Weekly Update : 6 June -12 June 2022

The junta’s decision to move forward with the death penalty is inhumane and unlawful. Justice has been delayed and denied in #Myanmar. As more lives are lost to military violence, the urgency for the international community to respond becomes even greater. Weekly Update:

Guards deny female inmates drinking water after protest in Myanmar’s Insein Prison

The women said a fellow prisoner’s miscarriage was the result of guard negligence.

Authorities in Myanmar’s notorious Insein Prison have cut off the drinking water supply to the cells of female political prisoners who protested poor living conditions in the facility after a fellow inmate who was denied medical treatment suffered a miscarriage, sources said Friday.

Sources who visited the prison on the outskirts of Myanmar’s commercial capital Yangon told RFA Burmese that dozens of prisoners have been forced to drink from the toilet after the taps were turned off more than two weeks ago, leaving them with no other source of water.

“The authorities cut off the drinking water since the protest,” said one recent visitor, who spoke to RFA on condition of anonymity.

“They put 60-70 female prisoners in one prison hall. I was told that all of them are now forced to drink water from the toilet.”

The source said that some of the prisoners have contracted cholera and other diseases after drinking the unclean water.

Last month, a 24-year-old political prisoner at Insein named Cherry Bo Kyi Naing, who is serving a three-year prison sentence for “unlawful association,” suffered an early-term miscarriage after authorities delayed sending her to the hospital for treatment.

On May 23, the female political prisoners held a protest, claiming that Cherry Bo Kyi Naing’s miscarriage was avoidable and the result of negligence by the guards. Two days later, prison authorities shut down the protest and relocated all the female political prisoners to the single prison hall, before shutting off the water supply.

When asked by RFA for comment on the situation at Insein, Prison Department spokesperson Khin Shwe denied reports that the women had been cut off access to drinking water.

“In Insein prison, we provide adequate water supplies for both drinking and hygiene,” he said.

“We don’t give such punishments for incidents that occur in the prison. We have no such thing.”

Attempts by RFA to reach the International Committee of the Red Cross in Bangkok, Thailand, went unanswered Friday. The Bangkok-based Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) told RFA it is still making inquiries into the protest at Insein and the response by authorities and was unable to comment.

Kaythi Aye, a former political prisoner in Myanmar who now lives in Norway, told RFA that female prisoners require better hygiene conditions than their male counterparts, and access to clean water is crucial.

“Prisoners are in serious trouble when they don’t have access to clean water, especially during the monsoon season, when mosquitos proliferate and people suffer skin conditions,” she said.

“Wet conditions cause disease to spread further. It’s inhumane to cut off clean water for the female prisoners.”

According to the AAPP, security forces have arrested more than 11,000 civilians in Myanmar since the military seized power in a Feb. 1, 2021 coup. There are nearly 1,200 female prisoners across the country, around 200 of which are held in Insein Prison.

Translated by Ye Kaung Myint Maung for RFA Burmese. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

RFA News

Political prisoners shot, beaten to death in Mandalay, Hpa-an crackdowns

Recent incidents inside some of Myanmar’s most notorious prisons point to harsher repression and deepening tensions

Two of Myanmar’s most notorious detention centres carried out brutal crackdowns on political prisoners over the past week, signalling the junta’s determination to impose harsh penalties on detained dissidents.

On Sunday, two political prisoners were beaten to death and 13 others were injured during a clash inside Mandalay’s Obo Prison, according to a lawyer familiar with the situation.

A day later, at least two political detainees were shot and another 60 were injured after prison authorities moved to crush a protest at Hpa-An Prison in Karen (Kayin) State, sources there reported.

Both incidents appear to be related to moves by prison authorities to mix political prisoners with ordinary prisoners convicted on criminal charges.

This was more clearly the case in Hpa-An, where political prisoners staged a sitting protest after they were ordered to leave a ward normally reserved for inmates whose charges are related to their political activities.

According to prison sources, the prisoners were forcibly moved to another ward and attacked with sharpened bamboo sticks and slingshots if they failed to follow orders.

