Bank staffer dies two days after being shot by junta’s troops on her way home from work

The 33-year-old woman worked for South Korea’s Shinhan Bank in Yangon, and was shot in the head while travelling in a company vehicle

Members of the Myanmar police force are seen in Yangon on February 26 (Myanmar Now) 

A female staff member from South Korea's Shinhan Bank died in Yangon on Friday morning after being shot in the head two days earlier by the junta’s armed forces.  

Su Su Kyi, the 33-year-old bank staffer, was shot on the U Chit Maung Road in Tamwe township while returning home from work in a corporate vehicle on Wednesday.

The junta’s troops reportedly tried to stop the vehicle and opened fire on it when the driver did not pull over. 

After being treated for two nights at Yangon General Hospital, friends of Suu Suu Kyi said that she died of her injuries on Friday morning. 

 

 

Her funeral was scheduled for Friday afternoon in Yangon.

 

 

The Korea Times reported on Thursday that Shinhan Bank had decided to temporarily shut down its office in Yangon after one of its employees was shot by the military and, at the time of reporting, was in critical condition.

The report cited the bank’s spokesperson, who said that all employees in its Yangon office had started working from home after the incident. The Shinhan headquarters was reportedly considering ordering Korean staff to leave Myanmar. 

According to the advocacy group Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, at least 543 people have been killed by the junta since the military seized power on February 1 in a coup that overthrew elected civilian leaders.

 

A family is forced to bury a 25-year-old protester’s belongings instead of her ashes after the junta takes both her life and her body

Published on Jul 31, 2021
Thu Thu Zin’s funeral is held Aye Yeik Nyein cemetery in Mandalay on July 29 (Supplied)

A hushed burial was held at dawn in Mandalay’s Aye Yeik Nyein cemetery on Thursday, with personal effects that belonged to 25-year-old Thu Thu Zin placed in the grave where her body would have been. 

Two days earlier, she was killed by a bullet to the head fired by the junta’s troops as she marched through the city at the forefront of the Mya Taung protest column. 

While police confirmed that same day that the young woman had been killed, troops from the 910th Engineering Battalion—occupying Mandalay Palace and the hills to the east—would not return her body or her ashes to her family. She had already been cremated, they said, her remains presumably discarded. 

As tradition prescribes, Thu Thu Zin’s family offered a meal to monks in her honour and held a graveside funeral service. It was attended by just 10 people and concluded in as many minutes, allegedly under the watch of a military vehicle parked in the vicinity. 

“Here, kid, take some money to buy gas for your motorbike and a top-up for your phone,” an older relative said at the ceremony, his voice shaking, placing a modest offering of cash in an empty tomb. 

Transformed into an activist

Before the February 1 coup, Thu Thu Zin led a relatively normal life, working full-time at a cosmetics company during the week and volunteering with local charity groups on the weekends. She was the second youngest of four children and lived with her parents in Mandalay’s Minde Eikin ward. 

Friends and relatives who knew her said that the military’s attempted seizure of power transformed her into an activist who became devoted to resisting the junta. She quit her job to dedicate herself fully to the anti-dictatorship movement in her city. 

“She used to get angry at me when I tried to stop her. She said, ‘Who will do it if I don’t? Even educated people like doctors are risking their lives for this. What else is there for me to lose?’” a relative said. 

Major military crackdowns on protests in Mandalay meant that city-wide demonstrations were crushed, with activists resorting to guerilla-style tactics to organise and hold flash protests as evidence of their continued rejection of military rule. 

In these dangerous times, Thu Thu Zin was known for joining any protest column that dared to march in the city’s streets. Her family tried to prohibit her from taking part, but they could not stop her. 

“When we didn’t let her go anymore, she’d lie about where she was going,” her relative said. 

‘I saw her fall’

In June, as public expressions of dissent were being violently suppressed by the military in Mandalay, Thu Thu Zin joined the well-known Mya Taung protest column headed by monks, one of her friends told Myanmar Now.  

