Staff

Staff

 

 

The US and the YPG, the PKK terror group’s Syrian wing, have an open relationship, but long before the YPG’s emergence, the Centcom refused to go against the terror group during the invasion of Iraq.

For the US Central Command (Centcom) and the White House, there has been an elephant-in-the-room situation regarding the presence of PKK terrorist organisation in northern Iraq, especially at the height of the Iraq invasion in 2003.

While the US considers PKK as a terrorist organisation, Centcom, a military wing responsible for running America's Middle East operations, has carved its own path when it comes to dealing with PKK, even though it means contradicting with Washington's official policy on the terror group.

Last week, Centcom issued condolences for several killed members of the YPG, the Syrian wing of the PKK, which Washington projects as its ally in its war against Daesh. The US claims that the YPG and the PKK are separate entities despite the strong evidence which proves that they are under the same leadership.  

Contrary to Washington's global pledge to root out terrorism, Centcom’s non-confrontational approach toward the PKK goes beyond the YPG, which came into existence in 2011 at the beginning of the Syrian civil war. During the US occupation of Iraq, Centcom did not perceive the PKK as a threat and even resisted a few times against the White House decisions “to eliminate” the group, according to Matthew Bryza, a former top Bush administration official. 

While it's common for US diplomats and Centcom to have disagreements over certain issues from time to time, the Central Command’s PKK policy during Washington's invasion of Iraq was more than an internal disagreement, says Bryza. 

During the Iraq War, Bryza was the lead person in the staff of the National Security Council under the Bush administration, and had a tense relation with Centcom on the PKK’s presence in northern Iraq. 

“What was a big problem was how the Central Command absolutely refused to implement President Bush’s decision that PKK is a terrorist organisation and is an enemy of the US and whose safe haven in northern Iraq, which was under US control, had to be eliminated,” Bryza tells TRT World

The PKK, which has led to tens of thousands of deaths across Türkiye during its decades-long terror campaign against Ankara, used northern Iraq’s Qandil Mountains as its headquarters since the late 1990s. The terror group also has other hideouts and military camps across northern Iraq close to the Turkish border. 

Against the Bush doctrine

According to Bryza, the Centcom’s rejection of the White House’s PKK decision goes against the Bush Doctrine, which emerged after the September 11 attacks advocating that a person or any organisation providing safety or haven to terrorists is also guilty of terrorist actions.

“Once the US gained control of northern Iraq, where the PKK has its headquarters and area of operations, the US would have been in violation of President Bush’s own doctrine if it did not take action to eliminate PKK’s terrorist threat to Türkiye. Part of my job was to implement President Bush’s decision all the way through the Central Command,” says Bryza. 

But Centcom “resisted and they came up with excuses for why they could not move against the PKK in northern Iraq”, frustrating the former US diplomat. 

While Centcom claimed that they did not have enough troops to fight both Saddam’s army and the PKK in northern Iraq, at the same time, then-Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld was contradictorily telling the American people that the US had plenty of troops and did not need more troops to conduct military operations, Bryza says. 

“Those two things can not be true simultaneously,” observes the experienced diplomat. Even after the US completely invaded Iraq and defeated Saddam’s army, there was no progress at all against the PKK as the Centcom then came up with different reasons, stating that they needed to focus on anti-American Sunni uprising across western Iraq, Bryza says. 

Centcom also claimed that going against the PKK might have created instability in northern Iraq, Bryza says. 

Mehmet Emin Koc, a former Turkish special forces officer who participated in Türkiye’s cross-border operations in northern Iraq in the 2000s, also believes that Centcom opposed Ankara’s cross-border operations against the PKK in northern Iraq, claiming that it would destabilise the region. 