Gunshots were also heard coming from the direction of cells holding political prisoners, but it could not be confirmed at the time of reporting whether any of them had been shot.

What triggered the crackdown at Obo Prison was less clear, but the approach taken by prison authorities there was equally heavy-handed.

“We don’t know how it started, but we do know that prison authorities, including the prison superintendent, beat the political prisoners using metal batons,” said a lawyer with contacts inside the prison.

According to the lawyer, two prisoners were confirmed dead,  and 13 others were sent to the prison hospital to receive treatment for their injuries.

Other sources have told Myanmar Now that political detainees are routinely harassed at Obo. This includes claims of officials firing guns to terrorise the prisoners.

There have also reportedly been tensions between political prisoners and criminal convicts, with prison authorities siding with the latter in disputes. 

A friend of one inmate said that there were also other serious issues contributing to the tense situation at the prison, including  unclean drinking water and a lack of healthcare.
Hpa-An_prison.jpeg

Hpa-An prison in Karen State (Karen Information Center)

Hpa-An prison in Karen State (Karen Information Center)

Crowded prisons

Tensions have been high at many prisons in Myanmar, in part due to overcrowding caused by the massive influx of political prisoners into the country’s penal system since last year’s coup.

According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), nearly 11,000 people regime opponents remain behind bars more than a year after the military takeover.

Some of the political prisoners currently being held at Obo Prison were transferred there two months ago following a riot at Monywa Prison. Guards reportedly discharged their weapons to end a fight that had broken out there between political detainees and criminal convicts on April 3.

At least 20 of the political prisoners involved in that incident were placed in isolation cells, while 150 were transferred to Obo and Myingyan prisons, sources reported.

According to one source at the prison, inmates incarcerated for resisting the return of military rule make up more than half of Monywa Prison’s roughly 900 detainees.

On June 1, there was another incident there involving two female prisoners who were slapped by a warder for arguing with each other. Other prisoners were not happy about the way the situation was handled, a prison source said. 

There have also been complaints from female prisoners about restrictions related to taking showers and the presence of male officers during searches of the female ward.

The prison’s new superintendent, Wai Min Latt, has also been criticised for his policies. On May 23, he imposed a new rule against reading after 9pm, and he has also been accused of “terrorising” prisoners.

According to one inmate, officers from the military’s Northwestern Regional Command, based in Monywa, visited the prison in late May to meet with convicted murderers.  

This could not be confirmed, and the reason for the alleged visit could not be ascertained.

Restricted access

There were also signs of trouble at Insein Prison in April. In the third week of the month, more than 100 political prisoners, including student leaders, were transferred to detention centres in other parts of the country, according to prison sources.

The reason for this move was not clear, but it came weeks after Khant Thu Aung, the chair of the Yangon University of Economics Students’ Union, was beaten for refusing to sit in position after he was transferred to a ward for criminals.

Khant Thu Aung, who was sentenced in February to three years in prison for incitement, was also denied permission to receive letters, according to a relative.

Lawyers claim that nearly 90 prisoners were beaten—some to the point of unconsciousness—for refusing to leave their cells and singing an anti-dictatorship song

In July of last year, the military was called in to crush a protest at Insein Prison after inmates began chanting anti-dictatorship slogans. According to AAPP, the protest began in two wards for female prisoners and then spread to the rest of the prison.

Days later, in an effort to curb the spread of Covid-19, the junta released more than 4,200 inmates from prisons around the country. Almost none, however, were political prisoners.

In December, around 90 political prisoners inside Insein Prison were beaten and placed in solitary confinement for taking part in a nationwide Silent Strike by refusing to leave their cells, according to their lawyers.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which monitors prison conditions around the world, has come under fire for its lack of an effective response to the situation in Myanmar.

The sister of one injured inmate being held in Hpa-An Prison said that she has called the ICRC office in Yangon repeatedly, but has yet to receive any information about her brother.

