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.
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- Close The Sky
- International condemnation of the escalating humanitarian crisis and rights violations in Myanmar
- Women in Karenni State face increasing levels of violence
Myanmar junta forces murder seven civilians in Wetlet village
/in NewsRegime troops killed seven people and injured several others in three separate incidents in and around the village of Thamayoe in Sagaing Region’s Wetlet Township on Thursday, according to local sources.
Phoe Lwin, a 55-year-old fishmonger, was reportedly shot dead when he ran into a junta column just outside of the village, which is located on the eastern bank of the Muu River some 25km west of the township’s administrative centre.
Then, at around 4:30am, the same column opened fire on a truck that was carrying six women to a neighbouring village to sell goods in the local market, according to Thamayoe residents.
The truck’s driver and three of his passengers were killed instantly, and at least one of the other women was said to be in critical condition.
“They shot at the tractor from the front, hitting the engine many times. The women had many gunshot wounds. Some were killed right away by shots to the head, while others bled to death,” said a local man who spoke to Myanmar Now on condition of anonymity.
The four who were killed were identified as the 27-year-old driver, Lwin Moe, and three of his passengers: Hnin Hlaing, 57, Aye Nu Win, 40, and Nu Khine, 46.
“It infuriates me that they did this to civilians for no reason. It wouldn’t be so painful if the victims were resistance fighters,” said the local man.
Resistance forces operating in the area said they had to wait until around 6am to rescue the survivors, as some of the junta troops stayed behind to shoot anyone who approached the victims.
“They were shot all over their bodies and their wounds were very bad. We couldn’t save everyone, as some had already died,” said an officer of the Shwebo District People’s Defence Force (PDF).
After this second shooting, the junta column of around 60 soldiers entered Thamayoe, where they proceeded to kill two more villagers.
Phyu Phyu San, 30, and Thein Hlaing, 62, were both shot to death on sight while trying to run away from the approaching soldiers, according to the PDF officer and other sources.
“The woman was shot in the chest, arms and legs, while the man was shot in the head at point blank range. His brains were splattered all over the place. They ran into the assaulting junta column while trying to flee,” he said.
The column then ransacked several houses in the village and looted shops in the market before crossing the Muu River to Ayadaw Township sometime before noon.
The bodies of the deceased were all cremated later the same day, according to a member of a local volunteer group who helped to recover their remains.
“It was heartbreaking, but I braced myself and retrieved the bodies. The fact that they were just civilians made it that much sadder,” he said.
In late June, another junta column of around 100 troops reportedly killed four civilians during raids on villages in western Wetlet Township.
The military also carried out a series of airstrikes on villages near the town of Wetlet on June 29.
The column responsible for Thursday’s killings reportedly left Shwebo Township the day before and spent the night in Ywar Thar Gyi, a village located about 13km east of Thamayoe.
Myanmar Now News
Shan State official who joined CDM killed in custody
/in NewsA former civil servant who joined the Civil Disobedience Movement (CDM) against military rule died days after his arrest in northern Shan State more than a year ago, his family has recently learned.
Htay Lin Aung was a deputy staff officer with the General Administration Department in Shan State’s Nawnghkio Township when he decided to quit his job in support of the CDM shortly after the military seized power in February 2021.
After several attempts to arrest him for taking part in anti-regime protests, the junta finally managed to apprehend him at a toll gate near the entrance to the town of Kyaukme on March 8, 2022.
His family completely lost contact with him after that and has only recently received confirmation of his death in custody six days later, a source close to the family told Myanmar Now.
According to the source, who did not want to be named, appeals to the International Committee of the Red Cross and other organizations that provide assistance to political prisoners failed to yield any information about Htay Lin Aung’s fate.
However, a reliable source with knowledge of the case recently informed his family that he was beaten to death at the Kyaukme District Interrogation Centre for refusing to betray others taking part in the CDM.
“His hands were tied behind his back and his head was covered with a cloth. He chose to die. He gave his life to protect others,” said the family friend, citing the inside source.
Now that they know for sure what has happened to Htay Lin Aung, his wife and children will hold a donation ceremony in his memory, the family friend added.
An estimated 70% of civil servants in Nawnghkio Township joined the CDM after the coup. Many are currently being held in Lashio Prison, where they are serving long sentences for opposing the regime.
