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.
Recent Posts
- Successfully Conducted a Workshop on Nepal’s Transitional Justice (TJ) with Experts from Nepal.
- East Timor war crimes case against Min Aung Hlaing reaches next stage
- War Crimes Case Against Myanmar Dictator Moves Forward in Timor-Leste
- Open letter from Myanmar, regional and international civil society organizations to ASEAN to End Myanmar Military’s Violence, Advance Accountability and Operationalize Cross-border Humanitarian Aid
- Press Release – Rights-Based Reform: ASEAN Five Years on from the 5-Point Consensus


Fifteen killed in regime airstrike on Magway’s Saw Township
/in NewsResidents in Magway Region’s Saw Township said that at least 15 civilians, including children and a monk, were killed and 27 others were injured in an airstrike carried out by the military on a monastery in Ahkyipanpalun village of Kyauktu town on Thursday.
“The monastery was engulfed in flames. They unleashed a barrage of 500-pound explosives and incendiary bombs. The number of injured remains uncertain as patients have been transported to various hospitals. Efforts are underway to find those unaccounted for,” an Ahkyipanpalun resident told DVB.
Rescue workers recovered the bodies of the victims following the airstrike. The injured are reportedly suffering from severe burns. Witnesses stated that the attack occurred on May 9 – the same day that the People’s Defense Force (PDF), public administration officials, and residents held a meeting at the monastery.
Neither the military regime nor the PDF have made public statements about the airstrike on the monastery in Ahkipanpalun village. An airstrike on Pazigyi village of Kanbalu Township, Sagaing Region, during a local administration meeting killed over 160 people on April 11, 2023. The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners has documented at least 4,981 people killed by pro-military forces since the 2021 coup.
DVB News
Human Rights Situation weekly update (May 1 to 7, 2024)
/in HR Situation, NewsHuman Rights Violations took place in States and Regions from May 1 to 7, 2024
Military Junta Troop launched airstrikes and dropped bombs in the Sagaing Region, Magway Region, Tanintharyi Region, Bago Region, Kachin State, and Rakhine State from May 1st to 7th. The Military Junta prohibited and blocked working permission in foreign countries on May 1st. The Military’s Pyusawhtee troop killed and wasted 4 civilians in Bago Region. Men were arrested for the Military Service in the Sagaing Region and Magway Region
7 civilians died and over 50 were arrested by the arresting and killing of Military Junta within a week. A civilian died and 2 were injured by the land mines of the Military Junta Troop.
Infogram
‘Apocalypse’: Myanmar Doctor Describes Deadly Junta Airstrike on Mindat Hospital
/in News“Apocalypse” is how a doctor has described the scene when Myanmar junta fighter jets used four 500lb bombs to destroy a hospital in Chin State’s Mindat Township on April 25, killing five patients and injuring 15 others.
Dr. Shao* was among anti-regime medics who helped run Wun Ma Thuu Hospital, which provided free treatment to civilians injured in junta attacks.
Residents of Mindat and neighboring Chin State townships, as well as nearby areas of Magwe and Sagaing regions, relied on the hospital before it was targeted by the junta.
Fighter jets intentionally bombed the hospital despite an absence of clashes in the township. Three days after the first airstrike, warplanes returned to bomb the hospital’s remaining buildings on April 28.
Intentionally attacking medical services during conflict is considered a war crime under international humanitarian law. A total of 343 hospitals and clinics have been destroyed in junta attacks, killing 104 health workers, according to an April 28 statement issued by the parallel civilian National Unity Government.
Dr. Shao formerly worked at Mandalay Public Hospital in the country’s second city but joined the CDM (civil disobedience movement) two days after the military ousted the elected civilian government on Feb. 1, 2021. Fleeing an arrest warrant issued because he refused to work for the junta, he took up his post at Wun Ma Thuu Hospital on Aug. 6, 2021.
On April 25, he was settling down after a routine day in the operating theater.
