Myanmar soldiers execute nine IDPs sheltering at Sagaing meditation centre

Local residents said the victims—eight men and one woman—had all been lined up and shot in the head

Residents of Oak Pho, a village in Sagaing Region’s Budalin Township, say that regime forces executed nine people sheltering at a local Buddhist meditation centre on Monday.

The victims, some of whom were elderly, had been displaced by recent fighting in the area. All nine had been shot in the head, local sources told Myanmar Now.

“Their brains were blown out. The bullets went straight into their heads,” said one man who did not want to be identified.

“The bodies were all in a row in one area of the meditation centre. They had been forced to sit in a line, and then they were executed. There weren’t any other injuries on them,” he added.

Local residents identified the victims as Khin Saung, 82; Win Maung, 65; Bo Tin, 67; Soe, 47; Kyaw Myo Tun, 46; Pho Sait, 47; Baydar, 45; Ni, 45; and Moe Moe, 30.

According to one source, Moe Moe’s five-year-old daughter survived the attack because some other internally displaced persons (IDPs) at the centre took her with them when they fled as the military arrived.

The bodies were discovered at around 8am on Tuesday, according to a man who was present at the time.

The soldiers who massacred the IDPs were reportedly from Light Infantry Division 77, a unit based in Bago that has been accused of committing serious human rights abuses in the past.

A member of a local defence force told Myanmar Now that the soldiers were part of a column of around 150 troops that had left Monywa on Sunday morning. After reaching Budalin, around half proceeded north of the town the next day. About 5km from the town, this group was attacked with explosives.

Enraged, the soldiers raided Oak Pho, where several civilians were killed on the spot. Some villagers who fled to the nearby meditation centre were followed, forcing the IDPs sheltering there to run for their lives.

“There were around 40 people staying at the meditation centre. The younger ones, including most of the women, were able to get away. But a few older ones who had trouble running didn’t make it,” said an Oak Pho villager.

Residents of the village say that the soldiers also ransacked at least a dozen houses and destroyed several vehicles.

After spending the night at the village monastery, the troops left the following morning for the police station in Seng Pyin, a village in Depayin Township, according to local defence forces.

Most of the inhabitants of Oak Pho, a village of around 450 households, are currently in hiding in neighbouring villages, local sources said.

Myanmar Now News

Myanmar’s Health System Is in Collapse, ‘Obliterated’ by the Regime

The surgeon was in the middle of operating on a patient when the squad of soldiers entered the hospital looking for doctors to arrest. A receptionist alerted the surgeon, Dr. Kyaw Swar, but it was too late for him to stop the procedure.

Hoping to avoid attention, he ran out into the hallway and collected the shoes that he and his colleagues had left outside the operating room door — a telltale sign that surgery was underway. Moments later, the soldiers walked noisily past the operating theater.

“If they had found us, they would have arrested us,” Dr. Kyaw Swar said. “But I will not run away while I am operating on a patient. It is not a crime for a doctor to treat patients.”

Dr. Kyaw Swar’s close call last month came as Myanmar’s security forces intensify their crackdown on doctors who oppose the military junta that seized power 14 months ago. Doctors have been at the forefront of a nationwide civil disobedience movement that has crippled the economy, and the regime has targeted health care workers from the start.

In recent weeks, the security forces have arrested doctors at their homes and hospitals, revoked the licenses of prominent physicians, searched hospitals for wounded resistance fighters and threatened to close health care facilities that employ doctors opposing the regime.

For Myanmar soldiers, who are notorious for stealing from citizens, going after doctors is also a convenient way to make money, since doctors are among the country’s wealthier people. During arrests, soldiers have seized cash, gold, jewelry and vehicles worth tens of thousands of dollars. In some cases, army officers have demanded as much as $5,000 not to shut down a private hospital, hospital officials said.

Since the coup on Feb. 1, 2021, soldiers and the police have arrested 140 doctors for participating in the nationwide protest movement, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, which is monitoring arrests. Of these, 89 remain behind bars.

At least 30 doctors have been killed, according to the New York-based Physicians for Human Rights, which called Myanmar one of the most dangerous places in the world to be a health worker.

The harassment and arrest of doctors who oppose the regime comes as the country faces a continuing health emergency because of a severe shortage of doctors, a chronic lack of resources and the closing of many hospitals and clinics.Image

Medical students, doctors and engineers  in February 2021 protesting against the military coup that month in Myanmar.
Credit…The New York Times
Medical students, doctors and engineers  in February 2021 protesting against the military coup that month in Myanmar.