“They said we had to visit their office in person, and we did exactly that, but we still don’t know anything,” she said.

Jacequeline Fernandez, the communications manager for ICRC Myanmar, said that the organisation has been hampered in its efforts to gain access to prisons due to restrictions that have been in place since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“Unfortunately, we are unable to monitor the situation of the prisoners and provide humanitarian aid for them as we are not allowed to visit the prisons in person,” she said.

“ICRC can, however, help the prisoners find their relatives according to the policies of the ICRC’s programs,” she added.

Myanmar Now News

Myanmar junta’s plan to execute political leaders greeted with outrage and warnings

Executing veteran activist Ko Jimmy and NLD MP Phyo Zayar Thaw will only add fuel to the fire already engulfing the country, say regime opponents

The Myanmar regime’s announcement on Friday that it will go ahead with the execution of two prominent leaders accused of treason and terrorism was greeted over the weekend by a loud chorus of condemnation.

At a press conference on Friday, junta spokesperson General Zaw Min Tun said that appeals against the death sentences imposed on Ko Jimmy, a veteran of the 1988 pro-democracy uprising, and Phyo Zayar Thaw, a hip-hop artist and National League for Democracy (NLD) MP, had been rejected, paving the way for their execution.

The two men, who were sentenced to death in January for allegedly plotting to carry out attacks on regime targets, have been in military custody since their capture late last year. Two other men, Hla Myo Aung and Aung Thura Zaw, are also set to face execution for murdering military informants, Zaw Min Tun told reporters.

The announcement came as a surprise in a country where it has been decades since a death-row prisoner has actually been put to death.

In a joint statement signed by nearly 200 civil society organisations, Norway-based legal analyst Min Lwin Oo noted that the haste with which the appeals were rejected was “unprecedented”.

“Normally, the appeals process for death sentence takes up to three to five years through different courts and at least four to five years to go through state leaders. Such a fast-track process is unprecedented,” he was quoted as saying in the statement, which was releasedby the umbrella group Progressive Voice of Myanmar.

According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), one of the signatories of the statement, a total of 114 political prisoners, including two minors, have been handed death sentences by the regime.

Kyi Myint, another legal expert who is also a well-known political analyst, told Myanmar Now that the move would likely ignite a major backlash against the regime.

“There will be unimaginably big repercussions and serious acts of revenge,” he said. “They will be even more hated by the public.”

He also pointed out that because last year’s military coup violated Myanmar’s 2008 constitution, the current head of the regime, Senior-General Min Aung Hlaing, could also be accused of committing treason. 

“This is all the more heartbreaking because the real traitors of the country are planning to execute innocent people for treachery,” he said.

Myanmar’s shadow National Unity Government (NUG) also warned that executing two of the country’s best-known political dissidents would only provoke outrage among activists and ordinary citizens alike.

“If they actually go ahead and hang them, the military will face even greater resistance. They need to understand that the more they try to instil fear in Myanmar’s people, the stronger the people’s movement becomes,” said Aung Myo Min, the NUG’s minister for human rights.

On Saturday, the Myanmar Defence Force, an armed resistance group based in Sagaing region, echoed this sentiment with a statement warning that it would take “appropriate action” if the executions are carried out.

‘They want people to be scared of them and bow to them’, one lawyer says of the recent announcement that 19 people have been sentence to death 

There was also widespread international condemnation of the move. 

At a press briefing on Friday, Stéphane Dujarric, the spokesperson for United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, called the planned executions a “blatant violation to the right to life, liberty and security of person, as per Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”

Saying the UN chief was “deeply troubled” by the news, Dujarric also reiterated his calls for “the immediate release of all political prisoners in Myanmar.”

According to AAPP figures, 10,903 people arrested since last year’s coup remain behind bars.

France’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also weighed in on what it called the regime’s “abject decision” to reinstitute the execution of convicted prisoners.

“The violation of the de facto moratorium regarding the death sentence that has existed for more than 30 years in the country represents a major setback,” it said in a statement released on Saturday.

