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Bangkok: More than a dozen Nobel peace prize winners have criticised their fellow laureate, Aung San Suu Kyi, for failing to protect Rohingyas in Myanmar's strife-torn Rakhine state.
Among the 22 signatories of the letter were East Timor's former president and prime minister Jose Ramos Horta and South African archbishop Desmond Tutu.
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"If we fail to take action, people may starve to death if they are not killed with bullets," the group said in an unusual joint letter, adding the violence bears the hallmarks of Rwanda's 1994 genocide as well as ethnic cleansing seen in Sudan's western Darfur region, Bosnia and Kosovo.
"We are frustrated that she has not taken any initiative to ensure full and equal citizenship rights of the Rohingyas," the group said, referring to Ms Suu Kyi, who was swept into power by elections in late 2015.
Myanmar's foreign minister Aung San Suu Kyi refuses to use the name Rohingya. Photo: AP
The signatories urged the United Nations to "end the human crisis" facing more than one million Rohingyas, a Muslim minority in Buddhist-majority Myanmar who according to the UN have for decades been subjected to a campaign of grinding dehumanisation, including being stripped of their citizenship rights and rendered stateless in 1982.
The signatories said even if Rohingyas were behind the police post attacks, the military's response has been "grossly disproportionate".
Osman Gani, a Rohingya man from Myanmar, shows a video clip that he shot on his mobile phone while standing on the bank of the Naf River in Bangladesh in December. Photo: AP
"It would be one thing to round up suspects, interrogate them and put them on trial," they said. "It is quite another to unleash helicopter gunships on thousands of ordinary civilians and to rape women and throw babies into fire."
Meanwhile, Myanmar's government has criticised plans for a "food flotilla" to sail from Malaysia to Rakhine in mid-January with 200 tonnes of supplies, saying those behind the shipments must first seek permission.
Salema Khatu, left, wraps her arms around her son Habil, who was suffering from tuberculosis, in Rakhine state, Myanmar, in 2014. Photo: AP
The flotilla's organisers say that up to 200 people may travel on the ships, including NGO members, doctors, medical teams, politicians, religious leaders and crew. Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has fiercely criticised Myanmar's treatment of Rohingyas, describing it as genocide.