ND Burma
ND-Burma formed in 2004 in order to provide a way for Burma human rights organizations to collaborate on the human rights documentation process. The 13 ND-Burma member organizations seek to collectively use the truth of what communities in Burma have endured to advocate for justice for victims. ND-Burma trains local organizations in human rights documentation; coordinates members’ input into a common database using Martus, a secure open-source software; and engages in joint-advocacy campaigns.
Recent Posts
- Myanmar junta bombs Rohingya Muslim village killing 41, rescuers say
- Myanmar’s junta cuts filmmaker’s life sentence to 15 years as part of wider amnesty
- Close The Sky
- International condemnation of the escalating humanitarian crisis and rights violations in Myanmar
- Women in Karenni State face increasing levels of violence
ND-Burma holds its 4th Reparations workshop in Yangon, 5-7 March
/in NewsND-Burma held its 4th Reparations Workshop in Yangon 5 – 7 March. Participants examined reparations programmes in Peru, Chile and South Africa, and held a detailed discussion on what kind of programme would best serve Burma’s many victims of human rights violations, as well as national reconciliation. Participants continued to stress the importance of reparations in order to end human rights violations and bring peace.
Participants included ND-Burma members as well as: Future Light Center, Genuine Public Servants, Vimutti Women’s Organization, Progressive Voice and Open Myanmar Initiative. Together they represent a range of ethnic nationalities, women, political prisoners, organisations fighting for democratic change, and the LGBTI community.
Activism & Agency: The Female Experience of Political Imprisonment
/in ND-Burma Members' ReportsActivism & Agency: The Female Experience of Political Imprisonment
March 8th is International Women’s Day, and in celebration of women around the world, and to acknowledge the strength and #FemaleFortitude of female political prisoners, Read more
EU Issues Statement Regarding the Situation in Kachin State
/in NewsThe European Union Delegation in agreement with the EU Heads of Mission in Myanmar have issued the following statement in relation to the conflict in Kachin State.
“Decades of conflict in Kachin state have displaced families, disrupted development, caused despair and left communities divided.
During a three-day visit to Kachin State from 21 to 23 February 2018, the EU Heads of Mission met the Chief Minister and Kachin State Government, political, ethnic and religious leaders, civil society, IDPs, aid workers and human rights defenders. We are grateful for the warm welcome and hospitality of the people of Kachin state.
The visit confirms our fear that Myanmar’s transition to democracy has not yet brought durable peace and progress to Kachin state. With peace talks in Kachin stalled, the local people face continued human rights violations, loss of lives and dignity, lost opportunities, land grabbing and an unsustainable and inequitable exploitation of Kachin’s natural resources.
We call on all parties to the conflict to cease hostilities and offensive operations and fulfil Myanmar’s obligations under international law to protect civilians and non-combatants. Only progress towards a political agreement on Myanmar’s future constitutional settlement can ensure lasting peace.
The EU is one of the international witnesses to the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement. The EU supports peace and reconciliation projects across Myanmar with 68 million euros and provides humanitarian aid to people affected by conflict. We call on the security agencies to lift existing restrictions on the delivery of impartial and necessary support by the international community to communities in need.”
Bulldozing Rohingya villages was not ‘demolition of evidence,’ official says
/in NewsBurma has bulldozed the remains of Rohingya Muslim villages to make way for refugee resettlement, not to destroy evidence of atrocities, an official leading reconstruction efforts in the troubled northern state of Rakhine said on Monday.
Last week, New York-based Human Rights Watch said it had analysed satellite imagery showing Burma had flattened at least 55 villages in Rakhine, including two that appeared to be intact before heavy machinery arrived.
The group said the demolitions could have erased evidence of atrocities by security forces in what the United Nations and the United States have called an ethnic cleansing campaign against the stateless Rohingya minority.
A military crackdown prompted by Rohingya insurgents’ attacks on 30 police posts and an army base on 25 August drove 688,000 people from their villages and across the border into Bangladesh, many of them recounting killings, rape and arson by Burmese soldiers and police.
Burma has denied most allegations and asked for more evidence of abuses, while denying independent journalists, human rights monitors and UN-appointed investigators access to the conflict zone.
De facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi in October set up the Union Enterprise for Humanitarian Assistance, Resettlement and Development (UEHRD) to lead the domestic response.
Veteran economist Aung Tun Thet, who is the chairman of the body, said villages were being bulldozed to make it easier for the government to resettle refugees as near as possible to their former homes.
“There’s no desire to get rid of the so-called evidence,” he told reporters on Monday, responding to the allegations of demolition of evidence.
“What we have intended [is] to ensure that the buildings for the people that return can be easily built,” he added.
Aung Tun Thet also said Burma would do its best to make sure repatriation under an agreement signed with Bangladesh in November would be “fair, dignified and safe.”
In a speech to the Human Rights Council in Geneva, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres restated his call for Burma to “ensure unfettered humanitarian access in Rakhine State.”
The United Nations suspended activities in northern Rakhine and evacuated non-critical staff after the government suggested it had supported Rohingya insurgents last year. The UN refugee agency has been excluded from the repatriation process.
