Protesters take aim at South-east Asia leaders in Sydney on sidelines of Australia-Asean summit

Rohingya supporters hold placards during a protest against Aung San Suu Kyi as she visits Australia to attend the Asean Special Summit 2018, in Sydney, on March 17, 2018. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

SYDNEY (AFP) - Provocative images of one-time human rights icon Aung San Suu Kyi with a Hitler moustache and banners demanding Cambodia's Hun Sen step down were held by protesters in Sydney on Saturday (March 17) in a rally against South-east Asian leaders.

Thousands demonstrated in the city against a raft of grievances on the sidelines of an Australia-Asean special summit, where Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has vowed to tackle human rights issues.

They came together to urge the release of political prisoners in Vietnam, an end to strongman Hun Sen's regime in Cambodia and a halt to the military crackdown on Rohingya in Myanmar.

"We are here to protest issues that are happening in Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, the Rohingya - you name it, we are here to send a clear voice to these governments that you do not mistreat human rights," Vietnamese-Australian protestor Davy Nguyen told AFP.

Leaders from the Association of South-east Asian Nations including Hun Sen, Myanmar's de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi and Vietnam's Nguyen Xuan Phuc, are in Sydney for talks. The Philippines' Rodrigo Duterte opted not to attend.

All have been accused of oppression.

"The summit is here, and the (Australian) government needs to do something - they need to put human rights before economics, before money," Nguyen added.

Among banners was one portraying Aung San Suu Kyi with a Adolf Hitler moustache, calling on her to "Return the Nobel Prize".

The Nobel laureate is accused of failing to do enough to halt the persecution of the Muslim-minority Rohingya community who have been brutally forced out of Rakhine state by the Myanmar military.

Others urged Hun Sen, who is accused of overseeing widespread human rights violations, to quit. The protest followed a rally by several hundred Cambodian-Australians against him on Friday.

"We are here today in solidarity among the communities from South-east Asia who are facing dictatorship and genocide, of course particularly in the Rohingya community," Shawfikul Islam from the Australian Burmese Rohingya Organisation said.

Asean groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Australia has been a dialogue partner since 1974.

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