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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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‘Can nobody save us?’ – Eyewitnesses recount Myanmar military airstrike on Kanbalu
/in NewsSurvivors of a junta aerial attack on the Sagaing Region village of Pa Zi Gyi tell Myanmar Now of the horrors they beheld in its aftermath, and of the children they lost
Seconds after recognising the sound of a fighter jet overhead, U Myo remembers an explosion he could compare only to thunder.
The 57-year-old was tending to his cattle in a pasture outside the village of Pa Zi Gyi on the morning of April 11, when Myanmar military aircraft twice bombed a gathering held to commemorate the opening of a small administrative office under the publicly mandated National Unity Government (NUG).
Members of every household in the farming hamlet of 800 residents in Sagaing Region’s Kanbalu Township were in attendance, sheltering under a simple structure of wood and corrugated metal sheets to enjoy a special meal of pork curry, vermicelli soup and fermented mango salad ahead of the Myanmar New Year.
The bombs hit the building and the field where they had gathered to socialise and eat. Amid flames and smoke billowing hundreds of metres upward, U Myo rushed to the site of the blasts, immediately confronted with cries from the wounded for help.
“They were screaming, ‘Can nobody save us?” he recounted in a phone interview with Myanmar Now. “Some were drenched in blood and were running around hysterically.”
U Myo recognised one of the victims, 70-year-old Myint Wai, who pleaded with him to amputate his legs, which had been crushed. His injuries proved fatal.
“Both of his legs were mangled, with pieces of flesh protruding out. I did not dare to cut them off,” he said.
U Myo later found that his sister Ma Zaw, aged 30, and his brother, Naing Min Tun, 20, were among the dead, which, at the time of reporting, exceeded 170 people out of around 200 in attendance that day. Among the deceased were more than 30 children, including an infant as young as three months old.
Other villagers interviewed by Myanmar Now said that three entire families had been wiped out in the assault, with no known surviving relatives.
The NUG-appointed administrator for Pa Zi Gyi, Hla Oo, and the village’s security and public defence chiefs Tun Yin and Myat Lin, were also killed.
Military spokesperson Gen Zaw Min Tun has claimed that the attack was legitimate, describing the target as a meeting of anti-junta People’s Defence Force members, who he described as “terrorists.” High numbers of casualties were presumably compounded by the presence of weapons and gunpowder that he alleged had been stored in the area by these resistance groups.
As news spread from independent media outlets about the dozens of minors slain in the airstrike, junta-run newspapers published an April 14 article accusing anyone present at the event in Pa Zi Gyi of having ties to “terrorists,” with the text accompanied by photos of children wielding guns.
Just 10 minutes after the aerial bombing by the military fighter jet, a helicopter arrived in Pa Zi Gyi, with troops on board opening fire on the area below, targeting survivors and those assisting the scores of wounded people.
U Myo was forced to hide in a nearby ditch where he said he could feel the gunshots reverberating on the earth around him.
A number of those who were injured but had survived the initial explosions were killed during the second attack, he said.
Another resident of Pa Zi Gyi who withheld her name out of fear for her safety, said that she had attended the April 11 ceremony with her entire family, looking forward to the festive meal on offer.
She left the event just before the bombing, carrying her infant daughter but leaving behind her mother and 7-year-old elder child July Moe, who were later found among the casualties.
“When I was leaving, I asked my daughter to go back home with me, pointing out that there was no food she liked at the event. But she refused—she wanted to be in the company of her friends, even if she did not want to eat,” the woman explained.
Four of her young friends were also killed alongside her.
As the mother walked away from the site, she heard the same explosions described by U Myo, followed by shots fired from the army helicopter. Her baby close to her chest, she had no choice but to run in the opposite direction.
Now she is among a small group of survivors sheltering on tarps and the parched earth under trees in the nearby forest, unable to return home.
Another woman staying at the same site told Myanmar Now in a recent video interview that two of her sons and her teenage daughter were killed in the attack. She cried remembering how she had pushed her older children to complete high school, and for their futures now lost.
