روما بت
ماه بت
پین باهیس
بهترین سایت شرط بندی
بت کارت
یاس بت
یک بت
مگاپاری
اونجا بت
alvinbet.org
بت برو
بت فا
بت فوروارد
وان ایکس بت
1win giriş
بت وینر
بهترین سایت شرط بندی ایرانی
1xbet giriş
وان کیک بت
وین بت
ریتزو بت
1xbet-ir.com.co/
https://www.symbaloo.com/mix/paperiounblocked2?lang=EN https://www.symbaloo.com/mix/agariounblockedschool1?lang=EN https://yohoho-io.app/ https://2.yohoho-io.net/paper.io unblocked https://www.symbaloo.com/mix/yohoho-unblocked-76?lang=EN https://www.symbaloo.com/mix/agariounblockedpvp https://www.symbaloo.com/mix/yohoho?lang=EN
HomeNewsASEAN, Australia leaders press Myanmar over Rohingya crisis

ASEAN, Australia leaders press Myanmar over Rohingya crisis

Published on

Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been grilled by world leaders over her inaction regarding the persecution of the minority Rohingya Muslims in her country.

Suu Kyi has been under intense global criticism for her public rejection of a brutal military crackdown that has forced nearly 700,000 of the Muslim-minority Rohingya to flee Myanmar’s Rakhine State for Bangladesh since August last year.

That campaign of state-sponsored violence originally began in late 2016.

Suu Kyi, who arrived in the Australian city of Sydney on Saturday to take part in a three-day special meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), was ostracized by other ASEAN members for her brazen denial of atrocities against the minority Rohingya community in Myanmar, which the United Nations says bears the “hallmarks of genocide.

The Rohingya crisis has sparked rare tensions within the bloc, with members demanding outside intervention to end the crisis.

The ASEAN members, namely, Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam, who used to take pride in the existing political harmony in the group, have been at loggerheads with Myanmar over the mishandling of the Rohingya crisis.

Malaysia and Bangladesh, who have borne the brunt of the problems resulting from the Rohingya’s displacement, have been most vocal in their criticism of Myanmar. The two Muslim-majority countries have taken a pincer approach against their Buddhist-dominant neighbor, exerting increased pressure to end the crisis.

‘No longer a domestic issue’

Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najib Razak insisted to his Southeast Asian neighbors that the Rohingya crisis was no longer a domestic issue.

“Because of the suffering of Rohingya people and that of displacement around the region, the situation in [Myanmar’s] Rakhine State and Myanmar can no longer be considered to be a purely domestic matter,” he said.

Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi (L) and Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najib Razak are seen at the ASEAN-Australia Special Summit in Sydney, on March 17, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

“In addition, the problem should not be looked at through the humanitarian prism only, because it has the potential of developing into a serious security threat to the region,” Razak added.

He said it was high time the international community made a joint effort to resolve the crisis.

“We discussed the situation in Rakhine State at considerable length today,” Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said at the closing press conference on Sunday. “It’s certainly an issue that has been discussed and it is fair to say… very constructively, in our meeting.”

Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who is this year’s ASEAN chair, acknowledged the region’s concerns about the ongoing plight of the Rohingya.

He hinted that an international body bigger than ASEAN — possibly the UN Security Council — was needed to achieve a forceful solution to the Rohingya crisis.

“It is of concern for all ASEAN countries, and yet ASEAN is not able to intervene and to force an outcome,” Lee said.

Both Turnbull  and Lee said that they would back efforts to reach a long-term solution to end the crisis and that they supported humanitarian efforts to help those displaced.

Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi arrives in Canberra, Australia, on March 18, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

Suu Kyi has not commented publicly since arriving in Australia on Saturday for the summit, but is scheduled to take questions at a Tuesday media event.

Myanmar’s military, with support from the government and Buddhist mobs, has launched a deadly crackdown against Rohingya Muslims residing in the western state of Rakhine.

Only in its first month of the clampdown, which has been described by UN experts and prominent rights group as “ethnic cleansing” and “genocide,” some 6,700 Rohingya Muslims were killed, including more than 700 children, according to Doctors without Borders.

Latest articles

Philadelphia DC 33 strikers: ‘When we fight, we win!’

Philadelphia As the historic strike by 9,000 members of Philadelphia’s American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees District Council 33 continues, workers’ militancy is escalating, and support for them is growing. Mountains of uncollected garbage are growing at official city collection sites in neighborhoods around the city. Some have been dubbed “the Parker Piles”…

Tribute to Patrice Lumumba on his birth centenary, including Frantz Fanon’s essay

By Fausto Giudice, July 2, 2025 Workers World thanks Fausto Giudice of Tlaxcala for this tribute to Patrice Lumumba and for combining it with a tribute to his contemporary African revolutionary, Algeria’s Frantz Fanon, and for including a poem by Langston Hughes. For readers unaware of this important event in African history, a look at…

‘Hideous and revolting’ – Frederick Douglass on U.S. slavery

The following excerpts are from the powerful speech entitled “What to the slave is 4th of July,” made by Frederick Douglass, the great African-American abolitionist who escaped from slavery, at an independence day rally in Rochester, New York, on July 5, 1852.  In light of Trump’s racist attacks on “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion,” i.e., even…

US presentation of Operation Midnight Hammer, by Dorothy Shea

In accordance with Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, I wish to report on behalf of my Government that on 22 June 2025 the Armed Forces of the United States exercised the inherent right of collective self-defence and advanced vital United States interests in eliminating Iran’s nuclear programme by conducting a precision…

More like this

Philadelphia DC 33 strikers: ‘When we fight, we win!’

Philadelphia As the historic strike by 9,000 members of Philadelphia’s American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees District Council 33 continues, workers’ militancy is escalating, and support for them is growing. Mountains of uncollected garbage are growing at official city collection sites in neighborhoods around the city. Some have been dubbed “the Parker Piles”…

Tribute to Patrice Lumumba on his birth centenary, including Frantz Fanon’s essay

By Fausto Giudice, July 2, 2025 Workers World thanks Fausto Giudice of Tlaxcala for this tribute to Patrice Lumumba and for combining it with a tribute to his contemporary African revolutionary, Algeria’s Frantz Fanon, and for including a poem by Langston Hughes. For readers unaware of this important event in African history, a look at…

‘Hideous and revolting’ – Frederick Douglass on U.S. slavery

The following excerpts are from the powerful speech entitled “What to the slave is 4th of July,” made by Frederick Douglass, the great African-American abolitionist who escaped from slavery, at an independence day rally in Rochester, New York, on July 5, 1852.  In light of Trump’s racist attacks on “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion,” i.e., even…