Koc thinks that during the invasion, Centcom allowed the PKK to use northern Iraq as a safe haven. “While the PKK terrorist organisation carried out all kinds of terrorist acts along the Türkiye-Iraq border and even within Turkish territory, they (Centcom) created a safe living space for the PKK in the mountainous areas in the northern Iraq,” Koc tells TRT World

Turkish opposition to US invasion

Bryza, who was tasked with developing positive relations with Türkiye and some other countries during the US invasion, thinks that Centcom’s PKK policy was also partly based on Ankara’s critical rejection of allowing American troops to invade Iraq via Turkish territories. 

“That made many in Centcom angry about Türkiye and to look at Türkiye not as a partner with whom to conduct this war but rather as an obstacle and a problem to be managed,” Bryza says, referring to the Turkish rejection of the US war on Iraq. After that “Central Command did not want to do anything to make Türkiye happy,” he says. 

While Centcom might still be angry at Ankara’s rejection of allowing American troops to enter Iraq from Türkiye, many US officials and experts now strongly believe that the 2003 occupation itself was a terrible mistake. Many Turkish analysts say Ankara did not have regrets about the fact that Türkiye did not participate in the ill-thought US war on Iraq, which has still not recovered from the invasion’s disastrous consequences. 

“Türkiye has such a deep political understanding that the deterioration of the stability and peace environment that may occur in its neighbour Iraq may affect itself in the long term. For this reason, Türkiye adopted a stance against the Iraq War and considered that staying out of the war would be appropriate within the scope of its national interests,” says Koc. 

Like Bryza, he also believes that Turkish opposition to the US invasion still shows its effects on Ankara-Washington ties. 

Edward Erickson, a former US military officer and a prominent expert on military history who was deployed to Iraq and had also worked in Kurdish-led autonomous region in northern Iraq in the past under Centcom, also finds Washington’s handling of the PKK problematic during the invasion of Iraq. 

“This is a great question. Why didn't the US go after a recognised terrorist organisation that was easily within its operational reach?” Erickson asks. 

“We never stationed US forces north of Mosul and we never stationed US forces inside the KRG (Kurdish Regional Government) itself. I think the reason that we chose not to go after the PKK is because it might have led to a  ‘blue-on-blue’ confrontation with the (Kurdish) Peshmerga. The PKK was never a threat to US forces or to the mission in Iraq,” Erickson tells TRT World. Blue-on-blue confrontation refers to military engagements between allied forces. 

Northern Iraq equation

Erickson's account suggests the US did not see the PKK as an obstacle to its military occupation of Iraq, but it always factored in regional complications such as the presence of Peshmerga forces, Washington's key ally. The US Centcom, according to Erickson, wasn't sure how Peshmerga would react to any possible military action against PKK, even though the two sides had been enemies for decades. 

“Yes, the Peshmerga and the PKK are rivals to some extent. I really don't know what the US knew about the relationship between them, but it is easy to make mistakes in combat,” says the military analyst, believing that a confrontation with either Masoud Barzani’s KDP or the late Jalal Talabani’s PUK parties would have destabilised the fragile Baghdad government in the early stage of the US invasion. 

Mehmet Bulovali, an Iraqi-Kurdish political analyst and a former top adviser to the Iraqi presidency, thinks similarly to Erickson. While the US is aligned with the YPG in Syria, it does not have a real understanding with the PKK leadership in Iraq, Bulovali tells TRT World

While the PKK managed to wean itself off the US' anti-terror scanner, Bulovali believes the terror group “owes” its presence in northern Iraq more to the Iranian support than the American backing. “Washington coordinated with Tehran during the Iraq invasion and two powers still maintain a working relationship when it comes to turbulent Iraqi politics. I believe the PKK is active in northern Iraq not because of the US support but the Iranian backing,” he tells TRT World.

Despite Centcom’s resistance to eliminating the PKK from northern Iraq, in 2007, during then-Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s meeting with Bush in Washington, the US reached a political understanding with Türkiye for Ankara’s cross-border operations against the terror group, according to Bryza. 

