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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- Myanmar junta bombs Rohingya Muslim village killing 41, rescuers say
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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
Clashes near Myawaddy displace thousands of civilians to Thailand
/in NewsThe battles took place near Shwe Kokko, the site of a major development project partly owned by the junta-allied general secretary of Karen State’s Border Guard Force
Junta forces continued to battle the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) and their allies this week near the town of Shwe Kokko, north of Myawaddy, Karen State, forcing thousands of locals to flee to the Thai border.
Several Border Guard Force (BGF) outposts near the Shwe Kokko-Yatai New City development project came under attack by KNLA and allied forces on Wednesday, leading to ongoing clashes, according to officials of the KNLA’s political wing, the Karen National Union (KNU).
The Lion Battalion Commando Special Force, a resistance group involved in the attacks, released a video on Thursday night along with a statement saying that some 80 members of the military and BGF were killed in the fighting, and another 60 injured. The video showed arms and equipment seized from the military and BGF forces.
Shwe Kokko, located on the Thai-Myanmar border, is the site of the Shwe Kokko-Yatai New City development project. The project is operated as a partnership between Brig- Gen Saw Chit Thu, head of the junta-allied BGF in Karen State, and Yatai International Holdings Group, a Chinese company registered in Hong Kong.
Largely financed by Chinese and other foreign investors, the project faced significant opposition during the civilian administration of the National League of Democracy (NLD) and was put on hold in 2020 following a government inquiry into its business practices.
However, the project resumed operations after the 2021 military coup and has become notorious for scandals involving labour abuse and trafficking, the victims of which included foreign workers recruited from abroad, especially within online gambling facilities operating in the town.
While the recent fighting is known to have caused casualties among the KNLA and allied resistance forces, the details are still unknown, according to Padoh Saw Liston, the district secretary of KNLA Brigade 6.
“We heard that there were several casualties on our side but we still don’t know the details as things are very complicated in Kawkareik, Thingan Nyi Naung, Myawaddy and Shwe Kokko,” Padoh Saw Liston said on Thursday, referring to the towns near which battles have occurred in recent weeks.
The KNLA-allied resistance forces attacked BGF outposts in Hti Kaw Htaw village, located 6 miles from Shwe Kokko, on Wednesday. The military targeted the area with heavy artillery shelling and airstrikes during the ensuing battle.
The air and artillery strikes forced more than 6,000 residents of Hti Kaw Htaw and nearby villages on the Thaungyin (Moei) River to flee to the Thai-Myanmar border as of Wednesday.
Displaced people that crossed the border into Thailand are now sheltering on three acres of land owned by a local Thai woman and receiving aid from the Thai military and other authorities, according to a person assisting with the process.
“We could hear heavy artillery shells going off, and the battles were still going on this morning,” the individual said.
Allied KNLA and PDF forces operating in KNU territory announced today that part of the Asia Highway connecting Myawaddy and Kawkareik will be closed for two weeks due to ongoing clashes and the military sending reinforcements in civilian vehicles. As the highway is crucial for the border trade between Thailand and Myanmar, many commercial trucks had to turn back on Friday, according to a businessman familiar with the matter.
During a speech at an Armed Forces Day ceremony in Naypyidaw on March 27, coup leader Min Aung Hlaing said that the military would take decisive action against the publicly mandated and anti-junta National Unity Government, the People’s Defence Forces, and the ethnic armed organisations aiding them. Battlesbroke out in Karen State shortly afterwards.
Padoh Saw Taw Nee, a spokesperson for the KNU, said that there were now around 500,000 internally displaced people in Karen State due to the ongoing fighting.
Myanmar Now News
Continuous fighting near Shwegu displaces thousands of civilians
/in NewsThousands of local residents—as well as volunteers from aid organisations—have been displaced by military shelling and airstrikes that began in Shwegu Township, Kachin State last week amid clashes with resistance forces.
