Detained at night, lifeless by morning: Arrests under Myanmar’s junta

A growing number of protesters have disappeared into military custody, with the authorities providing no information about their location, well-being or the charges against them

Family members are pictured in mourning at the funeral of Zaw Myat Lynn, an official from Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party. He was taken into regime custody alive on the night of March 6, but the following day his family was notified that he had died.

Under the current military regime, members of Myanmar’s public have increasingly been taken into custody alive at night, only to have their bodies returned to their families the following morning. 

Both the condition and whereabouts of others who have been arrested by the junta remain unknown to their relatives and lawyers, who say they have been unable to obtain even basic information about detainees. 

Since the February 1 military coup that ousted the National League for Democracy (NLD) government, elected parliamentarians, party members and their families have been targeted for arrest, alongside people who have been peacefully protesting the coup nationwide in what is being described as Myanmar’s Spring Revolution. 

It remains difficult to confirm the official number of people detained by the regime. According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), between February 1 and March 8 the military council arrested more than 1,700 people and security forces had killed at least 60. The AAPP has noted that investigations into these figures are ongoing. 

It is unknown how many of those detained have died during interrogations by security forces, but at least three have been confirmed. 

Fifty-eight-year-old Khin Maung Latt, the NLD party chair of a community ward in Yangon’s Pabedan Township was arrested on the night of March 6; by the next day, he had died in police custody. Zaw Myat Lynn, an NLD member in charge of the “Suu” vocational training institute in Yangon’s Shwepyitha Township, was arrested on March 8. His family was notified the following day that he too had died. 

In both these instances, the families still have not been officially told their cause of death. 

“From what we could observe visibly, he died because he was shot in the chest. But there was no precise explanation for the cause of the death,” an NLD central executive committee member said of Zaw Myat Lynn, describing the condition of his body when viewed by his widow at Mingaladon Military Hospital in Yangon.

Similarly, Khin Maung Latt’s family have also inquired about his cause of death in state custody, but the military administration offered no explanation. 

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An anti-coup protest in Yangon's Sanchaung township on March 11. 

In the northern Shan State town of Muse, the Shan Herald Agency for News reported that 43-year-old Thein Lwin was arrested at an anti-coup protest, only to have his body-- which appeared to have been beaten-- returned to his family days later on March 5. 

Others taken by security forces have disappeared, their whereabouts unknown. 

Ko Ja Mar, an NLD member and personal security guard for the now detained State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, was arrested at his Bago Township home by armed personnel on March 9. At the time of reporting, his family had not received an update on where he was being held or what condition he was in. 

Myanmar Now spoke to a lawyer who is providing legal support to the families of people who have disappeared during protests in Yangon. He explained that as the number of missing persons grows, lawyers are sharing the caseload amongst themselves and working pro-bono.

“At this moment, I am only accepting cases of the  youth who disappeared in Sanchaung, Myaynigone, and townships around Hledan. In townships like North Okkalapa, since the number of the disappeared persons is much higher, other [lawyer] friends of mine are helping their families,” he said on the condition of anonymity. 

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Murders, torture & arrests have virtually stopped mass demonstrations in downtown Yangon. Yet hundreds of people in the suburban townships have kept protesting, as have residents of other cities nationwide.

On March 8, security forces blocked people who were peacefully protesting against the military coup in Sanchaung Township from leaving the area. At least 20 people were arrested overnight, but most managed to escape with the help of local residents. 

Lawyers have made a list of persons who are missing and have made inquiries with the authorities about whether they are being held in Insein Prison, but often do not receive a response.  

“Don’t even talk about the politicians-- it’s still really hard to find out about ordinary people and youth who have been shot, beaten and arrested for joining peaceful protests,” the lawyer explained. “We don’t exactly know if they are here [in Insein Prison]. Have they already been charged? Are they healthy or injured? Seeing them seems so far off at this moment.” 

Relatives of and legal advocates for the missing persons say that as long as people remain unaccounted for, the numbers of those arrested or killed throughout the country will remain only estimates. 

Two days after the March 8 Sanchaung arrests, the mother of a missing boy attempted to inquire about his condition at the Sanchaung police station, where she had heard her son and others were detained. She received no answers.   

While trying to get further information about his whereabouts, she heard that protesters were being held in a military estate on Lower Mingaladon Road  in Yangon’s Shwepyitha Township. She went there on Thursday morning. 

“They just repeatedly said that no one was detained in the estate,” the mother of the young protester said. 