 

In the crucial meeting, Bryza finally got an opportunity to overcome Centom’s PKK resistance. During the meeting, he articulated to the American leadership that Türkiye has “reasonable” demands, like operational intelligence sharing from its NATO ally, and did not request a major operation from the US against the PKK in northern Iraq.  

“That became a real breakthrough and US-Türkiye relations in regard to the PKK started to concertise after that,” the former US official says. 

Despite the “breakthrough”, many Turkish analysts believe that Centcom’s unwillingness to eliminate the PKK leadership from northern Iraq laid the ground for Washington’s next chapter with the YPG in northern Syria. The US now allows the PKK’s Syrian offshoot to use northern Syria as a safe haven, much like it did to the PKK leadership in northern Iraq during the invasion. 

“Of course, Centcom will not go after the PKK now in northern Iraq. It does not have the ability to do so. Even back in 2003 and 2007, Centcom was not willing to go after the PKK,” says Bryza. 

US Centcom gave no responses to TRT World’s questions for this article. 

Source: TRT World

 Kuwait reiterated its unwavering position on preservation of international security and peace and nuclear non-proliferation only out of its outright commitment to respecting international conventions. This came in a speech delivered by Kuwait’s Permanent Representative at the UN Tareq Al-Banai during the Tenth Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT).

He said the world has agreed that the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) is the keystone of the non-proliferation system, calling for ensuring the credibility of the NPT, especially amid the ongoing developments. While marking the 50th anniversary of the NPT, it is the responsibility of all parties to work hard to maintain this treaty.

He added that there is an opportunity for this conference to make genuine headway should the countries, especially nuclear ones, honor their vow to adopt a relevant ambitious plan with specific goals. The Kuwait diplomat pointed out the swift and serious developments experienced by the world over the last period, with some nuclear countries announcing continuation and upgrading of their nuclear arsenals and insistence on the nuclear deterrence policy.

Al-Banai went on saying that these developments necessitate clear-cut and unequivocal mechanisms within the framework of the NPT. However, he voiced hope that Kuwait and Gulf concerns about this agreement would be taken into account, calling for following up on the implementation of UNSC Resolution 2231 regarding verification and monitoring in Iran.

Al-Banai called on the parties to the Iranian nuclear agreement to return to the negotiating table with a view to arriving at an agreement that could ensure that Iran’s nuclear program is peaceful. Kuwait’s new permanent representative at the UN strongly condemned any nuclear tests that could undermine human safety or any provocation or behavior that might jeopardize international security and peace.

He noted that Kuwait had contributed to Arab efforts to press for freeing the Middle East of nuclear weapons and weapons of mass destruction, based on a resolution adopted during the 2010 review conference. He added that the conference had asked the then UN secretary general and the three countries that adopted the resolution to hold a conference on a nuclear-free region.

However, he regretted, the conference was not held due to the absence of the political will and earnestness on the part of all concerned parties. He underlined that all parties have the right to develop research and studies, and possess and use nuclear technology for peaceful purposes, but legal commitments and agreements concluded with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) must be observed. In this context, he hailed the IAEA’s role and technical cooperation programs that contribute to building the national capabilities of developing countries and ensuring peaceful nuclear technology.

Proceeding from this fact, Kuwait has always attached special attention to technical cooperation activities, and has backed the IAEA’s initiatives for peaceful nuclear usage and laboratory revamp. The Kuwaiti diplomat concluded by hoping that the review conference would promote conviction that open, constructive and fruitful dialogue should continue to ensure sustainable peace, security and stability, boost confidence and curtail nuclear proliferation hazards. – KUNA

 

 

  • Russian sanctions have been working in an unexpected way: by limited the nation's imports, not its exports.
  • Paul Krugman said Russia was having trouble buying goods, which has been tanking its production and GDP.
  • He said attempts at economic war have historically been unsuccessful unless they involved combat, bringing some hope to the West.