“Oh my sons, I told you never to speak a word about not wanting to go to school. I wanted to see you graduate from university,” she mourned, describing a feeling of defeat as she alluded to the surviving villagers’ meagre defences of machetes and muskets in the face of the junta’s sophisticated military machine.
“Now we have to give in. We cannot match their power.”
Myanmar Now News
Myanmar’s military bombs village ceremony killing scores of civilians
/in NewsThe junta sent in jets and an attack helicopter during the opening of a local administrative office, locals say.
UPDATED at 4:46 p.m. EDT on April 11, 2023
As many as 100 villagers have been killed and more than 50 injured when junta aircraft bombed a crowd of hundreds attending an office opening ceremony in Sagaing region’s Kanbalu township, locals said.
The air strike is one of the deadliest attacks on civilians since Myanmar’s military seized power in a Feb. 1, 2021 coup d’etat.
Most of the injured and dead were women and children, witnesses told RFA. They said it was hard to tell how many people had died because the bodies were so badly mangled by the bombs and machine gun fire, but by Monday afternoon, the bodies of at least 53 people had been collected.
“I saw the bodies of four to six children who had been blown about 100 feet [30 meters from the building],” said a local who didn’t want to be identified.
“I saw bodies ripped open and burnt.”
Sources said that at least 20 children were among those killed in the air strike on Pa Zi Gyi village, although RFA was unable to confirm the claim.
Another resident who spoke on condition of anonymity said there were “too many finger-size bits of body parts all over the streets,” adding that one could “barely walk without stepping on them.”
“Some bodies were headless, while some heads were without bodies. There is no way to identify who the bodies belong to,” the resident said. “The junta aircraft hovered around the village and shot at everyone from all angles, aiming at locations where civilians might be hiding.”
Nway Oo, a relief worker, said the injured are being transported to clinics in nearby villages operated by the anti-junta People’s Defense Force and are receiving medical treatment.
“Most of them are people with their hands or legs blown off,” he said. “As we are transporting them in four-wheel drive vehicles, we can only bring 4-7 people at a time. We have to be vigilant and listen for the sound of junta aircraft before we enter and exit the village.”
Nway Oo said that a military junta troop is stationed in nearby in Ma Lel village, hampering efforts to transport the injured.
An eyewitness to the attack told RFA that the military had “received specific information about the opening of the public administration office” ahead of time and “deliberately carried out an air raid on the civilian crowd.”
An official with the local PDF said that the junta “aimed to send a message with this air strike: that it would do anything and everything to deter the people from establishing public administration.”
“The junta attacked a crowd of ordinary civilians including women, children and pregnant women,” he said. “There were no resistance fighters in that crowd.”
Videos of the bombing site shot by citizen journalists and viewed by RFA showed a barren expanse strewn with various body parts, punctuated by the smoking ruins of structures and destroyed motorbikes. Residents and anti-junta fighters can be seen dragging mutilated corpses for collection and identification as they comb through the carnage.
Junta statements on attack
People Media, the news agency of the Union Solidarity and Development Party – which serves as the junta’s electoral proxy party – said the army’s Northwestern Regional Headquarters carried out Tuesday morning’s attack on Pa Zi Gyi village. It did not mention the number of casualties.
Junta Deputy Information Minister Major Gen. Zaw Min Tun claimed in comments carried by the pro-junta MRTV station that anti-junta forces, including the PDF, had assumed control of Kanbalu township through force and that the military had only targeted combatants during the ceremony.
“[The PDF] says villagers were killed when pictures are circulated of victims wearing civilian clothing, but when they carry out an attack, they claim that the same sort of victims are PDF,” he said, suggesting that anti-junta forces had either doctored photos from the air strike or misreported casualties. “Additionally, the PDF hides their mines and other weapons there, so when we attacked, it triggered much larger explosions and caused more casualties.”
Zaw Min Tun reiterated junta claims that the PDF is “a terrorist organization” that regularly commits “war crimes,” including threatening villagers and setting fire to their homes, in contrast to reports RFA has received that accuse the military of such tactics.
