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Myanmar swimmer sacrificed Tokyo Olympics dream after a brutal military coupEverything changed in the swimmer’s homeland...
31/07/2021

Myanmar swimmer sacrificed Tokyo Olympics dream after a brutal military coup
Everything changed in the swimmer’s homeland when the military seized power six months ago.

Publish: Saturday, July 31, 2021 by QPTar

Win Htet Oo has dreamed about competing in the Olympics since he was 6 years old. But when the men’s 50-meter freestyle final takes place in Tokyo late Saturday, the swimmer from Myanmar, 27, will be watching at home.

Despite a recent Olympic qualifying time and a national record, he’s boycotting the Games in protest against the military coup that overthrew his country’s elected government six months ago this weekend.

“It’s been two decades in the making, slowly training, slowly improving, aspiring to be at the level where I could represent my country,” he told NBC News from his home in Australia earlier this week.

But then everything changed in the swimmer’s homeland when the military seized power in February.

“I knew it instantly — I could not represent Myanmar — not as long as the military was in charge,” he said.

Instead, he’s hoping to help keep the world’s attention on the country and put pressure on what he calls the “hypocritical” International Olympic Committee.
From hope to despair
Win Htet Oo was born in Malaysia to parents from Myanmar. After attending college in New York, he moved to Melbourne where he has focused on his swimming.

But it was a visit to Myanmar in 2016 that made him double down on his Olympic dream. After more than 50 years of brutal military rule, a 2015 general election put Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi and her party in power, seen as a major step in the country’s troubled road to democracy.

“I saw a lot of hope. I saw a lot of energy and bravery, especially in the creative arts … That really inspired me to consider what I was doing as a swimmer, as an athlete,” he recalled.

The stars looked to be aligning for Tokyo 2020, with Win Htet Oo competing at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games and securing both an Olympic qualifying time and a national record in the 50-meter freestyle event.
Then came the military coup.

“There was disbelief … I felt so hopeful that the transition to democracy was going to succeed, no matter how slow the pace was going,” Win Htet Oo said.
To the alarm of human rights groups, the military has violently crushed protests across the country in a bid to consolidate power.

More than 900 people opposing the junta have been killed by security forces, drawing international condemnation and sanctions, including from the United States.

“Six months since the coup, the military junta has arbitrarily detained thousands, killed hundreds of civilians including dozens of children, and now people are left fending a deadly pandemic on their own,” Manny Maung, a Myanmar researcher at Human Rights Watch, said.

“This shows us how utterly unprepared and unfit the military is to govern … The economy has collapsed, the health care system has collapsed and aid is not reaching the most vulnerable people.”
IOC request denied
After the coup, the military also took control of the Myanmar Olympic Committee — another reason why Win Htet Oo said there was no way he could compete in the national team.

He wrote to the International Olympic Committee and asked if he could come to Tokyo as an independent athlete. But the organization turned down his request.
With “no other options,” he withdrew from consideration before the Myanmar team was finalized.

“People need to know that the Myanmar military isn’t just another military that has taken power in some backwater, developing country,” he said.

“People think fascism is long dead after World War II, but no, it exists today in Myanmar and it’s shocking that the world continues to tolerate it.”

“This is a military that stands accused of genocide against the Rohingya and against other ethnic people in Myanmar,” he added, referencing a deadly 2017 crackdown against the Rohingya minority population in the Buddhist-majority country’s Rakhine state, which caused more than 1 million to flee.

In a statement, the IOC said the Myanmar Olympic Committee remained “the officially IOC-recognized National Olympic Committee (NOC).”

“Over the past months, the NOC has repeatedly confirmed its focus on the preparation of its team for the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020,” it said. “In accordance with the Olympic Charter, any qualified/eligible athletes should be entered by their respective IOC-recognized NOCs.”

While the Myanmar Olympic Committee sent a team of seven athletes to the last Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, this time around just two are competing.
‘It’s hypocritical’
Win Htet Oo said he was deeply troubled by the IOC’s response to his request and is now calling for reform around how the organization recognizes national Olympic committees.

“They’re sticking to a political neutrality stance, even though I think the Myanmar Olympic Committee is breaching the Olympic Charter.”

“It’s hypocritical,” he said of the Olympics’ avowed aspirations to foster peace and harmony.
But experts say this is nothing new.
“What the IOC is interested in, is the financial bottom line and putting on a good show,” said Dr. Tom Heenan, who teaches sport studies at Melbourne’s Monash University.
“The Olympic Charter has noble words … But it’s all window dressing. The main aim of the Olympics is revenue for the IOC and the Olympic movement,” he said.

