It is still unclear whether Myanmar Commander-in-Chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing is more upset by a United Nations report that recommends he be charged and tried for “genocide” for his military’s crackdown on Rohingya Muslims, or Facebook’s coincident decision to shutter his account for disseminating information the company said “enabled serious human-rights abuses in the country.”
Yangon-based observers suggest that being shunned by Facebook could be more damaging for the loss of face it caused the military in a nation where the platform is hugely popular. Min Aung Hlaing’s account, along with other military-run pages such as the Myawady television network and Myanmar Daily Star newspaper, had more than six million combined subscribers.
The UN Human Rights Council’s report, released in part on August 27, is more strongly worded than any previous document produced by a UN-appointed commission. It mentions “genocide”, a crime under international law and therefore considerably more serious than previous claims of “ethnic cleansing.”
The latter term has no legal bearing, but has been used by United Nations Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Raad Al Hussein, among others, in referring to the Myanmar military’s crackdown on the Rohingya.
It is highly unlikely that the UN report, compiled by a group of international legal experts, will lead as suggested to charges being filed at the Hague-based International Criminal Court (ICC). Instead, it will likely drive Myanmar even closer to China, its main foreign ally and diplomatic protector in international fora like the UN Security Council.
Unlike Western nations that have strongly criticized Myanmar’s military abuses in Rakhine state, China has remained largely quiescent.

While Myanmar’s military, or Tatmadaw, must depend on Beijing’s support at the UN Security Council, where China has vetoed previous attempts by the West to impose sanctions over the Rohingya issue, its top generals remain suspicious of China’s long-term ambitions in their country.
Sources close to the military’s top brass say they see China as a tactical partner in managing international opinion, but at the same time feel the need to defend the country’s sovereignty against China’s strong commercial and strategic advances, which they aim to keep within certain boundaries and hedge by engaging other major powers.
The Rohingya crisis, which since last August has seen as many as 800,000 refugees driven across the border into neighboring Bangladesh, has limited the Tatmadaw’s room for maneuver as the country falls back to pariah status in the view of much of the West.
The generals earlier implemented political reforms, including allowances for limited democracy, specifically to engage the West and counterbalance China’s outsized influence. Those overtures saw the lifting of US and EU sanctions imposed against previous military rights abuses.
China’s ongoing plans to build a deep-sea port at Rakhine state’s Kyaukpyu and connect it with a high-speed railway to its southern province of Yunnan – part of Beijing’s US$1 trillion Belt and Road Initiative – is viewed skeptically in military circles as an attempt to turn Myanmar into a pawn in its fast expanding global economic empire.

Myanmar’s civilian government, led by Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy (NLD), is seen by China as more conciliatory to such designs and perhaps easier to manipulate with promises of economic largesse, Yangon-based observers say. China earlier perceived Suu Kyi, a Noble Peace Prize winner for her non-violent resistance to military rule, as a staunch ally of the West.
But as Suu Kyi’s former Western allies condemn her for not acting or speaking out on the Rohingya crisis, with some even stripping her of awards she received for her long struggle for democracy, she reportedly feels betrayed and has turned to China for counterbalancing support.
The UN report falls short of accusing Suu Kyi of culpability for the carnage in Rakhine state, but does criticize her for failing to use her “moral authority” to stop the violence.
At the same time, Beijing has skillfully courted her NLD by inviting its leading members to China for all-paid “friendship visits.” China also paid for the renovation of the Daw Khin Kyi Women Hospital in Yangon, which is named after Suu Kyi’s mother, and has contributed to several charities run by people close to the NLD.
Suu Kyi’s elected government is legally and administratively hemmed in by the autonomous military, which maintains full control of the powerful defense, home and border affairs ministries. That means Suu Kyi lacks any command control over the troops who were allegedly involved in acts the UN now says constitute genocide.
Still, Suu Kyi has astounded many observers by defending the clampdown to avoid antagonizing the top brass and destabilizing her already weak government. Her government predictably rejected the UN’s assessment, with its Ambassador to the UN Hau Do Suan saying it questioned the mission’s “objectivity, impartiality and sincerity,” according to news reports.

After the UN mission’s presentation of a preview of its findings and recommendations (the full report will be made public in September) the US and other UN Security Council members chimed in with calls for Myanmar’s military leaders, including Min Aung Hlaing, to be held responsible for the alleged crimes at the ICC.
It will be easier said than done, however, to prosecute Min Aung Hlaing and his fellow military officers mentioned in the UN report at the ICC. Myanmar is not within the ICC’s jurisdiction because it is not a signatory to the Rome Statute, under which the court was established in 1998.
The Hague-based ICC, which began functioning in 2002, works closely with UN agencies and could take up the genocide charge if the UN Security Council unanimously agrees. But China and Russia, both permanent Council members, will most likely block any such move through their veto powers.
Bangladesh, which is one of the Rome Statute’s 123 signatories, could conceivably bring the case to the ICC if it could be proven that the atrocities committed by the Myanmar military come under its jurisdiction.
But when asked by the ICC in June to give the government’s opinion regarding the issue of jurisdiction, Foreign Affairs Minister Mohammad Shahriar Alam said “we have provided the information only as requested by the court…Bangladesh is still committed to settle the matter bilaterally.”
Even if the ICC commenced proceedings and reached a verdict, Min Aung Hlaing and his colleagues would not risk arrest unless they traveled to signatory countries.

