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Myanmar junta likely using air strikes as 'collective punishment': Amnesty

AFP . Bangkok
01 Jun 2022 10:32:02 | Update: 01 Jun 2022 10:44:57
Myanmar junta likely using air strikes as 'collective punishment': Amnesty
File photo shows an aerial view of Bin village of the Mingin Township in Sagaing region after villagers say it was set ablaze by the Myanmar military, in Myanmar — Reuters

Myanmar's military has likely used airstrikes and artillery barrages as "collective punishment" against civilians opposing its coup, Amnesty International said Wednesday, accusing the junta of war crimes.

Deadly clashes have ravaged swathes of the country since last year's coup, which ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi's government, with the junta unable to crush resistance to its rule.

Between last December and March, the military ramped up its onslaught in Kayah and Kayin states along the Thai border, with troops carrying out extrajudicial killings and looting and burning villages, Amnesty said.

Airstrikes and shelling hit homes, health facilities, temples and churches, the rights group said, with villagers telling researchers some artillery barrages lasted for days.

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Amnesty said the onslaught constituted "a new wave of war crimes and likely crimes against humanity".

Airstrikes killed nine civilians and wounded at least nine others during the reporting period, the report said.

"In almost all documented (air) attacks, only civilians appear to have been present," it said.

One airstrike last January hit a camp for internally displaced people in Kayah state, killing a man and two sisters sheltering in an area that activists said "should have been well known to the military".

Researchers also documented instances when soldiers had shot civilians fleeing clashes, including one eyewitness who said troops had shot dead six people trying to cross a river into Thailand. 

Collective punishment

Amnesty said the military's operations "reflected its signature policy of collective punishment of civilian communities perceived to support an armed group or, in the coup's aftermath, the wider protest movement".

Kayah and Kayin states have seen some of the fiercest fighting since the putsch, with anti-coup fighters often teaming up with more established ethnic rebel groups.

In January, the military called in airstrikes on the Kayah state capital Loikaw to dislodge anti-coup fighters, a junta spokesman told AFP.

On Christmas Eve last year, more than 30 burnt bodies, including those of women and children, were discovered on a highway in the state after a massacre blamed on junta troops.

The charity Save the Children later said two of its staff were among those killed.

Myanmar's military has been repeatedly accused of atrocities and war crimes during decades of internal conflict.

Military violence against the Rohingya minority in 2017 sent an estimated 750,000 people fleeing into neighbouring Bangladesh, bringing accounts of rape, murder and arson.

Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing -- who headed the army during the Rohingya crackdown -- said in March that the military would "annihilate until the end" groups fighting to overturn its rule.

More than 1,800 people have been killed in the junta's crackdown on dissent, according to a local monitoring group.

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