10/07/2014
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawmakers
reviewed the "troubling" state of human rights in Southeast Asia on
Wednesday and stiffly criticized Vietnam and Cambodia. But they reserved
some of their toughest words for Myanmar, demanding an end to U.S.
concessions to its quasi-civilian government.
The Republican
chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Ed Royce, likened
conditions faced by minority Muslims in western Myanmar to concentration
camps. A Democratic lawmaker questioned whether there were signs of
genocide.
The hearing indicated congressional goodwill toward
Myanmar's government has been exhausted, and criticism of the Obama
administration's forward-leaning engagement policy has intensified.Royce pronounced the outlook for human rights in Southeast Asia, a region of 620 million people, as "very troubling." The committee's top-ranking Democrat Eliot Engel said that as the U.S. looks to deepen its strategic interests in the region, promoting rights "is the right thing to do and it's also the smart thing to do."
While
no lawmakers mentioned Wednesday's presidential election in Indonesia
that the White House lauded as sign of its maturing democracy, the seven
congressmen who spoke found plenty to criticize in region. They took
aim at suppression of dissent and religious freedom in Vietnam, the
strong-arm tactics of Cambodia's leader Hun Sen, and the military
takeover in Thailand.
Conservative
and rights advocate, Republican Rep. Chris Smith, said, "Vietnam is in a
race to the bottom with the likes of China and even North Korea." He
criticized the leader of the Democratic-led Senate for failing to allow a
vote on a bill that has repeatedly passed the House and would impose
sanctions on Vietnamese officials complicit in rights abuses.
On
Cambodia, Engel said the ruling party of Hun Sen, who has led the
country for almost three decades, has tightened its "chokehold" on the
media, silenced human rights advocates and failed to stop illegal land
grabs. Royce said the ballot count in last year's flawed national
elections was "truly preposterous."
Former senior State Department
rights official, Lorne Craner, recommended that the U.S. avoid
high-level contacts with Cambodia's government until it resolves its
dispute with the main opposition bloc which is boycotting parliament as
it presses its demand for an independent investigation into election
irregularities.
Democratic
Rep. David Cicilline joined several lawmakers in condemning the
treatment of Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims. Some 140,000 Rohingya have been
displaced and corralled in camps after bearing the brunt of vicious
outbreaks of sectarian violence involving majority Buddhists, while tens
of thousands more have fled the country.
He
questioned whether there was an "element of genocide in the attacks
against the Rohingya population." Rights advocate and former Democratic
congressman Tom Andrews, who has visited the strife-hit Rakhine State,
testified he thought there was, and that attacks were systematic and
done with the support of the government.
Myanmar
dismisses that notion, and President Thein Sein has vowed serious
actions against perpetrators of sectarian violence. But amid fears of
rising nationalism ahead of 2015 elections, the former general has also
recently been criticized by the State Department for proposing
discriminatory legislation, including possible criminalization of
interfaith marriage.
Royce
demanded an immediate cessation of nascent U.S. military-to-military
cooperation with Myanmar until the persecution of minorities ends, and
his Democratic counterpart echoed the desire for a more circumspect
outreach to the country also known as Burma, which has been rewarded
with rapid sanctions relief and massive aid in the past two years.
"We
need to see real progress from Burma's leaders on these human rights
issues before we provide the military-led government with any further
concessions," Engel said.

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