UN human rights expert for Burma, Tomas Quintana, speaks at a press
conference in Rangoon in this file photograph. Photo: Mizzima
The UN expert on human rights in Burma will visit the country for four days starting on Tuesday, at the invitation of the government.
conference in Rangoon in this file photograph. Photo: Mizzima
The UN expert on human rights in Burma will visit the country for four days starting on Tuesday, at the invitation of the government.
Special Rapporteur Tomas Ojea Quintana will tour the country, said the
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in a statement on
Wedneday.
Quintana has requested to visit Arakan (Rakhine)
State and Kachin State and will report his findings to the UN's Human Rights
Council, OHCHR said.
However, it was unclear if Quintana would be given permission to visit
Arakan State in western Burma where widespread sectarian violence has claimed
up to 78 lives and where thousands of homes and businesses were burned in June.
There are reports of continued unrest in the area, and human rights groups have
called for an independent investigation by a credible group.
In a statement released by OHCHR, Quintana cited “ongoing human rights
challenges, including ... recent violence in Rakhine state, as well as
continuing armed conflict, particularly in Kachin State.”
Quintana will meet with government officials, politicians, the National
Human Rights Commission and civil society groups in Naypyitaw and Rangoon,
according to the Geneva-based agency.
He said that there has been “significant progress on reforms (in
Myanmar), which I hope will culminate in the creation of a peaceful and vibrant
democracy that respects human rights and upholds the rule of law”.
A press conference is planned at Rangoon International Airport at the
end of his mission on August 4.
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