People from at least seven villages south of the town of Shwegu—including Hnget Tadar, Si Thaung, Man Wein, Nam Lang, Nawng Let Gyi and Si Mu Gyi—have fled the fighting. A 40-year-old local man said the military’s rockets and heavy artillery shells had hit civilian targets.
“My nieces from Man Wein were forced to flee to Shwegu, and they told us that the military’s bomb attacks had hit the monastery and most of the people had fled into the forests,” the man said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
With volunteers from local and international aid organisations also currently displaced, accurately estimating the number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) or families has proved difficult.
Battles between March 23 and 26
On March 23, two junta columns initiated an assault on several villages near the border between the Shan and Kachin states just south of Shwegu, which is located on the bank of the upper Ayeyarwady River.
The force was made up of some 50 soldiers of Light Infantry Battalion (LIB) 10 and some 80 soldiers of Infantry Battalion (IB) 77, Light Infantry Division (LID) 88.
Fighters of the Shwegu Township People’s Defence Force (PDF) attacked the LIB 10 troops in Hnget Tadar village just south of Shwegu, at around 9am, according to a PDF member.
“We put our troops in position as soon as they stepped into Hnget Tadar. They started shooting at around 9am and we counterattacked using drones. I heard that their battalion commander, Major Aung Aung, was killed,” the PDF fighter said.
Myanmar Now has yet to confirm the death of the junta officer independently.
The PDF claims to have had the collaboration of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), which provided military training and weapons for them, in the attack.
The two junta columns attacked other villages with heavy artillery shelling outside Shwegu’s southern edge on March 25—including Si Mu Gyi, Nam Lang and Man Wein—after which a clash broke out with the alliance of revolutionary forces.
The battle lasted some two hours, during which the military carried out airstrikes using two fighter jets at around 3pm, according to locals.
Six projectiles landed in Man Wein during the airstrike, which destroyed one building, and two landed in Si Thaung village just south of Man Wein, destroying two houses and killing five cows.
The IB 77 troops remained stationed in Nam Lang, while the troops of IB 10, having sustained heavy losses, withdrew north to Nawng Let Gyi village before falling under attack again by the PDF and their allies on March 26.
The resistance fighters estimated that they had killed over 20 junta soldiers in these battles. One member of the resistance alliance was also killed.
“The battle is still ongoing. They’re still not retreating and have taken shelter in Nam Lang. This is the sixth day of fighting,” a member of the Shwegu-based Kachin People’s Defence Force told Myanmar Now on Tuesday.
The junta force inside Nam Lang also reportedly torched and destroyed two houses in the village, slaughtered and ate livestock, and looted various civilians’ houses, according to local sources.
The military council no longer responds to claims about killings, arson, or looting committed by their soldiers. However, in a speech given on Monday for Armed Services Day, junta leader Min Aung Hlaing said the military would take “decisive action” against ethnic armed forces aiding the PDF.
The Battle in Banmauk
Battles have also broken out since last week between junta troops and an anti-junta alliance of PDF and people’s defence teams in Shwegu and nearby townships, including Banmauk Township, Sagaing Region.
A junta column of more than 100 soldiers departed from Banmauk on March 24. Two days later the column raided Kyaungle village, located 20 miles to the northwest, according to a local man with connections to the PDF and the people’s defence teams.
He said military aircraft bombed the hills near the village, where they believed resistance forces were hiding, later the same day.
“There’s a hill called Htone Taung between Kyaungle and another village nearby. They thought the PDF were on that hill and bombed the hill at around 3pm, but no locals were injured,” he said.
The column in question remained stationed in Kyaungle until Tuesday of this week, blocking the Banmauk-Indaw road and trapping local residents inside the village, according to the aforementioned Banmauk local.
The clashes in Shwegu and Banmauk occurred amid a broader campaign of attacks by resistance forces in several neighbouring townships—including Banmauk, Indaw, Katha, Myohla, and Shwegu—on junta columns running reinforcements, weapons, and supplies into Sagaing Region and Kachin State via the Ayeyarwady River.
