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Save the Children statement on ICC ruling on alleged deportation of Rohingya

7 Sep 2018 Bangladesh

Save the Children statement on ICC ruling on alleged deportation of Rohingya

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A Save the Children community mobiliser leads Rohingya refugee children, including Mohammed Jubayer* (7), from a nutrition centre back to their homes. The children have all just received a dosage of Vitamin A from Save the Children, as part of Nutrition Action Week. Mohammed Jubayer is a Rohingya refugee boy who lives in the Rohingya refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, with his father Manzur Ali* (35), mother, and extended family. He found out about Nutrition Week from a community mobiliser, who visited the learning space he attends and encouraged the children to visit the nutrition centre and receive the Vitamin A supplement. Daphnee Cook/ Save the Children

“Save the Children welcomes the decision that the International Criminal Court may investigate allegations Rohingya people were forced from Myanmar to Bangladesh,” Save the Children Country Director in Myanmar, Michael McGrath, said.

WE STAND SIDE BY SIDE WITH CHILDREN IN THE WORLD'S 
TOUGHEST PLACES.

“Save the Children strongly believes that the international community should also continue with the establishment of an interim mechanism to gather evidence of breaches of international law and mass atrocities while preparations are made for any International Criminal Court trials. 

“Save the Children’s team in Bangladesh has been supporting child survivors and their families in Bangladesh since the start of the crisis. They have heard testimonies of the atrocities committed in Myanmar, including harrowing reports of murder, torture and systematic rape.

“The perpetrators of these crimes must be held to account and this decision may be a step towards ensuring justice for the Rohingya.”

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