Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility Myanmar: Fact-finding mission welcome, urgently needed, overdue DONATE

Myanmar: Fact-finding mission welcome, urgently needed, overdue

An internationally mandated fact-finding mission to look at human rights violations in Myanmar is welcome, urgently needed and long overdue, Amnesty International said today.
“The announcement of an independent international fact-finding mission to look into human rights violations in Myanmar is long overdue. After the Myanmar government’s failure to establish a credible investigation into the security forces’ crimes against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine State, there is an urgent need for a team of international experts examine alleged violations there, in Kachin and in northern Shan State,” said Champa Patel, Amnesty International’s Director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
“The Myanmar government should welcome the fact-finding mission and assist it in every possible way with its work. The world has a right to know the full truth of events after Amnesty International and the UN both found that human rights violations against the Rohingya may amount to crimes against humanity.”
Background
The UN Human Rights Council should immediately appoint members of the team so they can start their work as soon as possible. 
Members should be selected on the basis of their demonstrated independence, qualifications, relevant experience and their availability to begin work at the earliest opportunity. Amnesty International hopes women will strongly be represented on the fact-finding team.
Given the multiple reports that security forces raped women and girls in Rakhine State, the fact-finding team should include experts in sexual and gender-based violence as well as on child rights, as well as researchers who are trained in approaching victims with due sensitivity.
 

Topics:

Share:

Take Action

Delegates at the 2023 Annual General Meeting of Amnesty Canada in Ottawa. Photo by Don Wright/Amnesty International.

Tell Canada to Stop Bankrolling Fossil Fuels!

A child's boot in a pond

Help defend people’s right to seek protection and safety in Canada!

Sudanese Refugees fleeing the conflict in the Darfur region sheltering in Adre, across the border in Eastern Chad, where conditions are dire and the rainy season is in full swing. More than 150,000 have arrived since April 2023. © Amnesty International

Demand an Arms Embargo in Sudan!

HOPE STARTS HERE

In a world that too often divides us, we choose solidarity.

Latest news

Related news

A group of Amnesty supporters rally in a Resistance protest

Freedom Needs Defenders

With your year-end gift to Amnesty, you help resist fear, censorship and injustice – wherever they spread.

Protect people at risk and fuel a global movement for human rights.

Double your impact with a matched gift by December 31st!

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.