Heenan said turning a blind eye to human rights abuse is “part of the history of the IOC and the Olympic movement,” with the most egregious example being the 1936 Berlin Olympics.

The IOC has repeatedly said it must be “neutral” and stay out of politics, with its president Thomas Bach insisting earlier this year it is “not a super world government.”

It has increased its focus on human rights in recent years, with rights requirements included in the host city contract for the next Summer Games in Paris in 2024.

But it has also faced criticism over next year’s Winter Games, which will be held in Beijing amid growing international backlash against China’s treatment of its Uyghur minority, Hong Kong and Tibet.

China denies wrongdoing and its foreign ministry has criticized “the politicization of sports” and said any boycott is “doomed to failure.”

Meanwhile, Win Htet Oo is left to watch the final he dreamed of taking part in from another continent, knowing that he could have been there.

“[But] I have hope,” he said. “Let’s think about how sport can be a force for protecting fundamental human rights. This is the next big idea that the IOC and athletes need to really think about.”

The reason why golf in the Olympics is not so exciting A competition method that ignores the flow of new rules and new e...
31/07/2021

The reason why golf in the Olympics is not so exciting A competition method that ignores the flow of new rules and new events

Publish: Saturday, July 31, 2021, by QPTar

The Olympic golf in which Hideki Matsuyama (29) is participating is not exciting. Even if the fact that the second day is just over is subtracted, the public's interest is low.

"because there is no ingenuity in the competition method" is golf writer Eisaburo Yoshikawa. ■ Dara Dara 4 days "Even though it is a tournament once every four years, it takes 72 holes stroke play of individual competition like Pro Tour. It takes more than half a day for one round and it takes four days to settle. There is no sense of speed or tension. Golf has returned to the Olympics for the first time in 112 years at the last Rio Games, but Mr. Yoshikawa pointed out that many people were aware of it. The International Golf Federation (IGF) also reported that it would "review the competition method" by the next Tokyo Olympics.

Since the International Olympic Committee (IOC) emphasizes TV ratings, it emphasizes the comprehensibility, visibility, and speed of the competition. That's why the basketball "3x3" with a 10-minute period system, the seven-seat rugby "Sevens" with 7 minutes each in the first and second half, and skateboarding and surfing, which are popular among young people, were adopted. At the other end of the spectrum is golf, where players are scattered in 18 holes and the competition time is long. "Still, thanks to the efforts of the industry, golf has returned to the Olympics, in order to popularize golf in the underdeveloped countries of golf in the former communist bloc," continued Mr. Yoshikawa. "While 60 men and women are eligible to participate in the Olympics, athletes up to 15th in the Olympic ranking are given the right to participate in up to 4 people from one country, and even if they are 16th or lower, up to 2 people from one country can participate, so they are ranked 300th in the world. The following players have also appeared. On the other hand, the Rio Olympics are Zika fever.5 out of the top 10 in the world are absent because of this. This time too, D. Johnson, who is in second place, and L. Westhasen, who is in eighth place, do not dislike hard schedules. Olympic golf is not the tournament that decides the best in the world.

A few years ago, the European Tour had a two-day, six-hole tournament (12 holes in total) with the participation of two people from one country and 16 countries. At that time, there was talk of a game format that was created with the Olympics in mind. Baseball in the Olympics is available in only six countries. In any case, the way golf is played should be reconsidered. ”Before that, it may be excluded from the Olympics.

Baseball / Korea Rep. Starts off with Softbank Martinez in the first match against the United StatesPublish: Saturday, J...
31/07/2021

Baseball / Korea Rep. Starts off with Softbank Martinez in the first match against the United States

Publish: Saturday, July 31, 2021, by QPTar

Tokyo Olympics Baseball Competition Opening Round Korea-America> (31st, Yokohama Stadium)
4th day of the Tokyo Olympics (Tokyo Olympics) baseball competition will be held at Yokohama Stadium on the 31st. In the second match, the Korean national team and the American national team will play against each other. In Korea, the first runner, Park Hae-min, followed by Lee Jung-hoo, made the first and third bases, and the third-base runner survived between the second grounder of Kim Hyun-soo . He attacked the start of American starting Nick Martinez and suddenly scored the opening goal.

