By Daily times
BANGKOK: The head of Myanmar’s fledgling human rights panel on Tuesday said it would not launch probes into allegations of abuses in ethnic conflict areas to encourage regime efforts to seek an end to fighting.
Bloody battles have raged since June in Kachin State in the far north, marring the progress of a new regime that has surprised observers with positive reforms, including tentative ceasefire deals with several rebel groups.
Win Mra, the chairman of the country’s human rights commission, told journalists at a news conference in Bangkok that attempts at reconciliation were “essentially political”.
He said the panel had decided investigations into the conflict zones were “not appropriate at this present point in time”.
“With the establishment of the peace, other problems like human rights violations and atrocities supposed to be committed against ethnic groups will also recede into the background,” he said.
Last month a report by Human Rights Watch accused the Myanmar army of abuses including rape, torture and killing of civilians in ethnic minority conflict zones in 2011. Win Mra acknowledged that rights abuses continued in Myanmar despite recent changes, citing land disputes, and mistreatment by officials as major sources of grievance.
“You are right in saying that human rights problems continue because this is something that cannot be tackled within a short period of time,” he said. “It is a process, as you would know, but I think we have started to handle this problem.” afp.
BANGKOK: The head of Myanmar’s fledgling human rights panel on Tuesday said it would not launch probes into allegations of abuses in ethnic conflict areas to encourage regime efforts to seek an end to fighting.
Bloody battles have raged since June in Kachin State in the far north, marring the progress of a new regime that has surprised observers with positive reforms, including tentative ceasefire deals with several rebel groups.
Win Mra, the chairman of the country’s human rights commission, told journalists at a news conference in Bangkok that attempts at reconciliation were “essentially political”.
He said the panel had decided investigations into the conflict zones were “not appropriate at this present point in time”.
“With the establishment of the peace, other problems like human rights violations and atrocities supposed to be committed against ethnic groups will also recede into the background,” he said.
Last month a report by Human Rights Watch accused the Myanmar army of abuses including rape, torture and killing of civilians in ethnic minority conflict zones in 2011. Win Mra acknowledged that rights abuses continued in Myanmar despite recent changes, citing land disputes, and mistreatment by officials as major sources of grievance.
“You are right in saying that human rights problems continue because this is something that cannot be tackled within a short period of time,” he said. “It is a process, as you would know, but I think we have started to handle this problem.” afp.
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