Myanmar's military perpetrated war crimes in the state of Karenni, according to a report.

Fortify Rights claims that evidence proves that military forces slaughtered people and exploited them as cover, and it is urging the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to endorse a weapons embargo.

According to a new study issued on Tuesday by the famous human rights organization Fortify Rights, the Myanmar military has killed people and used them as human shields in a series of atrocities in eastern Karenni State that may amount to war crimes.


The organization claims to have recorded assaults on churches, residential dwellings, camps for internally displaced persons, and other non-military targets in the state, which is also known as Kayah State, that occurred between May 2021 and January 2022, according to the report.

The news comes as foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) prepare to convene in Cambodia, despite the fact that no progress has been made on a five-point accord reached with the military in April that was intended to bring the bloodshed to a stop.


Fortify Rights said that it was past time for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to adopt a worldwide weapons embargo.


It is unacceptable that the Myanmar junta is killing civilians using weapons purchased on the international black market, according to Fortify Rights' Ismail Wolff, Regional Director for the organization. For the Myanmar junta's assaults on civilians to be stopped, clear and decisive action must be taken, says Human Rights Watch. An weapons embargo against the Myanmar military must be implemented immediately by the UN Security Council, and ASEAN should support this action on a strategic and practical level."




The Fortify Rights report is based on the testimony of 31 eyewitnesses and survivors, as well as photographic and video evidence that has been confirmed.


It contains fresh information on the Christmas Eve massacres in Hpruso Township, which resulted in the deaths of at least 40 people, including a child and two members of the Save the Children crew.


According to a doctor who worked on the autopsies of those who died, some of the corpses were so terribly charred that it was difficult to autopsy them; nonetheless, his team was able to determine that five of the victims were women and one was a girl under the age of fifteen.


In an interview with Fortify Rights, the doctor said that several of the patients had their mouths filled with fabric, indicating that they were gagged. We were able to collect enough evidence from some remains to conclude that they were burnt to death while still alive. "Almost every skull was shattered and extensively cracked...


An 18-year-old guy, his uncle, and two other men were allegedly used as human shields by the Myanmar army during confrontations with militants from the Karenni People's Defense Force (PDF) in Moe Bye Township, near the border of Shan state, according to Fortify Rights.


In an interview with Fortify Rights, the guy described how the soldiers "placed their rifles on our shoulders and fired PDFs while keeping behind us." "We were restrained and blinded for the duration of the experiment." We were subjected to a great deal of torture in a variety of ways. They kicked our bodies and struck us in the skulls with pistol handles, among other things." Eventually, three of the guys managed to flee, but Fortify Rights was unable to ascertain what had happened to the fourth, according to the company.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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