Last week the United States and United Kingdom imposed new sanctions on junta cronies Tun Min Latt and his wife Win Min Soe, their companies in and affiliated with the Star Sapphire Group, and other suppliers of aircraft fuel, arms, and equipment to the Myanmar military.
Human rights and pro-democracy activists have persistently appealed to foreign governments for stricter sanctions on individuals and entities enabling the junta’s abuses with supplies of jet fuel and other vital materiel.
Myanmar Now News
Human Rights Situation weekly update (March 22 to 31, 2023)
/in HR Situation, NewsThe Military Junta launched airstrikes and dropped bombs at Kayin State, Kayah State, Kachin State, Chin state, and Sagaing Region from March 22nd to 31st. As a consequence of the air strike, 14 people died, and at least 39 were injured, burnt houses, and death of cattle within a week. A leader of PDF from Myaung, Sagaing Region, and a villager from Madaya township, Mandalay Region were beheaded. 8 civilians were also burnt and killed by the Military’s junta troops. They also arrested the civilians and used them as human shields during their marching.
4 children were killed, and one was injured by military junta heavy artillery and shooting attack. They arrested a child and used it as a human shield in Kanbalu, Sagaing Region, and arrested 10 locals including a months-old child in Bokepyin township, Tanintharyi Region.
Infogram
Once-bustling town of Thantlang reduced to rubble by Myanmar’s junta
/in NewsMilitary raids, arson attacks, and airstrikes have turned Thantlang into a ghost town.
Western Myanmar’s once bustling town of Thantlang, with a sign above its gateway proclaiming that its inhabitants are “Not rich, but happy,” now lies in ruin after an onslaught of military raids, arson attacks, and airstrikes.
Two years after the military seized power in a coup d’etat, the Chin state township on the border of India’s Mizoram state is a shell of its former self. A resident who, like others RFA Burmese spoke with for this report, declined to be named out of security concerns, said the once bustling hub is now little more than a smoking ash heap.
“Our town is in dead silence as all residents have fled,” he said. “The only thing we hear from the area is gunshots and bomb blasts. It was a growing town before the military coup but it is now a deserted ruin.”
The inhabitants of Thantlang were quick to oppose the Feb. 1, 2021 coup and by September of that year had formed several anti-junta People’s Defense Force groups to counter a military offensive in the region.
Clashes between the two sides broke out on Sept. 19, 2021, during which junta troops shot and killed a Christian religious leader as he tried to put out fires in the township. Slightly more than a month later, junta soldiers returned to Thantlang and burned down two churches and at least 164 homes.
The September and October attacks sent more than 10,000 people – the entire population of Thantlang – fleeing to nearby villages and across the border into India, residents told RFA.
Since then, the military has returned several times to raze the township, including on June 9, 2022, when soldiers torched the decades-old Thantlang Baptist Church and set fire to homes.
The Chin National Front claims that in the two years since the coup, the junta launched more than 140 airstrikes on Thantlang, destroying many of the town’s buildings, including the CNF’s headquarters. The Thantlang PDF says junta troops have fired more than 100 heavy artillery shells at the town in 2023 alone.
In February, a member of the Thantlang PDF documented the destruction in a video, which he shared with RFA, claiming that “two-thirds of the town has been reduced to ashes because of [junta] arson.”
“The junta soldiers have raided and looted the remaining houses,” he said at the time. “They took whatever they wanted including rice, food, household items and everything … Only empty houses remain there.”
Airstrike on Khuabung village
The latest attack took place on Thursday, when two jets dropped bombs on Thantlang’s Khuabung village, around five miles (8 kilometers) from the township seat. The airstrike killed at least eight residents, including a six- and nine-year-old, and injured 20 others. It also set fire to multiple structures.
Salai Htet Ni, the spokesman for the ethnic Chin National Front, told RFA that Thursday’s attacks were unprovoked and intentionally targeted a civilian population.
