Myanmar violates the rights of the Rohingyas, the United Nations Children's Rights
Rakhine state forces against the minority Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar in violation of the terms of the UN Convention on Rights of the Child.
More than 700,000 Rohingyas fled to Bangladesh in the operation that began in late August last year, more than half of them children. The United Nations described the Myanmar campaign as a burning issue of ethnic cleansing.
The legal experts appointed by the International charity organization Save the Children Norway have received these findings by analyzing the research of UN organizations and international human rights organizations.
Human rights groups say the army has committed genocide, rape and torture of Rohingya. Their houses were burnt to the ground by fire.
According to Save the Children report, Myanmar violated at least seven categories of child rights of the United Nations Convention on the elimination of the army.
In the analysis, the Myanmar government and the country's security forces have been accused of violating this right.
The report said that the country's government has supported the operation of the military positively. There is no evidence that the country's government has stopped or condemned security forces for the brutal operation.
Myanmar has signed a United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1991. Accordingly, the country was bound to obey the law accordingly.
However, when contacted, the Myanmar government and the army did not respond when contacted, Reuters said.
According to the United Nations Convention, Buddhist majority has not protected children from violence, torture, ignorance, sex and other harassment, detention and inhuman behavior.
Violence of arbitrary Rohingya children, violations of violence, torture, and gender-based violence have violated the promises they made to the United Nations.
The news agency Reuters was able to see it before publishing the report next week.
The report's co-authors and professor of the International Refugees Act of Oxford University, Gua Goodwin Gill, said that the list of violations of child rights we received was not thorough. Here only the serious violations have been highlighted. There is a possibility of more similar violence.