Social welfare organisations overwhelmed by escalating Covid-19 death toll 

Three local groups in Yangon say they are witnessing hundreds of cremations per day of people who have died from a lack of treatment for the virus

Bodies awaiting cremation at Yay Way cemetery on July 13 (Photo: Myanmar Now)

For more than one week, three Yangon-based social welfare groups say they have assisted in organising around 600 cremations and funeral services every day, as Covid-19 infections surge amid a dysfunctional post-coup health infrastructure. 

The department of health under the junta is widely believed to have underreported the country’s Covid-related deaths, claiming that there have been a total of more than 700 nationwide in the first 13 days of July.  

“Many have died due to hypoxia. It’s worse in the elderly and those with underlying conditions. But it all boils down to the pandemic, after all. It’s not easy to even get a coffin or a stretcher. Everything’s extremely scarce now,” a spokesperson from Yangon’s Bo Sein Social Services said. 

Local representatives for the three organisations Myanmar Now spoke with said that their groups normally have the collective capacity to hold funeral services for 100 deceased persons per day. 

“Normally, our group would only have to deal with 20 to 25 bodies a day, but now it’s become more than 45 to 50 these days, and sometimes we have even had to close our office,” the spokesperson of a social welfare group in North Okkalapa said, adding that there are new social service teams emerging to help cope with the crisis. 

He chose not to identify the name of his organisation, due to security concerns. 

The outreach groups are sending the bodies to four cemeteries, including Yay Way in North Okkalapa Township, Htein Pin in Hlaing Tharyar, Kyi Su in South Dagon and Kyu Chaung in Shwepyitha. 

A local man who was at the Yay Way cemetery for two hours on Wednesday said that he witnessed the cemetery overcrowded with carts carrying coffins, waiting for their turn to bury or cremate the dead. He noted that all three incinerators in the crematorium were operating non-stop to cope with the unprecedented number of bodies. 

He told Myanmar Now that he saw around 50 bodies awaiting cremation, and that the parking lot was crowded with the cars of people attending funeral services and those from social service organisations assisting with the burials. 

Another member of a Yangon-based social welfare group said that the logistics of arranging so many burials and funeral services had become difficult, with the cemetery becoming a chaotic place. 

“Cremation takes time and for that reason alone, it’s really hard to get to the families on time [to collect the bodies of their loved ones],” he explained. 

Myanmar Now contacted the municipal authorities regarding the increase in Covid-19 deaths, but they would not provide public comment on the situation. 

Myanmar Now previously reported that Covid-19 patients were dying at an unprecedented rate due to the unavailability of medical oxygen. Sources at oxygen factories in Yangon said that the junta had ordered that the gas be exclusively supplied to Covid-19 centres run by the military council, and have prohibited both private and state-owned producers from distributing to individuals.

Junta spokesperson Zaw Min Tun confirmed on Monday that the military had, in fact, restricted private oxygen plants from selling oxygen to the general public amidst the third wave of the pandemic. 

“We admit it. All the hospitals and clinics are full. All the quarantine centers are full and we can’t receive patients anymore,” Zaw Min Tun said in a press conference in Naypyitaw. 

Demands for oxygen have been at an all-time high, as the virus affects patients’ ability to breathe. Representatives of social service teams said that people in Yangon have been paying as much as 350,000 to 400,000 kyat (US$210-240) for a 40-liter tank of oxygen. 

 

The legal team for Australian economic advisor to Aung San Suu Kyi has also been told they cannot hire their own Burmese-English interpreter in court

Published on Oct 15, 2021
Sean Turnell is seen with Aung San Suu Kyi (Sean Turnell / Facebook)

After more than eight months in junta detention, economic advisor to detained State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi Sean Turnell is still unable to meet privately with his lawyer, Myanmar Now has learned. 

Turnell, an Australian national, was arrested by the military council on February 6, just five days after Myanmar’s military coup which ousted the elected National League for Democracy government. Charges were brought against him for violating the colonial-era Official Secrets Act, which carries a 14-year prison sentence if convicted. 

Judge Ye Lwin of the Dekkhina District Court in Naypyitaw is presiding over the case. The most recent hearing, on Thursday, lasted only 30 minutes, according to Turnell’s lawyer, Ye Lin Aung. 

“I still haven’t been able to hold a private discussion with my client regarding the case,” he told Myanmar Now. 

Ye Lin Aung said that at the hearing, he submitted a request to the judge to allow him to meet with Turnell alone. 

On October 7, the lawyer’s request to hire a Burmese-English language interpreter for Turnell was denied. 

“They only denied our request to hire an interpreter by ourselves. The judge will let us know about getting us one who has been arranged by the [military council’s] Ministry of Education in the next court hearing,” said Ye Lin Aung, referring to the session scheduled for October 28. 

