Toronto Star

Save the Children says staff missing after attack

- TASSANEE VEJPONGSA

The internatio­nal aid group Save the Children said two of its staffers were missing in a massacre in eastern Myanmar that left more than 30 people, including women and children, dead and burned in their vehicles after they were reportedly shot by government troops as they were fleeing combat.

Photos of the aftermath of the Christmas Eve killings in Mo So village spread on social media in the country, fuelling outrage against the military that took power in February after ousting the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi.

The accounts could not be independen­tly verified. The photos showed the charred bodies of over 30 people in three burned-out vehicles. On Sunday, the U.S. Embassy in Myanmar said it was appalled by the “barbaric attack.”

“We will continue to press for accountabi­lity for the perpetrato­rs of the ongoing campaign of violence against the people of Burma,” it said in a statement.

Save the Children said it was suspending operations in the region.

A villager who said he went to the scene told the Associated Press that the victims had fled the fighting between armed resistance groups and Myanmar’s army near Koi Ngan village on Friday. He said they were killed after they were arrested by troops while heading to refugee camps in the western part of the township.

Save the Children said that two of its staff who were travelling home for the holidays after conducting humanitari­an response work in a nearby community were “caught up in the incident and remain missing.”

“We have confirmati­on that their private vehicle was attacked and burned out,” the group added in a statement.

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