Meanwhile, on Monday, US State Department spokesperson Ned Price tweeted that “The United States strongly condemns the Burmese military regime’s reported plans to execute pro-democracy and opposition leaders, exemplifying the regime’s disregard for human rights and the rule of law.”

Ko Jimmy and Phyo Zayar Thaw were both found guilty by junta-controlled courts of violating sections 49a, 50i and 50j of Myanmar’s Counterterrorism Law. The regime claims they were in possession of weapons at the time of their arrest and had also instructed others to carry out acts of terrorism.

The junta stepped up its use of the death penalty last year as part of its effort to crack down on anti-coup protests. However, judicial executions have rarely been carried out during Myanmar’s decades of military rule.

Myanmar Now News

Press Release: Regarding Stated Execution of 4 Sentenced to Death Political Prisoners

June 6, 2022

            On June 3, 2021, the junta council announced they intend to carry out the execution of death row detainees Jimmy (aka Kyaw Min Yu), Phyo Zayar Thaw, Hla Myo Aung and Aung Thura Zaw, heretofore given by military courts. Though announced, information regarding the status of the military court, location of the trials, and specific information on the nature of the trial, were not given to family members of each of the condemned political prisoners. The junta council has been destroying every facet of the judicial system in Burma.

Since the beginning of the coup, the junta council has been killing people across the country, burning towns and villages, as well as looting and stealing belongings of the people every day. The council’s statement on the execution of the political prisoners violates domestic, and international law, and is a blatant attempt to audaciously murder.

The execution announcement openly mocked the worlds’ efforts to abolish capital punishment. This calculated act uses political prisoners as hostage, to threaten a population resisting the military coup. As well as to bargain with international actors, who put pressure on the junta council to return democracy to Burma. The UN and others in the international community bare responsibility to help prevent the use of hostages in unjustified executions.

In accordance with our organizations belief that there can only be a true national reconciliation when there are no incarcerated political prisoners, we see the recent statement as a junta attempt to challenge and destroy future national reconciliation, including the stability of our country.

A junta council working to carry out an execution like this, is an unforgiveable act, and clear proof of utter disregard for the will of the international community who wish to return Burma to democracy, as well as to ASEAN who wish to resolve the issue through the 5-Point Consensus.

Therefore, we, the Assistance Association of Political Prisoners (AAPP), strongly urge all at the UN, ASEAN and other international actors to take a stand and put political pressure to halt the announced executions.

Assistance Association of Political Prisoners

Download link for 06.06 AAPP Release on Recent Death Penalty Statements

INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY AND CONCERNED ORGANIZATIONS CALL FOR ENDING 4 BURMESE ACTIVISTS EXECUTIONS

Myanmar’s junta has stated that it will execute a former lawmaker from Aung San Suu Kyi’s party, a prominent democracy activist and two civil society members in the country’s first judicial executions in the last few decades.

A military panel sentenced four people, including former National League for Democracy (NLD) Member of Parliament Phyo Zeya Thaw and democracy activist Kyaw Min Yu, better known as Ko Jimmy, for alleged “terrorism” while Hla Myo Aung and Aung Thura Zaw are the other two who faced death sentenced earlier.

The four men did not receive a fair trial. “First of all, it’s not a fair trial because they lost their legal rights to defend at the military tribunal. They also lost their rights to legal counsel during the appeal process,” said Min Lwin Oo, a Myanmar legal expert based in Norway, adding that “Normally, the appeals process for death sentence takes up to three to five years through different courts and takes at least four to five years to go through state leaders. But such a fast-track process is unprecedented.”

“Two other men, who were convicted and sentenced to death for killing a woman they alleged was an informer for the junta in Yangon, will also be executed”, said Zaw Min Tun, adding that no date had been set for the executions.

If the executions go ahead, Phyo Zeya Thaw, Ko Jimmy, Hla Myo Aung and Aung Thura Zaw will be the first political dissidents to be executed in the country in the last few decades.