A number of people taking part in the CDM around the country are known to have died in junta custody.
Win Lwin, a teacher from Sintgaing Township in Mandalay Region, was reported dead a day after his arrest on November 1, 2021. Another teacher from Mandalay Region’s Thabeikkyin Township named Zaw Min Aung died just hours after his arrest later in the same month.
Hlaing Win, a teacher from Sagaing Region’s Kanbalu Region, was killed within days of his arrest in December 2021, and in October of last year, another CDM teacher named Saw Moe Tun was beheaded by regime forces in Pauk Township, Magway Region.
According to the latest figures released by the Association for the Assistance of Political Prisoners (AAPP), the Myanmar junta continues to hold a total of 19,311 dissidents, including some ousted government leaders, in its custody.
The AAPP also claims that as of July 4, at least 3,745 people have died at the hands of the regime over the past two and a half years.
Myanmar Now News
Human Rights Situation weekly update (June 22 to 30, 2023)
/in HR Situation, NewsHuman Rights Violations took place in States and Regions from June 22 to 30, 2023
Military Junta troops launched an airstrike and dropped bombs in Chin State, Kayah State, Kachin State, and Sagaing Region from June 22nd to 30th. Over 9 civilians were injured and 11 died by the airstrike and civilian buildings were burnt within a week. Over 35 civilians were arrested as human shields in Salingyi Township and Khin-U Township, Sagaing Region. 6 children were also injured by the Military’s heavy and light artillery attacks.
Military Junta troops raped and killed 2 women in Sagaing Region and also arrested and killed 18 civilians including 13 PDF Fighters. The Pyusawhtee troop which is under the Military Junta, also threatened the civilians from Kanbalu Township that they will occupy the houses and farms if the local civilians do not attend the Pyusawhtee military training.
Infogram
Forced Prostitution
/in Cartoon Animation, News(က) နိုင်ငံတကာဥပဒေအရ လိင်လုပ်ငန်းအတွင်းသို့ အတင်းအဓမ္မ သွတ်သွင်းခံရခြင်းတွင် မည်သည့် အင်္ဂါရပ်များ ပါဝင်သနည်း။
လိင်ဖျော်ဖြေရေး လုပ်ငန်းအတွင်းသို့ အတင်းအဓမ္မ သွတ်သွင်းခံရခြင်းအား လူ့အခွင့်အရေးချိုးဖောက်မှု တခုအဖြစ် မှတ်တမ်း တင်နိုင်ရန်အတွက် အောက်ဖေါ်ပြပါ အင်္ဂါရပ် (၄) ခု သက်သေထင်ရှားကြောင်း တင်ပြရပါမည်။
၁။ လိင်ဆက်ဆံမှုပုံစံတခုခု
၂။ အတင်းအကျပ် လုပ်ဆောင်ခြင်း သို့မဟုတ် အလိုမတူခြင်း
၃။ ငွေပေးခြင်း သို့မဟုတ် အလားတူပုံစံတမျိုးမျိုး
၄။ အစိုးရ၏ လုပ်ဆောင်ချက် တို့ ဖြစ်သည်။
Myanmar military arrests 10 workers for garment factory strikes
/in NewsThe detained include 2 members of a banned union.
Myanmar’s junta authorities have arrested 10 workers from Yangon region for incitement to riot, state-controlled newspapers reported Thursday.
Reports said two members of the outlawed Action Labor Rights group were arrested along with workers from two garment factories between June 14 and 17.
The Action Labor Rights members were identified as Thandar Soe Lin and Pyoe Myat Thin.
The workers came from Shwepyitha township’s Hosheng Myanmar garment factory and Sun Apparel Myanmar in Hlaingtharya township.
The factory workers were fired and arrested for taking the lead in demanding a 17% pay rise to the equivalent of U.S.$2.70 a day.
An Action Labor Rights union official, who wished to remain anonymous for security reasons, told RFA the arrests of workers on political charges when they were only calling for better pay is a violation of labor rights.
“These workers were not doing anything political, and they were demanding their rights because the wages are low,” the official said.
“Junta arrests of protesters demanding their rights is a violation of the rights of weak grassroots workers, and protects oppressive employers.”