Major partners such as China, India, Russia and Israel are not Rome Statute signatories. Neither is the US, though it’s not clear the now disgraced military commander would be invited to Washington for any reason any time soon.
The only impact the UN report and its seemingly unrealistic recommendations may have on Min Aung Hlaing is that the bad exposure could hit his chances of pursuing a post-military political career. Many observers believe he eyes a run for the presidency at the next general elections, due to be held in 2020.
According to sources close to the Tatmadaw, some in the officer corps see a “NLD hand” in the UN’s “genocide” assessment and Facebook’s military ban as a backhanded attempt to discredit the military and bolster its position vis-à-vis the generals.
To clear the air, the government issued a statement saying that it did not have any advance notice of the Facebook ban. “Neither the government nor [the government’s] social media monitoring team played a part in [the decision by Facebook],” presidential spokesman Zaw Htay said.
The winner in the ruckus will likely be China, which both the civilian government and military will now look to for support in an hour of diplomatic need. But the two sides’ different perceptions of the nature and terms of that relationship could break into the open as international pressure builds for justice and local politics intensify ahead of the next elections.

Bao D Nguyen America did the evil, Is it that China has to follow the Evil, since China is going to be next super Evil Power.
Joe Wong , Why Min Aung Hlaing created ARSA ?
I think it is funny that America has gotten away with killing hundreds of thousands of Muslims since 2002, by blaming China for everything. Hahahaha!
Joe Wong You still did not answer my question.
Joe Wong Can you show any document of Chinese aid to Rohyanga?
Ken Nguyen Can you name those government department, with their official address so that I can ask them.
Nurun Nabi, China provided food, medicine, clothing and shelters to the refugees, unlike the American, British and Indian only provided foul mouth media and NGOs to pour fuel on the fire in Myanmar and make the situation worse.
Nurun Nabi, you are a liar like Yashad Rizvi, you create the Rohyangas crisis, you killed and raped the Rohyangas then you spread fake news in order to wage reckless against Myanmar like you did in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Yogoslavia. You are a warmonger and criminal against humanity, ICC will get to you sooner or later.
Nurun Nabi, you are a liar like Yashad Rizvi, you create the Rohyangas crisis, you killed and raped the Rohyangas then you spread fake news in order to wage reckless against Myanmar like you did in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Yogoslavia. You are a warmonger and criminal against humanity, ICC will get to you sooner or later.
Nurun Nabi
Go and ask Myanmar gocernment and people, not western media!
Yeah, hundreds of Hindus and Buddhists were murdered. No world media talk about them.
What is humanatarin aid by China, and where. ?
China wants access to Myanmar only.
There is no genocide operation but a CIA operation to destabilise the nation using some terrorists. China has sent humantarian aid and supplies.
Nurun Nabi, why do you hate Rohyangas and do not letting to settle in the USA, UK, Australia, NZ and Canada? Are you jealous they will have a better live than yours?
Joe Wong And a communist crusade against the uighurs and tibetans.
Well 30m in the Soviet Union wasn’t good enough for the CPC, they went abit further and murdered 70m during the Cultural Revolution.
Joe Wong Doesnt matter to China, because they are commiting genocide against the uighurs.
Roland Watson, The Christians have eternal crusades against the Muslims, the current War on Terror is a renewed Christian crusade against Muslims, and be assured the current Christian crusade against Muslims will not be the last one.
British and the American created the Rohyanga problem in Myanmar like they created the ISIS problems in the ME, the perpetrators to take up their responsibility and resolve the mess they created. Britain, USA, Australia, NZ, Canada, and EU should take in those Rohyanga instead of forcing the Rohyanga back into an untangle situation and suffer.
The USA, Britain, and their western partners are not democracy, they are covert Orwellian policy states and brutal imperialists, they have been using violence to plunder and enslave the world since they could sail outside of the Mediterranean Sea. Don’t kill democracy with perjury.
Nurun Nabi, British and the American created the Rohyanga problem in Myanmar like they created the ISIS problems in the ME, you need to ask the perpetrators to take up their responsibility and settle those Rohyanga in Britain, Australia, NZ and USA. Rohyanga will be way more happier living in those nations instead of Myanmar.
The journalist pack is at it again and now Bertil has joined. Boo Hoo, can’t mention the genocide because the dictatorship will move closer to China. Ha! The dictatorship has always been close to China. Than Shwe and Beijing have played everyone like violins for decades. The relationship is and always has been great – at least back until Ne Win supported the West and the Kuomintang and China backed the CPB. More importantly, the mistake all the journalists and diplomats are making is thinking that this is an issue of policy. It’s not. It’s about principles and nothing else. If you can’t stand up to genocide, you have no principles. Genocide should always be opposed, and in the strongest terms. No other considerations count. Fine, the Burma rulers are once again publicly close to China (mirroring what has been the case behind the scenes). The civilized world should take a stand against Burma, and its patron China, and also Russia. It’s democracy versus dictatorship. Which side do you want to be on?
Can the govt. of China say, why they are not saying anything on the genocide of Rohyanga in Myanmar ? Is it China thinks Ughir Muslims and Arakan Muslims are same?