“That day, 25.04.2024, started like any other day. We performed surgery on a patient at 4.30 pm and finished the operation around 6 pm. After the surgery, my colleague and I walked back to our place which was a block away from the hospital down the hill. I was supposed to attend an online class, but I didn’t. I cooked our traditional fish-based rice noodle soup for tomorrow’s breakfast for all of us. Then I went to my room and watched a YouTube video to be relaxed.”
He describes what happened next as “version two of the apocalypse”.
“I was chatting with my colleagues at about 7.50 pm when I heard a noise that I suddenly realized came from a jet fighter or a helicopter. Before I could warn my friends that we might be under air attack, a loud blast and red flash knocked me to the floor and the ceiling began to cave in. It was an airstrike for sure and my impulse was to run to the bomb shelter.”
However, he remembered that the military often strafes people with machine-gun fire after an airstrike.
“So I continued to crouch down in the room. As expected, I heard the sound of a machine gun being fired.
“After about a minute, I ran to the bomb shelter and yelled for everyone to get in. Two minutes after I got inside, the second bomb detonated. This time it was closer, shaking the ground so that the edges of the bomb shelter started to fall. We later found out that the blasts were so intense because they came from two bombs being dropped twice.”
The impact also caused oil barrels to explode, which started a fire.
“I was in a frenzy and I didn’t know what to do. Our house was on fire and we couldn’t retrieve any belongings from the blaze.”
Once the bombing raid was over, Dr. Shao and his colleagues rushed out to check the damage.
“We went to the hospital and found everything destroyed: the ceiling had collapsed, the floors were strewn with broken glass, and the building was on fire. We salvaged what we could from the operating theater, including instruments, medicines, and other stuff that was still in good condition. We tried to carry out as much stuff we could, but the fire became so strong that we had to give up at around 11.30 pm.”
Hospital staff also raced to save bedridden patients from the flames and smoke that were engulfing the wards.
“We wrapped immobile patients in soaking blankets and carried them out of the burning hospital.
My friend, nurses and I checked the patients to see who needed urgent medical attention.
The stable patients were then sent to houses in the village. We also transformed a village house into a makeshift hospital and temporary operating theater.”
Two patients were killed immediately in the bombing while another three succumbed to their injuries in the following days. Over 30 more were injured, 14 when the hospital ceiling collapsed from the blast impact.
“I was simultaneously furious and grief-stricken that patients who had come to be treated for their injuries had suffered worse injuries and even death here due to the inhumane action of intentionally dropping bombs on the hospital.”
Having rescued patients and equipment from the burning hospital, Dr, Shao and his team now had another urgent task at hand: saving the lives of people caught in the bombing.
“At 5.30 am, we needed to operate on a patient who had a stick penetrating his abdomen at the civilian house in the village. We had to arrange a row of chairs to form a makeshift operating table.”
An hour later, exhausted after completing the operation successfully, he was lying down for a nap when the warning of another air raid sounded. He rushed to the bomb shelter but only managed to get an hour’s rest due to the crowded conditions.
“Throughout the whole day, we were in and out of the bomb shelter due to a jet fighter and military airplane hovering above our heads.”
After undergoing surgery in the makeshift hospital, patients were sent back to houses in the village.
The next day, patients who could be moved were evacuated to neighboring villages over concern of more bombing raids.
“I didn’t have time to cry because I was shaking with fear,” Dr. Shao said. “That’s why I describe what I experienced on that day as a second apocalypse.”
Dr. Shao is a pseudonym used at the request of the doctor concerned for his security.
