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Junta Replaces Pattaya Mayor by Article 44

Sontaya Khunpluem, at left. At right, junta chairman and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha.
Sontaya Khunpluem, at left. At right, junta chairman and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha.

BANGKOK — By the power of the junta leader’s extralegal authority, Pattaya City got a new mayor Tuesday.

After holding the top administrative post for just over a year, Maj. Gen. Anan Charoenchasri was removed out of the junta’s desire to “minimize conflict” and prepare for the first elections in five years to be held next year.

The order dismissing him was signed by junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha, who is empowered by the constitution to take any action he deems necessary.

The same statement also appointed Sontaya Khunpluem to replace him.

It cited the development of the nearby Eastern Economic Corridor as a need for strong leadership.

“Thus, the mayor and chief executive of the Pattaya need to be equipped with high potential, experience and knowledge to execute” administrative functions, it said.

Sontaya, 54, was appointed in April to be a political adviser to Gen. Prayuth following a long career in various ministries.

His early government career began in 2001 as a minister of science and technology. He next served as minister of tourism and sports in 2002 under Thaksin Shinawatra. In 2012, he was appointed minister of culture. In 2013, he was elected to lead the Phalang Chon Party (Power of Chonburi Party). He is also the president of the Pattaya United Football Club.

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Democrat Party Leadership Becomes Three-Way Contest

Democrat Party chairman Abhisit Vejjajiva meets last month with Alongkorn Pollabutr, a former deputy party leader now challenging him for party leadership.
Democrat Party chairman Abhisit Vejjajiva meets last month with Alongkorn Pollabutr, a former deputy party leader now challenging him for party leadership.

BANGKOK — A former Phitsanulok MP is expected to become the third candidate seeking to lead Thailand’s oldest political party when he announces his candidacy Thursday.

Warong Dechgitvigrom will join former deputy leader Alongkorn Pollabutr in competing for the top Democrat Party post against longtime incumbent Abhisit Vejjajiva. Warong is vowing to make the party a winner again while Alongkorn insists it take a no-tolerance approach to corruption and vote buying.

Observers see Warong as close to the insurgent wing of former Democrat Suthep Thaugsuban which helped usher in the coup four years ago through street protests. Alongkorn served on one of the junta’s defunct reform bodies.

Warong Dechgitvigrom
Warong Dechgitvigrom

Warong will formally launch his candidacy Thursday in Phutsanulok province. Alongkorn, 61, has thrown his hat in the ring but is refusing to fully declare until the rules are clear regarding the party’s first-ever primary vote to settle the leadership question later this year.

He met today with 54-year-old Abhisit, who’s led the party since 2005, at its Bangkok headquarters to discuss the matter.

The two have agreed that all three candidates should air their vision for the party this weekend, either on Saturday or Sunday.

Alongkorn said Abhisit is open to the idea of a primary in which one candidate will be singled out for party approval. A new leader should be in place by the middle of November, Alongkorn said.

Alongkorn said he is ready to compete, subject to agreeable rules.

His policies include no vote buying, no mudslinging, no fighting outside the democratic system and no corruption.

Warong, 57, is best known for pushing for the prosecution of then-PM Yingluck Shinawatra for mishandling of an agricultural subsidy. He’s close to Thavorn Saenniam, a key figure in the group behind street protests five years ago that helped overthrow Yingluck’s Pheu Thai-led government.

The Democrats haven’t had a popularly elected prime minister since 2001 as Pheu Thai has won every poll since by wide margins.

Warong said he wants to make the Democrat Party great and strong and to win in elections. Without being under anyone’s control.

“There’s no hidden agenda,” he said.

Reached Tuesday for comment, Warong said he was preoccupied and handed the phone to Sombat Yasin, a former Democrat peer representing Phrae province.

Sombat denied that Warong and the group represent pro-junta Suthep or anyone in particular. Asked whether Warong, were he to become party leader, would consider supporting junta He said it was too soon to say whether he would support junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha’s bid to remain prime minister.

“Whether we support Prayuth or not, the matter is too far ahead. We can’t look down on the people. If we win by a landslide, say 350 MPs, then Warong should be the prime minister,” Sombat said.

