Relatives of Aung Lwin said he is not involved in any disputes and believe he may have been mistaken for someone else
A group of armed men wearing masks beat and then kidnapped a villager near Taungup in southern Rakhine state on Monday evening, a village administrator has said.
Aung Lwin, a 30-year-old handyman from Padar village, was on his way home with his sister, Aye Aye Lwin, after withdrawing money from a bank in Taungup when six men attacked the two siblings at around 4:30pm.

“We don’t know the details yet. A family member came to report the incident and went to the police station,” said Ohn Myint, the administrator of Padar, which is 28 miles north of Taungup and has a population of roughly 1,700.
The assailants did not take the money the siblings had withdrawn from the bank. Aung Lwin is not known to have any involvement in politics or in the conflict between the Arakan Army (AA) and the Tatmadaw, Ohn Myint said.
“When we did some questioning, the family said Aung Lwin doesn’t hold any grudges. They think he was mistaken for someone else,” he said.
Zaw Win, an officer at the Lahmu police station, said Aung Lwin’s relatives came to report the incident but then decided against filing a case.
The attack happened about four miles from Padar, between the villages of Kamar and Yone. The men carried rods and knives and left Aye Aye Lwin with three bruises on her head, Zaw Win said.
Police are questioning family members and awaiting instructions on how to proceed with the case, he added.
Violence in Rakhine state has typically been confined to the north since clashes broke out between the AA and the military two years ago.
But more recently the conflict has begun to spread south, with local monitors reporting landmine explosions and cases of civilians being kidnapped and tortured.
On October 14 three election candidates from the National League for Democracy were detained by the AA in Phaung Kar village, 15 miles from Taungup.
The group has so far refused to release Min Aung, Ni Ni May Myint and Chit Chit Chaw, saying they would be freed if political negotiations go smoothly.
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