The US government is conducting an intensive examination of alleged atrocities against Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims, documenting accusations of murder, rape, beatings and other possible offenses in an investigation that could be used to prosecute Myanmar's military for crimes against humanity, US officials told Reuters.
The undertaking, led by the State Department, has involved more than a thousand interviews of Rohingya men and women in refugee camps in Bangladesh, where almost 700,000 Rohingya have fled after a military crackdown last year in Myanmar's northwestern Rakhine State, two US officials said. The work is modelled on a US forensic investigation of mass atrocities in Sudan's Darfur region in 2004, which led to a US declaration of genocide that culminated in economic sanctions against the Sudanese government.
The interviews were conducted in March and April by about 20 investigators with backgrounds in international law and criminal justice, including some who worked on tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, the US officials said.
Rohingya refugees try to take shelter from torrential rain as they are held by the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) after illegally crossing the border, in Teknaf, Bangladesh, August 31, 2017 Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters
The information will be analyzed in Washington and documented in a report to be sent to the State Department's leadership in May or early June, the officials said. It's unclear whether the Trump administration will publicly release the findings, or whether they will be used to justify new sanctions on the Myanmar government or a recommendation for international prosecution.
"The purpose of this investigation is to contribute to justice processes, including community awareness raising, international advocacy efforts, and community-based reconciliation efforts, as well as possible investigations, truth-seeking efforts, or other efforts for justice and accountability," said a document used by the investigators in the sprawling refugee camps and reviewed by Reuters.
Three US officials in Washington and several people involved in the investigation on the ground in Bangladesh disclosed details of the fact-finding operation to Reuters.
700,000-Rohingyas-who-have-entered-Bangladesh-since-August-2017-have-been-sheltered-in-different-camps-in-Cox's-Bazar Syed Zakir Hossain
A State Department official, asked to confirm the specifics of the investigation conducted in the refugee camps as reported by Reuters, said "the program details are accurate." The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the US government was using all available information and a wide range of tools, but added: "We cannot get ahead of the deliberative, policymaking process."
As of publication, the Myanmar government and military had not responded to questions from Reuters. Myanmar has said its operations in Rakhine were a legitimate response to attacks on security forces by Rohingya insurgents.
The interviewers in the camps asked the refugees basic demographic questions, the date the person left Myanmar, and to recount their experiences during the wave of violence unleashed against the Rohingya in Rakhine State by the Myanmar military and local Buddhist residents.
The July 1 issue of Time magazine featured controversial Myanmar monk Wirathu, who has poured vitriol on the country's small Muslim population, cheering a military crackdown that has forced nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslim into Bangladesh AFP
The investigators also asked refugees to describe the battalions and weaponry used by the Myanmar military in Rakhine State during operations against the Rohingya, said one person involved with the investigation in the camps, which are located in the Cox's Bazar. The investigators have received names of individual perpetrators and the identities of specific battalions allegedly involved, this person said.
A second person involved in the project on the ground said 1,025 refugees have been interviewed and the assignment may include a second phase focused on military units.
Zohra Khatun, 35, a Rohingya refugee in the camps, said she told investigators that soldiers waged a campaign of violence and harassment in her village in Rakhine State starting last August. They made arrests and shot several people, driving her and others to flee, she said.
"One military officer grabbed me by the throat and tried to take me," she told Reuters, clutching her shirt collar to demonstrate. The military, she said, burned homes in the village, including hers.
The investigation coincides with a debate inside the US government and on Capitol Hill over whether the Trump administration has done enough to hold Myanmar's military to account for brutal violence against the largely stateless Rohingya.
The Rohingya are a small Muslim minority in majority-Buddhist Myanmar. Though they have been present in what's now Myanmar for generations, many Burmese consider them to be interlopers. Violence against them has increased in recent years as the country has made a partial shift to democratic governance.
Close to 1 million #Rohingya refugees have fled to Cox's Bazar. Your support can make a difference: https://t.co/gEXmgPf1Ud pic.twitter.com/axlwzcnbMq
— IOM - UN Migration (@UNmigration) April 23, 2018
In November, following the lead of the United Nations and the European Union, then-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson declared that the Rohingya crisis constituted "ethnic cleansing," a designation that raised the possibility of additional sanctions against Myanmar's military commanders and increased pressure on its civilian leader, Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. The Myanmar government has denied the accusations.