Sombat said Warong and about half a dozen former MP peers want to open up the Democrat Party to new talents and outsiders.

“We won’t compare ourselves to His Excellency Abhisit, but we will open up the party to able people,” Sombat said.

Sombat said the party will meet Wednesday to discuss rules for selecting the new leader.

The latest proposed system would require candidates get endorsements from 400 former MPs as well as 1,000 party members drawn from each of the four regions to become party leader.

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Bangkok’s Evicted Birds Likely to Just Fly Back: Biologist

Pigeons take flight Tuesday in Buriram city.
Pigeons take flight Tuesday in Buriram city.

BANGKOK — City Hall is pushing forward the mass eviction of its pigeon population despite doubts it is effective, including one expert who points out they’ll just fly back.

Deputy Gov. Taweesak Lertprapan on Monday said signs have been put up telling people not to feed the birds as livestock crews scour pigeon-plagued spots, and a mere 200 Bangkok pigeons have been transported to facilities outside of town in a bid to reduce their numbers.

He said the city will move against flocks in more overpopulated areas later this month and later move them to a new city-built detention and quarantine facility in the works.

According to health officials, some of the 200 birds were found to have bacteria that causes a respiratory disease that can develop into pneumonia.

The city has said the pigeons will be released after they are disinfected, a strategy a university biologist says fails to take into account pigeon’s strong homing instincts.

“If you don’t release them far enough, they’ll just fly back,” said Jessda Denduangboripant of Chulalongkorn University, adding that they have evolved to city life and are no longer wild. “Pigeons are city birds, like sparrows. They’re not birds that contribute to the fertility of forests.”

The deputy governor however believes that life in the city has made them lazy and hopes they’ll find somewhere else to resettle.

“There’s information suggesting that they’ve now become city birds … and can’t fly as far as they used to,” he said. “If they migrate to nature, in a forest or a national park, they won’t fly back [to the city].”

Kriangsak Hamarit, a Kasetsart University researcher, in June cited research that found a Bangkok pigeon flew home from Ranong province, 600 kilometers southeast of the capital, within a month.

The latest purge of the capital’s rock doves was set off last week by junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha’s order that local authorities nationwide to step up their bird-control game, citing health concerns.

Does all the coo-ing mean health troubles are brewing? Not really, according to a top veterinarian.

Srireepong Kiertkrittikhoon of Chulalongkorn’s Small Animals Hospital said human health risks from pigeons come from bacteria in their droppings that can cause fungal infections.

But the risks of a pigeon-borne epidemic would only be moderate to vulnerable populations such as the elderly.

“It would be people with weak immune systems [most likely to fall ill] such as children and seniors. There’s a chance of an infection that can cause meningitis,” he said. “People who are healthy in general would be fine.”

Feeding the Problem

Jessda, the biologist, said limiting the birds’ food intake by stopping people from feeding them is the most effective solution offered so far.

Deputy municipal leader Taweesak said signs in different languages have been put up in all public parks to discourage bird feeding, with health workers dispatched to tell people why they should not. Travel agencies have been instructed to tell tourists that feeding birds is not allowed.

“They’re spoiled from the feeding and won’t seek food on their own,” he said.

Feeding birds was already punishable under public health regulations by up to three years in jail and a 25,000 fine, plus another 2,000 baht for violating cleanliness and order codes. Those selling bird food without permission face up to six months in jail and a fine of 10,000 baht for violating livestock regulations.

Even if the released pigeons didn’t come back, Jessda said it would leave an ecological niche for other birds to move into, especially if people keep providing food. For example, he said, doves once occupied a natural habitat but are more often found in cities now.

Either way, he believes catch and release is doomed to fail.

“Many years ago, City Hall also tried to catch the birds and release them somewhere else,” he said. “This measure alone won’t work.”

“To effectively [decrease their numbers] people should learn why they ought to stop feeding them,” he added. “The birds carry a lot of diseases. They have parasites both inside and outside their bodies.”

Related stories:

Storm of Feathers as Bangkok Pigeons Feel the Heat

Thai Junta Orders Millions Rounded Up, Denied Food

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Freak-Out Troupe to Lead 30+ Gonzo Acts at Sukhum Fest

Photo: Acid Mothers Temple Official / Facebook

BANGKOK — Cosmic freak-out juggernauts from mid-’90s Japan will take over a Bangkok music venue as the headlining act of an upcoming epic nightlife program.