Since last year’s coup, the military regime has handed down death sentences to 113 people for their roles in the armed resistance to the junta, according to VOA’s Burmese Service, but none of these sentences have been carried out.

The junta’s decision to “move towards executing two prominent political leaders will be like pouring gasoline on the fire of popular anti-military resistance in the country,” said Phil Robertson, a deputy director of U.S.-based Human Rights Watch.

At the United Nations on Friday, spokesman Stephane Dujarric said: “We are deeply troubled by the Myanmar military’s decision to proceed with the execution of two pro-democracy activists after they received death sentences. This is a blatant violation of the right to life, liberty, and security of person as per Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”

The junta accused Phyo Zeya Thaw of orchestrating several attacks on regime forces, including a gun attack on a commuter train in Yangon in August that killed five police officers.

A hip-hop pioneer whose subversive rhymes irked the previous junta, he was jailed in 2008 for founding an anti-junta youth activist organization and his leading role in Saffron Revolution, an anti- junta movement led by Buddhist monks. He was elected to parliament in the 2015 elections, which ushered in a transition to civilian rule.

Ko Jimmy, who rose to prominence during Myanmar’s 1988 student uprising against the country’s previous military regime, was arrested in October 2021. The arrest was based on an arrest warrant alleging he had incited unrest with his social media posts.

Nearly 16 months after the military launched its nationwide campaign of violence and terror in an attempt to illegally seize power, the military has killed over 2,000 people, including women and children and detained over 12,000.

Having so far failed to impose its rule over the territory and population, the military continues to intensify its cruel and brutal attacks against the people of Myanmar with indiscriminate airstrikes, shelling, massacres, burning down of villages, torture, and sexual and gender-based violence. In addition, the military continues to manipulate for military gain, impede or block humanitarian aid to over 880,000 displaced people across the country while attacking medical facilities and medical and humanitarian workers.

Despite the brutal violence, the Myanmar people have continued to resist the military, steadfastly demonstrating their courageous will and defense of their democracy.

Over 400,000 civil servants who have joined the Civil Disobedience Movement refuse to work under the military, while others carry out general strikes and street protests. Boycott of military products and refusal to pay electricity bills continues and self-defense forces and formation of new autonomous local administrations alongside the existing parallel administrations in ethnic areas mar the military’s desperate attempts to assert administrative and territorial control.

We, the following organizations and world citizens condemn the order of execution and call for Phyo Zeya Thaw, Ko Jimmy, Hla Myo Aung and Aung Thura Zaw be given JUSTICE and respect before the law. We also call for the immediate release of all political prisoners, end of violence and for establishment of GENUINE PEACE and FEDERAL DEMOCRACY in Myanmar.