Japan is a silver medal, a new type of judo mixed team ... Loses to France 1-4 in the finalPublish: Saturday, July 31, 2...
31/07/2021

Japan is a silver medal, a new type of judo mixed team ... Loses to France 1-4 in the final

Publish: Saturday, July 31, 2021 by QPTar

At the Tokyo Olympics, the final of a new type of judo mixed team was held on the 31st, and Japan lost to France 1-4 and won the silver medal. The world championship has been held since 2017, and Japan has won the championship for the third time in a row. In the individual event, Japan mass-produced 9 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze and medals, but the endless beauty could not be displayed. The number of Japanese judo medals in this tournament was 12, which was the highest number ever in the previous Rio de Janeiro tournament.
In a mixed team, a total of 6 players, 3 men and 3 players, will play once, and the one who wins 4 wins.

 In the first match, Chizuru Arai, a 70-kilometer gold medalist in Japan, was defeated by a 63-kilometer gold medalist at the beginning of the game, losing one waza-ari in 3 minutes and 31 seconds. It was a black star start.
In the second game, I did not reach the medal in the 90 kg class MukaiMukai Shoichiro loses one at the end of the extension. Japan started losing two games in a row, just like in the quarterfinals of the first match.

 The third match is a gold medalist SoneSee youKagayakiAkira Plays against a bronze medalist of the same class. I held down from Ouchi mowing and won one.
In the fourth game, 100 kg class Wolf Aaron will face Teddy Riner, who has won four consecutive medals in the 100 kg class. At the end of the extension, he was defeated by waza-ari.

In the fifth game, Tsukasa Yoshida, a 57-kilometer class bronze, challenged the silver medalist, but in 55 seconds he was deprived of his waza-ari and lost as it was.

 Shohei Ono was scheduled to appear in the sixth match, but there was no match.

 In Japan's first quarter-final match against Germany, Uta Abe (52 kg class) lost a foul to a player in the first class. Ono was also defeated at the start of the turbulence, but from here Arai, Mukai, Sone and Wolf won four straight games. In the semi-finals, he overwhelmed the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) with 4-0.

Japan’s national football team wins a penalty shootout against New Zealand and enters the top four for the first time in...
31/07/2021

Japan’s national football team wins a penalty shootout against New Zealand and enters the top four for the first time in two tournaments

Publish: Saturday, July 31, 2021 : By QPTar

Tokyo Olympics 9th Day Soccer Men's Quarterfinals, Japan 0-0 New Zealand = PK4-2 (31st, Kashima Stadium) Japan will play against New Zealand, who is second in Group B. He won the fierce battle that was entangled in the penalty shootout and decided to advance to the best four for the first time in two tournaments since the 2012 London Games. Japan will play the semi-final (Saitama Stadium) with Spain on August 3rd.

Japan created repeated opportunities from the side in the first half. In the 11th minute of the first half, Japan won the right corner kick with the opponents, selected the shoot corner, and developed Doan → Kubo → Hayashi. Hayashi who received the ball goes on the right side and crosses to the far side. Endo matched this, but the shot crossed the floating goal bar. In the 31st minute of the first half, Kubo dribbled on the right side and passed to the near side. Doan, who ran in front of the goal, shot a shot but missed the goal to the right.

apan took the initiative in the second half as well. In the 24th minute of the second half, Ueda and Nakayama replaced Hayashi and Soma, and the flag bearer, who was on the left side back, moved up one position. In the 31st minute of the second half, Hashioka raised the cross from the depths of the opponents on the right side, and the flag bearer who ran to the far side matched with the heading while competing with the opponent defender. However, the shot slightly crossed the goal bar. In the 37th minute of the second half, Doan, who had the ball on the right side of the penalty area, passed in front of the goal. Free Ueda matched with his right foot but was blocked by a good save by the opponent GK Oud.

Entering overtime, Japan introduced Mitoma in place of the flag bearer. The scene where the ball was stolen in the middle stage and the counter was set was conspicuous. In the 11th minute of the first half of the extension, Kubo broke through the center vertically and tried to shoot with his right foot, but GK Oud saved with his foot. In the 12th minute of the first half of the extension, Doan dribbled from the right side to the center and finished with his left foot, but the shot crossed the goal bar. In the latter half of the extension, he replaced Doan with Miyoshi but did not shake the net.

When he entered the penalty shootout without being settled even in overtime, GK Kosei Tani read the opponent's second shot and saved it, and in the third shot, the opponent's shot floated and crossed over the bar. He won the penalty shootout 4-2.

