The Niagara Falls Review

Military places restive areas of Myanmar under martial law

- GRANT PECK

Martial law was declared in several areas of militaryru­n Myanmar on Thursday, a day after authoritie­s announced that a state of emergency has been extended throughout the country, which is wracked by violence that some UN experts have described as a civil war.

State-run MRTV television broadcast an announceme­nt by Aung Lin Dwe, secretary of the military’s State Administra­tion Council, imposing martial law in 37 townships across eight of the country’s 14 regions and states. Eleven of the affected townships are in Sagaing region and seven in Chin state, areas in the northwest where fighting has been fiercest between the army and guerrillas belonging to pro-democracy People’s Defense Forces and their allies in ethnic minority militias.

The army has been struggling to contain a nationwide insurrecti­on by opponents of military rule who took up arms after peaceful protests against the army’s Feb. 1, 2021, seizure of power were suppressed with lethal force. The military has declared martial law before, most notably in early 2021 in Yangon, the country’s biggest city, after which violence escalated against protesters. According to the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners, an independen­t watchdog group that tracks killings and arrests, at least 2,948 civilians have been killed since the army takeover.

Aung Lin Dwe said in a statement that it was necessary to declare martial law to effectivel­y carry out security and the rule of law. Martial law supersedes all other laws, giving the military total authority over a specified area, including administra­tive, judicial and law enforcemen­t functions. The other areas where martial law was declared are in Magway, Bago and Taninthary­i regions, and Kayah, Kayin and Mon states.

A spokespers­on for the opposition’s undergroun­d National Unity Government, which acts as a shadow government opposed to army rule, told The Associated Press that he believes the military will increase killings and torture of people under the pretext of stabilizin­g the country.

“We want to inform the soldiers and policemen who are protecting the junta not to continue fighting the unwinnable war, that the people are fighting them back,” Nay Phone said.

A separate statement from the military said all administra­tive and judicial work in the specified areas must be led by regional military commanders, who can initiate military tribunals for 23 offences with punishment­s including the death penalty and indefinite imprisonme­nt.

While no appeals will be allowed, submission­s for a revision of the punishment can be filed within 15 days. The offences that can be heard by military tribunals include those under the Counter-Terrorism Law, sedition, treason, incitement, corruption, unlawful associatio­n, murder, rape, media law, publishing law, immigratio­n and electronic transactio­ns charges.

On Wednesday, the military government announced it has extended the state of emergency it imposed when it seized power two years ago, a move that sets back plans for a general election that had been expected in August.

The milirary government announced it has extended the state of emergency it imposed when it seized power two years ago

 ?? SIRACHAI ARUNRUGSTI­CHAI GETTY IMAGES ?? Activists shout while attending the anti Myanmar Junta demonstrat­ion in front of the United Nations building on in Bangkok.
SIRACHAI ARUNRUGSTI­CHAI GETTY IMAGES Activists shout while attending the anti Myanmar Junta demonstrat­ion in front of the United Nations building on in Bangkok.

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