It was at this friend’s house where Thu Thu Zin had been staying in recent weeks in an effort to shield her family from the military’s arrests, which often target relatives of activists wanted by the junta. 

Thu Thu Zin came home for the last time five days before she was killed, and told her relatives not to be concerned about her safety. 

“She attended the protests regularly, but she lied to us and said that she was out volunteering with her friends, so as not to worry her mother,” the relative who spoke to Myanmar Now said. 

The day she was shot dead, she was holding a flag at the front of the protest column, shouting chants, her friend said. 

We have to work harder. We’re never backing down

The last time Thu Thu Zin was seen, she was stumbling to the ground in front of the eastern gate of the Mahamuni pagoda after the military fired three shots at the crowd, her friend who witnessed the event told Myanmar Now. 

“I saw her fall as soon as I heard the gunshots. We couldn’t do anything for her as we were running for our lives as well. We couldn’t even get her body back,” she said.

It is believed that in addition to Thu Thu Zin, four more protesters were taken into junta custody from the column. Among them was 20-year-old Toe Toe Aung, who was shot and injured. No further information about the detainees’ whereabouts or their conditions was available at the time of reporting. 

Thu Thu Zin’s friend said that she would never stop mourning her death, or avenging others whose lives have been taken by the military. 

“We have to work harder. We’re never backing down,” she said. 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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Kachin forces strike two military bases and destroy a checkpoint during a series of overnight attacks

Published on Jul 31, 2021
A KIA soldier seen in September 2021 (EPA)

The Kachin Independence Army (KIA) attacked three military bases in the Kachin State towns of Mogaung and Waingmaw overnight on Thursday, according to locals.

At around 10:30pm, the KIA’s Battalion 3 under Brigade 5 launched an assault on the junta’s Waingmaw-based Light Infantry Battalion (LIB) 58. 

Gunfire could be heard across Waingmaw town and subsided at around midnight, a man who lives near the LIB base told Myanmar Now.  

The man said two civilians were wounded—one mortally—when the junta’s Myitkyina-based Northern Regional Command fired artillery shells at the area of the fighting.

“Two people were injured when heavy artillery shells fell on the bus station and the former company compound of the Kachin Entrepreneurs Association on the Waingmaw-Washawng Road. One of them later died,” the man said.  

The deceased, 36-year-old Aung Le, was a company worker living in the compound where the artillery shells exploded. Details of the other person who was injured were not available at the time of reporting. 

At around 3am on Friday, locals said the KIA ambushed the junta’s Maran Kahtaung military checkpoint between Mogaung and Kamine in Mohnyin District, subsequently destroying it.

The KIA also fired about 30 artillery shells at Base 3 of the Military Operations Command—known by the Burmese language acronym Sa Ka Kha—in Mogaung at around 3:30am, a resident said on the condition of anonymity. 

“I don't know where they were firing during the night. I could only hear the sound. I came to know only in the morning that they had attacked those places. Now, it is a bit quiet in the town,” the resident said. 

Col Naw Bu, the KIA's information officer, was contacted by Myanmar Now about the clashes in Mogaung and Waingmaw, but he had not responded at the time of reporting. 

He did, however, confirm to Kachin State-based media outlets on Friday that fighting had taken place and there had been civilian casualties. 

Around one hour after the Thursday night attack on LIB 58 in Waingmaw, the junta's military bases west of the KIA headquarters in Laiza fired artillery shells around the Kachin stronghold, according to those local news reports. 

At the time of publication, the military’s information ministry had not released any information about the KIA strikes. 

On Thursday, the KIA also attacked two of the junta’s bases between Kutkai and Muse townships in northern Shan State. 

Following the February 1 military coup, heavy fighting broke out between the KIA and the junta’s army in northern Shan State, and the fighting has also spread to Kachin State.