A woman who is helping the families of three disappeared protesters said that it is believed that prisoners are being held inside the compound, which served as a military prison in the past. Since the coup, prisoner transport vehicles have been seen by residents regularly coming in and out of the compound with security escort cars. 

“They have denied it,” she said of the security forces. “They said there are no detainees. Just during the time we were there, at around 12:00 p.m., two Double Cap cars full of soldiers and a prisoner transport vehicle drove into the estate,” she said. 

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An anti-coup protest in Yangon's North Okkalapa township on March 11. 

Another suburban Yangon Township, North Okkalapa, is believed to have seen some of the toughest crackdowns on protests, with military personnel using machine guns against the public. Local social welfare and volunteer groups have guessed that at least 30 people were killed there and many more arrested. 

Myanmar Now has been able to confirm eight deaths in that brutal crackdown. 

At least 13 were killed on March 5 in Mandalay in protests against the military dictatorship. Though the military council’s troops have arrested many people, only one death has been officially confirmed: Naing Min Ko, 21, in a statement by the military’s own MWD broadcasting channel, according to the victim’s older sister, Ngwe Hnin Phyu. 

She has repeatedly asked that Naing Min Ko’s body be returned to the family, but has received no response. 

At the time of publication, the military was continuing to inflict violence on protesters across the country. On the evening of March 9 alone, more than 70 people were arrested in Myeik, Tanintharyi Region. Among them, at least 45 were subjected to brutal torture at the hands of soldiers. 

 

 

 

Police and soldiers shot at rescue vehicles and the houses of residents who tried to save injured people during the crackdown, witnesses said 

Published on Mar 16, 2021
Twenty-year-old Yadanar Htoon was killed during the March 15 crackdown in Myingyan (Supplied)

The coup regime’s forces murdered three teenage boys as they attacked anti-military protesters in the town of Myingyan in Mandalay region on Monday, a doctor and residents said. 

Yan Myo Aung, 16, Aung Myo Zaw, 17, and Tun Ye Naing, 18, were among six people killed in the town and at least 20 fatalities nationwide that day. The other victims from Myingyan were Hla Soe, 53, Yadanar Htoon, 20, and Kyaw Saw, 26. 

Three of the six were confirmed dead on Monday afternoon and another one passed away in the evening at a makeshift outdoors clinic, where doctors on strike from government hospitals were attending to wounded protesters. 

Two more were added to the list of fatalities later in the evening, when the junta’s forces told their family members to come and retrieve the bodies from the Myingyan Hospital. 

“I think two injured people that the military had taken to the hospital died on the spot,” a doctor told Myanmar Now. “One was shot in the head and another one was shot in the left side of the chest. I think the soldiers took the bullets out [of their bodies].”

Myingyan Hospital had been closed because medical staff there joined the Civil Disobedience Movement but it has now been taken over by police and soldiers, the doctor added. 

Just four nurses and one military doctor are working at the hospital, and no patients go there anymore because the entrance is guarded by armed forces, the doctor added. 

At least another 17 people were injured in Monday’s crackdown in Myingyan, and five of those are in critical conditions, said another doctor. 

Yan Myo Aung, the 16-year-old who died, had just finished high school last year and was living with his mother, residents said. 

His mother had been unable to stop him from participating in anti-coup protests because he was so passionate about doing so, a resident who went to his funeral told Myanmar Now.

Aung Myo Zaw had finished 10th grade and was looking forward to the Covid-19 pandemic ending and schools reopening. He was the youngest in a family of seven, all of whom have been participating in anti-coup demonstrations, a relative said.  

Tun Ye Naing was one of the breadwinners in his family and worked delivering cheroots - traditional cigarettes - to local traders, one of his neighbours said.

A protester who was with him at Monday’s rally said he had heard from others who witnessed the killing that a member of the junta’s forces hit Tun Ye Naing’s head against a wall after he was shot and told him he was hard to kill before dragging him away.

“I don’t know if it’s true but there was a blood stain on the wall,” the protester said. “We didn’t see exactly what happened because we were running. We only saw that he was taken away on a truck.”

He was brought to the Myingyan Hospital and his family members retrieved his body at around 7:30pm with the help of charity organizations.

Yadanar Htoon, the 20-year-old victim, is survived by a 3-year-old son and her husband.

Hla Soe, meanwhile, was not participating in the protest when he was killed. He was a vendor and was shot as he tried to close the window of his shop after hearing gunshots, a local resident said. 

During the attack, the junta’s forces fired continuously, making it impossible for rescuers and protesters to carry away wounded people. Vehicles being used in the rescue effort were shot at, residents said.  

