Rae urged to pressure Myanmar’s neighbours to stop military’s Rohingya crackdown
OTTAWA — Canada’s special envoy for the Rohingya crisis, Bob Rae, should enlist some of Myanmar’s influential Asian neighbours to help stop attacks against its minority Muslim population, says a former United Nations disaster response chief.
Jan Egeland, who was UN undersecretary general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief at the height of some of the world’s most recent crises, said he applauds Rae’s appointment.
But he said Rae should expand the scope of his diplomacy beyond Bangladesh, which has absorbed the hundreds of thousands of fleeing Rohingya Muslims, and Myanmar, whose military leaders are being blamed for what has been branded as ethnic cleansing.
“My humble advice to the Canadian envoy is to get countries like China, India, Japan, Singapore to put pressure on the military and security services in Myanmar,” Egeland said in an interview.