Promoting underground art and music in the capital, the Sukhum Music Festival in November will feature more than 30 acts performing at five venues along Sukhumvit Road and its environs.

The festival opens up near the top of Soi Sukhumvit 55 at De Commune with the spotlight on experimental indie duo Stylish Nonsense, who will be joined by Finnish saxophonist and electronic musician Jimi Tenor and Bangkok techno pioneers Nolens.Volens.

The second night will move on to three venues: Thong Lor Art Space, 12 x 12 Bar on Soi Thara Rom 2 and Live Cube, a venue upstairs from the Okinawa Kinji restaurant on Soi Sukhumvit 69. At these venues will a chance to see electro nu-wavers Cut the Crab, post-rock trio Abstraction XL and Jinta, a five-piece set blending post-rock and folk.

Music fans on the final night can head to Case Space Revolution, on the second floor of vegetarian restaurant Broccoli Revolution for an experimental session by Kota Taki and Nakarin Teerapenu, and more.

But the biggest of the three nights’ events is back at De Commune with alt-rockers Desktop Error and classical Indian music-influenced “stoner rock” band Chladni Chandi. Of course it all ends with a musical universe created by a renowned Japanese psychedelic rock collective who are bringing an expanded roster to perform as Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso U.F.O.

The fest runs Nov. 23 through Nov. 25 at the aforementioned venues. Tickets purchased before Oct. 1 are 2,000 baht for all three days. Three-day tickets at the door will be sold for 2,500 baht. Purchase details are available online.

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Lawmakers Eye Article 44 to Speed Cannabis Law

Rangers confiscate cannabis plants Sept. 12 at a cornfield in Loei province.

BANGKOK — Fearing a legislative delay to the rollout of medical cannabis, several lawmakers proposed Tuesday that the junta chairman invoke his emergency power to enact it into law immediately.

Interim parliament member Jate Sirathranont said debate and deliberation on new narcotics bill, which would decriminalize use of some substances, has taken longer than expected to reach cloture. Proponents of the law fear they can’t get it through before the next government comes to power.

“If the government uses Article 44, the process would be much faster,” Jate, a physician by trade, said in an interview, referring to a constitutional clause that permits Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha to enact any law he deems fit.

Read: Medical Thai Weed Gets a Launch Date

In the meantime, Jate said he and other lawmakers will propose a scaled-down measure of only one provision: legalizing marijuana use for medical and research purposes. He hopes to see it passed quickly. A minimum of 20 lawmakers are needed to submit a bill.

“Many members of the public have urged us to pass the law on medical cannabis,” Jate said.

A top narcotics official also said the Ministry of Justice believes the use of Article 44 is now the most feasible option.

Sirinya Sitdhichai told reporters he has been ordered by justice minister Prajin Juntong to draft a report to Gen. Prayuth explaining the background of the law within 10 days so the junta chairman can decide whether to invoke his emergency power.

“I cannot answer if the special law will be invoked,” Sirinya, head of Office of Narcotics Control Board, said at an news conference. “But the ONCB is obligated to whatever Gen. Prajin orders.”

Jate said he has already addressed government representatives in a parliament session why Article 44 is necessary to speed up the new drug law. He said its use is up to Gen. Prayuth.

“I cannot interfere in their affairs,” the lawmaker said.

The ongoing drug law overhaul, which consists of three new laws, is currently before a parliamentary commission. If passed, they would decriminalize a range of uses, such as cannabis for medication and research, and kratom plants for personal use and growth. The laws would also shift the focus to rehabilitation rather than incarceration of drug users.

Officials initially believed the laws would be completed by April. But the junta chairman’s announcement that the new election would take place in February means the time frame must be cut short.

Speaking to reporters, Sirinya said his agency has conducted careful study and concluded that Thailand would benefit from clinical study of cannabis. Medicines using cannabis would help patients who suffer from seizures, Parkinson’s disease and side effects from chemotherapy, he said.

“If it’s not good, why would we propose this in the first place?” Sirinya said.

