Rohingya refugees
Rohingya refugees including children and women wait outside a fence of a health clinic at the Kutupalong, Coxabazar in Bangladesh. Photo: Abir Abdullah/EPA-EFE

Amnesty International and 34 other humanitarian groups on Monday called for the UN Human Rights Council to hold a special session on the Rakhine crisis in Myanmar.
We โ€œstrongly support calls for a UN Human Rights Council special session on the deteriorating human rights situation in Myanmar and urge your delegations to support holding such a session as soon as possibleโ€, an open letter addressed to the council said.
โ€œIn light of serious reports of human rights violationsโ€ฆ we believe that a special session is imperative to launch decisive action and ensure international scrutiny and monitoring of the situation.โ€
The groups said the council should adopt a resolution that would call on the Myanmar government to โ€œimmediately cease all human rights violations, including crimes against humanityโ€ and allow human rights groups โ€œfull and unfettered access to all parts of the countryโ€.
The 47-member council rarely convenes for a special session. In all, the UN group has held 26 since its inception in 2006.
A special session may be held at the request of at least a third of the member states, or 16 countries.
Earlier this month the UN Security Council dropped plans to adopt a resolution demanding an end to the violence in Myanmar in the face of strong opposition from China.