In a statement earlier this month marking World Health Day, a rights group, Network for Human Rights Documentation Burma, said the Myanmar military has “destabilized the country beyond repair.”

“The health care sector is one of many which has been obliterated,” the group said.

Nearly one million children are not receiving routine immunizations, leaving them vulnerable to measles and other diseases, and nearly 5 million children are missing out on vitamin A supplements, putting them at risk of infections and blindness, according to UNICEF.

Throughout the country, barely 40 percent of the population is fully vaccinated for Covid-19, and many patients are left without routine care. Needed operations are difficult to schedule.

Doctors say that health care has improved somewhat in recent months in Yangon, Myanmar’s largest city, with many physicians returning to work. But anti-regime doctors estimate that hundreds of people are still dying each week because of the collapse of the health care system.

One regime tactic has been to release doctors from prison on the condition that they disavow the civil disobedience movement and agree to work at a military-controlled, government hospital, doctors said.

“In conflict-torn areas, it’s worse than in cities because the government hospitals are not running at all and people are mostly in refugee camps in the jungle,” said Dr. Wai Myo, who was fired from Mandalay General Hospital last year for joining the protest movement. “So, if something happens to them, the chance of death is very high.”

A spokeswoman for the junta’s health ministry declined to comment.

After the coup, thousands of doctors refused to work for the regime and left jobs in government facilities. Many began offering their services free at private hospitals and underground clinics.

In its attempt to force doctors to work in facilities it controls, the military has shut down at least a dozen clinics offering free medical treatment and demanded that private hospitals and clinics hand over the names of patients and their medical history.

As it hunts down anti-regime doctors and wounded combatants, the regime has branded people seeking care from underground clinics as “illegal patients.”

“What is the reason to arrest us?” asked Dr. Wai Myo. “Just for giving treatment? It’s total nonsense. I want to be a good citizen, so I joined the civil disobedience movement. I want to be a good doctor, so I’m giving free medical treatment to patients.”

Mandalay General Hospital, a major teaching hospital in Myanmar’s second-largest city, has been at the center of the protest movement since the start. Doctors in Mandalay have been much slower than those in other regions to return to work at government-controlled centers.

Last month, the city’s health director and the army general who is Mandalay’s chief commander summoned private hospital owners to a meeting and informed them that the licenses of 14 medical professors and leading specialists at Mandalay General Hospital would be revoked, according to hospital owners who attended the meeting.

Image

Medical staff watched from a hospital rooftop as security forces cracked down on protestors in Mandalay in February 2021, the month of the coup in Myanmar.
Credit…The New York Times
Medical staff watched from a hospital rooftop as security forces cracked down on protestors in Mandalay in February 2021, the month of the coup in Myanmar.

They warned that any private hospital that hired them — or other doctors known to support the civil disobedience movement — would be shut down.

The loss of highly trained doctors can have life-or-death consequences for some patients.

Lieu Shin, a rice farmer from Kalay, 160 miles northwest of Mandalay, is in desperate need of a kidney transplant, and his brother has agreed to donate one. But Mandalay General Hospital, the only place in the region where such surgery could be done, no longer has a team of doctors capable of performing the operation.

Mr. Lieu Shin, 64, was given only days to live, but continues to hang on with dialysis, which is exhausting his family’s savings. He blames the regime for his inability to get treatment, not the doctors.

“The doctors said I need an emergency operation,” he said. “But there are not enough doctors at the hospital. All I can do now is wait for my turn to die.”

The New York Times

Two female 88 Generation activists missing following their arrest

The son of one of the two women was also detained in the Kayin State capital Hpa-an last week

Two women belonging to a political organization formed by veterans of the 1988 pro-democracy uprising were arrested in the Kayin (Karen) State capital Hpa-an last week and have not been heard from since, according to their colleagues.

Nu Nu Aung and Khet Khet, who are both members of the 88 Generation Peace and Open Society, were arrested on April 26 along with Khet Khet’s adult son, an official from the group told Myanmar Now.

Nu Nu Aung was in Hpa-An to receive medical treatment when all three were taken into custody, the official added.

Nu Nu Aung belongs to the group’s Farmers’ Welfare Department, while Khet Khet is a member of its Department of Women’s and Children’s Affairs.

Myanmar Now has been unable to obtain any information regarding the arrests from regime officials.

Founded by prominent former student leaders, the 88 Generation group has played a leading role in resisting the military’s return to power following last year’s coup.

One of its founding members, Min Ko Naing, is a member of the National Unity Consultative Council, a coalition of ethnic and pro-democracy forces formed to oppose the dictatorship and establish a federal union.

