EU is preparing for sanctions against Myanmar generals - Online News All 24

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Friday, 23 February 2018

EU is preparing for sanctions against Myanmar generals

Myanmar is preparing to impose a ban on the army officers responsible for the Rohingya persecution, EU-EU Reuters, according to a report by two diplomats, has asked the EU foreign policy chief to make a list of those who can come against this ban next week.

Reuters wrote that if the ban on Myanmar generals or the action taken to seize their assets, it would be the toughest step in the European Union.

The United States and Canada have declared similar sanctions on Myanmar military officers involved in Rohingya persecution earlier.

A diplomat told Reuters what steps would be taken against Myanmar senior army officers involved in human rights violations, urging EU foreign policy chief Federico Magrini to immediately bring the proposal forward.

He will be asked to find out how the EU sanctions imposed on Myanmar from the nineties will be strengthened.

After a meeting of the EU Foreign Ministers on Monday, Reuters has said that a statement can come about this issue.
The report said that in the statement of the EU, it may be called for the release of two Reuters journalists, arrested on December 12 for violation of Myanmar's state privacy law.

On August 25 last year, a new army operation started in Rakhine after 30 police posts and an army base attacked. In the village of Rohingyas, about seven lakh people have fled to Bangladesh and have taken refuge in Bangladesh so far in the killing, rape and burning disputes.

The Rohingya refugees who have taken shelter in Bangladesh's Rohingya village in Rohara, are described as the extreme oppression of the army. The United Nations describes the Army Aviation as an 'ethnic cleansing campaign'.
The United States has listed the names of 52 people and organizations, including Major General Maung Mounong Soi, who led the operation, last December.

United Nations special envoy Yanghi Li recently said in an interview with Channel 4 that the country's leader Aung San Suu Kyi could be convicted of crimes against humanity in order to prevent Rohingya from protecting against persecution in Myanmar.

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