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Myanmar troops burn 11 civilians alive in retaliatory attack, witness and reports say

Bloodstain on the ground
In an image taken from video, blood stains the ground in Done Taw village in Myanmar, where 11 people were reportedly burned alive.
(Associated Press)
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Myanmar government troops rounded up villagers, some believed to be children, tied them up and slaughtered them, according to a witness and other reports. An opposition leader said the civilians were burned alive, as repression of resistance to the country’s military coup takes an increasingly brutal turn.

A video of the aftermath of Tuesday’s assault — apparent retaliation for an attack on a military convoy — showed the charred bodies of 11 people lying in a circle amid what appeared to be the remains of a hut.

Outrage spread both inside and outside Myanmar as the graphic images were shared on social media. Human Rights Watch said the assault was similar to other recent attacks and looked as though it was meant to be discovered.

For the record:

5:20 a.m. Dec. 9, 2021A previous version of this story misidentified Manny Maung’s role at Human Rights Watch. She is a researcher with the organization, not a spokesperson.

“This incident is quite brazen, and it happened in an area that was meant to be found, and seen, to scare people,” Manny Maung, a researcher for the group, said. “Our contacts are saying these were just boys and young people who were villagers who were caught in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

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Opposition activist Sasa, who uses one name, said the attack began after a military convoy — which was raiding villages in the country’s northwest — hit a roadside bomb. Troops retaliated first by shelling the village of Done Taw, then rounding up anyone they could capture there.

“They were lashed together, tortured and ultimately burned alive,” he said, adding that the victims ranged in age from 14 to 40.

The sentencing of Aung San Suu Kyi is a blow to Myanmar’s democratic aspirations, but worldwide fervor over her fate had already faded.

“The sheer brutality, savagery, and cruelty of the these acts shows a new depth of depravity, and proves that, despite the pretense of the relative detente seen over the last few months, the junta never had any intention of deescalating their campaign of violence,” said Sasa, the spokesman for Myanmar’s underground National Unity Government, which says it is the country’s only legitimate administration.

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That group declared itself the country’s true leaders after the Feb. 1 military takeover that prevented elected lawmakers from taking their seats in parliament. The seizure of power was initially met with nonviolent street protests, but after police and soldiers responded with lethal force, violence escalated as opponents of military rule took up arms in self-defense. In recent months, fighting has been raging in northwestern areas.

United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric expressed deep concern over the reports of the “horrific killing of 11 people” and strongly condemned such violence, saying “credible reports indicate that five children were among those people killed.”

The government has denied that it had any troops in the area. But a witness told the Associated Press that about 50 troops marched into Done Taw about 11 a.m. Tuesday, seizing anyone who did not manage to flee.

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“They arrested 11 innocent villagers,” said the witness, who described himself as a farmer and an activist and spoke on condition of anonymity because he fears for his safety.

He did not see the moment of their killing but said he believes they were burned alive, which other people who spoke to Myanmar media also said.

He later saw the charred remains and was present when the images were taken. The images themselves could not be independently verified.

The witness who spoke to the AP said that those captured in Tuesday’s attack were not members of the locally organized People’s Defense Force, which sometimes engages the army in combat. He said they were members of a less formally organized village protection group. Other witnesses cited in Myanmar media said the victims were members of a defense force.

Thakhin Kai Bwor is the editor of the Myanmar Gazette, the only Burmese-language newspaper in the U.S. For many readers, it’s also a how-to guide for life in America.

Dujarric reminded Myanmar’s military authorities of their obligations under international law to ensure the safety and protection of civilians and called for those responsible “for this heinous act” to be held accountable.

As of Wednesday, he said, security forces had killed more than 1,300 unarmed individuals, including more than 75 children, since the military takeover.

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In seizing power, the military claimed massive fraud in the 2020 election that saw Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy win in a landslide. The military said that justified the takeover under a constitution that allows it to seize power in emergencies — though independent election observers did not detect any major irregularities.

On Monday, Suu Kyi was convicted of charges of incitement and violating coronavirus restrictions and sentenced to two years of incarceration. The court’s action was widely criticized as a further effort by military rulers to roll back the democratic gains of recent years.

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