2017
DOI: 10.22146/ikat.v1i1.27466
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Comparative Study of the Roles of ASEAN and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Responding to the Rohingya Crisis

Abstract: Since 2012, Southeast Asia has witnessed the human rights tragedy of the Rohingya people of Myanmar. Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have been displaced from their homes and traveled to refugee facilities in Myanmar and Bangladesh, while others have been stranded on the Andaman Sea. The Rohingya crisis is perhaps the most horrific human rights tragedy after the crisis in Vietnam in the 1970s. As the crisis has developed, international communities, including ASEAN and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…With these interests in mind, Indonesia pursued the asean mode of quiet diplomacy, concentrated on humanitarian, technical, and economic assistance, rather than taking the more confrontational route of the oic. 138 Although asean states were generally reluctant to directly confront human rights issues, several scholars have argued that asean remained an important regional forum to pursue human rights goals.139 However, the 'asean Way' has resulted in what Rosyidin terms the 'action-identity gap' , where asean states adopt policies to ensure compliance with international human rights commitments, but face few consequences for violating these norms at the regional or national level.140 For instance, the former asean Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (aichr) representative from Indonesia, Dinna Wisnu, contradicted Indonesia's official position on the Rakhine crisis in 2018, encouraging the aichr and asean to respond more directly.141 Yet the asean Political Security Community and the aichr have, collectively, taken no concrete action to stop violence against the Rohingya following the escalation of violence in 2017, maintaining a soft diplomatic approach.142…”
Section: 1mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With these interests in mind, Indonesia pursued the asean mode of quiet diplomacy, concentrated on humanitarian, technical, and economic assistance, rather than taking the more confrontational route of the oic. 138 Although asean states were generally reluctant to directly confront human rights issues, several scholars have argued that asean remained an important regional forum to pursue human rights goals.139 However, the 'asean Way' has resulted in what Rosyidin terms the 'action-identity gap' , where asean states adopt policies to ensure compliance with international human rights commitments, but face few consequences for violating these norms at the regional or national level.140 For instance, the former asean Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (aichr) representative from Indonesia, Dinna Wisnu, contradicted Indonesia's official position on the Rakhine crisis in 2018, encouraging the aichr and asean to respond more directly.141 Yet the asean Political Security Community and the aichr have, collectively, taken no concrete action to stop violence against the Rohingya following the escalation of violence in 2017, maintaining a soft diplomatic approach.142…”
Section: 1mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the diplomatic level, ASEAN has been "toothless" and apparently lacks the will and confidence to tackle the Rohingya crisis, instead relying on diplomatic rhetoric. 39 As the core regional organization for Southeast Asia, ASEAN should take a leading role in resolving the Rohingya crisis. ASEAN and its members have a moral obligation to take necessary measures, which should take priority over simply offering mere humanitarian assistance.…”
Section: Repatriation: a Durable But Almost Impossible Solutionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The document concludes fourteen mandates and functions. One is for the AICHR to actively and independently observe, evaluate, and investigate human rights practices in each ASEAN member states (Jati, 2017).…”
Section: A) Political Security For Rohingya Refugees In the Skb Bireuenmentioning
confidence: 99%