With Russia showing signs of benefitting from a volatile and chaotic energy trade since its invasion of Ukraine, some have wondered if Western sanctions on the country have backfired — but measures to choke Russia's economy have been working in an unexpected way, top economist Paul Krugman says, and history suggests the West that will come out on top in the economic struggle.

"Russia is having no problem selling stuff, [but] it's having a lot of trouble buying stuff," Krugman wrote in an op-ed for the New York Times on Tuesday, noting that although Western nations have fixated on capping Russian exports, limitations on Russian imports have been wreaking havoc on Moscow's economy.

It's a departure from the intent of the original plan, which aimed to curb Russia's war revenue through energy bans and a possible a price cap on Russia energy, which Western leaders are looking to propose by year-end.

But that hasn't gone according to plan, and data shows Russia pulled in $24 billion in energy exports the first three months of war alone, and has been limiting supply to Western nations to drive up energy prices, tipping economies in Europe close to a recession. Since the start of Ukraine's invasion, Brent crude is up 8% to $101.96 as of 8:40 am ET and natural gas is up 70% to $7.81.

But import side of the equation tells a different story. Bans on selling to Russia have lowered Russia's trade volume with sanctioning countries by 60% and non-sanctioning countries by 40%, Krugman pointed.

That's led to a dramatic decrease in Russia's industrial production and relatedly, its GDP. According to the Peterson Economic Institute, production in the country has fallen as much as 50% for goods ranging from plastic to coal to household appliances.

"So economic sanctions against Russia appear to have been surprisingly effective, just not in the way everyone expected," Krugman said.

He added that historically, previous attempts at economic warfare have been unsuccessful, unless they involved a military effort, such as the US sinking Japanese merchant shipments in World War II, causing the Japanese economy to tank.

That provides some optimism as Russia continues to slash energy supplies from Europe — suggesting that despite the attempts at retaliation, the country will struggle to come out on top against the West.

But Krugman acknowledged the fight would be affected by factors like inflation and high recession risks, which currently have the West in a difficult position. The Federal Reserve issued a 75-point rate hike last week to combat inflation running at 41-year highs, and the European Central Bank issued an aggressive half-point hike a few weeks ago to combat sky high prices and weakening economic sentiment.

However, Europe in particular still faces even greater difficulties ahead as the continent braces for winter without the normal flow of Russian gas supplies./Business Insider

Türkiye has criticised Greece's latest move denying recognition to the Turkish minority’s elected Muslim clerics (muftis), calling it "unacceptable".

In a statement on Thursday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry urged Greece to respect international law and fulfil its obligations under the longstanding Treaty of Lausanne and other relevant agreements, "and put an end to its policies pressuring and intimidating the Turkish Minority in Western Thrace".

The statement came in response to a new legislation allowing the appointment of muftis by Greek authorities, a system the Turkish minority in Western Thrace rejects.

"Greece once again violated the rights and freedoms of the Turkish Minority in Western Thrace, guaranteed by international agreements, particularly the Lausanne Peace Treaty, through an act that it has enacted recently regarding the Muftis in Western Thrace," said the statement.

Adding that the law was drafted without any consultation with the Turkish minority in Western Thrace, the ministry stressed that Greece "once again disregarded the elected Muftis of the Turkish Minority, thus their will and religious freedom".

"In this framework, we fully support the statement made by the Consultative Board of the Turkish Minority in Western Thrace on 3 August 2022, reflecting the rightful reaction of our kinsmen," it said.

'Contractual obligations'

Citing Article 40 of Lausanne, Ankara pointed out that the treaty grants the Turkish minority in Western Thrace the right to establish, manage and control its own religious, educational, charitable and social institutions.

"Greece’s violation of this right against its contractual obligations had also been recorded by past rulings of the European Court of Human Rights," the ministry added.

Ankara further called on Athens to provide the Turkish minority with the necessary support and facilitation in electing muftis and administering and structuring muftiates.

