Wednesday, May 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Supports Genocide Case Against Myanmar At International Court Of Justice

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Nov, 2019 08:54 PM

    OTTAWA - Canada is supporting a genocide lawsuit against the Myanmar government for systemic violence that forced more than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee their country.

     

    Gambia filed the genocide application on Monday with the International Court of Justice in The Hague on behalf of the Organization of Islamic Co-operation, a group of 57 Muslim countries.

     

    Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said in a statement the move will advance accountability for the crime of genocide, which includes mass murder, systemic discrimination, hate speech and sexual and gender-based violence.

     

    The Canadian government will look for ways to support Gambia's legal efforts, she added. To that end, she said the government will enlist the help of former Liberal interim leader and longtime politician Bob Rae, who also served as Canada's special envoy to Myanmar.

     

    "Canada will work with other like-minded countries to end impunity for those accused of committing the gravest crimes under international law," Freeland said.

     

    "Ensuring that the perpetrators of these atrocities are held to account is imperative to provide justice to the victims and survivors while building lasting peace and reconciliation in Myanmar."

     

    Rae, in his report on Myanmar released last year, urged Canada to play a leading role in any international prosecution of the perpetrators of violence in the South Asian country.

     

    Rae also predicted legal challenges for the international community if it decided to pursue a prosecution against Myanmar's leaders for crimes against humanity.

     

    The main challenge would be to create a credible and independent tribunal that could hear the case, he said, noting that special tribunals were set up to prosecute war crimes in Cambodia, Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

     

    In September 2018, the House of Commons unanimously supported a motion that said the crimes against the Rohingya were a genocide. The motion also reiterated a call for the UN Security Council to refer Myanmar to the International Criminal Court.

     

    The motion coincided with a United Nations fact-finding mission that reported the Myanmar military systematically killed thousands of Rohingya civilians, burned hundreds of their villages and engaged in ethnic cleansing and mass gang rape. It called for top generals to be investigated and prosecuted for genocide.

     

    A statement on Monday from Human Rights Watch on behalf of 10 international non-governmental organizations said the move by Gambia represented "the first judicial scrutiny of Myanmar’s campaign of murder, rape, arson, and other atrocities against Rohingya Muslims."

     

    It noted that Canada, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Turkey, and France "have asserted that Myanmar committed genocide against the Rohingya."

     

    In October 2018, Canada also stripped Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar's civilian leader, of her honorary Canadian citizenship for her complicity in the atrocities. She had been renowned for her decades as a leader peacefully opposing her country's military rulers.

     

    Myanmar's military launched attacks against the Rohingya in August 2017. Most fled to neighbouring Bangladesh and have created one of the world's largest refugee camps.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Escalating Violence: 3 Shootings In Just 15 Hours In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    Vancouver Police are investigating three shootings in the Downtown Eastside, over a 15-hour period, that have sent four people to hospital with injuries.

    Escalating Violence: 3 Shootings In Just 15 Hours In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    Two Pedestrians Struck In North Delta Within 24 Hours, Police Urge Caution

    Delta Police are encouraging pedestrians and drivers to take precautions in darker, rainy weather after two pedestrians were struck within a 24-hour period in North Delta.

    Two Pedestrians Struck In North Delta Within 24 Hours, Police Urge Caution

    Literacy Programs Help British Columbians Develop Essential Language, Listening Skills

    Literacy Programs Help British Columbians Develop Essential Language, Listening Skills
    Children and families throughout B.C. will have the opportunity to spark their imagination and foster lifelong learning through innovative community literacy programs, thanks to a $500,000 provincial government investment to support 2019’s Raise-a-Reader campaign.

    Literacy Programs Help British Columbians Develop Essential Language, Listening Skills

    Student Arrested At Delta High School After Allegedly Assaulting Another Student

    Student Arrested At Delta High School After Allegedly Assaulting Another Student
    A Delta Police school liaison officer was at South Delta Secondary School (SDSS) on September 18, 2019 during school hours, when he was made aware of an allegation of an assault that had occurred that same day.

    Student Arrested At Delta High School After Allegedly Assaulting Another Student

    Trudeau And Scheer Attack Ford And Wynne In Battle For Bountiful Ontario

    OTTAWA - Ontario leaders — old and current — were pinned firmly in the crosshairs of Justin Trudeau and Andrew Scheer's federal battle Monday for the vote-rich province that represents the gateway to victory.

    Trudeau And Scheer Attack Ford And Wynne In Battle For Bountiful Ontario

    British Man Returns To Yukon To Tipple His Own Toe In Long-running Tradition

    WHITEHORSE - An British man who lost several toes to frostbite in Yukon is now back in the territory for a reunification of sorts.

    British Man Returns To Yukon To Tipple His Own Toe In Long-running Tradition