In 2 weeks, half of this country could be infected with COVID-19Myanmar is grappling with all three simultaneously, repo...
31/07/2021

In 2 weeks, half of this country could be infected with COVID-19

Myanmar is grappling with all three simultaneously, reported Reuters. The Southeast Asian country of 54 million people has been wracked in political turmoil for months, complicating its pandemic response and collapsing the health care system.
This week, Myanmar’s seven-day rolling per capita death rate reached 6.29 deaths per one million people — more than twice as high as the per capita death rate in India at the peak of its crisis in May, reported the AP.
COVID-19 outbreaks in Myanmar have reached a crisis point. Half of the country’s population could be infected within two weeks, according to some estimates, per Al Jazeera. But the virus outbreaks wouldn’t stop at Myanmar’s borders.
Bordering five nations, Myanmar could become a “super spreader” state, per The Guardian.
What’s going on with COVID-19 outbreaks in Myanmar?
Myanmar is currently experiencing its worst coronavirus wave yet, reported the Deseret News. Official numbers have shown a sharp rise since June, but experts widely believe that these numbers are drastic undercounts, per The Associated Press.
Over the last two weeks, cases in Myanmar increased by 105%, reported the Deseret News.
Thursday, Myanmar reported 5,234 new cases and 342 deaths, according to the health ministry’s statistics, reported the AP.
Reports from medics and funeral services describe an even higher toll, reported Al Jazeera.
Cases in Myanmar are expected to continue rising drastically in the coming weeks. By one estimate from the U.K., half of Myanmar’s population — or 27 million people — could be infected with COVID-19 within the next two weeks, per Al Jazeera.
Why is COVID-19 surging in Myanmar?
The situation in Myanmar is near chaos, reported Reuters. The delta variant is surging while the health care system is collapsing.
The junta and military government have been accused of using the pandemic to “consolidate power and crush opposition,” per the AP.
“The military is weaponizing COVID,” said Yanghee Lee, former Myanmar human rights expert to the U.N., per the AP.
Doctors and other health care workers — many of whom participated in demonstrations protesting the military government — have been attacked or arrested, reported Al Jazeera. The military still has warrants out for hundreds of medical professionals.
By the U.N.’s estimate, only 40% of health care facilities in Myanmar are still functioning. Out of fear, some doctors have taken to treating patients in secret, reported The Guardian.
So far, Myanmar has only vaccinated about 3.2% of its population, per Al Jazeera.
Vaccination efforts in Myanmar face compounding difficulties since people may be hesitant of the vaccine, the military government trying to vaccinate them or both, per Reuters.
“Ongoing political tension and deep distrust between the public and the ruling military junta — which took power in February’s coup — has made a bad situation even worse,” reported the Deseret News.
What will happen in Myanmar?
This week, Myanmar’s military called for international aid for its coronavirus response. The U.K. has also pushed for the U.N. to lead a cease-fire in conflict zones of the country to ensure vaccines are delivered, reported Al Jazeera. Neither effort has gotten much traction.
“Myanmar is becoming a super-spreader of COVID-19 with these very virulent variants,” said Tom Andrews, the U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar, per The Guardian.
“COVID does not respect nationalities or borders or ideologies or political parties,” Andrews said. “It’s an equal opportunities killer.
“This is a region that is susceptible to even greater suffering as a result of Myanmar becoming a super-spreader state,” he said.

 , Accusations Against Myanmar Junta Ahead of Coup AnniversarySmall groups of students protested against Myanmar's milit...
31/07/2021

, Accusations Against Myanmar Junta Ahead of Coup Anniversary

Small groups of students protested against Myanmar's military junta on Saturday in Mandalay and a human rights group accused the armed forces of crimes against humanity ahead of the six-month anniversary of the army's takeover.
Bands of university students rode motorbikes around Mandalay waving red and green flags, saying they rejected any possibility of talks with the military to negotiate a return to civilian rule.
Myanmar's army seized power on Feb. 1 from the civilian government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi after her ruling party won elections that the military argued were tainted by fraud.
New York-based Human Rights Watch on Saturday said the armed forces' violent suppression of protests against the coup and arrests of opponents included torture, murder and other acts that violate international humanitarian conventions.
“These attacks on the population amount to crimes against humanity for which those responsible should be brought to account,” Brad Adams, the group's Asia director, said in a statement.
The spokesman for the military authorities, Zaw Min Tun, could not be reached on Saturday to respond to Human Rights Watch allegations because his mobile phone was turned off.
The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners activist group says at least 6,990 people have been arrested since the coup. The group says the armed forces have killed 939 people, a number the military says is exaggerated.
The army has branded its opponents terrorists and says its takeover was in line with the constitution.
The military took power in February after alleging fraud in the November 2020 election, which Suu Kyi's party swept. The former electoral commission had dismissed the military’s accusations.