Death toll expected to rise
Tuesday’s air strike happened during the inauguration of a public administration office established by Myanmar’s parallel National Unity Government, Nay Zin Lat, the National League for Democracy MP for Kanbalu township told RFA.
A statement from NUG President Duwa Lashi La said the death toll was expected to rise.
“They were men, women, and children who posed no threat to the Myanmar military,” he said in the statement posted on Facebook.
“The military continues its mindless war on our country’s own people. Their sole aim is to consolidate power through death and destruction. They will not succeed.”
The junta dissolved the NLD last month after the party failed to re-register with the Election Commission but members continue to work with the NUG to try to restore democracy in Myanmar and carry out administrative work in areas not under junta control. Locals said junta troops carry out frequent raids on Pa Zi Gyi.
In this image grab from a video, a building burns in the aftermath of the Myanmar junta’s shelling and airstrikes on Pa Zi Gyi village, Kanbalu township, Sagaing region on Tuesday, April 11, 2023. Credit: Citizen journalist
Nay Zin Lat said many people died on the spot after a jet fighter dropped two bombs and an Mi-35 attack helicopter fired over 200 shots from its machine guns. He said more than 800 locals were attending the ceremony.
“There was a group of local residents who were discussing how to manage social issues in the community,” he said.
“They were bombarded by the air and shot at non-stop with machine guns. The shooting took about 15 minutes.”
He said the injured were taken to nearby villages and some local voluntary groups were providing medical treatment.
Nay Zin Lat urged organizations including the United Nations and the international community to do more to block the junta’s supply of jet fuel and called for a more effective ban on the sale of arms and ammunition to the regime.
RFA called Aye Hlaing, Sagaing region’s junta spokesperson and social affairs minister, but no one answered.
International response
Tuesday’s attack drew condemnation from a number of international organizations including the United Nations and rights groups.
In a statement, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres called for “those responsible to be held accountable” and for the injured to be allowed medical treatment and access to assistance.
U.N. Human Rights Chief Volker Turk said he was “horrified” by the attack, noting reports that schoolchildren performing dances, as well as other civilians, were among the victims.
“Despite clear legal obligations for the military to protect civilians in the conduct of hostilities, there has been blatant disregard for the related rules of international law,” he said in a statement.
London-based Amnesty International’s Business and Human Rights Researcher Montse Ferrer said in a statement that Tuesday’s attack and other junta air raids “highlight the urgent need to suspend the import of aviation fuel” to Myanmar’s Air Force. “This supply chain fuels violations of international humanitarian law, including war crimes, and it must be disrupted in order to save lives,” he said.
Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for New York-based Human Rights Watch, told RFA that “there’s no justification for bombing a group of civilians.”
“You can’t just fly an airplane over a group of civilians and drop a bomb on them and say that because a few people may be militants that it was justified,” he said. “That is a clear violation of international humanitarian law, it’s a clear violation of the laws of war,” he added, calling for a thorough investigation of the incident and a ban on aviation fuel to the junta.
Zachary Abuza, a professor at the National War College in Washington and an adjunct at Georgetown University, condemned the air strike “another outrageous attack on a civilian population by a regime that is increasingly desperate to achieve its strategic goals.”
“The military’s doctrine of counter-insurgency is … based on terrorizing the population into submission — it is based on intentional targeting of civilians,” he said, adding that “air attacks are just part of that.”
“[Air strikes] are an acknowledgement that the military is just stretched so thin right now … They’re spread all over the country in this multi-front war and so they’re increasingly reliant on air attacks and long-range artillery because they simply cannot fight on the ground.”
Tuesday’s air strike came just one day after a junta jet fighter dropped bombs near a high school in Chin state’s Falam township, killing nine civilians and injuring four others, according to residents.
RFA News
Myanmar junta airstrikes kill dozens in attack on NUG ceremony
/in NewsMany of the victims were members of the public who were offered food as part of the ceremony, which also coincided with the start of Myanmar’s traditional New Year’s celebrations
As many as 80 people, including children, are feared dead following an air raid carried out by Myanmar’s military in Sagaing Region’s Kanbalu Township early Tuesday morning.