Irrawaddy News
What is Transitional Justice (Cartoon Animation)
/in Cartoon Animation“အသွင်ကူးပြောင်းရေးဆိုင်ရာတရားမျှတမှုဆိုတာ (What is Transitional Justice) ” ကို ND-Burma မှ Animation အနေဖြင့် ယနေ့ ထုတ်ပြန်လိုက်သည်။
အသွင်ကူးပြောင်းရေးဆိုင်ရာတရားမျှတမှုဆိုတာ (What is Transitional Justice)-
အာဏာရှင်စနစ်မှ ဒီမိုကရေစီသို့ ကူးပြောင်းရာ တွင်လည်းကောင်း၊ ပြည်တွင်းစစ်ပဋိပက္ခများချုပ်ငြိမ်း၍ ငြိမ်းချမ်းရေး ဖြစ်စဉ်သို့ကူးပြောင်းရာတွင်လည်းကောင်း၊ ခွဲခြားဖိနှိပ်သည့် စနစ်မှ ခွဲခြားမှုကင်းမဲ့ပြီး ဒီမိုကရေစီနှင့် လူ့အခွင့်အရေး ရှိသည့် စနစ်သို့ကူးပြောင်းရာတွင် လည်းကောင်း အတိတ်ကာလတွင် နေရာအနှံ့ စနစ်တကျ ရည်ရွယ်ချက်ရှိရှိကျူးလွန်းခဲ့သော လူ့အခွင့်အရေး ချိုးဖောက်မှု ဖြစ်စဉ်များအား ပြန်လည်ဖော်ထုတ်
မှတ်တမ်းတင်ပြီး ထိခိုက်နစ်နာ ခံစားခဲ့ရသူများအတွက် တရားမျှတမှု ရရှိအောင်ကိုင်တွယ်ဖြေရှင်းသည့် လုပ်ငန်းစဉ်ဖြစ်သည်။
အဓိက ရည်ရွယ်ချက်မှာ – လူ့အခွင့်အရေးချိုးဖောက်မှုများအတွက် –
အမှန်တရားပေါ်ပေါက်ရေး(Truth)၊ တရားမျှတမှုဖော်ဆောင်ရေး (Justice)၊ ဂုဏ်သိက္ခာမြှင့်တင်ရေး Dignity၊ ပြန်လည်ကုစားပေးလျော်ရေး (Reparation)၊ ပြစ်ဒဏ်ပေးခံရခြင်းမှကင်းလွတ်နေသည့် ဓလေ့အား ဆန့်ကျင်တိုက်ဖျက်ရေး နှင့် နောက်နောင်တွင်ထပ်မံမဖြစ်ပေါ်ရေး အတွက် ရည်ရွယ် ဆောင်ရွက်ပါသည်။
အသွင်ကူးပြောင်းရေးဆိုင်ရာလုပ်ငန်းစဉ်များအနေဖြင့် – ပြစ်မှုကျူးလွန်သူများကို တရားစွဲဆိုအပြစ်ပေးရေးလုပ်ငန်းစဉ် (Justice)၊ လူ့အခွင့်အရေး ချိုးဖောက်မှုများ ကိုစုံစမ်းဖော်ထုတ်၍အမှန်တရားပေါ်ပေါက်ရေး လုပ်ငန်းစဉ် (Truth)၊ နစ်နာသူများအား ပြန်လည်ကုစားပေးလျှော်ရေးနှင့် ဂုဏ်ပြုပေးခြင်း လုပ်ငန်းစဉ် (Reparation) နှင့် နောက်နောင်ထပ်မံ
မဖြစ်ပွားစေရေးအတွက် အာမခံရန် အခြေခံဥပဒေအပါအဝင် ဥပဒေများ၊
အဖွဲ့အစည်းများအား ပြင်ဆင် ပြောင်းလဲခြင်း (Institution Reform) လုပ်ငန်းတို့အားဆောင်ရွက်ကြသည်။
Human Rights Situation weekly update (April 22 to 30, 2024)
/in HR Situation, NewsHuman Rights Violations took place in States and Regions from April 22 to 30, 2024
Military Junta Troop launched airstrikes and dropped bombs in the Sagaing Region, Bago Region, Magway Region, Kachin State, Kayin State, Rakhine State, Chin State, and Mon State from April 22nd to 30th. Military Junta Troop committed to arresting the civilians and blackmailing the 2nd batch of Military Service in the Yangon Region, Mandalay Region, Magway Region, and Ayeyarwady Region. Military Junta arrested and used the local civilians as human shields in Magway Region, Kachin State, and Rakhine State.