 : Coup Leads to Crimes Against HumanityMyanmar’s military junta has committed numerous abuses against the population th...
31/07/2021

: Coup Leads to Crimes Against Humanity

Myanmar’s military junta has committed numerous abuses against the population that amount to crimes against humanity in the six months since the February 1, 2021 coup, Human Rights Watch said today.
Since the military takeover, millions of people have taken to the streets across the country and peacefully protested for a return to a democratically elected civilian government. As part of a widespread and systematic attack on the population, security forces have repeatedly fired on and otherwise used excessive force to disperse and harm protesters. Police and soldiers have killed over 900 protesters and bystanders, including about 75 children, forcibly disappeared over 100 persons, and tortured and r***d an unknown number in custody. Several thousand people have been arbitrarily arrested and detained.
“Myanmar’s junta has responded to massive popular opposition to the coup with killings, torture, and arbitrary detention of people who merely want last year’s election results to be respected and a government that reflects the popular will,” said Brad Adams, Asia director. “These attacks on the population amount to crimes against humanity for which those responsible should be brought to account.”
The concept of crimes against humanity dates to at least 1915 and was part of the 1945 Charter of the International Military Tribunal that created the Nuremberg trials of N**i leaders. Under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), crimes against humanity are a series of offenses that are knowingly committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population.
The offenses of Myanmar’s junta against those opposed to the military coup have been both a widespread and systematic attack against the population, Human Rights Watch said. The nature of the response, broad-based and frequently consistent, reflects government policy rather than the actions of individual security personnel.
Apparent crimes against humanity committed since February 1 include murder, enforced disappearance, torture, r**e and other sexual violence, severe deprivation of liberty, and other inhumane acts causing great suffering. Human Rights Watch previously found that Myanmar’s military had committed crimes against humanity against the ethnic Rohingya population in 2012-2013 and again in 2017 as part of campaigns of ethnic cleansing. The authorities are committing crimes against humanity of apartheid, persecution, and severe deprivation of liberty against Rohingya currently living in Rakhine State. The UN-backed Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM) is “closely following” events and is collecting evidence of possible crimes committed following the coup. The IIMM is also mandated to build case files to support efforts to hold individuals responsible for such crimes in criminal proceedings.
The United Nations, regional bodies, and governments, including the European Union, United States, and Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), should respond to the continuing crimes against humanity in Myanmar by supplementing, strengthening, and coordinating international sanctions against the military and the State Administration Council (SAC) junta leadership under Sr. Gen. Min Aung Hlaing. Actions should include targeted sanctions on individuals, a global arms embargo, and financial restrictions that would reduce the junta’s revenues from extractive industries.
Governments should act to reduce the junta’s gas revenues, which are the military’s largest source of foreign currency income, adding up to about US$1 billion annually in duties, taxes, royalties, fees, tariffs, and other profits. The US, EU, UK, and others should block payments to the junta and state-owned enterprises from foreign-financed oil and gas projects, such as those operated by PTT, Total, and Chevron. Such measures can be designed to target the junta’s access to foreign accounts while allowing for the continued production of gas and electricity in the country.
Since the coup, concerns about vetoes by China and Russia have deterred the United Nations Security Council from adopting resolutions to address the human rights crisis in Myanmar. The Security Council should urgently take measures against the junta, including by referring the situation in the country to the International Criminal Court (ICC), Human Rights Watch said. The court’s prosecutor is currently investigating the crimes against humanity of deportation and persecution following the 2017 ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya, as those crimes were completed in Bangladesh, an ICC member. The council should follow the June resolution of the UN General Assembly with its own resolution to impose a legally binding arms embargo and targeted sanctions on junta officials and key military leaders.
The Security Council and UN member countries should end the pretense that ASEAN will place sufficient pressure on the junta to restore a democratically elected civilian government, release political prisoners, and hold those responsible for abuses to account, Human Rights Watch said. Since its summit meeting on April 24, ASEAN has failed to appoint a promised special envoy and has taken no meaningful steps to press the junta to address grave human rights concerns in Myanmar.
“The international response to the Myanmar junta’s crimes against humanity has been stymied by fears of Security Council vetoes, ASEAN’s feckless leadership, and the EU’s hesitance to target foreign gas companies,” Adams said. “The Security Council and influential countries, notably the US, EU, Australia, Japan, India, and Thailand, should apply coordinated sanctions to pressure the junta to end its brutal repression.”
