Myanmar’s military strikes festival and anti-junta protest, killing 40


A Myanmar military strike on a festival and demonstration has killed more than 40 people, including children, according to local reports.

Myanmar has been reeling from civil war since the military seized power in a 2021 coup, prompting pro-democracy rebels to take up arms and ally with ethnic armed groups against the junta.

Hundreds of people were gathered in central Myanmar’s Chaung U township for the Thadingyut festival on Monday, local time, when the military dropped bombs on the crowd, according to a member of the committee that organised the event.

The woman, who requested anonymity for security reasons, said people were gathering for the festival and an anti-junta demonstration about 7pm when the bombs killed more than 40 people and injured about 80 others.

Myanmar rebels have been fighting against the military since a 2021 coup.

  (Reuters: Stringer )

“The committee alerted people and one-third of the crowd managed to flee,” she told AFP.

“But immediately, one motor-powered paraglider flew right over the crowd, dropping two bombs on the centre of the gathering.

“Children were completely torn apart,” said the woman, who was not at the scene but attended funerals on Tuesday.

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Multiple Western aid agencies said they have struggled to get personnel into Myanmar as the ruling junta leads the response to the country’s largest natural disaster in years.

When another motorised paraglider flying overhead left the area, she said people rushed to help the injured.

“As of this morning, we were still collecting body parts from the ground — pieces of flesh, limbs, parts of bodies that were blown apart,” she added.

A resident of Chaung U who attended the event on Monday confirmed the estimated toll, saying people attempted to run when they realised the para-motor was flying overhead.

“While I was saying to people ‘please don’t run’, the para-motor dropped two bombs,” he told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“Two of my comrades were killed just in front of me. There were even more who died in front of me.”

He said he attended funerals on Tuesday for nine friends who were killed.

A local media outlet also said 40 people were killed in the attack.

A junta spokesperson could not immediately be reached for comment late on Tuesday.

‘Gruesome wake-up call’ against Myanmar military

Human rights watchdog Amnesty International said in a statement that the attack “should serve as a gruesome wake-up call that civilians in Myanmar need urgent protection”.

The attack showed the military was “intensifying an already brutal campaign against pockets of resistance,” the London-based organisation said.

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Nearly five years ago, Myanmar’s military seized power, plunging the country into a bloody civil war that left the junta internationally isolated. Now, with no end to the conflict in sight, Myanmar is going to the polls again.

“The international community may have forgotten about the conflict in Myanmar, but the Myanmar military is taking advantage of reduced scrutiny to carry out war crimes with impunity,” said Joe Freeman, Amnesty’s Myanmar researcher.

He called on the Association of Southeast Asian Nations bloc to increase pressure on the Myanmar junta as ASEAN officials prepare for a meeting later this month.

The junta has touted elections beginning on December 28 as a path to reconciliation.

But a United Nations expert has dismissed the vote as a “fraud” to disguise continuing military rule, and rebels have vowed to block it.

AFP


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