Geneva: An independent human rights expert working with the United Nations is criticising China and Russia for allegedly supplying weapons used by Myanmar's military against civilians since it seized power last year. Tom Andrews, a special rapporteur working with the UN human rights office, urged countries to halt such sales. He also called on the UN Security Council, where China and Russia are permanent members, to hold an emergency meeting to discuss a possible ban on sales of arms used by Myanmar's military against civilians. The people of Myanmar are imploring the UN to act, Andrews said in a statement Tuesday. They deserve an up-or-down vote on a Security Council resolution that will stop the sale of weapons being used to kill them.
The findings come in a new report from Andrews on the types and amounts of weapons used by the military as early as 2018, when it led a bloody crackdown on the Muslim Rohingya minority that caused hundreds of thousands to flee to neighbouring Bangladesh. Andrews' research described several categories of weapons transfers, with the ones he identified most problematically coming from China, Russia and Serbia, because they have been sent since 2018 and continued after the military's takeover last year. He also cited India for having transferred weapons before the coup, and once afterward, and said three other countries Belarus, Pakistan and Ukraine -- had sent arms before the military takeover but not afterward. He said Israel and South Korea have sent naval vessels to Myanmar since 2018 that could be used against civilians, but have since committed to no longer sending weapons.
Also Read:Myanmar seeks to have Rohingya case thrown out of UN court