However, the ministry stressed that Greece's "attempts to bring the Muftiates under its own control, against the will of the Minority, are unacceptable".

Mentioning how Türkiye does not interfere with the functioning of the religious institutions of non-Muslim minorities in its country or the election of their leaders through such repressive laws and practices, the ministry affirmed that Türkiye "will continue to follow closely the rights and freedoms of our kinsmen".

Rights abuses

Greece's Western Thrace region – in the country’s northeast, near the Turkish border – is home to a substantial, long-established Muslim Turkish minority numbering around 150,000, or around a third of the population.

The rights of the Turks of Western Thrace were guaranteed under the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, but since then the situation has steadily deteriorated.

After a Greek junta came to power in 1967, the Turks of Western Thrace started to face harsher persecution and rights abuses by the Greek state, often in blatant violation of European court rulings.

The Turkish minority in Greece continues to face problems exercising its collective and civil rights and education rights, including Greek authorities banning the word “Turkish” in the names of associations, shuttering Turkish schools and trying to block the Turkish community from electing its own muftis.

Source: AA

The United Nations has accused “Israel” of causing the displacement of scores of Palestinians living in a Bedouin community in the occupied West Bank. 

In a report, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said around 100 Palestinians were forced to leave the Ras At Teen Bedouin community near Ramallah city last month.

The report cited unbearable living conditions as a result of [Israel's] "coercive measures", settler violence and demolitions of their shelters as reasons that forced Palestinian residents to leave their community.

The UN report called on the “Israeli” authorities to halt the policy of home demolition and land confiscation, hold illegal settlers accountable for their violence against Palestinian residents and prevent “Israeli” forces from using excessive force against them.

 

Illegal settlements 

“Israeli” and Palestinian estimates indicate there are about 660,000 illegal settlers living in 145 settlements and 140 outposts in the occupied West Bank.

Under international law, all Jewish settlements in occupied territories are considered illegal.

The settlements stand on land occupied by “Israel” in a 1967 war and where Palestinians want to build a future state. 

“Israel” disputes that the settlements are illegal or that they would obstruct Palestinian statehood. US-sponsored peace talks stalled in 2014.

Source: AA

A large fire has broken out in a popular forest in western Berlin following an explosion in a police munitions storage site.

Firefighters were still unable to begin putting out the flames on Thursday as the affected area of 15,000 square metres (161,500 square feet) included a storage site for police ammunition.

The incident came as a new heatwave was due to envelop Germany over the day.

"There are still explosions" at the storage area neighbouring Grunewald forest, said a spokesperson for Berlin's firefighter service.

"The situation is unpredictable. It's burning uncontrollably in the forest," he added.

Officials are building a security cordon to allow firefighters to begin extinguishing the flames from a distance of about a kilometre from the ammunition storage zone.

A police helicopter was circling the area, as authorities appealed for the public to keep away.

Temperatures are expected to climb to as high as 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) across parts of Germany. In Berlin, they are predicted to reach 38C.

Brandenburg, the region surrounding Berlin, has for days been battling forest fires.

Source: AFP

Wildfires raging through Europe this summer have burned the second-largest area on record, even though the region is only halfway through its typical fire season, according to data from the European Union's Joint Research Centre.

A dozen European countries have suffered major blazes this year, forcing thousands to evacuate and destroying homes and businesses. Countries including Italy, Spain and France still face extreme fire risk.

Wildfires have burned 600,731 hectares in EU countries this year so far, the data showed.

That ranks as the second-highest total for any year since 2006, when records began. In 2017, 987,844 hectares were burned.

This year's burned area is more than double the size of Luxembourg. No other year in the dataset had seen such a high amount of burned land in Europe by August.

The Mediterranean region's typical fire season runs from June to September.

'Extremely unusual'

Climate change is exacerbating fires, by increasing the hot and dry conditions that help them spread faster, burn longer and rage more intensely.

