[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 172 (Wednesday, October 25, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6821-S6822]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ROHINGYA HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, the Rohingya are one of many ethnic
groups, largely Muslim, who have been living for centuries in Burma and
now in Myanmar, with the majority of them in the western coastal
Rakhine State.
Deep-seated misconceptions about their roots and faith have led to
decades of discrimination, about which many of us are aware because of
press reports. They have been denied citizenship, had their movement
restricted, and have been deprived of basic healthcare. It is no wonder
that the Rohingya people are considered to be one of the most
persecuted minorities in the world.
Today, as a result of a military crackdown against them in the
Rakhine State--an overzealous, disproportionate response to attacks on
security outposts by some militants last October and then again this
August--countless Rohingya have been brutally killed, and more than
600,000 have fled to overwhelmed and desperate camps in neighboring
Bangladesh.
The scorched-earth tactic by the Burmese military has left hundreds
of villages literally burned to the ground, and the reports of rape,
starvation, mass killing--even reports of security forces burning
people, babies, alive--have been horrifying. Satellite images and maps
indicate that the destruction by the Burmese military is not episodic,
it is systematic.
In Bangladesh, aid groups have been unable to keep up with the influx
of refugees. The unprecedented scale of the crisis and the lack of
infrastructure in the makeshift camps have created significant gaps in
access to food, medical care, and even safety and shelter.
The international community has condemned the violence against the
Rohingya, and rightly so.
Countries around the world--reputable international human rights
organizations such as the Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International,
and even the U.N.--have denounced the military's campaign against the
Rohingya.
In a speech to the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva last month,
the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein,
called the Burmese military operation against the Rohingya people ``a
textbook example of ethnic cleansing.''
Many of my colleagues in this Chamber joined me when I introduced S.
Res. 250 to condemn these atrocities, and a large group of us also
wrote to the administration recently to urge Secretary Tillerson and
Administrator Green to help resolve the crisis and provide critically
needed aid.
Just yesterday, in a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, my
friend and colleague, Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland, labeled the
crisis a ``genocide.'' Yet Aung San Suu Kyi, the de facto leader of
Burma, the Nobel laureate, has largely done and said too little.
I have followed Aung San Suu Kyi over the years. I joined many of my
colleagues in praising her struggle for democracy. After 15 years under
house arrest, she and the National League for Democracy won a landslide
victory in the first national vote since Burma's transition to civilian
rule in 2015, more than two decades after her party was denied its
victory in the 1990 election.
I admired her so much for her nonviolent struggle for political
freedom and human rights. And while I recognize she still has a fragile
relationship with the Burmese military, which still has considerable
power, I am sadly disappointed in her lack of leadership when it comes
to the plight of the Rohingya people--her fellow countrymen--men and
women who are in a desperate situation.
She claims she is committed to restoring peace and the rule of law.
Yet she has spoken of so-called allegations and counterallegations
instead of addressing the widespread, well-documented abuses by her own
country's security forces.
I was glad that Aung San Suu Kyi in 2016 appointed investigators, led
by former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, who recommended this
summer that Burma review a 1982 law that strips most Rohingya of
citizenship. Yet the Burmese Government has yet to implement any of the
Commission's recommendations and further continues to deny access to
the Rakhine State to other U.N. investigators, journalists, and NGO
groups. Some officials have even accused the Rohingya of faking rape
and faking the burning of their own homes. What a preposterous claim.
I recognize the dramatic progress Burma has made over the years. It
will take a long time to overcome many of the challenges in such a
young democracy, and I understand that Aung San Suu Kyi, as State
Counselor, has a limited role under the power-sharing agreement with
her military, which has largely been responsible for the violence I
have described. But I would urge her to live up to her own words upon
delivering her Nobel Peace Prize lecture in 2012 to address the
historic and brutal suppression of the Rohingya and support ethnic
reconciliation in Burma. In fact, Aung San Suu Kyi quoted the following
passages from the preamble to the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, which was adopted by the U.N. General Assembly in 1948, as the
answer to why she fought for democracy and human rights in her home
country in Burma. She said:
[D]isregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in
barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind,
and the advent of a world in which human beings shall enjoy
freedom of speech and belief and freedom from fear and want
has been proclaimed as the highest aspiration of the common
people,
[I]t is essential, if man is not to be compelled to have
recourse, as a last resort, to rebellion against tyranny and
oppression, that human rights should be protected by the rule
of law.
These are wise words used by Aung San Suu Kyi when she received her
Nobel Prize. They are words that apply today to this crisis within her
own country.
I am committed to doing what I can in Congress to hold those in the
Burmese military personally accountable for the reprehensible human
rights violations against the Rohingya.
I want to note that I have also had the opportunity over the October
recess to meet with some members of the Rohingya community who have
resettled in my home State of Illinois over the years.