The United States responded in December by imposing targeted sanctions on one Myanmar general and threatening to penalize others. Washington has also scaled back already-limited military ties with Myanmar since the Rohingya crisis began. Human rights groups and Democratic lawmakers in Washington have urged the Republican White House to widen sanctions and designate the violence as "crimes against humanity," a legal term that can set the stage for charges at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
"No decisions have been made on that front, but it's something being looked at very carefully," a senior Trump administration official told Reuters.
Pulitzer winning photographs displayed on a screen outside Thomson Reuters office at Times Square, New York. #Rohingya pic.twitter.com/KaXuU0UX5G
— Saifullah Muhammad (@saifulcan) April 24, 2018
A Reuters investigation published in February provided the first independent confirmation of what had taken place in the village of Inn Din, where 10 Rohingya Muslim men and boys were hacked to death by Rakhine Buddhist villagers or shot by security force members. The story was based on accounts not only from Rohingya refugees but also from soldiers, police officers and Buddhist locals who admitted to participating in the bloodshed.
Pictures obtained by Reuters showed the men and boys with their hands tied behind their backs and their bodies in a shallow grave. Two Reuters journalists were jailed while reporting the story and remain in prison in Yangon, where they face up to 14 years in jail on possible charges of violating Myanmar's Official Secrets Act.
So far, there has been resistance by lawyers in the White House and State Department to adopt the terms "crimes against humanity" or "genocide" in describing deaths of Rohingya in Myanmar, the US officials said.
Here's why the #Rohingya people of #Myanmar are some of the most persecuted people in the world pic.twitter.com/OJyBLCZ5IK
— Abu Marwan Rahoom (@rah2005oom) April 18, 2018
The State Department itself has been divided over how to characterize or interpret the violence against the Rohingya, the officials said.
The East Asian and Pacific Affairs Bureau, staffed largely by career diplomats and representing the view of the embassy in Myanmar, has held at times "to a success narrative" on Myanmar since the lifting of sanctions was announced in October 2016 and the strong public role played by the US government in the historic 2012 opening of the country after decades of military rule, one official said.
Diplomats in Yangon have also been reluctant to jeopardize Washington's relationship with Suu Kyi, a democratic icon who has faced criticism for failing to do more to rein in the violence against the Rohingya. Some senior US officials still believe Suu Kyi remains the best hope for a more democratic Myanmar, one official said. "They are reluctant to upset that relationship."
House rent, land price, transport fare, educational state and prices of daily commodities are getting out of control day by day Syed Zakir Hossain/Dhaka Tribune
That contrasts with the State Department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, based in Washington, which has pushed for tougher sanctions, the officials said. Bridging that gap has been made more difficult because the State Department under President Donald Trump has yet to fill many important diplomatic positions, the officials said.
Officials described the process in the refugee camps of documenting the abuses as rigorous. Each interview was coded with key words according to the alleged crime, such as killing, rape, sexual violence and lynching. Different categories of alleged perpetrator also have codes – from civilians to insurgents, Myanmar military personnel and police.
"After the 1,000 interviews and statistical analysis, we can draw certain conclusions about the perpetrators of crime and patterns of crime," one official said.
Ten Rohingya men with their hands bound kneel as members of the Myanmar security forces stand guard in Inn Din village in Rakhine state on September 2, 2017 Reuters
The official said one possible result from the documentation of abuses against the Rohingya could be a vote by the United Nations General Assembly to establish an international body to investigate the most serious crimes committed against the Rohingya, similar to what it's done with Syria.
The State Department did not respond to questions about divisions within the administration over how to characterize the violence and criticism that the administration was too slow in acting to halt abuses.
Subiya Khatun, 29, who fled her Rakhine home in September and reported seeing three dead bodies in a canal on her way to the Bangladesh border, said she hoped for justice and a safe return to Myanmar.
"They said they have come from America. 'This investigation will be used for your help,'" she said she was told by the people who interviewed her in the camps. "If Allah wishes, we will get justice and our demands will be fulfilled."