  1. Action Against Myanmar Military Coup (Sydney)
  2. Action Committee for Democracy Development (ACDD)
  3. Ah Nah Podcast- Conversation with Myanmar
  4. All Burma Democratic Face in New Zealand
  5. All Burma Student Democratic Front – Australia Branch
  6. All Young Burmese League (AYBL)
  7. Alliance for FREE Burma Solidarity
  8. Alternative Solutions for Rural Communities (ASORCOM)
  9. ALTSEAN-Burma
  10. Anti-Myanmar Dictatorship Movement
  11. Anti-Myanmar Military Dictatorship Network (AMMDN)
  12. Asia Pacific Solidarity Coalition
  13. Asian Cultural Forum on Development (ACFOD)
  14. Assistance Association for Political Prisoners
  15. Association of Human Rights Defenders and Promoters
  16. Athan – Freedom of Expression Activist Organization
  17. Auckland Kachin Community (New Zealand)
  18. Auckland Zomi Community (New Zealand)
  19. Australia Burma Friendship Association, Northern Territory
  20. Australia Karen Organization WA Inc.
  21. Australia Myanmar Doctors, Nurses and Friends
  22. Australia Myanmar Institute (AMI)
  23. Australia Myanmar Youth Alliance (AMYA)
  24. Australian Burmese Muslim Organisation
  25. Australian Chin Community (Eastern Melbourne Inc)
  26. Australian Karen Organisation (AKO)
  27. Bamar Community Tasmania
  28. Blood Money Campaign
  29. Burma Action Ireland
  30. Burma Campaign UK
  31. Burma Human Rights Network
  32. Burma Lawyers’ Council (BLC)
  33. Burman Suomalaiset (Finland)
  34. Burmese Community
  35. Burmese Community Development Collaboration (BCDC)
  36. Burmese Community Group (Manawatu, NZ)
  37. Burmese Community Support Group (BCSG)
  38. Burmese Friendship Association
  39. Burmese Medical Association Australia (BMAA)
  40. Burmese Rohingya Welfare Organisation – New Zealand
  41. Burmese Women’s Union
  42. Campaign for Popular Democracy (CPD), Thailand
  43. Canberra Karen Association
  44. Central European Institute of Asian Studies
  45. Chin Community of Western Australia Inc.
  46. Chin Community of Auckland
  47. Chin Community SA
  48. Chin Community Tasmania
  49. Chin Human Rights Organization (CHRO)
  50. Chin Youth Organization
  51. Community Resource Center (CRC)
  52. Cross Cultural Foundation (CrCF)
  53. CRPH & NUG Supporters Ireland
  54. CRPH Funding Ireland
  55. CRPH Support Group, Norway
  56. CRPH/NUG Support Group Australia
  57. Democracy for Burma
  58. Democracy for Myanmar – Working Group (NZ)
  59. Democracy, Peace and Women’s Organization
  60. Educational Initiatives
  61. Equality Myanmar
  62. ETOs Watch Coalition (ETO = Extra Territorial Obligations)
  63. European Karen Network (EKN)
  64. Falam Community
  65. Federal Myanmar Benevolence Group (NZ)
  66. FEDEVI Argentina
  67. Future Light Center
  68. Future Thanlwin
  69. German Solidarity with Myanmar Democracy eV
  70. Global Myanmar Spring Revolution
  71. Grass-root People
  72. Human Rights Alert, Manipur
  73. Human Rights and Development Foundation (HRDF)
  74. Human Rights Educators Network
  75. Human Rights Foundation of Monland
  76. Human Rights Lawyers Association (HRLA)
  77. Industrial Training Centre (ITC) Family Sydney
  78. Info Birmanie
  79. Initiatives for International Dialogue (IID)
  80. Interfaith Youth Coalition on Aids in Myanmar (IYCA-Myanmar)
  81. International Alliance of Inhabitants, Tunisia
  82. Isaan Land Reform Network (ILRN)
  83. Joint Action Committee for Democracy in Burma (JACDB)
  84. Justice 4 Myanmar – Hope & Development
  85. Justice For Myanmar
  86. Kachin Association Australia
  87. Kachin Association of Australia WA Inc.
  88. Karen Community
  89. Karen Human Rights Group
  90. Karen Swedish Community (KSC)
  91. Karen Women’s Organization
  92. Karenni Civil Society Network
  93. Karenni Federation of Australia
  94. Karenni National Women’s Organization
  95. Karenni/Kayah Community
  96. Karenni Society New Zealand
  97. Kayan Internally Displacement Supervising Committee (KIDSC)
  98. Kayan Women’s Organization
  99. Kayin Community Tasmania
  100. Keng Tung Youth