About 1,500 Rohingya people live in the Chicagoland area. Among them
is Nasir Zakaria. He helped found the Rohingya Culture Center in
Chicago--the first Rohingya community center in America. The center
helps provide a safe, familiar space for Rohingya people new to the
country, as well as critically needed resources, such as translators,
ESL and computer classes, help with paperwork, and much more.
When I met Nasir and the other members of the community about a week
ago with my wife, they told me about the phone calls and photos they
receive late at night from family and friends fleeing the violence,
looking for safety in Bangladesh.
[[Page S6822]]
I also heard from community members who recently returned from a
medical mission to Bangladesh. They showed me the photos they brought
back. One food line to feed refugees was literally 1 mile long.
Healthcare is limited. Safe drinking water is limited. Cholera is
detected. It is a horrible situation for these people who have been
tossed out of Myanmar and now are trying just to survive nearby
Bangladesh. The stories are horrific, and they are all the same.
Here is an image of this exodus that was printed in the New York
Times. It shows families fleeing Burma across the border to Bangladesh
with smoke rising in the background from the villages that they lived
in being burned.
The stories I heard were of helpless, poor families walking on foot
through jungles, crowding in boats along the Naf River, leaving behind
everything with accountings of rape, killing, and arson by the Burmese
military. They arrive in Bangladesh sick, exhausted, and desperately in
need of the most basic things--food, clean water, medicine, a safe
space to rest their heads.
Here is another image, which is heartbreaking. It is an indication of
what happens in the refugee camps when food arrives, this time in a
camp known as Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh.
A UNICEF report last week stated that 58 percent of the refugees who
have poured into Cox's Bazar are children, noting that they are in hell
on Earth. They are acutely malnourished, they need clean water and
vaccines, and they are at risk of exploitation by traffickers. This is
unacceptable.
I understand that Bangladesh and Burma have discussed a repatriation
plan recently, but many refugees don't have any documents. They were
literally burned out of their homes. We need to call on the U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees. Filippo Grandi was in my office last week,
and he stressed how important it is for us to speak up and to help on
this issue, that we ensure the voluntary right of return and we ensure
the safety of those who do return and we make sure that the paper
requirements for return are reasonable for people who are literally
homeless and stateless at this moment.
Many are wary of returning without an assurance of full citizenship,
given the risk of further persecution or the threat of being placed in
camps in Myanmar when they return. I don't blame them, because the
atrocities committed against the Rohingya over the past months and
weeks are not new by any means.
Nasir Zakaria in Chicago told me that more than three decades ago,
when he was only 14, he was kidnapped by militants targeting the
Rohingya in Burma. He never saw his parents again.
Nasir eventually escaped to Bangladesh, made his way to Malaysia,
where he worked for 18 years in construction before he finally made it
to the United States with a green card in 2013. He learned English,
worked as a dishwasher in a hotel near Chicago, supported his wife and
three children, met others in the community, and helped to create the
Rohingya Center that I visited.
Here is a picture of Nasir Zakaria with his son, Mohamed, in their
Chicago apartment. You can see the American flag in the background. He
is very proud of this Nation that he now calls home.
The Rohingya Culture Center provides critical resources to more than
400 families in the Chicago area, one of the largest concentrations of
Rohingya refugees in America. More than three decades after Nasir first
escaped Burma, the Rohingya continue to be attacked and demonized.
Let me close by saying that we met today with the Myanmar Ambassador.
Seven Senators sat down with him and expressed the sentiments that I
have included in this statement.
First, let me give Mr. U Aung Lynn, the Ambassador, credit for coming
to the meeting. He knew what we were going to raise. Yet he came, he
took notes, and he assured us that he would respond to this; that we
would be able to come back in a week or two for a progress report on
what is being done; that he would allow or plead for access of U.N.
personnel, as well as NGO groups, into the northern Rakhine area
currently being denied access; that he would personally make it clear
to his government we want those responsible for these atrocities held
accountable. We want to make certain, as well, that those who are
repatriated have a fair chance to return to a safe atmosphere in
Myanmar and, ultimately, for citizenship.
It was a long list of requirements and requests that we gave to the
Ambassador. He took them all in a positive way and told us he would be
back to us in a matter of a week or two with a progress report.
Let me close by appealing to Aung San Suu Kyi to help resolve this
crisis. I am counting on her. I do believe she is a good person. I hope
that she will respond to this crisis in her own country the way she
stood up with so much courage before.
I plan to meet with this Ambassador in a few weeks to chart the
progress, and I look forward to working with my colleagues on a
bipartisan basis to end this ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya people in
Myanmar. We cannot allow the Burmese military to commit these
atrocities.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, before Senator Durbin leaves the floor, I
just want to commend our colleague from Illinois. He and I have worked
together for many years, and throughout that time, the Senator from
Illinois has constantly been a voice for those who have no voice on
these human rights concerns, laying out why the effort to step up is
what we are all about as Americans.
I thank him. I enjoyed listening to him again. You don't really enjoy
it because you hear about the suffering, but I am so glad that Senator
Durbin has made this case, and I thank him for it.
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