Victims of Rohingya Muslims and the Typology of Crimes Against Them from the Perspective of the Statute of the International Criminal Court

Document Type : Original Article

Authors

1 department facutly of law islamic azad university saveh branch

2 university of amin

Abstract

In recent decades, people living and indigenous to Rakhine State have been exposed to widespread crime and organized violence perpetrated against them by Buddhists and Myanmar government officials. Murder and committing horrific and inhumane acts, sexual assaults, looting of their property, confiscation of land, acts of violence, widespread and arbitrary arrests, forced transfer and mass deportation of Rohingya Muslims, etc. have led to the jurisdiction of domestic crimes. Be an international criminal. Pursuant to Articles 6 and 7 of the Statute of the Court, murder of members of a group, intentionally exposing that group to improper living leading to the decline of general or partial physical, all-encompassing, racial and racial powers are among the crimes enshrined in the Rome Statute and Crimes against Humanity. It is considered genocide and the need for the International Criminal Court to investigate these crimes becomes even more apparent.
Keywords: victimization, crime against humanity, Rohingya Muslims, genocide

Keywords