည္ေထာင္စုေရွ႕ေနခ်ဳပ္႐ုံး
သတင္းထုတ္ျပန္ခ်က္
၁၃၈၁ ခုႏွစ္၊ ျပာသိုလျပည့္ေက်ာ္ ၁၃ ရက္
(၂၀၂၀ ျပည့္ႏွစ္၊ ဇန္နဝါရီလ ၂၂ ရက္)
လြတ္လပ္ေသာစုံစမ္းစစ္ေဆးေရးေကာ္မရွင္၏ အၿပီးသတ္အစီရင္ခံစာႏွင့္ စပ္လ်ဥ္း၍ သတင္းထုတ္ျပန္ျခင္း
၁။ နိုင္ငံေတာ္သမၼတ႐ုံးသည္ ၂၀၁၆-၂၀၁၇ ခုႏွစ္တြင္ ျမန္မာ့တပ္မေတာ္ႏွင့္ ARSA အၾကမ္းဖက္ အဖြဲ႕တို႔ အၾကား ျဖစ္ပြားခဲ့သည့္ တိုက္ခိုက္မႈျဖစ္စဥ္မ်ားအတြင္း ရခိုင္ျပည္နယ္၌ လူ႔ အခြင့္အေရး ခ်ိဳးေဖာက္မႈမ်ား ရွိ ေၾကာင္း စြပ္စြဲ ခ်က္မ်ားအေပၚ စုံစမ္းစစ္ေဆးရန္ ၂၀၁၈ ခုႏွစ္၊ ဇူလိုင္လ ၃၀ ရက္ေန႔တြင္ လြတ္လပ္ေသာ စုံစမ္းစစ္ေဆးေရး ေကာ္မရွင္ (Independent Commission of Enquiry - ICOE) ကို ဖြဲ႕စည္းခဲ့ပါသည္။
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Rohingya group blasts panel report on violence against community
theSundaily
21 Jan 2020
21 Jan 2020
Rohingya refugees gather near the fence in the “no man’s land” zone between Myanmar and Bangladesh border as seen from Maungdaw, Rakhine state during a government-organized visit for journalists on Aug 24, 2018 — AFP
KUALA LUMPUR: A UK-based Rohingya group Monday dismissed a report published by Myanmar’s Independent Commission of Enquiry (ICOE) the same day which concluded that no evidence of genocide was found despite proof of war crimes committed by some members of Myanmar security forces.
Myanmar finds war crimes but no genocide in Rohingya crackdown
Aljazeera
2020.01.21
ICOE report comes days before UN's top court issues ruling on whether urgent measures are necessary to stop genocide.
2020.01.21
ICOE report comes days before UN's top court issues ruling on whether urgent measures are necessary to stop genocide.
Rohingya, who have lived in Myanmar for generations, fled to Bangladesh
in 2017 and are fearful of returning without guarantees on their rights
and citizenship [File: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]
A commission set up to investigate the 2017 crackdown in Rakhine that led hundreds of thousands of mostly Muslim Rohingya to flee Myanmar, has concluded that while some soldiers probably committed war crimes there was no genocide.
The Independent Commission of Enquiry (ICOE) released the findings of its investigation, but not the full report, to the country's president on Monday, a few days before the United Nations' top court is set to rule on whether to impose urgent measures to stop the alleged continuing genocide in Myanmar.
The Independent Commission of Enquiry (ICOE) released the findings of its investigation, but not the full report, to the country's president on Monday, a few days before the United Nations' top court is set to rule on whether to impose urgent measures to stop the alleged continuing genocide in Myanmar.
Monday, January 20, 2020
Government-appointed panel in Myanmar finds no evidence of genocide against Rohingya
THE
GLOBE
AND MAILL
Poppy McPherson
YANGON,Reuters
Manish Swarup/The Associated Press
GLOBE
AND MAILL
Poppy McPherson
YANGON,Reuters
Manish Swarup/The Associated Press
In this Jan. 23, 2018, file photo, a Rohingya refugee hangs a blanket out to dry at Balukhali refugee camp, in Bangladesh.
A government-appointed panel established in Myanmar to probe allegations of abuses in Rakhine state in 2017 that drew global outrage said on Monday they had found no evidence of genocide against the Rohingya Muslim minority.
Thursday, January 16, 2020
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