The Myanmar military junta must immediately end its deadly nationwide attack against nonviolent protesters and return
power to the elected government, Fortify Rights said today. The junta’s forces killed at least 61 people in at least
seven regions and states throughout the country since a February 1 coup d’état, according to various sources. Yesterday
alone, soldiers and police reportedly killed at least 38 people.
On Friday, the U.N. Security Council will convene in New York City to discuss the situation in Myanmar.
“Senior General Min Aung Hlaing and his murderous junta are systematically terrorizing the people of Myanmar,” said
Ismail Wolff, Regional Director of Fortify Rights. “We’re witnessing security forces commit targeted extrajudicial
killings and other widespread violations. The Security Council should urgently impose a global arms embargo against the
military.”
Since February 27, the Myanmar military and police have dramatically escalated the use of excessive and lethal force
against unarmed protesters in almost all of the country’s 14 states and regions.
According to Tom Andrews, the U.N. special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, the junta’s forces
killed at least 23 people from early February to March 1. Yesterday, the military and police killed an additional 38
people, according to the U.N. Special Envoy on Myanmar Christine Schraner Burgener.
The police and military killed men, women, and children. Victims included students, a carpenter, an engineer, a teacher,
and others.
Video footage shared widely on social media shows military soldiers and police officers shooting into crowds of unarmed
people, shooting into private residences, brutally beating and arbitrarily arresting people, including medical workers
and journalists, and destroying property.
In two videos filmed yesterday and shared online, two bloodied, lifeless bodies lay on a street reportedly in Monywa,
Sagaing Region. In one clip, two police officers drag one of the bodies down the road; in another clip, four officers
carry a body down the same road.
In another video reportedly filmed in North Okkalapa in Yangon, a dozen police officers surround a man and escort him
out of a building and onto a street. A gunshot then rings out, and the man collapses to the pavement. An officer then
kicks the man’s lifeless body, and then another officer drags the body away.
Open-source photographs and videos show Myanmar Army soldiers holding automatic weapons, long-range sniper rifles, and
other firearms. Police also used less-lethal weapons, including rubber bullets, slingshots, tear gas, and water cannons,
against unarmed protesters.
The similar use of excessive and lethal force by security forces in towns and cities throughout the country demonstrates
coordination between units and an overarching national strategy, said Fortify Rights. All military and police in the
chain of command should be held liable for crimes committed against the people of Myanmar.
The junta has also arbitrarily arrested, charged, or sentenced at least 1,498 people since the February 1 coup,
according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a human rights organization monitoring arrests and
detentions in Myanmar.
On February 1, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing orchestrated a military coup d’état, overthrowing the elected government
and detaining President Win Myint, State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, dozens of other government leaders,
parliamentarians, and human rights defenders. The junta took over the executive, judicial, and legislative levers of
power and, on February 2, created a military-appointed “State Administration Council” (SAC) to rule the country.
On March 1, the Committee Representing the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw, comprising elected members of parliament, declared the
SAC a “Terrorist Group” for its “atrocities and acts of terrorism.”
Speaking at the U.N. General Assembly on February 26, Myanmar’s ambassador to the U.N., Kyaw Moe Tun, told member states
that he represented the elected government of the National League for Democracy and called on the international
community to use “any means necessary to take action” against the military to help “restore the democracy,” adding: “We
need further strongest possible action from the international community to immediately end the military coup, to stop
oppressing the innocent people, to return the state power to the people, and to restore the democracy.”
The U.N. Security Council should impose a global arms embargo against the Myanmar military, sanctions against Myanmar military individuals, entities, and assets, and refer the
situation in Myanmar to the International Criminal Court, said Fortify Rights. Failing that, the U.N. General Assembly
should hold an emergency special session to address the crisis.
“Soldiers and police in Myanmar are behaving like death squads and committing grave human rights violations,” said
Ismail Wolff. “The world must take immediate action. There is no way out of this other than a complete repudiation of
the coup and the junta.”