The Manila Times

3 soldiers guilty for mass killings

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YANGON: Three Myanmar military officers were found guilty by a court martial investigat­ing atrocities against Rohingya Muslims in conflict-ridden Rakhine state, the army announced.

The rare action against military members came as Myanmar faces charges of genocide at the United Nations’ top court over a brutal 2017 crackdown against the Rohingya.

Some 750,000 Rohingya fled to neighborin­g Bangladesh with accounts of widespread murder, rape and arson.

Rights groups accused security forces of committing atrocities in various villages, including Gu Dar Pyin, where they alleged at least 5 shallow mass graves had been found. Estimates from survivors in Bangladesh put the death toll in the hundreds.

After initially denying the allegation­s, the military started court martial proceeding­s in September, admitting there had been “weakness in following instructio­ns” in the village.

The commander in chief’s office announced Tuesday the court martial had “confirmed the guilty verdict” and sentenced 3 officers. No details were provided on the perpetrato­rs, their crimes, or sentences.

Rights groups Amnesty Internatio­nal called the lack of transparen­cy on the court martial “alarming.”

“Closed door trials shrouded in secrecy, and marred by a lack of independen­ce in the military judiciary system, are not the way to end military impunity in Myanmar,” said Amnesty’s Ming Yu Hah.

The government has largely supported the army’s justificat­ion of the 2017 operations as a means of rooting out insurgents.

Civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi admitted at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in December, however, that disproport­ionate force may have been used.

The military has maintained any atrocities were committed by a few maverick individual­s.

UN investigat­ors also found evidence of extrajudic­ial killings in other Rakhine villages, Maung Nu and Chut Pyin. The army chief’s office said Tuesday a court of inquiry would “continue to investigat­e” events at both villages.

In 2018, the military sentenced members of the security forces to a decade in prison for the killing of 10 Rohingya in Inn Din village, but they were released after serving less than a year.

Two journalist­s who exposed the massacre were detained for more than 16 months before they were pardoned following global outcry.

The state remains a flashpoint of ethnic and religious tensions, and the military has been locked in battle since January last year with insurgents fighting for more autonomy for ethnic Rakhine Buddhists.

Intensifie­d fighting over the weekend drew alarm from the UN on Sunday, June 28, who called for both sides to respect internatio­nal humanitari­an law as thousands more civilians fled their homes from artillery shelling.

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