Currently in hiding, he has been wanted by the junta since February of last year, when the military ousted the country’s elected civilian government.

Mya Aye, another founding member, was sentenced to two years in prison in March, more than a year after being arrested at his home on the morning of the coup.

In January, fellow 88 Generation leader Ko Jimmy, whose real name is Kyaw Min Yu, was sentenced to death after being found guilty by a junta-controlled court of plotting acts of terrorism.

According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, more than 10,000 people have been arrested, charged or sentenced over the past 14 months for opposing the takeover.

Myanmar Now News

Over 11,000 Houses Burned Down in Myanmar Junta Attacks Since Coup

Myanmars junta forces had burned down at least 11,417 civilian houses at 296 locations by the end of April with Sagaing Region suffering the heaviest damage, according to the independent research group Data for Myanmar.

There are 10 states and regions where houses have been burned down by regime forces with Sagaing, Magwe, Chin and Kayah suffering the heaviest damage.

Data for Myanmar said approximately 7,503 houses in Sagaing were torched by regime forces from February 1, 2021, to April 30, 2022, as well as 2,131 houses in Magwe Region, 1,147 in Chin State and about 407 in Kayah State and dozens of others in Mandalay, Tanintharyi, Bago, Kayah and Kachin.

Sagaing, Magwe, Chin and Kayah have the most active resistance groups against the junta and troops have increasingly carried out indiscriminate attacks on civilians, including air and artillery strikes, arbitrary killings, massacres, burning people alive, using civilians as human shields, and looting and burning houses.

The research group used reports from the media, rights groups and refugee organizations. However, Data for Myanmar did not include information that has yet to be verified so the actual number of houses burned may be higher than the reported figures.

During April about 2,512 houses were burned down in Sagaing Region, the heaviest damage since the 2021 coup. Within the region, Khin-U Township had the heaviest damage and about 529 houses were burned down.

On April 29, over 120 houses were torched in Inngutto village, Kantbalu Township in the region.

 Regime forces were attacked with mines near our village so they came and torched the village. We lost houses, livestock and our agricultural machines,” said a villager. 

 Several villages in Sagaing Region have continued to stage daily anti-regime protests, despite brutal crackdowns and raids.

Irrawaddy News

Weekly Update : 25 April to 1 May 2022

Women and children have suffered impacts of the failed coup. The systematic oppression of vulnerable groups exacerbates long held gaps in flawed laws which have long failed to adequately meet the needs of women and children. They must be protected. More in the weekly update

Karenni political party announces plan to unite local anti-junta forces under new administration team

The announcement comes after the party criticised the National Unity Government for failing to consult ethnic groups about administrative reform

The Karenni National Progressive Party (KNPP) is planning to form a new administration team to unite ethnic groups in the state and its surrounding regions, the party’s vice secretary Aung San Myint has said.

The new team will bring together the Karenni State Consultative Council (KSCC), which was formed in the wake of last year’s coup to unite local political forces, with ethnic armed organisations in the area.

“We are planning to form an administration team with the ethnic armed organisations in the area, their administration departments and the KSCC’s administration team after writing an interim plan,” said Aung San Myint.

“The government mechanisms of ethnic revolutionary forces have been in existence for 70 years,” he added. “We are not planning to form a government mechanism for each of the groups, but instead we are going to negotiate with all the involved parties to integrate all of their government mechanisms into a single mechanism of the KSCC.”

The KNPP criticised the underground National Unity Government (NUG) for announcing plans on April 24 to reform its administrative processes without properly consulting ethnic groups.

The KSCC includes the Kayah State Democratic Party (KYSDP), the Kayan National Party (KNP), the National League for Democracy (NLD), five ethnic armed organisations, and the Karenni Nationalities Defence Force, an armed group formed after the coup.

Groups operating under the NUG and the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH) have not joined the KSCC.

The military council’s governance mechanisms in Karenni State are failing and only the KSCC is serving the public, said Aung San Myint.

“People need to know what’s actually happening here. Towns and villages were destroyed in Karenni, entire townships and villages have been emptied out and the civilians are staying at IDP camps,” he said.

“These IDP camps are inside our territories and we are providing food, shelter and security for the public at the moment,” he added.

The new administration team will cover all of Karenni territory, which includes several regions of southern Shan and northern Karen states and areas around Naypyitaw, he added. The team would only be an interim organisation, he said.

“We need to have accountability and transparency in order to call ourselves a government,” he said. “It is impossible to form a complete government amidst all the battles that have been going on.”

Lwin Ko Latt, the NUG’s minister of home affairs, did not return calls from Myanmar Now seeking comment.

Myanmar Now News