The KIA, in cooperation with local People’s Defence Forces, has also fought the junta’s troops in Kawlin, Katha and Htigyaing townships in upper Sagaing Region.

On Monday afternoon, the KIA intercepted and attacked seven naval vessels belonging to the junta on the Irrawaddy River near Shwegu in Kachin State. 

Prior to the coup, the KIA was not among the ethnic armed organisations signatory to the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement with the government and military, but had engaged in preliminary peace talks with the National League for Democracy administration. 

In February, following the military’s attempted seizure of power in Myanmar, the KIA announced that they would protect anti-coup protesters in Kachin State and welcomed the resistance movement.

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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Many of the victims’ bodies showed clear signs they were tortured in captivity 

Published on Jul 30, 2021
Some of the bodies were buried together in a shallow grave in the forest west of Zee Pin Twin village (Supplied)

(Content warning: This article contains images of dead bodies that viewers may find disturbing.)

Junta soldiers in the resistance stronghold of Kani Township in Sagaing have massacred at least 28 people this month, and locals fear there are more bodies yet to be uncovered. 

Seven of the confirmed killings were discovered in a forest west of the village of Zee Pin Twin on Thursday. The body of a captured resistance fighter was also brought back to the village on Thursday after being found in the surrounding area on Tuesday evening.

All of the victims were male and wounds on their bodies indicated they had been mercilessly tortured before their deaths. 

Another five bodies were found in the area later on Thursday, said a Kani-based activist, referencing local witnesses, though he was unable to offer further details. 

Soldiers have captured dozens in Kani in recent weeks, both civilians and fighters from the Monywa People’s Defence Force (MPDF). Myanmar Now spoke to a total of nine people who either found bodies in Kani this month or heard accounts from those who did.  

The bodies found around Zee Pin Twin were so badly mutilated that villagers have only been able to identify two of them, the activist said. 

“We still don’t know if the bodies belong to the people who were captured as most of them were completely disfigured to the point that we couldn’t determine who they were or where they were from,” he said.

The victims from the first group found on Thursday were two elderly people, one person with a disability, four people aged between 18 and 30 and one person of an unknown age, witnesses said. 

A video of the exhumation showed one of the men had his eye gouged out and his hands tied. Locals said they feared more bodies were buried nearby but were scared to search for them because they believed there were landmines in the area. 

The MPDF said a group of its fighters were ambushed near Zee Pin Twin on Tuesday and forced to retreat. Six fighters were killed or went missing in that attack, the group’s spokesperson said. 

“Only one died during the battle and the rest got shot in their limbs which incapacitated them,” he said. “We have some photos suggesting that they were caught and shot to death at close-range. It can be assumed that the military shot all of our injured comrades.”

The military is still patrolling around the woods near Zee Pin Twin village, the locals said. 

On July 11 and 12 Kani locals discovered the bodies of 15 men after soldiers detained a group of residents from the villages of Yin, Kone Thar and Palu Zawa.

“The first two bodies we found had their faces slashed with knives,” said one of the locals. “We found some with their limbs broken and some with their necks slit. Some were nearly decapitated and some had their limbs mutilated. We can assume that they slit the victims' faces with knives as they interrogated them.”

Photos and videos showed the victims had been stripped naked or half naked. Some were blindfolded with their own clothes and some tied to each other. 

The deceased included a father and his two sons, as well as three brothers and one of their nephews, locals said. Most were aged between 30 and 50, and one was 60 years old. 

Kani Township’s residents have offered some of the fiercest and most tenacious resistance to the junta that seized power in a coup in February. 

Last week, soldiers rode boats along the Chindwin river, coming on land intermittently to terrorise people living along the riverbank. They destroyed several houses and injured three civilians, including a pregnant woman.

Around 10,000 civilians from five different village tracts have fled their homes as a result of military attacks in Kani in recent weeks, according to local social aid groups who wished to remain unnamed. Myanmar Now has been unable to independently confirm the figure. 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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