HomeAfricaRohingya survivors expect UN's highest court to find Myanmar committed genocide

Rohingya survivors expect UN’s highest court to find Myanmar committed genocide

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By Stephanie van den ​Berg

THE HAGUE, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Rohingya survivors of the 2017 military crackdown in Myanmar expect the International Court of Justice, the United Nations' highest court, to ⁠rule the country committed genocide against them, they said on Friday.

A judgment is expected in three-to-six months' time following three weeks of hearings at the court ‍in the Hague that is also known as the World Court.

The outcome of the case will ​have repercussions beyond Myanmar, including affecting South Africa’s genocide case at the court against Israel over the war in Gaza.

GAMBIA BROUGHT THE CASE

In their final submissions this week, ​lawyers for Gambia, a mainly Muslim country that brought the case, told the court that the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn from Myanmar's conduct is that it intended to destroy the Rohingya as a group.

Myanmar has denied accusations of genocide and said the 2017 offensive that forced at least ‌730,000 Rohingya from their homes and into neighbouring Bangladesh was a legitimate counterterrorist ‌operation.

Speaking on Friday on the sidelines of a meeting of survivors of mass atrocities, Yousuf Ali, a ​52-year-old Rohingya refugee who says he was tortured by the Myanmar military, said he believed the court would declare a genocide had been committed.

"The world has ‌witnessed us suffering for so many years (... ) how we were deported, how our homes were ⁠destroyed and we were killed," he said.

A U.N. fact-finding mission ‌concluded the offensive had included "genocidal acts" and ​survivors recounted killings, mass rape and arson.

At the international court, Myanmar's lawyers said the fact-finding mission was biased and that its conclusions did not have the standard ⁠of proof needed for a ⁠finding of genocide.

Gambia's Justice Minister Dawda Jallow asked the court to reject Myanmar's arguments ​and said a judgment declaring genocide would help to break Myanmar's "cycle of atrocities and impunities".

(Reporting by Stephanie van ‌den Berg; editing by Barbara Lewis)

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