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Heavy rain causes flooding in townships nationwide; UN states that abuses ‘widespread’ in Myanmar

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Volunteers assist flood victims in Myawaddy Township of Karen State on Sept. 11. (Credit: Myanmar Fire Services Department)

Heavy rain causes flooding in townships nationwide

An unknown number of people across Burma have been displaced from their homes nationwide due to flooding caused by heavy rains this week. Meteorologists predicted that the remnants of Typhoon Yagi would cause heavy rainfall and strong winds across the country until Wednesday. The storm arrived in Shan State on Monday.

There have been no reported casualties, but farmers have said that crop fields have been destroyed by the water. “The floods washed my rice away even though it wasn’t fully ripe [yet]. It was all ruined,” a resident of Naungshwe Township in southern Shan State told DVB. 

In Myawaddy Township of Karen State and Tatkon Township of Naypyidaw Region, rising water levels have forced an unknown number of residents to evacuate their homes to safer places. “The water rose up to five and a half feet [1.67 m]. Officials came, took photos, and left. Now, locals are having to manage the situation on their own,” a Tatkon resident told DVB. 

UN states that abuses are ‘widespread’ in Burma

Nicholas Koumjian, the head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM), said that civilians are being deliberately targeted and being subjected to sexual violence and torture since the 2021 military coup, during a speech to the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland on Monday.

“Victims and witnesses have recounted beatings, electric shocks, strangulations and torture by pulling out fingernails with pliers. There is evidence that minors and other victims of all genders have been subjected to gang rape, burns on sexual body parts and other violent sexual and gender-based crimes,” he recounted.

Koumjian added that the IIMM is collecting evidence of war crimes that have been committed in Burma and sharing it with the International Criminal Court (ICC), the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and a court in Argentina. But he admitted that the IIMM faces challenges, including lack of access to crime scenes or witnesses inside Burma.

Students attend the opening ceremony of a school for migrant children in Mae Sot, Thailand on April 3. (Credit: DVB)

Migrant families told to send children to Thai schools

The families of over 500 students from Burma living in southern Thailand, who attended migrant education centers that were closed in Surat Thani Province on Sept. 4, were told to enroll their children in Thai public schools. The Thai authorities stated that the schools were in violation of the law.

“The Thai government will review and investigate the [closed] schools. I hope they will find another way to reopen them,” Htoo Chit, the executive director of the Foundation for Education and Development (FED), told DVB. “People like us don’t even know who to ask for help. My child has never attended [Thai] school,” said the mother of one student. 

Thailand’s National Human Rights Commission expressed concern over the closure of the migrant education centers, which serve the children of migrant workers from Burma in Thailand. There are nearly 200 schools in Thailand that serve an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 students from Burma, according to the FED.

News by Region

AYEYARWADY—Thirty teachers attended a seven-day training course on how to conduct a population and household census at an immigration office in Pathein Township, located in eastern Ayeyarwady Region, last week. 

“Administration and immigration offices pressured us to attend,” a teacher in Pathein Township told DVB. Min Aung Hlaing has announced that a census will be held Oct. 1-15 in preparation for elections that are tentatively scheduled for November 2025.  

KAREN—Methamphetamine and ketamine valued at $16 million USD were seized by authorities at a checkpoint in Mae Sot, Thailand, which entered the country from Karen State. The U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) reported in December 2023 that opium cultivation in Burma has increased by 18 percent since the 2021 coup.

MON—The regime’s Union Election Commission (UEC) stated that it has accepted the application for the registration of the Mon Unity Party (MUP) on Monday. The MUP was founded on July 11, 2019 after a merger of the All Mon Region Democracy Party and Mon National Party. Its headquarters is located in the Mon State capital Mawlamyine. 

“We applied for the registration in February, last year,” an anonymous source in the MUP told DVB. The MUP won 12 seats, including the position of minister for Mon ethnic affairs in Mon and Karen states during the 2020 election. The UEC has accepted the registration of 52 political parties with four more parties to be considered.

NAYPYIDAW—A Tatkon Township administrator told DVB that rescue teams and authorities are trying to assist in the evacuation of residents from their homes in 20 villages due to flash flooding caused by heavy rainfall on Wednesday. 

“Flooding has reached as high as the roofs of houses in the lowlands. People in those homes had to evacuate themselves to monasteries or other areas as there were no rescue teams,” said a Thitseintpin village resident.

