| KILLINGS, RAPES IN
WELL-PLANNED ATTACK BY BURMESE JUNTA, As many as 100 killed in May
operation targeting Aung San Suu Kyi
RFA News
WASHINGTON, Sept. 5, 2003--A pro-government
activist paid to take part in a May 30 attack on the convoy of opposition
leader Aung San Suu Kyi in northern Burma has revealed that as many
as 100 people were killed and an unknown number of women raped in
a series of government-led atrocities in the area, Radio Free Asia
(RFA) reports. In testimony recorded for RFA's Burmese service,
the man has described a well-planned terror operation by the junta
against its own people, including a carefully orchestrated cover-up
to conceal the number of dead.
"At midnight, [local junta official] Ko Tin Nyunt came to
houses in [Kyi and Yitthay villages] and hired men to shovel...
In [an abandoned irrigation department compound called] Sei Myaung
Wun, they dug holes between the buildings' foundations," said
the man, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "Later, they
brought the bodies, maybe 100 there, including people who were alive
with serious injuries."
The men filled roughly one dozen burial sites inside the compound,
each containing three to four bodies--although medical officers,
police, military intelligence personnel, and firefighters told villagers
to sign affidavits saying that only four people had been killed.
On May 31, under supervision of Depayin Township Police Commissioner
Than Win, they exhumed four bodies, washed their faces and photographed
them, then buried them again.
According to several sources, scores of bodies were delivered to
a crematorium in Monywar Industrial Zone and cremated over two nights,
June 1-2. RFA has confirmed the existence of a crematorium in Monywar
Industrial Zone but--unlike other elements of this report--was unable
to independently corroborate that it was used on those nights to
cremate people who died in the attack on Aung San Suu Kyi's convoy.
While the number of dead cannot be independently verified, opposition
supporters who witnessed the worst of the attacks in floodlights
near the Ywarthit Bridge, near Depayin Township in the north of
the country, say at least 100 people were beaten to death by government
gangs in the area.
Then deputy home minister Brigadier Gen. Thura Myint Maung and
chairman of the junta's district branch Lt. Col. Myint Lwin met
May 31 at the Sei Myaung Wun compound with other officials, the
man said. Myint Maung instructed everyone present to relate the
events of May 30 as a brawl between supporters of Aung San Suu Kyi
and supporters of the ruling State Peace and Development Council
(SPDC), with authorities stepping in to restore order. Myint Maung
was promoted Aug. 25 to minister of religious affairs.
"We, the civilian staff, were forced to attend briefings by
the authorities. They read out the government press conference as
covered in the newspaper.
We were told that four people had been killed and 50 injured, and
they asked us to sign forms testifying to this," said the pro-government
activist, a member of the government-led Union Solidarity and Development
Association (USDA).
The government activist who recorded his testimony for RFA said
he had been recruited to carry out the attacks and that he had agreed
for fear of being denounced as an opposition supporter. "The
training we got was very simple.
Stand firmly at the position we were assigned, one step forward
and beat anyone who came within our reach, and step back. Since
many people were positioned everywhere, there wouldn't be any way
to escape from the attack," he said, adding that a number of
men dressed to look like Buddhist monks attended the training sessions.
He described how men and women were detained separately on the
night of May 30 in storage halls in the abandoned Sei Myaung Wun
compound. "Many women were raped by authorities in the hall.
I learned from a friend who was in the next room on duty and secretly
watched these horrible events. He said it was unfair and atrocious,
but he could do nothing to help."
"He heard women crying for help. The doors were closed, and
nobody was able to escape," he said. "There were a lot
of missing persons around our area. We, the whole town, knew that
it was a premeditated attack. But the authorities are trying to
cover it up by arresting and killing those who witnessed it."
The commander of the Northwest Military Division Command arrived
in Depayin Township at about 9 p.m. on May 30 and told subordinates
to clear away all evidence of the attack during the night, he said.
"The deputy home minister and the divisional commander were
in Monywar Township before Aung San Suu Kyi arrived, and they monitored
the situation very closely," he said.
Witnesses agree that government officials arrived in the area many
days before the attack on the National League for Democracy (NLD)
convoy, commandeering a local school and 50-60 trucks and vans from
the local population. They also commissioned local carpenters to
make bamboo spikes, iron spikes, and other homemade weapons, which
were issued to the attackers.
All USDA members in the area were ordered to congregate at the
No. 1 State High School in Depayin Township no later than May 27,
where they were provided with training and free food. They were
paid on May 30. Dinner was withheld on May 30, however, until after
the ambush, "so these people were hungry and more impatient
and mad," the USDA member reported. "Officers with the
rank of major instructed two cars [by walkie-talkie] to collide
with Aung San Suu Kyi's car--they tried to kill her this way,"
he said.
The USDA member said Aung San Suu Kyi's car initially escaped the
ambush in scenes reminiscent of a Hong Kong action movie. But her
driver was finally stymied by a train blocking a railway crossing
outside Ye Oo Township a few miles from Depayin.
The junta has kept Aung San Suu Kyi in detention since the Depayin
ambush, drawing widespread international condemnation. The SPDC
has repeatedly characterized the attacks as a brawl between NLD
and anti-opposition supporters, with police trying to stop the conflict.
RFA broadcasts news and information to those Asian listeners who
lack regular access to full and balanced reporting in their domestic
media. Through its broadcasts and call-in programs, RFA aims to
fill a critical gap in the lives of people across Asia. Created
by Congress in 1994 and incorporated in 1996, RFA currently broadcasts
in Burmese, Cantonese, Khmer, Korean, Lao, Mandarin, the Wu dialect,
Vietnamese, Tibetan (Uke, Amdo, and Kham), and Uyghur. It adheres
to the highest standards of journalism and aims to exemplify accuracy,
balance, and fairness in its editorial content. ###
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