“The Rohingya community desperately needs immediate, life-saving assistance, long-term solutions and justice,” Guterres said on Monday.
http://www.dvb.no/news/bulldozing-rohingya-villages-not-demolition-evidence-burmese-official-says/79904
Amnesty international press release: INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATION INTO MILITARY KILLING OF FOUR KARENNI MEN ESSENTIAL FOR TRUTH AND JUSTICE
/in Press Releases and Statements20 February 2018
Myanmar: Independent investigation into military killing of four Karenni men essential for truth and justice
The Myanmar authorities must ensure an independent, impartial and effective investigation into the killing of four ethnic Karenni men by Myanmar soldiers in December 2017, Amnesty International said today. The current military investigation into the deaths cannot be considered to be credible and is unlikely to deliver truth and justice. Failure to hold those responsible to account before independent civilian courts would further entrench a climate of impunity in the county.
The four men were killed on the morning of 20 December 2017 at a check post in Loikaw, Kayah State operated by the Karennni National Progressive Party (KNPP), an ethnic armed organization in Myanmar. The previous evening, a convoy of army tucks, allegedly carrying illegally logged timber, passed through the check post and were inspected by KNPP members who were manning the post. The KNPP and Myanmar army operate under a ceasefire agreement, signed in March 2012. According to one of the KNPP members, the next morning, Myanmar soldiers surrounded the post and detained him and three other KNPP members, along with another man who had spent the night sleeping at the check post. The men were told to put on KNPP uniforms and line up to have their photos taken, however a Myanmar army solider then opened fire, killing four – three of the KNPP men and the civilian. The fourth KNPP member managed to escape and is currently in hiding. The military disputes this version of events, claiming that the men were killed after they tried to fight back against soldiers during the raid, however it has announced that it is investigating the incident.
Soon after the killings, senior KNPP leaders requested that the military handover the men’s bodies for burial. The military explained in response that the bodies had been cremated, however returned their ashes in four jars along with photographs of the dead men. According to credible sources, the military’s Regional Operations Commander offered the families of the deceased men 100,000 kyats (USD 60) each, which they refused. They later each accepted 500,000 kyat (USD 300) from the Kayah State regional government.
International human rights law and standards are clear that persons who carry out investigations into human rights violations should be chosen for their demonstrable impartiality and should be independent of the individuals, institutions and agencies implicated in the events being investigated. An investigation by the Myanmar military into these killings is therefore inadequate and cannot be considered to be credible.
Amnesty International calls on the Myanmar authorities to promptly initiate an independent, impartial and effective investigation into the killings. The men’s families should be kept informed of the status of the investigation, and the results should be made public. If sufficient, admissible evidence is obtained, all those suspected of being responsible, including any persons with command responsibility, must be brought to justice before an independent, civilian court, in proceedings which meet international standards of fairness and which do not impose the death penalty. In the meantime, anyone suspected of involvement in the killings should be immediately suspended from frontline duties.
Amnesty International is also concerned for the safety and wellbeing of the eyewitness to the killings, who is currently in hiding. According to information from credible sources, military officials have requested that he present himself for questioning, however he is fearful of doing so since his testimony would implicate military officials in wrongdoing. Amnesty International calls on the Myanmar authorities to ensure his safety and the safety of any other witnesses.
The case takes place in a wider context of allegations of human rights violations – including extrajudicial executions and other unlawful killings – by the Myanmar military, in particular in ethnic minority areas. Investigations into such allegations are rare and suspected perpetrators are seldom held to account, contributing to a culture of impunity in the country. The case underscores, yet again, the need for the Myanmar authorities to allow the UN-mandated Fact- Finding Mission to access the country, investigate allegations of human rights violations and abuses, and make recommendations aimed at ensuring accountability.
Amnesty International is also concerned that authorities have used a repressive law against individuals and activists speaking out about the killings. On 22 December, more than a dozen peaceful protesters gathered in Loikaw town to protest against the killing and demand justice. Five organizers from the Union of Karenni State Youth (UKSY) and the Karenni State
Farmers Union were subsequently charged with violating the Peaceful Assembly and Peaceful Procession Act, a law which has frequently been used to stifle peaceful dissent in the past. The activists were found guilty on 12 January 2018, and ordered to pay a fine or else serve a 20 day prison sentence. The five chose to serve the prison sentence.
Amnesty International calls on the Myanmar authorities to respect the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly. Authorities must not use the threat of arrest and prosecution to deter peaceful protesters from exercising their rights and demanding justice and accountability. Instead, they should take swift action to review and repeal or else amend the Peaceful Assembly and Peaceful Procession Act and all other repressive laws which are used to arbitrarily restrict these rights.
https://www.amnesty.org/…/Documents/ASA1679182018ENGLISH.PDF
Former political prisoners call for better health support
/in NewsAn organisation representing former political prisoners says they are not receiving the health care support they deserve from the government and is lobbying MPs to change the situation.
By HTUN KHAING | FRONTIER
FORMER POLITICAL prisoners have launched a campaign calling on the National League for Democracy government to provide care for thousands of former prisoners of conscience who suffered physically and mentally in jail when the country was under junta rule.
