Bob Geldof returns award in protest against Suu Kyi for allowing persecution of Rohingya

Irish musician Bob Geldof, right, holds aloft his Freedom of the City of Dublin scroll as he prepares to return it at Dublin City Hall, in Dublin, on Monday. (AFP)
Updated 14 November 2017
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Bob Geldof returns award in protest against Suu Kyi for allowing persecution of Rohingya

LONDON: The UK government on Monday said the actions of military forces in Myanmar against the Rohingya people “looks like ethnic cleansing.”
Theresa May’s spokesman said: “We’ve been appalled by the inhumane violence that’s taking place in Rakhine state.
“It’s a major humanitarian crisis. It’s been created by the Burmese military and it looks like ethnic cleansing.”
More than 600,000 of the Muslim ethnic minority from Myanmar’s Rakhine state have reportedly fled to refugee camps in Bangladesh amid the military clearance operations.
The UK government’s comments came on the same day that Irish musician and anti-poverty activist Bob Geldof said he would return his “Freedom of the City of Dublin” award to his hometown, saying he refused to hold the honor in conjunction with Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
The situation in Rakhine has prompted global calls for Suu Kyi to be stripped of all her former human rights accolades because she has not condemned the Myanmar military’s actions.
“I am a very proud Dubliner but cannot in all conscience continue to be one of the honored few to have received this great tribute whilst Aung San Suu Kyi remains among that number,” Geldof said in a statement.
“Her association with our city shames us all and we should have no truck with it, even by default. We honored her, now she appalls and shames us,” Geldof said.
“The moment she is stripped of her Dublin Freedom perhaps the Council would see fit to restore to me that which I take such pride in. If not so be it. Please accept this small gesture and the sadness that accompanies it.”
In a statement issued on Monday the Lord Mayor of Dublin, Ardmheara Micheal Mac Donncha, said: “Bob Geldof is entitled to return his award if he wishes to do so. It should be pointed out that as Ardmheara I have condemned the persecution of the Rohingya people and their expulsion from their homes by the military in Myanmar and the failure of Aung San Suu Kyi to even acknowledge, let alone condemn, what the UN has described as ethnic cleansing.”

He added: “I have met Rohingya representatives in Ireland and I am pledged to assist them. When I raised the issue of removing the Freedom of the City from the Myanmar leader, a consensus was not reached among the groups on the city council, though all have condemned the persecution of the Rohingya people, and the matter is not closed.”
Last month Suu Kyi was stripped of a similar honor by the British university city of Oxford, where she was an undergraduate.
The University of Bristol, one of the several universities to award honorary degrees to the Burmese leader during her time in opposition, has also said it is reviewing its award in light of accusations of mistreatment of the Rohingya.
A spokesperson for the University of Bristol told Arab News: “The university shares the growing concern with the ongoing situation in Myanmar. In 1998, we awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws to Dr. Aung San Suu Kyi, who at the time was leading the struggle for human rights and democracy in the then Burma. In terms of this award, it would be wrong to make any decision at this time to consider revoking such an honor but we will continue to monitor and review the situation as necessary.”
Unison, the UK’s second-largest trade union, confirmed to Arab News that it had suspended Suu Kyi’s honorary membership in September and that the situation in Burma will be “discussed” at UNISON’s next international committee meeting later this month to consider the “next steps.”
International human rights charity Amnesty International (AI) has carried out extensive research on the current Rohingya crisis, as well as the long-term pattern of discrimination against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine State.
An AI spokesperson told Arab News: “This is a clear case of ethnic cleansing. In legal terms, Amnesty international has consistently documented six separate types of crimes against humanity being committed against the Rohingya amid the current crisis: murder, deportation and forcible displacement, torture, rape and other sexual violence, persecution, and other inhumane acts such as denying food and other life-saving provisions.
“Our ongoing investigation into the crisis has been informed by multiple research trips to the Myanmar/Bangladesh border since the current wave of violence began, as well as expert analysis of satellite imagery and other remote sensing technology that has revealed the devastating scale of the Myanmar military’s targeted, scorched-earth campaign against Rohingya.”
The charity said it would issue a comprehensive new report in late November, based on two years of research, “covering the pervasive and long-standing discrimination against Rohingya that is one of the root causes behind this crisis.”