The junta’s forces also shot at the houses of residents who helped rescue injured protestors. 

According to estimates by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, at least 183 people have been killed nationwide since the uprising against the coup began. 

The coup regime has also arrested, charged or sentenced more than 2,100 people so far, the association 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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Many in Myanmar may soon be unable to put enough food on the table if trends continue, World Food Programme official says 

Published on Mar 16, 2021
 Opponents of the coup hold a candlelit vigil in Yangon on February 21 for protesters who have been killed and detained (Myanmar Now)

Rising food and fuel prices pose a “looming threat” to the poorest in Myanmar as the political unrest caused by the February 1 coup begins to affect supply chains, the United Nations has warned. 

The organisation’s World Food Programme (WFP) said on Tuesday that there had been “steep hikes” in the prices of staple goods in northern Rakhine state, with the average cost of cooking oil increasing 27% from January to February.  

The price of pulses in Maungdaw has jumped 15%, while rice prices have spiked by as much as 35% in some townships in Kachin state, such as Bhamo and Putao. Nationwide, rice prices have gone up by an average of 3%, the WFP said. 

And the price of fuel has increased 15% nationwide, which in turn may lead to further food price increases as the cost of transportation balloons. The problem is more severe in northern Rakhine, where petrol prices have jumped by 33% and diesel by 29%.

The WFP collected the data from 250 traders and shops across 70 townships nationwide. 

“These rising food and fuel prices are compounded by the near paralysis of the banking sector, slowdowns in remittances, and widespread limits on cash availability,” the WFP said in a statement. 

The programme’s Myanmar Country Director, Stephen Anderson, said the price increases were “troubling”. 

“Coming on top of the COVID-19 pandemic, if these price trends continue they will severely undermine the ability of the poorest and most vulnerable to put enough food on the family table.”

The WFP is stockpiling food to enable it to keep helping over 360,000 people in Myanmar, most of whom live in displacement camps.

Many parts of Myanmar’s economy have been brought to a standstill by strikes amid a massive popular uprising against the military regime. Foreign trade has virtually halted and banks have been forced to close their branches as employees refuse to work under the dictatorship.  

 

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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Among the IDPs, currently sheltering in a church in the Myitsone area, are elderly persons and newborn infants. 

Published on Mar 16, 2021
A woman holds her baby after fleeing clashes between the Kachin Independence Army and the Myanmar military in Injangyang Township on March 15 (Supplied)

Around 200 civilians fleeing clashes between the Myanmar military and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) were barred by the junta’s armed forces from entering a camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the Kachin State capital of Myitkyina on Monday.  

Fighting has spread from the Kachin State townships of Hpakant to Mogaung to Injangyang since early March. 

A battle on Monday near the Injangyang villages of Gway Htaung and Tan Baung Yan forced 200 people from both communities to seek temporary refuge in a Catholic church in the village of Tang Hpre. 

Tang Hpre is in the Myitsone area, located on the Mali and N’mai rivers, which make up the confluence of the Irrawaddy River.

“The KIA attacked a [Myanmar] military base in Gway Htaung, Injangyang. The battle lasted from 5:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m.,” a local source said. “It seems like they [KIA] are trying to regain the bases that they’ve lost in the past.” 

During previous episodes of armed conflict in 2018, the IDPs had previously fled to Pa La Na camp in Myitkyina. Despite continued instability and tension in the region, they had returned to their respective villages in Injangyang during the Covid-19 pandemic to escape the crowded conditions in the IDP camp. 

As they tried to leave the church where they had been sheltering and in order to continue onward to the Pa La Na camp, regime soldiers stopped them, blocking the exit to Tang Hpre village and essentially trapping them in the community. 

Some IDPs crossed the Irrawaddy River in motorboats with the help of locals. Myanmar soldiers told those operating the motorboats to turn back to the Myitsone area with the IDPs by 5:00 p.m. on March 15, according to those who fled. 

“We were told that the Myanmar military has forbidden them from going to Pa La Na camp. They were told to stay where they are,” a local helping the IDPs told Myanmar Now. “They will be assisted with food supplies such as rice, cooking oil, and salt,” the person said, although at the time of reporting, it was not clear who would provide such necessities. 

Among displaced are children, including newborn infants and elderly persons unable to walk.  

Those who managed to arrive in Tang Hpre said more villagers from Tan Baung Yan were still hiding in the forest, unable to reach a safe place to shelter.  

The Myitsone area is the site of a now suspended China-backed hydropower mega-dam which has been widely opposed by the Kachin and Myanmar public

 

 

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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