A Tatkon Township resident and his horse wade through flood waters in Naypyidaw Region on Sept. 11. (Credit: CJ)

Over 67 killed by airstrikes in Arakan State since Sunday; ICRC requests humanitarian access during visit to Naypyidaw

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Maungdaw Township in northern Arakan State seen from the Naf River along the Burma-Bangladesh border. (Credit: Reuters)

Over 67 killed by airstrikes in Arakan State since Sunday

The Arakan Army (AA) claimed that more than 50 people, including prisoners of war, were killed during airstrikes carried out by the Burma Air Force on the No. 2 Border Guard Post in Maungdaw Township, located near the Burma-Bangladesh border in northern Arakan State on Monday. It reported that members of pro-military Rohingya armed groups and the Arakan Liberation Party (ALP) were among the dead. 

The AA added that a fighter jet opened fire on U.N. buildings in Waithali village and at 3 Mile Point in Maungdaw on Sept. 9. The AA seized control of the No. 2 Border Guard Post on July 6. Another 17 people, including children and healthcare workers, were also reportedly killed and 10 were injured during airstrikes on a healthcare center in Pauktaw Township, south of the Arakan State capital Sittwe, on Sunday. 

“It is the place where the AA provided healthcare for prisoners and prisoners of war. They dropped bombs with their aircraft twice,” an anonymous source from the AA told DVB. Pauktaw came under the control of the AA on Jan. 24. Min Aung Hlaing said during a visit to the Shan State capital Taunggyi on Sept. 3 that the military would launch retaliatory attacks in areas controlled by resistance forces.

Military prepares for resistance attacks in eastern Kachin State

Kachin Independence Army (KIA) General Sumlut Gun Maw condemned the regime’s order for heightened defense against the KIA and People’s Defense Force (PDF) in the Kachin State Special Region 1, which is located in northeastern Kachin near the China border, on Monday. The area is controlled by the pro-military Kachin Border Guard Force (BGF). 

“The order should not have been issued,” Sumlut Gun Maw posted on his social media account. The martial order was issued in June and signed by Zahkung Ting Ying, the chief of the Kachin Special Region 1. He directed the BGF and militias based in Chipwi, Tsawlaw, Kanpaikti – which make up the special region – to “implement strict defense measures.” 

The regime order claimed that “the KIA and PDF are conducting offensives to disrupt the peace of local ethnic communities and the country” in the region. Much of Burma’s lucrative rare earth mining is conducted in the Kachin Special Region 1. The Kachin BGF was formed by the New Democratic Army – Kachin under military chain of command in 2009.  

President of the International Committee for the Red Cross Mirjana Spoljaric met with regime officials in Naypyidaw on Sept. 9. (Credit: Regime media)

ICRC requests humanitarian access during visit to Naypyidaw

A delegation led by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) President Mirjana Spoljaric met with Min Aung Hlaing in the capital Naypyidaw on Monday. Spoljaric called on the regime to allow greater humanitarian access to conflict-affected areas of the country. 

“Many families in Myanmar are going without basic medicines and health care, face food shortages and have limited access to clean water and sanitation. They live with the fear of conflict and violence. The disruption of livelihoods is leaving countless people without the means to sustain themselves,” Spoljaric stated in a press release on Monday. 

Spoljaric visited Burma from Sept. 5-9 and met with colleagues at the Myanmar Red Cross in Naypyidaw on Sunday. This is her first trip to Burma since becoming ICRC president in October 2022. The previous ICRC president, Peter Maurer, visited Burma in June 2021 – four months after the military coup. The regime claimed that it is adhering to international humanitarian law. 

News by Region

KACHIN—At least four civilians were killed and at least six were injured during fighting between the KIA and the military in Saitaung village of Hpakant Township on Sept. 5. Ywat Zaw Khaung from the Peace-talk Creation Group, which mediates between the military and resistance forces, was among the injured. 

“I heard the representatives of the Peace-talk Creation Group negotiated with the military not to use violence against the public, but it seems the military did not accept and is conducting retaliatory shelling,” Naw Bu, the KIA spokesperson told DVB. Around 1,500 civilians living around Saitaung village have been displaced from their homes due to the fighting.

KAREN—Cyber scam centers operating in Shwe Kokko, located 12 miles (20 km) north of Myawaddy, have reportedly relocated to territory under the control of the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA) in Karen State, as well as Laos and Cambodia, since the Karen BGF issued a warning for them to leave by October. 

