Myanmar’s top generals must be prosecuted for genocide, UN investigators say
The three-member team of investigators meticulously assembled hundreds of accounts by expatriate Rohingya, satellite footage and other information

United Nations investigators on Monday called for an international probe and prosecution of Myanmar’s army chief and five other top military commanders for genocide against the country’s Rohingya minority.
Some 700,000 Rohingya Muslims fled northern Rakhine state to Bangladesh after Myanmar launched a brutal crackdown in August last year on insurgents amid accounts of arson, murder and rape at the hands of soldiers and vigilante mobs in the mainly Buddhist country.
Myanmar has vehemently denied allegations of ethnic cleansing, insisting it was responding to attacks by Rohingya rebels.
But on Monday, a UN-backed fact-finding mission into violations in Myanmar said the country’s “top military generals, including Commander-in-Chief Senior-General Min Aung Hlaing, must be investigated and prosecuted for genocide in the north of Rakhine State”.
They should also be investigated and prosecuted for “crimes against humanity and war crimes in Rakhine, Kachin and Shan States,” it said, insisting that the army tactics had been “consistently and grossly disproportionate to actual security threats”.