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ICJ Opens Rohingya Genocide Hearings as Myanmar Dismisses Case as 'Flawed'

The hearings could clarify how the court infers genocidal intent with implications for other cases.

Overview

  • The Gambia opened its case at the International Court of Justice, alleging Myanmar’s 2017 operations targeted the Rohingya for destruction under the Genocide Convention.
  • Myanmar’s military government rejected the accusations as “flawed and unfounded” in a foreign ministry statement that avoided the word Rohingya, referring instead to “persons from Rakhine state.”
  • Roughly 700,000–750,000 people fled to Bangladesh during the crackdown, with survivors reporting mass killings, sexual violence, and arson; more than a million now live in camps in Cox’s Bazar.
  • The oral proceedings in The Hague are set to run for about three weeks, with Myanmar’s legal team due to present its response on Friday.
  • Legal analysts say the case could shape ICJ standards for proving genocidal intent and increase political pressure on Myanmar despite limited enforcement and a final judgment that may take months or years.