Hotter weather saps moisture from vegetation, turning it into dry fuel - a problem exacerbated by shrinking workforces in some areas to clear this vegetation.

Victor Resco de Dios, professor of forest engineering at Spain's Lleida University, said the large fires France and Portugal suffered in early July were "extremely unusual" and demonstrated how climate change is causing the fire season to start earlier and last longer.

"Today's fires in the Mediterranean can no longer be extinguished... Large fires are getting bigger and bigger," he said.

The JRC data covers wildfires bigger than 30 hectares, so if smaller fires were included the total burned would be even higher.

Southern European countries such as Portugal and Greece experience fires most summers, but hotter temperatures are pushing severe wildfire risk north, with Germany, Slovenia and the Czech Republic among those hit this season.

Some action can help to limit blazes, such as setting controlled fires that mimic the low-intensity fires in natural ecosystem cycles.

But without steep cuts to the greenhouse gas emissions causing climate change, scientists concur that heatwaves, wildfires and other climate impacts will worsen significantly.

Source: Reuters

An out-of-tune Bangladeshi singer with a huge internet following has been hauled in by police and told to cease his painful renditions of classical songs, sparking anger on social media.

"Hero" Alom, as he styles himself, has amassed nearly two million Facebook followers and almost 1.5 million on YouTube with his unique crooning style and arresting, raunchy videos.

Alom said on Wednesday that he was "mentally tortured" last week by police who told him to stop performing classical songs, that he was too ugly to be a singer, and to sign an "apology" bond.

"The police picked me up at 6am and kept me there for eight hours. They asked me why I sing Rabindra and Nazrul songs," he said.

Dhaka's chief detective Harun ur Rashid told reporters that Alom had apologised for singing the cherished songs and for wearing police uniforms without permission in his videos.

"We received many complaints against him," Harun said. "(He) totally changed the (traditional) style (of singing)... He assured us that he won't repeat this," Harun added.

Farook Hossain, deputy police commissioner of Dhaka, rejected claims by Alom, 37, that he had also been pressed to change his name. "He is making these comments just to go viral in social media," he said.

Following his ordeal, Alam released a new video depicting himself behind bars in a prison outfit, warbling mournfully that he is about to be hanged.

Social media anger  

Alom's treatment triggered outrage on social media, with commentators and activists calling it an attack on individual rights — even if his singing grates.

"I am not a fan of your songs or your acting. But if there is an attempt to muzzle your voice, I stand up against it," journalist Aditya Arafat posted.

"Don't be broken. You are a hero. No matter what others say, you are a real hero," Sanjida Khatun Rakhi wrote on Alom's Facebook page.

One of his numbers, "Arabian Song", in which he appears in traditional Arab clothing on a sand dune with camels superimposed in the background, has garnered 17 million views.

But he has also drawn critics' scorn, particularly for versions of classic songs of two beloved national treasures — Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore and Bangladesh's national poet Kazi Nazrul Islam.

Alom says he has acted in several films and also participated in Bangladesh's parliamentary election in 2018 as an independent candidate — garnering 638 votes.

He said that he started using the moniker "Hero" after becoming popular in his home district of Bogra, 150 kilometres north of Dhaka.

"I felt like I am a hero. So I took the name Hero Alom. I won't drop this name no matter what," he said. "At present, it seems you can't even sing with freedom in Bangladesh."

Source: AFP

Film-maker Kubota, 26, was detained last week near an anti-government rally in Yangon along with two Myanmar citizens.

 

A Japanese journalist detained in Myanmar has been charged with breaching immigration law and encouraging dissent against the military.

Toru Kubota, who was held while covering a protest in Yangon last week, "has been charged under section 505 (a) and under immigration law 13-1", the junta said in a statement on Thursday.

Film-maker Kubota, 26, was detained last Saturday near an anti-government rally in Yangon along with two Myanmar citizens.