Alleged Crimes Against Humanity Since the February 1 Coup
The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court defines crimes against humanity as one of several offenses “committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population, with knowledge of the attack.” “Widespread” refers to the scale of the acts or number of victims. A “systematic” attack indicates a pattern or methodical plan. Crimes against humanity can be committed during peacetime as well as during armed conflict.
The statute defines “attack” as a “course of action involving the multiple commission of acts … pursuant to or in furtherance of a State or organizational policy.” The “attack” does not need to be a military attack as defined under international humanitarian law. Furthermore, “the term ‘population’ does not require that crimes against humanity be directed against the entire population of a geographical territory or area.”
The ICC statute’s Explanatory Memorandum states that crimes against humanity “are particularly odious offenses in that they constitute a serious attack on human dignity or grave humiliation or a degradation of one or more human beings. They are not isolated or sporadic events but are part either of a government policy (although the perpetrators need not identify themselves with this policy) or of a wide practice of atrocities tolerated or condoned by a government or a de facto authority.”
Myanmar is not a party to the ICC, but the UN Security Council could refer the situation in the country to the ICC.
The Myanmar military’s killing of numerous protesters, enforced disappearance of opposition supporters taken into custody, torture and r**e of many of those detained, and mass political detentions throughout Myanmar since the coup indicate that these abuses are widespread.
The authorities have made statements that suggest that the response to the protests has also been systematic. On February 21, the State Administration Council stated in the government’s Global New Light of Myanmar: “Protesters are now inciting the people, especially emotional teenagers and youth, to a confrontation path where they will suffer the loss of life.”
On March 26, the state MRTV news channel announced that demonstrators “should learn from the tragedy of earlier ugly deaths that you can be in danger of getting shot to the head and back” and warned that “parents should also talk their children out of it [joining protests], let’s not waste lives for nothing.” This language was widely interpreted to signal that the security forces were planning to respond with force to planned protests the next day, Armed Forces Day.
In a May 8 statement, the junta formally designated the opposition National Unity Government (NUG), its parliamentary committee, and their offshoot militias as “terrorist groups” for alleged acts of incitement against the junta, seemingly to justify a broad suppression campaign. The junta said that the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH) – composed of members of the majority party from the 2020 elections of the national parliament – and the NUG “constantly incited Civil Disobedience Movement participants to commit violent acts.”
The following alleged crimes against humanity should be independently and impartially investigated:
Murder
Since the February 1 coup, the State Administration Council junta has responded to massive protests with excessive and lethal force. The police and military have killed over 900 people, most of whom were protesters and bystanders in many cities and towns across Myanmar, including Yangon (Hlaing Thayar, North Okkapala, and other townships), Mandalay, Bago, Monywa, and other townships in Sagaing region, Mindat township in Chin state, and other locations. International human rights standards permit law enforcement officials to use lethal force only as a last resort when there is an imminent threat to life. But in numerous cases reported in the media, and by the UN, Human Rights Watch, and other human rights organizations, the security forces fired on demonstrators who were unarmed and posed no apparent threat.
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on April 13 denounced “yet another weekend of coordinated bloodshed in many parts of the country.” She said that “[t]he military seems intent on intensifying its pitiless policy of violence against the people of Myanmar, using military-grade and indiscriminate weaponry.”
The UN Human Rights Committee, in its General Comment No. 37 on the right of peaceful assembly, has stated that “[f]irearms are not an appropriate tool for the policing of assemblies, and must never be used simply to disperse an assembly.… [A]ny use of fi****ms by law enforcement officials in the context of assemblies must be limited to targeted individuals in circumstances in which it is strictly necessary to confront an imminent threat of death or serious injury.”
The crime against humanity of murder has been defined by ad hoc international tribunals as “the death of the victim which results from an act or omission by the accused, committed with the intent either to kill or to cause serious bodily harm with the reasonable knowledge that it would likely lead to death.”
There have been a number of reports of large-scale shooting of protesters by the security forces. The UN reported that security forces killed 18 people on February 28. On March 3, security forces across the country fired live rounds at protesters, killing at least 38 and wounding more than 100, the UN reported. Killings were also reported in one day in Monywa, Sagaing region; Myingyan and Mandalay, Mandalay region; Salin, Magway region; and Mawlamyine, Mon state, according to media reports and local analysts.
