Arakan News Agency
Myanmar authorities have been blocking facts about UN envoys to hide their crimes against the Muslim minority of Rohingya. The Myanmar government has postponed a visit by officials from the organization to Arakan state in the west of the country to inspect the situation of Muslims.
The Myanmar authorities have invoked bad weather for fear of the safety of human rights officials, while continuing to carry out the genocide against Muslims.
The Associate Spokesperson for the Secretary-General of United Nations, Erie Kaneko: Our colleagues in Myanmar reported that the trip was delayed due to bad weather.
“This is the official reason given to us,” the UN official told media. “The United Nations hopes that the re-visited visit will be held soon to reach the region.
According to the UN official, UN officials and other diplomats were planning a trip to Arakan state, where up to 500,000 Rohingya people have fled in recent weeks to neighboring Bangladesh to flee their country’s hell and the army of Burma, which burned their villages.
The UN Security Council will also meet to discuss the issue after French President Emmanuel Macaron described what happened as a “genocide” last week. The United Nations called it an “ethnic cleansing”, which put Myanmar in an embarrassing position and made it a fugitive in the international arena to block its crimes against it. Muslims.
The United Nations Human Rights Council decided from Geneva that Myanmar should allow the United Nations fact-finding mission, which is trying to investigate the commission of human rights violations by the Myanmar security forces, to enter.
The Human Rights Council said in its resolution: “We need to ensure full access, away from censorship and restrictions, to all regions and to conduct meetings with the population.
The international moves come amid calls from aid groups for signs of an outbreak of disease among Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh.
Prompting the Human Rights Council to organize mass vaccination campaigns against cholera, at a time when the sinking of a refugee boat in the Sea of Bengal highlighted the growing risks faced by the fleeing from Burma’s hell.
It is a matter of concern that some 518,000 Rohingya Muslims who have fled Myanmar in recent weeks are clearly lacking in clean water and sanitation equipment, with hundreds in a single toilet in some camps, according to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.







