- Web Master
- August 05, 2022
February 22, 2022 6:04 PM
UN Security Council members China and Russia, as well as Serbia have continued supplying Myanmar's junta with weapons used to attack civilians since last year's coup, a UN rights expert said on Tuesday.
United Nations Special Rapporteur on the rights situation in Myanmar, Tom Andrews, urged the Security Council to convene an emergency session "to debate and vote on a resolution to, at a minimum, ban those arms transfers that the Myanmar military are known to use to attack and kill Myanmar civilians."
He released a long-awaited report on Tuesday detailing where the junta is getting its weapons from, highlighting that two permanent members of the Security Council itself, who hold veto power over its decisions, remain among the main suppliers.
"Despite the evidence of the military junta's atrocity crimes being committed with impunity since launching a coup last year, UN Security Council members Russia and China continue to provide the Myanmar military junta with numerous fighter jets, armoured vehicles, and in the case of Russia, the promise of further arms," Andrews said in a statement.
"During this same
period, Serbia has authorized rockets and artillery for export to the
Myanmar military," said Andrews, who is an independent expert appointed
by the UN Human Rights Council, but who does not speak on behalf of the
world body. In his report, he
maintained that the arms transfers by the three countries had "occurred
with the full knowledge that they would be used to attack civilians, in
probable violation of international law." Myanmar
has been in chaos, its economy paralyzed, and more than 1,500 civilians
have been killed in a military crackdown since the putsch in February
2021, according to the UN. Since
the February 1, 2021 coup, at least 12,000 people have been detained,
including the de facto head of the civilian government, Aung San Suu
Kyi, while more than 440,000 people have been forcibly displaced.'Crimes against humanity'
Andrews reiterated
in his report that "there is strong evidence the junta has committed
war crimes and crimes against humanity," including murder, sexual
violence and torture. "The situation of human rights in Myanmar is dire and deteriorating," it said. The
report provides an overview of countries that have authorised the
transfer of weapons to Myanmar since 2018, when the military's attacks
on the Rohingya ethnic minority were widely documented and after a UN
fact-finding mission had urged an arms embargo. Israel,
India, Pakistan, South Korea, Belarus and Ukraine also figure on that
list, although only China, Russia and Serbia have continued their
transfers since the coup. The
UN General Assembly adopted a resolution last June calling for
countries to prevent the flow of arms to Myanmar, but Andrews said that
it had failed to have "any discernible impact on the crisis and the
capacity of the junta to launch attacks on civilians." He
pointed out that while none of the Security Council members had voted
against that resolution, the council had also not even considered voting
to make the text binding for member states. "It
is imperative that member states and the Security Council act urgently
to stop weapons sales to the military junta. Human lives, and Security
Council credibility, are on the line," he said. The
report acknowledges that China and Russia might very well use their
veto power to block any such text, but stressed that this "should not
deter other members from placing a resolution before the Council for
consideration, debate and a vote." "The people of Myanmar deserve to have a strong resolution." "The
Security Council should consider, at the very least, a resolution to
ban weapons that are being used by the Myanmar military to kill innocent
people," Andrews said.'Imperative'