June 25, 2013
Irrawaddy
The latest mini-furor kicked off last week with the publication by
the Nobel Women’s Initiative (NWI) of a letter, signed by 12 Nobel Peace
Prize winners, which called for an “immediate end to the violence
against Muslims and other ethnic minorities in Burma.”
Among the international who’s who of peace promoters who put their
names to the exhortation were Archbishop Desmond Tutu, former Timorese
President Jose Ramos-Horta, microfinance mogul Mohamed Yunus and Iranian
political exile Shirin Ebadi.
Absent from the list, however, was Burma’s own democracy icon and
Nobel winner Suu Kyi, an omission that was quickly picked up on by
high-profile human rights advocates and Burma watchers.
“Aung San Suu Kyi can’t get herself to join 12 Nobel Peace Laureates’
call for end to #Burma violence against Muslims,” tweeted Human Rights
Watch Executive Director Kenneth Roth.
Asked by The Irrawaddy if Suu Kyi had been asked to sign or if she
had snubbed the NWI, it turns out that as an elected parliamentarian,
Suu Kyi is not part of the NWI.
“As per the by-laws of the organization, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, as a
member of Parliament, is not a member of the Nobel Women’s Initiative,”
said Rachel Vincent, the NWI media and communications director.
“As you will see from the list of signatories, we do sometimes go
beyond the women laureates to extend an invitation to male laureates to
sign on to statements. You will also note that none of these male
laureates are sitting politicians, though some, like Oscar Arias, were
in the past,” Vincent added.
Suu Kyi has previously said that she does not know if all the
Rohingya, an oppressed Muslim minority living mostly in Burma’s west,
are entitled to Burmese citizenship, sparking anger and disappointment
among her erstwhile supporters outside of Burma.
In recent weeks, however, the opposition leader has been somewhat
more forthright, criticizing a proposal to limit Rohingya women to two
children as discriminatory, while opposing another suggestion, made by
Buddhist monks, that Buddhist Burmese women should face restrictions in
marrying Muslim men.
The NWI has in the past supported Suu Kyi and other politically
active Burmese women. In 2010, the NWI helped kick-start the
now-moribund campaign to look at the possibility of setting up a war
crimes or crimes against humanity tribunal on Burma, arguing that
long-standing and widely documented cases of sexual violence carried out
by Burmese soldiers against ethnic minority women warranted further
investigation.
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