He is the fifth foreign journalist detained in Myanmar after US citizens Nathan Maung and Danny Fenster and freelancers Robert Bociaga of Poland and Yuki Kitazumi of Japan, who were all eventually freed and deported.

Press clampdown

505a — a law that criminalises encouraging dissent against the military and carries a maximum three-year jail term — has been widely used by the military in its crackdown on dissent.

Breaching immigration law 13-1 carries a maximum of two years' imprisonment.

Myanmar's junta has clamped down on press freedoms, arresting reporters and photographers, as well as revoking broadcasting licences.

As of March this year, 48 journalists remain in custody across the country, according to monitoring group Reporting ASEAN.

Source: AFP

A cache of documents collected by war crimes investigators and reviewed by Reuters has revealed how the Myanmar military systematically demonised its Rohingya Muslim minority, created militias that would ultimately take part in mass violence against the Rohingya, and coordinated their actions with ultranationalist Buddhist monks.

The documents were collected by the Commission for International Justice and Accountability (CIJA), a nonprofit founded by a veteran war crimes investigator and staffed by international criminal lawyers, 

The cache reveals discussions and planning around the purges of the Rohingya population — called "textbook example of ethnic cleansing" by the UN and declared a genocide by the US — and efforts to hide military operations from the international community. 

For the past four years, these war crimes investigators have been working secretly to compile evidence they hope can be used to secure convictions in an international criminal court. 

Mass removal process

The documents do not contain orders explicitly telling soldiers to commit murder or rape – such smoking-gun records are rare in the field of international justice. But key in the CIJA cache is the evidence of planning, said Stephen Rapp, a former US ambassador-at-large for war crimes issues who now sits on CIJA's board. "Everything in it points to this intention to engage in this kind of mass removal process," he said. 

CIJA has begun handing its Myanmar material to prosecutors in the Hague. The organisation says the records implicate more than a dozen Burmese officials, most in the military.

And while the Burmese military faces grave allegations under international law, there is no easy road to convictions. Myanmar hasn't signed the Rome Statute that created the International Criminal Court (ICC), which has the power to try individual perpetrators for international crimes. 

The path to trial

As a result, the United Nations Security Council would typically have to refer allegations against Myanmar to the ICC. Such a move would likely be blocked by allies of Myanmar, say international law experts.

But other paths to trial exist. The ICC set a legal precedent in 2019 by allowing its chief prosecutor to begin investigating crimes against the Rohingya population, including deportation, because they fled to Bangladesh, which is a party to the court.

Also in 2019, majority-Muslim Gambia brought a case against Myanmar for genocide at the ICJ, on behalf of the 57 member states of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation. In July, the court cleared the case to proceed, rejecting objections filed by Myanmar. 

"Universal jurisdiction"

The non-profit Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK also filed a lawsuit against both army chief Min Aung Hlaing and Aung San Suu Kyi (the country's civilian leader the time of the mass violence) in Argentina under "universal jurisdiction," a legal principle that allows brutal acts to be tried in any court in the world.

Legal experts say the chances senior military leaders will be tried soon are slim. They rarely leave Myanmar, and then only to friendly nations like Russia and China, which aren’t parties to the ICC.

Entire Rohingya villages burned

In August 2017, the Myanmar military began a brutal crackdown that sent more than 700,000 Rohingya fleeing to Bangladesh. The pogrom was carried out against the Rohingya with a ferocity that stunned the world. Refugees described massacres, gang rapes and children thrown into raging fires. The nonprofit Médecins Sans Frontières estimated at least 10,000 people died. Hundreds of Rohingya villages were burned to the ground. 

Rohingya, who are mostly Muslim, trace their roots in Myanmar's Rakhine area back centuries, a reading of history supported by independent scholars. Nationalists from the country's Buddhist majority see the Rohingya as "illegitimate migrants" from neighbouring Bangladesh.

Source: agencies

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