Related stories:

At 420 Weed Fest, Heady Times for Thai Cannabis Activists (Photos)

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Hua Hin Tourist Cops: Protect, Serve and Post Whack Pics

The cops fool around at Venezia’s 3D Art Gallery, where visitors can take photos with backdrops that seem to bring one into a whole new world.

PRACHUAP KHIRI KHAN — One cop sits, Princess Jasmine-style, on a flying carpet. Another poses in an upside-down house with some plaster cows. And a whole group of officers pose with Santa to greet the internet.

Far from more sordid beats on the Gulf coast, tourist police in the quiet enclave of Hua Hin are bringing A-game charm to a social media feed that challenges the idea the bureaucracy online must be unintelligible, unfriendly and archaic.

They’ve gotten notice for trading tough-guy grimaces and posturing for disarming and self-deprecating humor in years of photos promoting local tourist destinations. Senior Sgt. Maj. Yuwaret Khunnasak spoke to Khaosod English about their social media mojo.

“All of us are froong-fring,” she said, using a slang term for all that is effusively girly and glittery.

Yuwaret said her commanders wanted to promote local tourism spots and gave the job to two policewomen and two policemen who have “absolutely no problem” making thumbs-up gestures next to plates of krapao.

“We want to present tourist spots like cafes, restaurants and so on. There’s so many places in Hua Hin, we haven’t even presented them all yet,” Yuwaret said. “We think really hard about the places we want to promote.”

But enough cop talk. Here are our favorite pics posted by the Hua Hin Tourist Police.

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‘Have you been here? It’s an Upside-Down House that makes everything around you turn upside down,’ reads the caption. Photo: Hua Hin Tourist Police / Facebook
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A dapper young officer hams it up in the upside-down house …
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… before cuddling with some teddies.
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The tourist police station itself seems to be a tourist spot on its own – especially for this Santa in a photo posted on Christmas Day in 2015.
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All aboard! Three cops ride the mini-train Sept. 4 at the Huahin Samphannam Floating Market.
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Buddy cops have a sunny day hanging out at a Venetian-themed attraction on Sept. 20.
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Sept 12, the cops visit Hua Hin Safari and say hi to a blue-and-yellow macaw.
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The staircase group pose lives on at the Wat Bang Ka Pom, in one of the cops’ sojourn Sept. 19 to Amphawa in Samut Songkhram.
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Four cops sip colorful drinks, including a rainbow-hued one, at Nha Baan Kafae Sod cafe on Sept. 9.
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Hey, buddy: A Hua Hin tourist cop greets a friendly farang visitor carrying crocs in a photo posted April 6 captioned, “Whether hot or cold, Hua Hin tourist police will serve Thais and foreigners,” and in English, “We serve, you’re safe.”
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Co-Founders of Instagram Resign From Company

Kevin Systrom, CEO and co-founder of Instagram, prepares for an announcement about IGTV on June 18 in San Francisco. Photo: Jeff Chiu / Associated Press
Kevin Systrom, CEO and co-founder of Instagram, prepares for an announcement about IGTV on June 18 in San Francisco. Photo: Jeff Chiu / Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — The co-founders of Instagram are resigning their positions with the social media company without explanation.

Chief Executive Kevin Systrom said in a statement late Monday that he and Mike Krieger, Instagram’s chief technical officer, plan to leave the company in the next few weeks and take time off “to explore our curiosity and creativity again.”

“Mike and I are grateful for the last eight years at Instagram and six years with the Facebook team,” Systrom said. “We’ve grown from 13 people to over a thousand with offices around the world, all while building products used and loved by a community of over one billion. We’re now ready for our next chapter.”

“Building new things requires that we step back, understand what inspires us and match that with what the world needs; that’s what we plan to do,” Systrom said. “We remain excited for the future of Instagram and Facebook in the coming years as we transition from leaders to two users in a billion.”

No explanation was given for their sudden departure from the photo-sharing network they founded in 2010.

Facebook bought Instagram in 2012, just before going public, at a price that seemed inconceivable at the time — $1 billion — especially for a little-known startup with no profit. At the time Instagram was ad-free, with a loyal following of 31 million users who were all on mobile devices — still a somewhat elusive bunch for the web-born Facebook back then. Since then, the service has grown to more than 1 billion users and has of course added plenty of advertisements.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg called Systrom and Krieger “extraordinary product leaders” and said he was looking forward “to seeing what they build next.”