Trump says US could run Venezuela and its oil for years

Updated 58 min 2 sec ago
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Trump says US could run Venezuela and its oil for years

  • US president made the comments less than a week after Washington seized Maduro in a raid on Caracus
  • Oil has emerged as the key to US control over Venezuela, which has the world’s largest proven reserves

WASHINGTON: The United States could run Venezuela and tap into its oil reserves for years, President Donald Trump said in an interview published Thursday, less than a week after toppling its leader Nicolas Maduro.
“Only time will tell” how long Washington would demand direct oversight of the South American country, Trump told The New York Times.
But when asked whether that meant three months, six months or a year, he replied: “I would say much longer.”
The 79-year-old US leader also said he wanted to travel to Venezuela eventually. “I think at some point it’ll be safe,” he said.
US special forces snatched president Maduro and his wife in a lightning raid on Saturday and whisked them to New York to face trial on drug and weapons charges, underscoring what Trump has called the “Donroe Doctrine” of US hegemony over its backyard.
Since then Trump has repeatedly asserted that the United States will “run” Venezuela, despite the fact that it has no boots on the ground.
Venezuela’s interim leader Delcy Rodriguez insisted that no foreign power was governing her country. “There is a stain on our relations such as had never occurred in our history,” Rodriguez said of the US attack.
But she added it was “not unusual or irregular” to trade with the United States now, following an announcement by state oil firm PDVSA that it was in negotiations to sell crude to the United States.

‘Tangled mess’

Oil has in fact emerged as the key to US control over Venezuela, which has the world’s largest proven reserves.
Trump announced a plan earlier this week for the United States to sell between 30 million and 50 million barrels of Venezuelan crude, with Caracas then using the money to buy US-made products.
On the streets of Caracas, opinions remain mixed about the oil plan.
“I feel we’ll have more opportunities if the oil is in the hands of the United States than in the hands of the government,” said Jose Antonio Blanco, 26. “The decisions they’ll make are better.”
Teresa Gonzalez, 52, said she didn’t know if the oil sales plan was good or bad.
“It’s a tangled mess. What we do is try to survive, if we don’t work, we don’t eat,” she added.
Trump, who will meet oil executives on Friday, is also considering a plan for the US to exert some control over Venezuela’s PDVSA, the Wall Street Journal reported.
The US would then have a hand in controlling most of the oil reserves in the Western Hemisphere, as Trump aims to drive oil prices down to $50 a barrel, the paper reported.
Vice President JD Vance underscored that “the way that we control Venezuela is we control the purse strings.”
“We tell the regime, ‘you’re allowed to sell the oil so long as you serve America’s national interest,’” he told Fox News host Jesse Watters in an interview broadcast late Wednesday.

‘Go like Maduro’

Vance, an Iraq veteran who is himself a skeptic of US military adventures, also addressed concerns from Trump’s “Make America Great Again,” saying the plan would exert pressure “without wasting a single American life.”
The US Senate is voting Thursday on a “war powers” resolution to require congressional authorization for military force against Venezuela, a test of Republican support for Trump’s actions.
Caracas announced on Wednesday that at least 100 people had been killed in the US attack and a similar number wounded. Havana says 32 Cuban soldiers were among them.
Trump’s administration has so far indicated it intends to stick with Rodriguez and sideline opposition figures, including Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Corina Machado.
But Rodriguez’s leadership faces internal pressures, analysts have told AFP, notably from her powerful Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez.
“Her power comes from Washington, not from the internal structure. If Trump decides she’s no longer useful, she’ll go like Maduro,” Venezuela’s former information minister Andres Izarra told AFP in an email.
The US operation in Venezuela — and Trump’s hints that other countries could be next — spread shockwaves through the Americas, but but he has since dialed down tensions with Colombia.
A day after Colombia’s leftist President Gustavo Petro spoke with Trump on Wednedsday, Bogota said Thursday it had agreed to take “joint action” against cocaine-smuggling guerrillas on the border with Venezuela.