Rohingya crisis besieges Suu Kyi at Singapore summit

AFP  |  Singapore 

Diplomatic niceties have been in short supply for at a summit in Singapore, where the one-time rights champion has been publicly chastised over her handling of the Rohingya crisis, compounding a dismal week for Myanmar's de facto leader.

Her reticence on the issue has cut her adrift from the global rights community including the United Nations, whose investigators say last year's campaign amounted to genocide.

Many of the honours previously showered upon for her stoic, peaceful resistance during years of house arrest by Myanmar's junta have been rescinded.

This week the bad got worse.

On Monday Amnesty International, whose campaign to free Suu Kyi galvanised global recognition of her democracy struggle, stripped her of its highest honour over her "indifference" to the atrocities against the Rohingya.

One day later at a regional summit in Singapore, criticism replaced the garlands she has received on the global stage since steering her party into government in 2016.

Suu Kyi was castigated by Malaysia's at the (ASEAN) meet, a forum better known for platitudes than admonishments.

"Someone who has been detained before should know the sufferings and should not inflict it on the hapless," the forthright Mahathir told reporters on Tuesday shortly before the summit opened.

"But it would seem that is trying to defend what is indefensible," he added, ploughing through the summit's tradition of politeness.

Dialling up the awkwardness, Mahathir spent the entire summit next to Suu Kyi at photocalls, roundtables and dinners -- thanks to the alphabetical proximity of and

"You can sense (her reception) is not the same as before," a Southeast told AFP, requesting anonymity. "Everyone was expecting more from her."

The diplomatic siege deepened on Wednesday when US told her the "violence and persecution" against the Rohingya was "without excuse".

In reply Suu Kyi, who appeared wrong-footed by the directness of the public critique, retreated behind her usual position: the Rohingya crisis is an internal affair.

"In a way, we can say we understand our country better than any other country does," she said.

The Nobel Laureate insists impartial domestic probes will establish any evidence of abuses.

But Rohingya refugees say Myanmar will never provide real justice.

has driven the Muslim minority out in waves and denies them citizenship and self-identification as "Rohingya", instead labelling them "Bengalis" -- illegal immigrants from neighbouring

More than 720,000 Rohingya were forced to cross the border by a kickback against Rohingya militants last year.

They joined crowded refugee camps in Bangladesh, one of Asia's poorest and most populous countries.

The first families in an initial group of 2,000 were due to be repatriated on Thursday under a deal that has stalled due to fears the Rohingya will face persecution on their return.

But by the afternoon none had returned amid reports of intimidation and fear among the refugees, who do not want to go back without citizenship, security and property guarantees.

Suu Kyi's defenders say her hands are tied by a power-sharing deal cut with the army that allowed civilian elections in 2015 but granted the military full control over all security matters.

A for Suu Kyi's for Democracy (NLD) defended the against the mounting flak in

"If their pressure (on Suu Kyi) is because of 'Bengali' repatriation... we have already agreed to accept all who have lived in Myanmar," Myo Nyunt said.

Suu Kyi still draws widespread support inside Buddhist-majority Myanmar.

But from to veteran US Bill Richardson, she has shed friends in international circles over her intransigence on the Rohingya crisis.

And even gatherings in -- where discretion and non-interference in perceived 'internal matters' of another country is a shibboleth of diplomacy -- no longer come with a guaranteed rock-star welcome.

"Her star has undoubtedly dimmed," another ASEAN told AFP, also requesting anonymity. "Her reception is not as warm as... (when) she still had that aura.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, November 15 2018. 14:50 IST