The departures are a challenge for Facebook. Instagram has been a bright spot for company not just because it’s seen as a more uplifting place than Facebook itself, but because it is popular with teens and young people — a group Facebook has had trouble keeping around.

Instagram has largely escaped Facebook’s high-profile problems over user privacy, foreign elections interference and fake news, even though it is not immune to any of these things (Facebook recently disclosed it has deleted hundreds of pages on its namesake site as well as Instagram that were linked to global misinformation campaigns intended to disrupt elections).

Though Systrom, in the early days of Instagram ads, famously checked each one personally to ensure it aligned with the app’s aesthetics, he was not as loudly anti-ads as the founder of another popular Facebook-acquired mobile app, WhatsApp.

WhatsApp’s CEO Jan Koum resigned in April.

Koum had signaled years earlier that he would take a stand against Facebook if the company’s push to increase profits demanded radical changes in the way WhatsApp operates. In a blog post written when Facebook announced the biggest acquisition in its history, Koum wrote that the deal wouldn’t have happened if WhatsApp “had to compromise on the core principles that will always define our company, our vision and our product.”

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Indonesian Teen Rescued After 49 Days at Sea

Aldi Novel Adilang, 18, is seen on a wooden fish trap floating in the waters near the island of Guam. Photo: Indonesian Consulate General in Osaka
Aldi Novel Adilang, 18, is seen on a wooden fish trap floating in the waters near the island of Guam. Photo: Indonesian Consulate General in Osaka

JAKARTA — An Indonesian teenager who survived 49 days adrift at sea after the wooden fish trap he was employed to mind slipped its moorings says he ran out of food within a week and survived on fish and seawater he squeezed from his clothing.

Aldi Novel Adilang told The Associated Press on Monday that he turned on a lamp every time he sighted another ship and can’t remember how many passed by “unaware of my ordeal.”

The Indonesian Consulate in Osaka, Japan, said the 18-year-old was rescued by a Panamanian-flagged vessel off Guam on Aug. 31, about 1,920 kilometers from his original location, and returned to Indonesia with officials earlier this month.

He was employed since age 16 in the one of the world’s loneliest jobs: lamp lighter on a rompong — a wooden raft with a hut on top that’s lit at night to attract fish — moored about 125 kilometers off the coast of North Sulawesi.

The coastline is not visible from the fishing rafts and the numerous rompong are miles apart, said Adilang’s mother, Net Kahiking. Supplies including food and fuel for a generator are dropped off about once a week. The minders, who earn $130 a month, communicate with fishing boats by hand-held radio.

“I was on the raft for one month and 18 days. My food ran out after the first week,” said Adilang. When it didn’t rain for days, “I had to soak my clothes in the sea, then I squeezed and drank the water.”

The boy’s father, Alfian Adilang, said the family is overjoyed at his return but angry with his employer. It was the third time the teen’s raft had drifted. The previous two times it had been rescued by the owner’s ship, the boy said.

The rafts are anchored with ropes and Aldi Adilang said strong friction caused them to break.

“I thought I will never meet my parents again, so I just prayed every day,” he said.

Adilang’s portable radio, known as a handy-talky or HT in Indonesia, would prove to be a lifesaver.

“It was early morning on Aug. 31 when I saw the ship and I lighted up the lamp and shouted ‘help’ using the HT,” he said.

“The ship had passed about one mile but then it turned to me. Might be because I used the English word,” he said. “Then they talked on the HT.”

The MV Arpeggio, which rescued Adilang off Guam, contacted the Indonesian mission in Japan when it docked in Tokuyama and officials from the Osaka consulate collected him on Sept. 6, the consulate said in a statement. He returned to Indonesia on Sept. 8.

Adilang, who is the youngest son of four siblings, said he no longer wants to work on a rompong.

“My parents agree,” he said.

Story: Ali Kotarumalos

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Vietnam Jails Activist For Anti-Government Facebook Posts

An undated file picture of Hanoi. Photo: Luong Thai Linh / EPA

HANOI — A court in southern Vietnam has sentenced an activist to 27 months in prison for Facebook posts that judges say insulted the ruling Communist Party and government.