“They may move to Cambodia or Laos but they will return to Burma. I have seen a lot of job postings for these businesses,” an anti-human trafficking group working along the Thailand-Burma border told DVB. The Institute for Strategy and Policy – Myanmar has documented that there are nearly 50 cyber scam compounds operating along the Thai border.

SHAN—Heavy flooding has affected towns in eastern Shan State, including Kengtung and Tachileik, since the remnants of Typhoon Yagi arrived in the region on Monday. The flooding has also impacted areas under the control of the United Wa State Army (UWSA) and National Democratic Alliance Army (NDAA).

“The stream on the [Mongpawk] outskirts near the Chinese border overflowed. In the morning, the water began to rise, and by evening, it had started to gradually recede,” a Mongpauk resident told DVB. Water levels exceeded critical thresholds in Tachileik on Monday, according to local sources. The regime’s Department of Meteorology and Hydrology has issued a heavy rainfall warning for most of Burma.

Residents wade through floodwaters in Mong Kung Township, located 120 miles (193 km) north of the Shan State capital Taunggyi, after heavy flooding. (Credit: CJ)

Chinland Defense Force accused of torturing teenagers; Military pledges ‘security’ for its nationwide census

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The Chin National Front flag flies in Rikhawdar after the town, located on the border of India, was seized on Nov. 13 (Credit: Chinland Information Center)

Chinland Defense Force accused of torturing teenagers

Two teenagers from Champhai district in India’s Mizoram State were released by the Chinland Defense Force (CDF) Hualngoram on Friday, The Print reported. The CDF arrested the boys for an alleged attack on one of its members in Rikhawdar town, located near the Indian border in Falam Township of Chinland, on Sept. 1. They were reportedly tortured while in CDF custody.

“We are almost at the edge of restraining our solidarity because of [CDF] action here and there. They start taking our kindness for granted, their statements these days almost anger our society. If these things continue we may not be able to tolerate their status,” a villager from Champhai district in India told The Print.

The teenagers, aged 15 and 16, were freed following negotiations between the CDF and local officials in Mizoram State. Chin resistance forces seized control of Rikhawdar, Chinland, on Nov. 13. Over 40,000 refugees from Burma have taken shelter in Mizoram State since the 2021 military coup. Mizo and Chin people are known collectively as the Zo ethnic nationality.

Military pledges ‘security’ for its nationwide census

Regime deputy leader Soe Win said that the military will provide security at “unsecure” locations across Burma in order for its workers to collect data for the nationwide census set to take place Oct. 1-15. He made the remarks during a meeting of the Central Census Commission in the capital Naypyidaw on Friday. 

“It is impossible to collect nationwide. How will the census be conducted in northern Shan and Arakan states?,” a source from the regime’s Department of Immigration and Population told DVB. Officials from 14 districts in Yangon have been receiving training on how to conduct a census since Sept. 3. 

Min Aung Hlaing said the census is being held in preparation for general elections that are tentatively scheduled for November 2025. Burma conducted its last national census in 2014. The Special Advisory Council for Myanmar (SAC-M), a group of experts on Burma, stated that the military regime has lost control of over 86 percent of the country’s territory to anti-coup resistance forces.   

Heavy rainfall expected nationwide this week

Meteorologists predict that the remnants of Typhoon Yagi will cause heavy rainfall and strong winds in Shan, Chin, Arakan, Karen and Mon states, as well as Mandalay, northern Magway, eastern Bago, Tanintharyi, and Yangon regions until Wednesday. The storm arrived in Shan State on Monday.  

“Our country is now between the remnants of Typhoon Yagi from the east and a strong depression in Bay of Bengal [from the west]. Now, it is entering eastern Shan State, causing heavy rainfall of more than 300 millimeters of rain. The remnants of the typhoon will reach Sagaing and Mandalay regions and bring more downpours,” meteorologist Win Naing told DVB. 

He added that the water levels of rivers must be monitored due to the risk of floods. The regime’s Department of Meteorology and Hydrology announced that the water levels of the Maesai creek in Tachileik exceeded three inches (7.6 cm) on Monday and may rise up to 1.5 feet (45.7 cm) in the next 24 hours. The World Food Programme (WFP) stated last month that more than 200,000 people have been impacted by flooding since late June.