State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, finance ministers Kyaw Win and Soe Win, and deputy minister Set Aung—who are charged with violating the Official Secrets Act along with Turnell—have also been barred from having private meetings with their respective lawyers. 

The charge was filed against all five defendants in the Eastern Yangon District Court in April, under a law which punishes the possession or sharing of information deemed “useful to an enemy” of the state.  

Hearings for the case were initially postponed until the Supreme Court decided on September 14 that Judge Ye Lwin in Naypyitaw would hear the case, after which Sean Turnell and the three Cabinet members were transferred from Yangon’s Insein Prison to a detention centre in Naypyitaw, where their first hearing took place on September 23.  

Limitations have been placed on which family members or lawyers could attend the hearings, which are being held under maximum security by the junta. Starting from the second court hearing on October 7, only two lawyers per defendant were allowed to enter the court, members of Suu Kyi’s legal team 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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Lawyer Khin Maung Zaw is prohibited by a local administrator from talking about the legal cases against the ousted NLD leadership with international envoys, organisations or media 

Published on Oct 15, 2021
Lawyer Khin Maung Zaw is seen in front of the Dekkhina District court in Naypyitaw in 2019 (Myanmar Now)

The lead defence lawyer for detained State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint’s legal team has been slapped with new restrictions barring him from speaking publicly about the criminal cases against his clients. 

Lawyer Khin Maung Zaw had his right to disclose information regarding his clients’ court hearings revoked by the local administrator for Napyitaw’s Pyinmana Township on Thursday, who did so by sending a letter of notice invoking Section 144 of Myanmar’s Code of Criminal Procedure. 

The statute allows for a lawyer’s right to disclose information to be restricted if their comments could cause a person “annoyance or injury” or “a disturbance of the public tranquility,” according to the code. 

The restrictions will prevent him from talking with international envoys, organisations or media about the cases against Suu Kyi and Win Myint, who have been in junta custody since just before Myanmar’s February 1 military coup which ousted their National League for Democracy (NLD) government.  

On Tuesday, Khin Maung Zaw shared with the media court testimony delivered by Win Myint regarding threats made against him by the military on the day of the coup. 

The shadow National Unity Government’s justice minister Thein Oo condemned the restrictions placed against Khin Maung Zaw and said that the Pyinmana Township administrator had overstepped his authority, explaining that only a judge could revoke the legal right in question. 

“This is a matter of the court and it has nothing to do with the township administrator,” Thein Oo said. 

Myanmar Now was unable to obtain comment from the five lawyers on the NLD leadership’s legal team regarding the order against Khin Maung Zaw. Another member of the team, San Marlar Nyunt, similarly had her right to disclose information restricted by the junta authorities in August. 

The military council has released no statement on the issue. 

President Win Myint was arrested just prior to the coup on February 1. Cases were filed against him for violation of the Section 505b of the Penal Code for incitement, and for violating the Disaster Management Law for holding political rallies ahead of the 2020 general election during the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Aung San Suu Kyi is also facing 11 criminal charges including major allegations of corruption. 

It is not known where the leaders are being held, but their hearings have been held in a specially designated court in Naypyitaw’s Ward No. 1, with the junta’s district and township judges presiding. 

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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A number of lawmakers from the ousted ruling party have decided to play it safe rather than risk the regime’s ire

Published on Oct 15, 2021
NLD supporters take part in a campaign rally in late 2020 (Myanmar Now)

At a time when most other MPs from the ousted National League for Democracy (NLD) find themselves in custody or in hiding, Sein Lwin is a rare exception: He remains safe and sound in his home in Ayeyarwady Region’s Kyonpyaw Township.

The reason, the 82-year-old lawmaker explained, is that he has signed a pledge not to have anything to do with the anti-regime resistance movement that has swept the country since the military seized power in February.

“The agreement says that we can’t associate with the movement at all and affirms that we haven’t been assigned to any duties by our party. They read it out and we had to sign it,” said the NLD MP for Kyonpyaw’s constituency (1), speaking to Myanmar Now in late September. 

Like others in his position, Sein Lwin was forced to choose between prison, becoming a fugitive, and making his peace with the regime. As one of those who picked the third option, he has faced criticism from those committed to overthrowing a junta that continues to jail and murder its critics.

But he is far from alone. Myo Thant, the MP for Kyonpyaw constituency (2), has also signed the pledge, while the wife of another local representative, Soe Aung Naing, signed it on his behalf.

