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Myanmar
This Week in AsiaPolitics

Myanmar people recount attacks, torture in first six months after military coup: ‘they burned my skin like barbecue’

  • Fortify Rights report provides new evidence of the Myanmar junta’s crimes and coordinated attack on the civilian population
  • Report suggests armed forces chief Min Aung Hlaing and dozens of other senior officials should be investigated and possibly prosecuted for their roles in the crackdown

Reading Time:4 minutes
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Security forces crackdown on demonstrations by protesters against the military coup in Myanmar  in February 2021. Photo: AFP
Maria Siow
“Dr Phi Phi”, a senior emergency doctor in Myanmar, remembered treating a patient with a gunshot wound to his chest and abdomen in Yangon last March.

“We managed to put in the chest tube, but there was a lot of bleeding. One litre of blood came out, and there was a lot of blood in his abdomen, in every part of his abdomen.”

A 25-year-old woman witnessed police in Mandalay storm into her home and shoot and kill her six-year old sister who was sitting on her father’s lap.

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“[My sister] told my dad she was scared, and he asked her, “Why are you scared?” and then [the officer] shot her.”

Protesters gather by a barricade during a crackdown by security forces on demonstrations against the military coup in Yangon in March 2021. Photo: STR/AFP
Protesters gather by a barricade during a crackdown by security forces on demonstrations against the military coup in Yangon in March 2021. Photo: STR/AFP

In May last year, police arrested Myanmar poet Zaw Htun, also known as Khet Thi, in Shwebo Township, Sagaing Region. He would later die in custody.

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His wife, Chaw Suge remembered how an officer told her the only way she could claim her husband’s body was to sign for it at the hospital.

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