Over 20 civilians died, and over 70 were injured by the Military’s heavy and light artillery attacks within a week. 4 underaged children died, and 7 were injured when the Military Junta committed abuses.
Infogram
Video shows rebel group sentencing own fighters to death for ‘abuse of power’
/in NewsFootage of public spectacle provides a rare look at how the ethnic army metes out justice to its own.
The video opens with an overhead shot of 10 individuals wearing blue jumpsuits on a stage adorned with banners in Chinese and large loudspeakers before slowly pulling back to reveal hundreds of spectators – several of them clutching brightly colored umbrellas to keep the sun off their faces.
But this is not a performance. The images captured in northeastern Myanmar’s Kokang region, in Shan state near China, show a public trial in the capital Laukkai by the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, or MNDAA, of members of their own ethnic army accused of “abuse of power.”
Among them is a 36-year-old district commander and two other guerrillas who the ethnic army said in a statement on Thursday it had executed following the trial on April 24. The remaining seven fighters received prison sentences, the MNDAA said.
The highly produced three-minute video provides a rare look at how the rebel army metes out justice to its own in the Kokang region after it captured Laukkai on Jan. 4.
The group is one of three ethnic militias making up the Three Brotherhood Alliance – along with the Ta’ang National Liberation Army and the Arakan Army – that has dealt the junta’s military forces a series of defeats since late last October. Their offensive has turned the tide in the civil war that broke out after the military overthrew a democratically elected government in a February 2021 coup d’etat.
In the video, which features a rousing, militaristic soundtrack, onlookers snap photos with their cellphones while officials in fatigues read out the alleged crimes of the 10 soldiers and their punishments. Within the crowd are families with young children, as well as groups of students with their instructors.
EU condemns executions
At the conclusion of the trial, the soldiers are led away in arm and leg shackles with signs hung around their necks identifying them as criminals in bold Chinese characters.
Three of the signs sport red Xs on them, marking those condemned to death. These men are made to stand in vehicles as they are driven through Laukkai to a field on the outskirts of the capital.
The next segment shows the three being led into the field before the picture fades to black. An order is heard and shots ring out, although no execution is shown.
In a statement on Thursday, the European Union condemned the executions “in the strongest terms,” calling them “an inhuman and degrading punishment that represents an ultimate denial of human dignity.”
The EU added that upholding the rule of law in accordance with international standards is an “effort integral to the aspirations for federal democracy.”
Attempts by RFA to contact MNDAA spokesperson Lee Kyar Win for additional information went unanswered.
Kokang has long been in China’s orbit, and many of its residents are ethnically Chinese. In the mid-20th century, Kokang served as a base for Myanmar communists, before the Communist Party of Burma collapsed in 1989.
In recent months, China had expressed increasing frustration with organized crime rings that had been allowed to operate in Kokang by junta-aligned forces. An estimated 120,000 people are being held in Myanmar against their will. Chinese nationals have both been trafficked by these groups and fleeced by them.
In its statement, the MNDAA said that the district commander who was sentenced to death had been involved in the kidnapping of two Burmese drivers, more than 10 Chinese nationals and six Vietnamese nationals between July and September of 2023. He also took part in the murder of two Chinese nationals, it said.
The other two fighters sentenced to death had served in the Logistics Department of Brigade 311 and were convicted of the theft and sale of weapons, as well as their involvement in “deadly kidnappings.”
Of the remaining seven soldiers, a deputy battalion commander of an MNDAA-aligned militia force and the deputy commander of Battalion 191 were sentenced to 15 and 20 years in prison, respectively. The other five were sentenced to terms ranging from two to five years in prison.
The MNDAA publicly executed four people on May 2, 2023, after convicting them of kidnapping and murdering Chinese nationals in Shan state’s largest town, Lashio.
RFA News