In fact, of the four MPs elected to represent Kyonpyaw, only one—80-year-old Mahn Johnny, an ethnic Karen politician who previously served as the region’s chief minister under the NLD—has not signed. Seen wearing a uniform and holding a combat rifle in a photo that has circulated widely on social media, he is assumed to be currently based in a liberated area. 

Peace at a price

As conflict engulfs much of the rest of Myanmar, Kyonpyaw has been largely spared the violence that now rages in many other parts of the country. There have been few arrests or reports of torture in the township, and its streets are free of rampaging soldiers burning down houses and menacing residents.

Sein Lwin believes that he and others of like mind deserve the credit for this. By prevailing over hotter heads, he says, they have preserved a measure of sanity amid all the madness.

“We can’t just join the movement, because once we do, they will start taking action against us as well. Therefore, we try not to be too eager about this,” he said. 

“About 80% of our local youths are too eager, so we, the elders, have had to hold them back,” he added.

But cooperation has come at a cost. According to Sein Lwin, junta authorities now occupy the two-storey office building that once served as the party’s township headquarters. Paid for with 58m kyat ($30,000) in party funds and private donations, the building no longer bears any evidence of the NLD’s ownership.

“Our office used to have our party’s flag up on the wall along with two portraits of [party leader] Aung San Suu Kyi. A township administrator came to take them down,” said Sein Lwin. “We let him do so and didn’t complain at all. We just asked them to remove them themselves, and they did.”

But while his capitulation may seem complete at this stage, Sein Lwin has also been known to share posts critical of the regime on Facebook. Whether he or his constituents will have to pay a price for this, however, remains to be seen.

Choosing sides

The junta’s Ministry of Home Affairs first declared the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH), the National Unity Government (NUG), and the People’s Defence Force (PDF) “unlawful associations” on May 24. It was also at this time that the regime ordered MPs to pledge that they would not support their activities in any way.

In response, the NLD released a statement on June 10 denouncing the junta as a “terrorist organization” and telling MPs that there was “no need” to sign the pledge. “The military council’s demand that MPs sign a pledge not to associate with the CRPH, the NUG and the PDF is not a lawful action, and so there is no need to follow their instructions,” it said.

While it is unclear how many MPs have signed the pledge, Myanmar Now has been able to confirm that at least 30 have done so. Apart from Sein Lwin, however, none have been willing to discuss their decision. 

For Htun Myint, an NLD MP from Yangon’s Bahan Township who is also a member of the CRPH, there can be no excuse for elected lawmakers who choose to do the junta’s bidding while the entire country suffers under its rule. 

“They have not only disrespected the people’s votes, they are also taking order from the junta. To be frank, they are betraying the people’s trust,” he said.

“Some signed that pledge using their health as an excuse. But if their health was so bad, they shouldn’t even have competed in the election in the first place,” he added.

Whatever the reason for their decision, the number of MPs who have signed the pledge may be substantially higher than the 30 cases that have so far been confirmed.

According to a senior NLD executive who spoke on condition of anonymity, 110 MPs from the party have agreed to sign. He said he could not reveal their identities, however, as doing so could put them at risk of reprisal.

Triple threat

As Thet Khine, the former regional MP for Magway Region’s Salin Township constituency (2), has learned, signing the pledge is no guarantee of anything. Despite being one of those who gave in to the junta’s demands, Thet Khine now faces charges that were laid against him in September. 

“The MPs who signed the junta’s pledge now face a triple threat. They are criticized by their colleagues, condemned by the people, and still at the mercy of the regime,” said the NLD executive.

The junta has been unrelenting in its persecution of anyone associated with the NLD, from rank-and-file members to the chief ministers of Magway Region and Rakhine State, who have already received prison sentences. State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint, who were both arrested on the day of the coup, are only its most prominent victims.

According to a member of the party’s central executive team, there are currently around 400 party members in detention, of whom 91 are MPs. Many others have fled to border areas or neighbouring countries. In some cases, even those who managed to reach safe areas have ended up in regime custody. 

Under such circumstances, making a deal with the regime may seem understandable, but it is nonetheless unforgivable, according to one staunch opponent of the junta.

“If we continue to run the country with such opportunists, our country will face more threats even after this dictatorship has ended,” said Naga, a leader of the Pale PDF in Sagaing Region.

Meanwhile, leaders of other parties dismissed efforts to force MPs to fall in line with the junta’s agenda as “inconsistent”.

“The military council itself has invalidated the results of the election, so there’s no sense asking MPs to not associate with the NUG, the CRPH, or the PDF. According to the regime, they’re not even MPs anymore. It’s very inconsistent of them, I must say,” said Sai Leik, the secretary general of the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy.

Asked if members of his own party, which won the third largest number of seats in last year’s election, signed the pledge, he said: “Very few of us did. The majority of us didn’t.”

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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