Human Rights Watch investigated incidents in which security personnel appeared to deliberately kill individuals. On March 3 in Yangon, at least 10 security force personnel were captured on video pushing a man ahead of a group of detainees and then fatally shooting him in the back at close range.
Medical doctors told Human Rights Watch that security forces prevented them from reaching wounded protesters, some of whom died from blood loss. Doctors working in mobile clinics during protests said security forces used live rounds interspersed with rubber bullets and that many of the fatal injuries were from bullet wounds to the upper body.
On March 13, the authorities killed at least nine protesters, including five in the Sein Pan area of Mandalay, when security forces reportedly shot into a crowd. On March 14 in Hlaing Thayar township, Yangon, security forces killed an estimated 58 people.
On March 17, police pursuing protesters forced their way into Sandar Linn Shein’s family home in Bayintnaung, Mayangone township. She said they accused the family of sheltering protesters and began shooting indiscriminately, killing her older sister instantly and wounding her older brother in the chest and then arresting him.
On March 27, Armed Forces Day, the day after the MRTV news channel announced that demonstrators “should learn from the tragedy of earlier ugly deaths that you can be in danger of getting shot to the head and back,” security forces carried out violent crackdowns on protesters in at least 40 towns and cities, killing dozens, Fortify Rights reported: “Eyewitness photographs and videos filmed [on March 27] show dead bodies, including children, and soldiers firing weapons street-level, dragging lifeless victims away, and brutally beating people.”
In one case, security forces shot and wounded Aye Ko during a night raid in Mandalay. Local media reported that security forces dragged him away and then set him on fire. Residents said soldiers threatened to shoot anyone who tried to help him. In a another widely publicized incident on March 27, a video shows soldiers shooting and killing Kyaw Min Latt at close range as he drove by them on a motorcycle.
On April 9, military personnel killed an estimated 82 people in Bago in a dawn assault on protesters’ barricades and encampments, according to media reports.
On May 26, the Associated Press, in conjunction with the Human Rights Center Investigations Lab at the University of California, Berkeley, published an extensive and detailed report documenting killings. The AP and Human Rights Center alleged that the junta was using the killings, including by dragging bodies through the streets and returning mutilated corpses to families, to terrorize the population into ending the protests. They identified more than 130 instances in which “security forces appeared to be using corpses and the bodies of the wounded to create anxiety, uncertainty, and strike fear in the civilian population.”
Enforced Disappearances
Since the coup, Myanmar authorities have taken into custody and forcibly disappeared more than 100 politicians, election officials, journalists, activists, and protesters, and refused to confirm their location in violation of international law.
Enforced disappearances are defined in the ICC statute as the arrest or detention of someone by the state or their agents followed by a refusal to acknowledge that deprivation of freedom or to give information on the fate or whereabouts of the person, with the intention of “removing them from the protection of the law for a prolonged period of time.”
Family members and friends of arrested anti-junta protesters told Human Rights Watch that not knowing where the person was being held heightened concerns about their safety and well-being.
In many cases, families only received information informally about the location of their family member, such as when newly released detainees notified others that they had seen another person who had been detained. Some families believe that because a prison accepts a package for their family member, it is most likely the place where their relative is being held. However, there is no factual basis for this conclusion, and it does not relieve the authorities of their obligation to provide information on a detainee’s whereabouts, produce a detainee in court within 48 hours as provided by Myanmar law, and promptly allow access to counsel and family members.
Torture
Many of those detained for taking part in pro-democracy demonstrations said after their release that that security personnel tortured and otherwise ill-treated them and others in custody. Methods of torture reported include beatings, mock executions with guns, burning with ci******es, and r**e and threatened r**e. While torture by police in criminal cases has long been a problem in Myanmar, coup opponents taken into custody have been at risk of routine beatings, torture, and gender-based violence, indicating that the mistreatment has been part of junta efforts to suppress the political opposition.
One 19-year-old man told the media that on April 9 he was taken to a military compound on the outskirts of Bago after a deadly day of protests. He said the security forces used cables, the butts of guns, and bottles to beat him on his hands. “The commander tied my hands from the back and used small scissors to cut my ears, the tip of my nose, my neck and my throat,” he said. “[He] hit my head with a glass bottle, beat me up, pointed at me with guns but the bullets did not come out.”
Protesters in Myeik, Tanintharyi region, said after their release that on March 9, security force members beat about 70 protesters detained during demonstrations with belts, rifles butts, pipes, wooden sticks, and chains. On April 19, the junta created a public outcry when it aired on MRTV the images of six young detainees who bore marks of torture suffered while they were detained.