The Vietnam News Agency reported that Doan Khanh Vinh Quang was convicted by the People’s Court in Ninh Kieu District in Can Tho province after a one-day trial Monday.

The conviction comes as communist authorities step up a crackdown on dissent. Quang was third activist to be jailed in a week on similar charges.

Despite sweeping economic reforms over the past 30 years that opened up Vietnam to foreign investment and trade, the Communist Party tolerates no challenge to its one-party rule.

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Myanmar Military Led ‘Extreme’ Violence Against Rohingya: US

A 2017 file photo of S, 25, mother of two, who says she was raped by members of Myanmar's armed forces in late August, is photographed in her friend's tent in Kutupalong refugee camp in Bangladesh. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — A U.S. government investigation has found that Myanmar’s military targeted Rohingya civilians indiscriminately and often with “extreme brutality” in a coordinated campaign to drive the minority Muslims out of the country.

The hard-hitting State Department report released Monday is based on a survey this spring of more than 1,000 refugees among the hundreds of thousands who have fled the crackdown to neighboring Bangladesh in the past two years.

The 20-page report does not say whether the abuses constitute genocide and crimes against humanity, as U.N. investigators have surmised.

But the U.S. findings make grim reading and are likely to reinforce calls for the Trump administration to make that determination and strengthen sanctions against the Southeast Asian nation.

Most of those interviewed had witnessed a killing, and half had witnessed sexual violence. Rohingya identified the military as the perpetrator in 84 percent of the killings or injuries they witnessed.

“The survey reveals that the recent violence in northern Rakhine State was extreme, large-scale, widespread, and seemingly geared toward both terrorizing the population and driving out the Rohingya residents,” the report says.

“The scope and scale of the military’s operations indicate they were well-planned and coordinated. In some areas, perpetrators used tactics that resulted in mass casualties, for example, locking people in houses to burn them, fencing off entire villages before shooting into the crowd, or sinking boats full of hundreds of fleeing Rohingya.”

The bloodshed has catapulted Myanmar, also known as Burma, back into the ranks of renegade nations where it languished for years when it was ruled by a military junta. The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor also announced last week she is launching a preliminary investigation into the deportations of Rohingya from Myanmar into Bangladesh.

Amnesty International USA said the State Department had missed an opportunity to make a legal determination of crimes against humanity, sending a worrying message about Washington’s willingness to seek justice for atrocities just under international law.

“The United States’ words mean nothing if it fails to pursue genuine accountability for victims and their families,” advocacy manager Francisco Bencosme said.

British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt hosted a meeting Monday of more than one dozen foreign ministers on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly to discuss the Rohingya crisis.

He said in a statement that Myanmar’s military leaders “must face full accountability for any atrocities committed” and that if conditions haven’t improved for the 1 million people affected by the crackdown in Rakhine State in a year’s time, “then we have failed as an international community.”

U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley announced $185 million in new humanitarian assistance, mostly for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh. She called on the Myanmar government “to do more to hold those who have engaged in ethnic cleansing accountable for their atrocities?.”

Myanmar, a majority Buddhist nation which is now formally under civilian rule, has denied abuses by its military.

But the U.S. report, coming on the heels of an extensive U.N. fact-finding mission that recommended military leaders be prosecuted for genocide, will make it increasingly difficult for the government to rebut international criticism.

The report found that in the two months following August 2017 — when attacks by Rohingya militants on security forces triggered massive retaliation — satellite imagery show that more than 38,000 buildings were destroyed by fire in Rakhine state. In many areas, refugees said security forces used flamethrowers or incendiary devices to burn down houses and to kill and injure Rohingya. Sexual violence is also reported as having been widespread.

“Two police from my village raped me,” the report quotes an unnamed 23-year-old woman as saying. “I know these men by sight, but not their names. After they were done, they told me to leave the country, this is not your country.”

Among the litany of abuses that refugees said they witnessed:

—Soldiers burning or urinating on Qurans.

—Victims of violence being decapitated or dismembered.

—Infants and children being beaten or killed

—Soldiers attacking women, and their infants, during or just after childbirth.

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