“There is no member of [the armed resistance] in the location where the military junta dropped bombs – it was just a civilian village,” he said, calling the regime “a terrorist organization.”
“This attack is the proof of what [junta chief Senior Gen.] Min Aung Hlaing said in his Armed Forces Day speech, that he is ‘taking decisive action.’ They are just targeting innocent civilians and this is part of an attempt to wipe our Chin ethnic group from the face of the earth.”
The junta has not released any information about why it attacked Khuabung, and attempts by RFA to reach Thant Zin, the junta’s social affairs minister and spokesman for Chin state, went unanswered Friday.
Salai Mang Hrang Lian, an official with the Chin Human Rights Group, told RFA that targeting civilians and burning down religious buildings are “war crimes.”
“No one is allowed to target and attack innocent civilians, religious buildings like churches, hospitals and schools,” he said. “This is the universal code of military conduct and the international basic rule of the law of armed conflict … The fact that the junta has committed war crimes is made clear when considering the incidents in Thantlang.”
Chin state under attack
And while the destruction in Thantlang is significant, it is only a small part of what the military has done in Chin state and elsewhere in Myanmar.
According to Chin civil groups, there are currently around 60,000 people displaced by conflict in Chin state, and around 50,000 others who have fled across the border to India’s Mizoram and Manipur states. The 60,000 inside Chin are part of an estimated 1.7 million refugees in Myanmar, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said this month.
Junta troops have killed nearly 400 people, including civilians and PDF members, and destroyed more than 4,300 homes in Chin state since the coup, according to the Institute of Chin Affairs. Thailand’s Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma) says that authorities in Myanmar have killed at least 3,194 civilians since the takeover – mostly during peaceful anti-junta protests.
Speaking to RFA on Friday, a resident of Thantlang who fled fighting there said he would never forgive the junta for what it did to his town.
“Thantlang was a great town before the military came into power,” he said. “Business was booming with many grocery stores and tea shops on each roadside. It was a bustling town and people enjoyed living there. But it has been reduced to ashes and now all I have left is bitterness toward the junta.”
RFA News
သတ်ဖြတ်ခြင်း အဓိပ္ပါယ်ကို သတ်မှတ်ခြင်း။ (Killing)
/in Cartoon Animation, Multimedia, News(က) နိုင်ငံတကာဥပဒေအရဆိုလျှင် သတ်ဖြတ်ခြင်း၏ အင်္ဂါရပ်များကား အဘယ်နည်း။ သတ်ဖြတ်ခြင်းကို လူ့အခွင့်အရေး ချိုးဖေါက်မှုတရပ်အဖြစ် မှတ်တမ်းပြုရန်အလို့ငှာ အောက်ပါ အင်္ဂါ ရပ် (၃)ရပ် ထင်ရှား ကြောင်းဖေါ်ပြရပါမည်။ ၁။ လူ့အသက်ကို သေစေခြင်း။ ၂။ တရားဥပဒေမဲ့ သတ်ဖြတ်ခြင်း။ ၃။ အစိုးရ၏ လုပ်ဆောင်ချက်။ အပြည်ပြည်ဆိုင်ရာ ဥပဒေ- လူတဦး၏ အသက်ရှင်နေထိုင်ခွင့် အသက်ရှင်နေထိုင်ခွင့်ကို အတင်းအကြပ် ရုပ်သိမ်းခြင်းကို အပြည်ပြည်ဆိုင်ရာ ဥပဒေများက ပိတ်ပင် တားမြစ်ထားပါသည်။ သတ်ဖြတ်ခြင်းသည် အသက်ရှင်နေထိုင်ခွင့်ကို ရုပ်သိမ်းခြင်းအဖြစ် အပြည်ပြည် ဆိုင်ရာ ဥပဒေကို ချိုးဖေါက်ရာ ရောက်သည်။
Military withholds bodies of two tortured, slain Muslim civilians from relatives in Sagaing Region
/in NewsJunta troops threw the young detainees’ remains into the Mu River river after denying requests from the victims’ families to retrieve them for a proper burial
The military refused to return the bodies of a 28-year-old man and a 17-year-old boy killed in junta custody to their bereaved relatives in Kanbalu Township, Sagaing Region, this week.