Newspapers reported that two more union members, Thuzar – who goes by one name – and Thurein Aung have gone into hiding and authorities are trying to find and arrest them.
Thuzar is accused of inciting workers to riot and organizing a protest at the two factories on June 12 and 13.
The union official told RFA the two fugitives do not plan to leave Myanmar.
Action Labor Rights is a Yangon-based union that has been calling for protection of the rights of workers who have been suffering from various problems since the Feb. 1, 2021 coup.
Another trade union leader, who also declined to be named, said the junta had already clamped down on other trade unions.
“The workers were charged with Article 505 only. But those who are part of groups declared to be illegal organizations are charged with Article 17 (1),” he said, referring to a law on membership of illegal groups that carries a maximum three year prison sentence.
“Ït becomes alarming to the other [unions]. It hits many birds with one stone.”
On March 1, 2021, a month after the military coup, the junta’s Ministry of Labor, Immigration and Population declared 16 trade unions and organizations active in labor issues to be illegal groups.
RFA News
At least 10 dead in Myanmar junta airstrikes on Sagaing village
/in NewsAn aerial assault targeting a village in Sagaing Region’s Pale Township on Tuesday afternoon killed at least 10 civilians, including a Buddhist monk, according to local sources.
The attack on Nyaung Kone, a village located less that 10km southwest of the town of Pale, took place at around 3pm and also destroyed a monastery and more than a dozen houses, the sources said.
Seven of the victims were killed in a house directly in front of the monastery. They included the monk and four of his relatives, as well as a man and his nephew who were also staying in the house, locals told Myanmar Now.
The three remaining victims were in other houses in the area, they added.
One of the deceased was among six people who were taken to the hospital after the attack, while the other nine were killed instantly, locals said.
According to a member of the Yinmabin District People’s Defence Force (PDF), which helped to evacuate the village after the attack, some of the bodies were still burning when resistance forces arrived on the scene.
“One person had their face completely blown off. Some of the bodies were on fire, which we had to drag out of the burning buildings,” he said.
The victims, including 47-year-old monk Kyaw Myint Tun, were all aged between 18 and 65, according to PDF sources.
A man who survived the attack told Myanmar Now that it came completely without warning.
“We didn’t even hear the aircraft as it approached. There was just a whooshing sound when it was already too close for us to get away, followed soon after by a bang,” he said.
A piece of shrapnel from that first blast pierced a pole in his house near where his son was sleeping, the man said. Grabbing his son, he ran into the washroom to take shelter, but then fled towards the monastery, thinking it would be safer, he added.
It was while he and other family members hid inside a tunnel near the monastery that he heard more bombs being dropped from a fighter jet, as well as machine gun fire, he said.
“I think they were incendiary bombs,” said the man, describing the intense fires that broke out immediately after the second attack.
Another local said that houses near the monastery burned down within minutes of being hit. He added that the explosions left five craters, each about a metre and a half deep, in the ground.
The man said he didn’t know why the village was attacked, as there were no armed groups based there or in the surrounding area.
“We really didn’t think they would attack us, as we weren’t involved in the resistance movement. I couldn’t believe it until I saw it with my own eyes. Now I don’t want to sit and wait for them to come kill me. Give me a gun and I’ll fight back,” he said.
Most of the village’s 300 households were still displaced on Wednesday amid rumours that a second assault was planned, sources there said.
Zaw Htet, a spokesperson for the Pale Township PDF, denounced the attack as “an inhuman act” by the junta’s air force.
“I wouldn’t complain if they were going after a military target, but this was a purely civilian village,” he said.
Another airstrike was also reported later the same day at Chin Pyit, a village located about 25km northwest of Nyaung Kone. Two people were injured in that attack, according to sources.
Myanmar’s military has relied heavily on its total control over the country’s airspace to target opponents of its rule since it seized power more than two years ago.
Its indiscriminate use of fighter jets and attack helicopters imported from Russia and China has been widely condemned for taking a heavy toll on civilians in conflict areas.
In a single incident on April 11, more than 160 people, including dozens of children, were killed in the village of Pa Zi Gyi in Sagaing’s Kanbalu Township, sparking international outrage.
Myanmar Now News