Unicef boss urges Myanmar to enact Kofi Annan’s recommendations

    Hussain of DOT
    Unicef Executive Director Henrietta Fore has said that Myanmar’s “commitment” to enacting the recommendations of Kofi Annan’s committee – which include ensuring freedom of movement and access to education – would help mend the lives of suffering children in the crisis-ridden Rakhine state.
    She said children from the Rohingya Muslim minority, an oft-persecuted and mostly stateless community from Buddhist-majority Myanmar, were living “a precarious and an almost hopeless existence” in camps in neighboring Bangladesh.

    About 730,000 Rohingya fled Rakhine state in western Myanmar into neighboring Bangladesh after a Myanmar military crackdown in August 2017 following attacks by Rohingya insurgents on security posts. Tens of thousands still remain behind in Rakhine, where they are subjected to restrictions on movement and have limited access to healthcare and education.

    “We urge the government to seize this moment and translate this potential into reality for all children,” she said on the first visit to the Myanmar capital Naypyidaw by a Unicef head in decades.

    “Taking these steps will also go a long way towards creating the right conditions for the return of refugees from Bangladesh.”

    The Annan commission was created by Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi in 2016 to find long-term solutions to deep-seated ethnic and religious divisions in Rakhine. However, implementation of its recommendations has been beset by crises and setbacks.

    A day after the panel issued its report in August 2017, Rohingya insurgents launched attacks on security forces, provoking a military crackdown the UN investigators described as “ethnic cleansing” with “genocidal intent”. Myanmar denies the charge.

    In mid-2018, a Myanmar minister told Western diplomats that eight of Annan’s recommendations – including one that asks authorities to take steps to amend the 1982 citizenship law that had rendered the Rohingya stateless – were problematic and could not be immediately fulfilled.

    The commission’s recommendations included points urging the government to “immediately expand primary education to the communities in northern Rakhine State, and intensify efforts to ensure that teachers assigned to Muslim villages resume their work, including by providing adequate security when necessary”. It also called on authorities to “ensure that all children in the state have access to education in Myanmar language” and that the tertiary education access is expanded.

    -Source: Reuters

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