International Committee of the Red Cross President Mirjana Spoljaric met with her colleagues at the Myanmar Red Cross in Naypyidaw on Sept. 8. (Credit: Myanmar Red Cross)

News by Region 

KACHIN—The bodies of three civilians that were killed during during fighting between the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and the military were recovered in Saitaung village of Hpakant Township, located 106 miles (170 km) northwest of the Kachin state capital Myitkyina, on Sunday. Fighting began after the military searched for resistance forces at a hotel in the village on Friday. 

“They arrested people inside the hotel after the raid. We heard the sound of gunfire and artillery shelling from Friday night until Sunday,” said a Saitaung resident. Some villagers managed to flee while others have locked themselves inside their homes. The regime cut off all telecommunication services to Kachin State in July.

MAGWAY—The Myaing People’s Defense Force (PDF) claimed that it set fire to government offices and the military-proxy Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) office in Myaing Township, after it attacked a military gate on Saturday. The PDF retreated from the town after the attacks.

“The fighting at the gate lasted an hour. We are still looking at the number of casualties from their [military] side,” a PDF spokesperson told DVB. No government staff were working inside the buildings when the attacks took place. The PDF has had Myaing surrounded since early September.

SHAN—The Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) stated that 12 civilians were injured during retaliatory airstrikes that were carried by the Burma Air Force in Lashio, northern Shan State, on Monday. The injured have been hospitalized and the full extent of the damage is unknown.  

The military conducted airstrikes on residential areas, including a school and hotel, in Lashio on Aug. 30 and Sept. 8. Min Aung Hlaing said during his visit to the Shan State capital Taunggyi on Sept. 3 that the military would launch retaliatory attacks in areas controlled by resistance forces. The MNDAA seized full control of Lashio after it captured the Northeastern Regional Military Command (RMC) headquarters on Aug. 3.

Read: An appeal to Muhammad Yunus, the interim leader of Bangladesh, from a Rohingya refugee by Pacifist Farooq. 

Rohingya Cultural Night at Bamboo Family Market in Chiang Mai, Thailand on Sept. 8. Follow DVB English News on X, FB, IG, Threads & TikTok. Subscribe to us on YouTube.

Rohingya Cultural Night features food, film, friendship and photos

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The four founding members of the Rohingya Maiyafuinor Collaborative Network, a group of Rohingya women human rights and justice advocates, in Chiang Mai, Thailand on Sept. 8. (Credit: DVB)

The Rohingya Cultural Night was hosted by the Rohingya Maiyafuinor Collaborative Network (RMCN) at Bamboo Family Market in Chiang Mai, Thailand on Sept. 8. It featured Rohingya food, films and photos from the Ek Khaale Rohingya visual restoration project. Read our op-ed from RMCN co-founder Noor Azizah “Rohingya women: Rebuilding our community, one step at a time.”

“We need to uplift and rebuild these connections again. And I think the best way to do that is to showcase our food, our culture, our film, our women, and various other aspects of who we are to make sure that the rest of the country also understand who we are, so that we can find a way to connect further again,” said Yasmin Ullah, the founder of the Rohingya Maiyafuinor Collaborative Network.

Jade and the Generals [2017 DVB Short Documentary]

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A banner announces the screening, which did not ultimately take place, of "Jade and the Generals" at Parkroyal Hotel in Yangon on May 17, 2017. (Credit: DVB)

Definitive DVB Docs is a new series to share classic documentary films made in English by the Democratic Voice of Burma: Jade and the Generals is a 2017 investigative documentary film made by Global Witness examining Myanmar’s jade mining companies which are secretly controlled by the families of military generals hidden behind networks of front companies.

People’s Defense Forces urged to follow code of conduct; Pro-military militia rejoins Shan State Army

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National Unity Government Acting President Duwa Lashi La visits a People’s Defense Force (PDF) camp on May 24, 2022. (Credit: Zarni Phyo)

People’s Defense Forces urged to follow code of conduct 

The National Unity Government (NUG) Acting President Duwa Lashi La urged the People’s Defense Force (PDF) and other resistance groups to follow the code of conduct during the third anniversary of the declaration of the ‘People’s Defensive War’ against the 2021 military coup on Saturday. 

“I believe the victory for the people will surely arrive in the end. The waves of the defensive war will gradually erode and destroy the dictatorship. These are not just words, but have been proven by the work done over the last three years of revolution,” said Duwa Lashi La on Sept. 7. 