The attack took place at around 7:45am during a ceremony held to mark the opening of a People’s Administration Team office in Pa Zi Gyi, a village located about 45km southeast of the town of Kanbalu, according to local sources.
The office operates under the authority of Myanmar’s publicly mandated National Unity Government (NUG), which the country’s military junta has designated a terrorist organisation.
An officer of the Kanbalu District People Defence Force (PDF), which is also under the NUG, told Myanmar Now that the fighter jet and military helicopter involved in the attack directly targeted the gathering of around 150 people.
“The jet dropped two bombs right on the crowd. Then an Mi-35 helicopter came and opened fire on them, maiming and killing a large number of civilians,” the PDF officer said.
Women, children and the elderly made up a large percentage of those killed and injured, he added. Many were there to receive food offered as part of the ceremony, which also coincided with the start of Thingyan, the traditional Myanmar New Year.
Another Kanbalu PDF officer who examined the scene soon after the attack said that the exact number of victims could not yet be determined, as many of the bodies had been torn apart.
He said that around 30 elderly villagers were in the building where the ceremony was being held, while most of the children were nearby.
“A bomb fell right on top of the building, blasting away its roof and walls. Just a few feet away, there are parts of dead children scattered all over the bushes,” he added.
Photos of the incident published online by a local guerrilla group showed human body parts scattered amongst the wreckage of the NUG administrative building.
In one photo, a woman’s body can be seen with the entire bottom half blown away. In another, internal organs are spilling out of the charred remains of a man whose arms have also been torn off at the shoulders. Others show burnt-out motorcycles and trees blackened by fire.
In a statement released on Tuesday afternoon, the NUG’s Ministry of Defence condemned the junta’s latest attack, which it said resulted in “the loss of scores of innocent civilians” and injured many more, “including children and pregnant women.”
“This heinous act by the terrorist military is yet another example of their indiscriminate use of extreme force against innocent civilians, constituting a war crime,” the statement said.
“We strongly condemn all terrorist acts committed against the people of Myanmar, including today’s attack, and reiterate our commitment to ensuring justice for the victims,” it added.
Myanmar’s military has carried out numerous airstrikes since seizing power in a coup two years ago. Many have targeted villages, causing heavy civilian casualties and displacing hundreds of thousands around the country.
In October of last year, it carried out an air raid on the village of A Nang Pa in Kachin State’s Hpakant Township, killing dozens at a gathering held to mark the anniversary of the founding of the Kachin Independence Organisation.
More recently, junta airstrikes killed at least nine civilians in Chin State’s Falam Township on Monday, less than two weeks after a similar attack in the state’s Thantlang Township left the same number dead at the end of March.
UPDATE: There were unconfirmed reports that four more bombs were dropped on Pa Zi Gyi at around 6pm on Tuesday as the bodies of the victims of the initial attack were being cremated. According to the source of this information, more than 70 bodies, including those of 17 children, were cremated before the second round of attacks began.
Myanmar Now News
Sentenced to Death by the Junta
/in ND-Burma Members' ReportsAs of April 6, 2023, the junta has sentenced 151 other individuals to death, according to AAPP’s documentation. Notably, of the 34 pro-democracy supporters whose ages are known, 58.8 percent are individuals under 30 years old, showing the junta’s targeted use of the death penalty against youth actively opposing the military coup and supporting the pro-democracy movement in Burma.
Human Rights Situation weekly update (April 1 to 7, 2023)
/in HR Situation, NewsMilitary Junta troops launched an airstrike and dropped bombs in Sagaing Region, Magway Region, Kayin State, and Kachin State from April 1st to 7th. They burnt and killed 9 Civilians within a week. Thwaythoke, The Military’s backed militia killed a person from Chanmyathasi and 4 persons from Aungmyaythasan, Mandalay Region. 15 political prisoners were beaten and held in solitary confinement for 10 days at Thayawady prison in West Bago Region. Military Junta troops and their forces are still committing Human Right violations.