The bodies of Thet Paing Soe, the elder victim, and Chit Min Naing, a minor, were found in a nearby drainage ditch on Friday with injuries suggesting torture. They had been detained and interrogated along with six other civilians in the town of Zee Kone two weeks earlier.
Soldiers stationed at the town’s sugar mill—accompanied by local police—arrested the eight civilians between March 8 and 9, after a woman who was allegedly working for the military as an informant was shot dead in the municipal market on March 6 by unknown assailants.
Another woman, who had been working at the market at the time, claimed she did not know who had shot the woman or for what reasons.
The detainees—including vendors and other locals—were held at the sugar mill. One was released on March 10 and five others were released on March 16.
“The bodies [of Thet Paing Soe and Chit Min Naing] were found in the U Aung Zay Ya ditch, stuck at the water gates just outside Zee Kone,” a local man told Myanmar Now on the condition of anonymity. “They were already badly disfigured when we found them.”
Citing eyewitnesses, he said that Thet Paing Soe had what appeared to be knife wounds to his chest and deep cuts all over his body. The body of Chit Min Naing had similar cuts, and his face showed signs—including bulging eyes and a protruding tongue—which suggested that he had been hanged.
They estimated that the victims had been dead for at least five days at the time they were found.
Thet Paing Soe had been arrested on March 8 along with one other man, who, like him, was a member of Zee Kone’s large Muslim community. After five more people, including Chit Min Naing’s mother—also a Muslim—were arrested on March 9, Chit Min Naing had gone to the police on March 10 to surrender himself to the officers in an attempt to secure her release.
“The military took his mother when he wasn’t home, so he turned himself in the next day in exchange for her release. Five vendors, including his mother, were released soon afterwards but they were already physically and mentally traumatised. The mother is losing her mind now after her son’s death,” the local man said.
Thet Paing Soe ran a mobile phone repair shop near the market where the alleged military informant was killed, and Chit Min Naing had worked for him there. However, neither had any known connections to the death of the alleged informant.
“Both of them were just civilians and they hadn’t done anything suspicious. They simply worked in a phone shop and were killed for no reason at all,” the local man said.
A source close to the victims’ families said the military refused their request to retrieve the bodies from the ditch for a proper Muslim burial, instead throwing them in the Mu River.
Thet Paing Soe, the owner of the phone shop, had gotten married 10 months earlier and is survived by his wife, who is five months pregnant with their child.
The local man who spoke with Myanmar Now—also a Muslim resident of Zee Kone—said that he had begun to feel a deep hatred towards the military council, which had not only killed two innocent civilians but even refused to return the victims’ bodies to their families.
“It’s so insulting that they invalidated their existence and religion even in death. I’d understand if they’d been killed during interrogation. But this was purely an execution and it breaks my heart to see the families deprived of the right to give their loved ones a proper funeral,” he said.
According to friends of the victims’ families, the military had also forbidden them from holding vigils, inviting neighbours to their houses to mourn, or even publicly praying.
“It’s really scary for us because we’re a minority here, especially during the first days of Ramadan,” the local man added, referring to the holy month which began on the evening of March 22. “Almost all of the past violence [against Muslims] took place during this month, so everyone is on edge these days.”
After the military disposed of the victims’ bodies in the Mu River, they were found downstream in Khin-U Township on Saturday. A group of local youth gave them a burial on the shore.
Detainees of the junta have been subjected to extrajudicial killings by the military and their allies in the neighbouring Mandalay Region in recent months, including in Natogyi, Madaya, and Myingyan townships late last year.
Myanmar Now attempted to contact the military council’s information department regarding the arrest and killing of the two youths but received no response.
Myanmar Now News