He added that this current pro-democracy uprising is broader than previous ones in Burma as people from all ethnic nationalities have united against the military to build a federal democratic country. The NUG Ministry of Defense has documented that over 620,200 military personnel have been killed since the ‘People’s Defensive War’ was declared on Sept. 7, 2021.

UN called to take stronger action on Burma

Human Rights Watch issued a statement calling on the U.N. Security Council (UNSC) to refer Burma to the International Criminal Court (ICC). It called on the U.K., the current penholder on UNSC resolutions related to Burma, to take greater action to stop the ongoing violence in the country. 

“The [UNSC] great-power deadlock means that it has been far too quiet on Myanmar for years. But if it chooses to let recent events pass without even a meeting or public show of concern, that neglect will stain the legacy of every ambassador sitting on the Council, particularly the UK, which is supposed to ‘lead’ on Myanmar,” said the HRW statement. 

The ICC is currently investigating alleged human rights abuses committed in Burma, but its jurisdiction is limited to investigating within Bangladesh territory, which is an ICC member. Burma is not a signatory of the ICC. The military and Arakan Army (AA) may be investigated for alleged attacks committed against Rohingya civilians in northern Arakan State since May.

Hundreds of pro-military militia members defected to the Shan State Army on Sept. 5. (Credit: SSPP/SSA)

Pro-military militia rejoins Shan State Army 

The Shan State Progress Party (SSPP/SSA) held a welcoming ceremony for a local militia that rejoined its ranks at the Shan State Army headquarters in Wahnai Village of Kyethi Township, 160 miles (257 km) northeast of the Shan State capital Taunggyi on Thursday. 

“The SSPP/SSA warmly welcomes the Sein Kyawt local militiamen who have returned to serve in their original force,” it said in a statement shared with the media. “From now on, we are officially part of the SSA,” said Lwe Mong, the chairperson of the Sein Kyawt militia, at the ceremony on Sept. 5.

The SSPP/SSA reportedly gave the Sein Kyawt militia more than 40 million kyat ($7,400 USD) to have its hundreds of members rejoin with all of their weapons. The Sein Kyawt had split from the SSA to become a pro-military militia in 2010 “under pressure,” according to the SSPP. 

News by Region

SHAN—The Shan State Frontline Investment Monitor stated that the United Wa State Army (UWSA) has allowed the construction of a China-backed dam along the Thanlwin (Salween) River in Tangyan Township. It added that the UWSA escorted 12 Chinese businessmen to the site in early August. Over 2,000 UWSA troops were deployed to northern Tangyan on July 11

Civil society groups and residents are opposed to the Naung Pha dam, citing concerns that it will increase the risk of floods and earthquakes. Beijing and Naypyidaw signed Memorandum of Understandings for the project in 2009 and 2014. The Naung Pha dam is expected to export at least 50 percent of the power it generates to China upon completion.

ARAKAN—The Sittwe Prison Court sentenced a total of 93 residents of Byainphyu village in Sittwe Township to three years each on Friday. More than 80 residents were allegedly killed and over 300 were arrested during a military raid on Byainphyu village May 29. 

More than 230 out of the 300 arrested were sentenced for violating the Unlawful Associations Act. Over 60 have been released. The court sentenced 141 of them to three years in prison each on Aug. 30. Sittwe residents claim that the military is blackmailing them after arrest.

MAGWAY—Six civilians, including a six-year-old girl, were killed and three others were injured as the military carried out airstrikes on Letyatma village of Myaing Township on Friday. Homes and a school sheltering Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) were destroyed. 

“They opened fire on the school and then dropped bombs on it,” a PDF member told DVB. The total number of casualties is unknown as many Letyatma residents are still unaccounted for. The PDF told residents to beware of more military airstrikes.

NAYPYIDAW—Medicine shortages have occurred nationwide since the regime announced that pharmacy import licenses will only be granted upon proof of export earnings starting on Sept. 1. The cost of medicine has also reportedly surged. The regime’s Department of Trade announced changes to the pharmaceutical import licensing policies on Aug. 28.

“Drug prices in pharmacies fluctuate throughout the day, increasing at least three times daily,” a Yangon resident told DVB. Under the new restrictions, 116 companies that had their applications for pharmaceutical import licenses approved in October 2023 must apply for licenses again before they can import medicine into the country.

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