The military Junta troops extort money from the factories, workshops, and restaurants to celebrate the Thingyan Water Festival in Yangon Region. Also asked 2 villagers per village to work as securities and extort money to build the Thingyan Mandats (stage for celebrating the water festival) in Kawhmu township. The Military also arrested the youths who came out at night and blackmailed them in Taunggyi, Southern Shan State.
Infogram
Week of fierce fighting forces 50,000 to flee Kale township in Myanmar’s north
/in NewsJunta troops attacked 17 villages with ground troops, heavy artillery and airstrikes.
Heavy artillery began raining from the sky onto villages to the north of Kale township on March 30, touching off what would become a week of fierce fighting between junta troops and local armed opposition forces.
By the time the dust had settled on Wednesday, more than 50,000 residents of 17 villages had scattered, leaving a vast swathe of area on the outskirts of the bustling township in Myanmar’s Sagaing region eerily quiet and creating a humanitarian crisis in nearby population centers where many fled to seek shelter.
“They all had to flee to the town of Kalay – the number of refugees coming into town amounted up to about 30,000 in two days, according to our calculations,” an aid worker assisting the displaced told Radio Free Asia. The influx of refugees amounts to nearly a quarter of the town’s population of around 130,000.
“What they mainly need is mosquito nets, as there are a lot of mosquitoes in the summer. The weather is too hot, too. They need medicines and food such as rice, cooking oil and salt.”
Following the artillery barrage, junta troops from the junta’s Kale-based Kha-La-Ya (228) unit, backed by forces from the regional command headquarters, conducted village raids using ground troops while aircraft provided support.
A fighter jet and three military helicopters were deployed to attack a location near the village of Pyin Taw U on Monday evening alone, residents said.
An official with the anti-junta Kale People’s Defense Force paramilitary group told RFA that multiple buildings were destroyed during the week of raids.
“How the fighting broke out was that the junta forces first started firing heavy artillery on the villages in the north of Kale more than 40 times and then their ground troops [and air force] began to attack,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity citing security concerns.
“We haven’t been able to confirm the details of the casualties and property damage in the villages yet. A Christian church and several houses have been damaged,” he said. “The junta threw fire bombs into the villages [on Thursday]. Nyung Kone and Kyi Kone villages are still burning.”
The official said that two people from the Kale PDF had been captured by the junta, one was killed and three were injured in the fighting.
A spokesman for the Kale PDF claimed that 10 junta soldiers were killed and 20 were wounded over the course of the week, but RFA has not been able to independently confirm the numbers.
Early on Tuesday, fighting broke out between junta soldiers stationed at Kale University and the anti-junta Siyin region Civic Defense Militia, the militia said in a statement. One junta soldier was killed and CDM forces captured some military weapons, the group said.
Attempts by RFA to reach Aye Hlaing, the junta spokesman for Sagaing region, about the clashes went unanswered Friday.
‘Our village is burning’
A resident of one of the villages north of Kale, who also declined to be named, told RFA that most of the people displaced by the fighting are sheltering in the homes of relatives in town, churches and Bible schools, or in the jungle.
Other sources said that at least two civilians were killed by the military during the raids, while three others were injured by shelling and airstrikes.
Meanwhile, the junta troops have set up camp at a Buddhist monastery in Nyang Kone village, making it impossible to return to the area, a resident said.
“When the fighting paused, we returned home riding motorcycles to fetch our items of value, but once we heard them start back up, we had to flee again,” the Nyang Kone resident said.
“We can hear gunshots and artillery shelling from the town. I dare not go back to my village. Other villagers who fled to the nearby woods said that our village is burning.”
On Thursday, the anti-junta Kale Defense Force issued a warning to residents traveling to the north of the township that “a fight could break out at any time.”
Residents estimate that since Myanmar’s military seized power in a Feb. 1, 2021 coup d’etat, around 70,000 people – or 1 out of every 5 inhabitants – have fled fighting in Kale township.
RFA News