  101. Korea Democracy Foundation
  102. Let’s Help Each Other
  103. Loka Ahlinn
  104. Matu Chin Community
  105. Mekong Butterfly
  106. Metta Campaign Mandalay
  107. Mindat Chin Community NSW
  108. Mindat Community
  109. Mizo Community
  110. Mon Families Group
  111. Mon National Council
  112. Montfort Social Institute
  113. Muslim Youth Network
  114. Myanmar Buddhist Community of South Australia
  115. Myanmar Community Coffs Harbour (MCC)
  116. Myanmar Democracy and Peace Committee (Australia)
  117. Myanmar Democratic Force in Denmark
  118. Myanmar Democratic Movement (MDM)
  119. Myanmar Diaspora Group (Finland)
  120. Myanmar Engineers – New Zealand
  121. Myanmar Engineering Association of Australia (MEAA)
  122. Myanmar Gonye (New Zealand)
  123. Myanmar People Alliance (Shan State)
  124. Myanmar People from Ireland
  125. Myanmar People Residing in Canberra
  126. Myanmar Professionals Association Australia (MPAA)
  127. Myanmar Students’ Association Australia (MSAA)
  128. Myanmar Students’ Union in New Zealand
  129. Netherlands – Myanmar Solidarity Platform
  130. Network for Human Rights Documentation Burma (ND-Burma)
  131. New Zealand Doctors for NUG
  132. New Zealand Karen Association
  133. New Zealand Zo Community Inc.
  134. NLD Solidarity Association (Australia)
  135. Non-binary Thailand
  136. Olive Organization
  137. Overseas Mon Association. New Zealand
  138. Peace and Culture Foundation
  139. Peace and Human Rights Resource Center (PHRC)
  140. Pa-O Women’s Union
  141. Perth Myanmar Youth Network
  142. Progressive Voice
  143. Pro Rights Foundation
  144. Patriotic War Veterans of Burma (PWVB)
  145. Pridi Banomyong Institute
  146. Pyithu Gonye (New Zealand)
  147. Queensland Kachin Community (QKC)
  148. Queensland Myanmar Youth Collective (QMYC)
  149. Queensland Rohingya Community
  150. Red Campaign Nirvana Exhortation Group
  151. Remonya Association of WA (Mon Community)
  152. EUMPUN Tjoet Njak Dien Yogyakaya – Indonesia
  153. Rvwang Community Association New Zealand
  154. Save and Care Organization for Ethnic Women at Border Areas
  155. Save Myanmar Fundraising Group (New Zealand)
  156. SEA Junction
  157. Shan Community (New Zealand)
  158. Shan MATA
  159. Shape-sea
  160. Shwe Youth Democratic Alliance (SYDA)
  161. Sitt Nyein Pann Foundation
  162. Southcare Medical Centre
  163. Southern Youth Development Organization
  164. Spirit in Education Movement (SEM)
  165. Support for Myanmar
  166. Swedish Burma Committee
  167. Sydney Friends for Myanmar Unity
  168. Synergy – Social Harmony Organization
  169. Ta’ang Legal Aid
  170. Tanintharyi MATA
  171. Thai Action Committee for Democracy in Burma (TACDB)
  172. Thai Working Group for an ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism
  173. The Civil Coalition for Human Rights
  174. The Institution of Professional Engineers Myanmar
  175. The Rotary Peace Center at Chulalongkorn University
  176. The Tunisia Human Rights League (THRL)
  177. Thint Myat Lo Thu Myar Organization
  178. Union Aid Abroad-APHEDA
  179. Union for Civil Liberty (UCL)
  180. United Myanmar Community of South Australia
  181. Uniting Church in Australia, Synod of Victoria and Tasmania
  182. US Campaign for Burma (USCB)
  183. Victorian Burmese Care Community (VBCC)
  184. Victorian Myanmar Youth
  185. We Fair
  186. WeMove
  187. We Pledge CDM (Australia)
  188. Western Australia Myanmar Democratic Network
  189. Women Activists Myanmar (WAM)
  190. Women Alliance Burma
  191. Women Peace Network
  192. Women’s League of Burma
  193. Yadanar Foundation
  194. Zo Community
  195. Zomi Association Australia Inc.
  196. Zomi Community Queensland
  197. Zomi Community South Australia
  198. Young People for Social Democracy Movement (YPD), Thailand
  199. 8888 Generation (New Zealand)

6 June 2022

Contact person:
Dr. Laddawan Tantivitayapitak    <drjobladdawan@gmail.com>
Boonthan T. Verawongse             <bverawongse9@gmail.com>
or                                                     <acfod.bangkok@gmail.com>