Report: Burma Army still committing—and covering up—war crimes against ethnic women
A report released today by the Kachin
Women’s Association Thailand (KWAT) and the Legal Aid Network (LAN) examines
war crimes of sexual violence against ethnic women, and the “systematic
cover-up” of these offenses by the Burma Army.
The publication of “Justice Delayed, Justice
Denied” coincided with the one-year anniversary of the rape and murder of two
ethnic Kachin teachers in northern Shan State. On January 19, 2015, Maran Lu
Ra, age 20, and Nan Tsin, age 21, were sexually assaulted, beaten and stabbed to
death in their bamboo house within a church compound in the village of Kawng
Kha, 20 miles east of Muse in northern Shan State.
“Why do we have to keep silent? This is the
public’s voice. We have to stand on the women’s side, on behalf of all,” said
Seng Zin, Joint General-Secretary at KWAT, of the report’s conclusions, which
are based on witness testimony.
While local police have yet to identify or
arrest a perpetrator, and the government has cleared the military of any
involvement in the crime, the report identifies the primary suspect as the
commanding officer of the Burma Army troops stationed in the village.
Police allegedly questioned some, but not
all of the soldiers in the area, and interrogated the commanding officer only
briefly. Forensic evidence from the Kawng Kha crime scene was also reportedly
collected unsystematically: suspicious items were placed in shopping bags,
hairs of the perpetrators stored in unsealed envelopes, bloody fingerprints not
collected for analysis, and no DNA testing was performed on bodily fluids
collected at the crime scene.
“The government’s
priorities were clear in the Kawng Kha case—protect the military at all cost,”
said KWAT General Secretary Moon Nay Li in a statement also released today.
The murder in Kawng Kha is one of four
incidents profiled in the report—others include the forced disappearance of a 28-year-old
Kachin woman, Sumlut Roi Ja, in 2011; the murder of a 14-year-old Kachin girl,
Ja Seng Ing, in 2012; and the rape and murder of a 28-year-old Shan woman, Nang
Khaek, in 2015.
KWAT and LAN fear that the impunity which
has accompanied these incidents “will become a catalyst for recurrence of gross
human rights violations in the future.”
“A key factor causing sexual violence is
the large number of Burma Army troops deployed throughout the ethnic states,”
the report states. KWAT and LAN argue that by “reducing its presence” in the
ethnic areas, the military would demonstrate sincerity in “seeking a negotiated
political solution to the conflict.”
Like other rights groups, KWAT also advocates
for the reform of the 2008 Constitution to eliminate “structural barrier[s]” to
justice in Burma, such as the military’s power over executive and judicial
institutions. Immunity for government officials is granted in Article 445 of
the 2008 Constitution, Seng Zin points out, a clause which protects them from
prosecution for actions committed during their service.
“If a soldier commits a crime while he is
serving, he can’t get punished by anyone—he was doing his duty,” she said of
the existing law. “Because of this kind of article, the military can get
impunity.”
Last month, the “Former President’s
Security Bill” was also proposed to Burma’s parliament, promising immunity to
ex-presidents for any crimes committed while in office. The legislation was not
openly challenged by the leadership of the National League for Democracy (NLD),
which won the majority of seats in Burma’s general election in November and is
slated to take power in March of this year.
Hkawng Lum, a lawyer working with LAN, said
in today’s statement that such an amnesty law would not protect President Thein
Sein from prosecution for war crimes in an international court, in accordance
with the Geneva Convention, which dictates the humane treatment of civilians
during times of armed conflict.
By SIMMA
FRANCIS / Shan Herald Agency for News (S.H.A.N)
Tags: Human Rights, News