“We are trying to urge the government to enact a law that will authorise the rehabilitation of former political prisoners who were tortured for years in prison,” said U Tun Kyi, 51, a spokesperson for the Former Political Prisoners’ Society, based in Yangon’s Tarmwe Township.
Thousands of former political prisoners are enduring hardship and some are seriously ill, he told Frontier.
“Some political prisoners who suffered from serious diseases did not receive adequate health care in prison and their condition worsened.”
Tun Kyi is working with other FPPS members to compile a list of former political prisoners nationwide that includes information about their health. They plan to send the list to MPs so that the matter will be raised in the Hluttaw, he said.
Tun Kyi, a tireless advocate for former political prisoners, also manages the free clinics run by the Hantharwaddy U Win Tin Foundation.
Dr Myint Thein treats a patient at the Hantharwaddy U Win Tin Foundation charity clinic in Yangon. (Steve Tickner | Frontier)
The foundation, based in Yangon’s Pazundaung Township, was formed in 2012 by the veteran activist, U Win Tin, who co-founded the NLD and later served 19 years in prison for his political beliefs. Win Tin, who was the patron of the NLD, died on April 21, 2014, aged 84.
Tun Kyi, who spent seven years in prison between 1989 and 1996, said poor quality food had also damaged prisoners’ health. The health consequences of consuming non-perishable food and impure water over many years included liver, heart and lung diseases and diabetes.
“About 400 patients visit our clinic each month and 75 percent have heart disease, diabetes and hypertension,” he said, adding that about 10 percent have lung and liver problems.
U Kyaw San, a former political prisoner who spent more than 13 years in Bago Region’s Thayawady Prison, which had a reputation for being one of the country’s worst jails, said there were long periods when inmates had no chance to eat fresh vegetables. Any food sent by family or friends would be kept for months by prison authorities, he said.
“We could only eat [dry] food, and even if it became mouldy we had to eat it because we had nothing else. As a result of eating food like this for about a decade we contracted a variety of diseases,” Kyaw San told Frontier.
Many former political prisoners who live in and around Yangon rely on the clinic but those living elsewhere find it difficult to travel to the commercial capital to receive treatment, Tun Kyi said.
U Bo Kyi, joint-secretary of the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma), told Frontier that the government spends less than K1,000 per person per day on food for prisoners.
“You can imagine the impact that has on someone’s life,” he said.
Bo Kyi, whose organisation is advocating for prison reform, said other problems faced by prisoners included corruption, poor sleeping quarters and lack of access to proper showers.
“Some senior prisoners, they bully other prisoners. If you want medical treatment, you have to pay. If you want a good shower, you have to pay. These senior prisoners, they act as a broker for the prison staff,” he said.
He said that authorities needed to be more transparent about the prison situation in the country.
“It shouldn’t be secret; it needs to be open to the public. They need to open the doors so people can see the reality,” he said.
Daw Aye Aye Thin at the Hantharwaddy U Win Tin Foundation clinic, which treats many former political prisoners. (Steve Tickner | Frontier)
Kyaw San said that although the FPPS and the foundation did what they could to help former prisoners of conscience, many had expected to receive support from the government after the NLD took office.
“If the former political prisoners, our friends, ask us for help, we have to look on with folded arms without being able to do anything,” Kyaw San said, adding that the only help he can give is to tell people to visit the clinic.
The FPPS, which estimates that the national parliament and government includes at least 120 former political prisoners, accuses the NLD administration of ignoring the plight of former prisoners of conscience since it took office.
“Many MPs and cabinet members relied on the clinic before they were elected; they know the situation faced by political prisoners. Now they have authority they should help,” said Tun Kyi.
The FPPS said that after Myanmar gained independence in 1948, the government recognised the role of political activists in the struggle against the British colonialists.
Tun Kyi said there has been no government recognition of the former political prisoners who struggled for nearly five decades against military rule. They have been marginalised and have not received adequate care for ailments caused by harsh treatment, including torture, in prison, he said.
Amyotha Hluttaw MP U Ye Htut (NLD, Sagaing-5) has been asked by the FPPS to raise the issues faced by former political prisoners in the Hluttaw.
“Many little-known former political prisoners were tortured in prison and have difficult lives, but people know only about those who became famous,” he told Frontier. He added that the government plans to help them, but that it needs to collect information about what illnesses former prisoners have and what help they need.
Bo Kyi said that relations between his organisation and the government had improved somewhat in recent years, and that they now organise human rights training in schools, universities and government departments.
“There are still issues in many areas. For freedom of expression, it is still difficult. For freedom of assembly, it is still difficult, but things have improved a little. Before, we didn’t trust them and they didn’t trust us, but through meeting things have gradually improved,” he said.
However, Tun Kyi said he is concerned that former political prisoners in poor health may not receive the care they need.
“Why isn’t the NLD considering the case of former political prisoners? This isn’t an issue that effects the constitution.”
TOP PHOTO: Images of political prisoners who died in jail are displayed at the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners office. (Ann Wang | Frontier)
Forntier