A 17-year-old boy told Human Rights Watch that he had been beaten for days while blindfolded, then forced into a pit and buried up to his neck in a mock burial. He said he and others arrested with him were denied food and water for four days and drank toilet water to survive.
The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) said that since the coup, at least 22 people have been tortured to death during custody.
Human Rights Watch investigated the case of Khin Maung Latt, 58, a ward chairman in Pabedan township in downtown Yangon. On the evening of March 6, witnesses saw soldiers and police forcibly enter Khin Maung Latt’s home, beat and kick him in front of his family, and then take him away at gunpoint. The next morning, after notification by the authorities, Khin Maung Latt’s family recovered his body from a hospital. The body had severe wounds to the hands and back and was covered in a bloody shroud, a witness said.
R**e and Other Sexual Violence
The UN special representative of the secretary-general on sexual violence, Pramila Patten, condemned alleged sexual violence by the Myanmar authorities. She called for an end to the abuses and for unimpeded access for an independent investigation. In a June 25 statement she said:
Night raids, arbitrary arrests, sieges of townships and neighborhoods, torture and deaths in detention, attacks on locations and sites where civilians are gathered or have fled, and reports of sexual violence in detention sites, particularly sexual assault, torture, physical and verbal abuse, and intimidation, have become an alarming feature of daily life.
Mary Lawlor, the special rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, noted in a July 19 statement on Myanmar that “[w]omen human rights defenders are particularly at risk in remote rural areas and are often beaten and kicked before being sent to prison where they can face torture and sexual violence with no medical care provided.”
The opposition National Unity Government reported that le***an, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people have been particularly vulnerable to sexual violence in custody. One transgender woman recounted after her release that she was r***d in custody with an object, tortured, and severely beaten.
Human Rights Watch investigated the case of a woman whom the police arrested on April 17 and accused of involvement in a series of bomb attacks against security forces in Yangon. Local media reported that police in Yankin township severely beat the woman, including on her ge****ls, causing vaginal bleeding, during interrogation at the police station. They beat her again at an interrogation center in Shwe Pyi Thar township, making it difficult for her to eat or urinate. Her cellmate said she herself was molested, threatened with a gun, and slapped during interrogation at another police precinct in Sanchaung township.
On March 3 in Yangon, the authorities arrested two journalists, Han Thar Nyein and Nathan Maung, during a raid of their Kamayut Media office. Nathan Maung, who has been released, said the police beat them for days at an interrogation center and that Han Thar Nyein, who is now in Insein prison, was also burned with ci******es and threatened with r**e.
Imprisonment or Other Severe Deprivation of Liberty in Violation of International Law
On February 1, the military arrested State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, President Win Myint, and several dozen other senior officials in early morning raids in the capital, Naypyidaw. They remain in detention.
The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) has reported that since the coup, security forces have arrested 6,990 people, of whom 5,442 remain detained. In some instances, security forces have arrested and detained family members and friends of activists, protesters, and opposition members as a form of collective punishment. The AAPP said that at least 119 people, including an infant, have been arrested during raids when security forces were unable to find the person they sought to arrest. At least 83 of them remain in detention and some family members have been sentenced to prison terms.
The junta has particularly targeted members of the media for arrest. Since February 1, the authorities have arrested 98 journalists, 46 of whom are currently in detention, according to the AAPP. Six journalists have been convicted, including five for violating section 505A of the penal code, a new provision that makes it a criminal offense punishable by up to three years in prison to publish or circulate comments that “cause fear” or spread vaguely defined “false news.”
Other Inhumane Acts Causing Great Suffering or Serious Injury
The junta has harassed, arbitrarily arrested, and attacked medical professionals, sometimes as they treated injured protesters. Many healthcare workers were early leaders of the opposition Civil Disobedience Movement and refused to work in government hospitals as a form of protest. Since the coup at least 260 healthcare workers have been attacked while trying to administer medical aid, and 18 killed. The AAPP said 76 remain in detention and up to 600 medical professionals have outstanding arrest warrants against them. Many have been forced to work underground in makeshift mobile clinics or have gone into hiding to evade arrest. The UN Country Team in Myanmar has said that the attacks on medical workers have jeopardized the Covid-19 response.
CCTV footage released online shows at least six police officers removing three workers from an ambulance of the Mon Myat Seik Htar (MMSH) volunteer rescue team, then beating the workers with their guns and batons and kicking them. The MMSH volunteers were subsequently arrested and released on March 24, Myanmar Now reported.


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