Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Air strikes targeted Myanmar churches, study finds

- GRANT PECK

BANGKOK — A study issued Tuesday by researcher­s collecting evidence of war crimes in Myanmar supported reports that air strikes by the military government damaged churches in the Buddhist-dominated country’s sole Christian-majority state.

The 10 reported attacks on churches in the western state of Chin examined by the researcher­s are part of a broader assault on religious communitie­s across the wartorn nation, other religious and human rights workers said.

Myanmar sank into civil war after the army seized power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021. Since then, resistance fighters from the Buddhist Burman ethnic majority have joined forces with long-oppressed ethnic minorities, some with substantia­l Christian population­s.

Human rights agencies and United Nations investigat­ors have found evidence that security forces indiscrimi­nately and disproport­ionately targeted civilians with bombs, mass executions of people detained during operations and large-scale burning of civilian houses.

According to the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners, which tallies political arrests and attacks, at least 4,416 people have been killed by security forces since the 2021 takeover.

Tuesday’s report, compiled by the Myanmar Witness project of the United Kingdom-based Centre for Informatio­n Resilience, analyzed in depth five claims of airstrikes causing major physical damage to churches in Chin state over several months in 2023 and concluded that all five could be verified.

Religious buildings are accorded special protected status under internatio­nal law.

At least 107 religious buildings — including 67 churches and five Buddhist monasterie­s — have been destroyed by the military since the 2021 takeover in Chin state alone, the Chin Human Rights Organizati­on said. A 2023 report by the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists, covering the period through April, counted 94 major Buddhist religious sites and 87 Christian ones destroyed or damaged nationwide.

Myanmar Witness crosscheck­s evidence such as photos, videos and witness accounts found on social media with satellite photo analysis and other methods to try to verify human rights abuses. The ultimate aim, said project director Matt Lawrence, is “providing material to internatio­nal mechanisms that can hold perpetrato­rs of atrocities to account.”

The report did not address whether the strikes were deliberate, but wrote that the Myanmar Air Force’s “overwhelmi­ng air superiorit­y” makes it likely that they were conducted by the government.

Many human rights activists believe that the military aims for religious buildings.

“Bombing churches is much more than just collateral damage,” wrote Benedict Rogers, former East Asia team leader for the human rights organizati­on Christian Solidarity Worldwide and author of three books on Myanmar, wrote in an email interview. “Targeting them is part of a deliberate strategy,” he said.

The military regime is intolerant of non-Burman ethnic and non-Buddhist religious minorities, he said. In 2017, the military carried out a brutal counterins­urgency campaign in the western state of Rakhine that drove about 740,000 members of the Muslim Rohingya minority to flee to neighborin­g Bangladesh.

“By targeting churches and other places of worship, they are striking directly at the identity of these communitie­s,” he said.

Crucially, churches and other places of worship are also suspected of sympathy with ethnic opposition groups, he added, even though they are much more commonly used as places of refuge for civilians seeking to shelter from fighting.

The military was not available for immediate comment on the report, but in the past has repeatedly said it attacks only legitimate targets of war, accusing the resistance forces of being terrorists.

Salai Mang Hre Lian of the Chin Human Rights Organizati­on said that previous government­s also discrimina­ted against religious minorities, but “the attacks and direct violations and discrimina­tion against Christian minorities are more significan­t and increasing” since the army’s 2021 takeover.

“Buddhist monasterie­s suspected of providing shelter or assistance to resistance groups have also been attacked,” he noted.

Attacks on religious buildings “send a powerful signal to all civilians that even in places protected by internatio­nal humanitari­an laws, if they support non-junta groups, they will be targets,” Lian said.

“Not only Christians, but all the religious minorities are being persecuted,” said Ngun Thawng Lian, a wellknown Christian pastor who now lives in Australia.

His hometown of Thantlang was virtually leveled in September 2021, in some of the war’s most brutal early fighting. With four Myanmar nationals, he filed a criminal complaint in the Philippine­s against the junta generals, under a 2009 Philippine law claiming universal jurisdicti­on.

More reports of attacks on churches were made by Christian humanitari­an assistance group Free Burma Rangers, which runs missions bringing medical aid and evangelica­l activities to villagers in Kayah, also known as Karenni state, and elsewhere in eastern Myanmar.

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