FBR REPORT: Burma
Army Continues Attacks in Kachin State as of 14 December 2011
Kachin State, Burma
16 December, 2011
KEY DEVELOPMENTS
The Burma Army continued attacks against the Kachin people
and every day there is shelling from attacking Burma Army units.
There has been no ceasefire by the Burma Army troops in this
area.
There are over 30,000 displaced Kachin villagers now in hiding.
Report by Kachin FBR team
The Burma Army continued attacks against the Kachin people and every day there
is shelling from attacking Burma Army units. There has been no ceasefire by
the Burma Army troops in our area and they keep attacking. There are over 30,000
displaced Kachin villagers in hiding now. On 13 December 2011 at 4:20pm, 3 Burma
Army helicopters sent food supplies to Burma Army camps at Loi Yain and Mo Bwan
in Kachin State. These helicopters came from Momauk Township, Ba Maw District
according to the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO -- pro-democracy ethnic
resistance). As the helicopters flew, Burma Army soldiers from Loi Yain and
Zin Lon Ka Ba Camps fired mortars and machine guns toward the surrounding area
to provide cover fire for the helicopters, which dropped four large loads. Mo
Bwan Camp is located at N 24°° 18' 42.6", E 97° 39' 48.7" and Zin Lon Ka
Ba Camp is at N 24° 16' 30.1", E 097° 30' 40.2".
There are at least 2000 Burma Army troops in Momauk Township, and they have
been attacking, patrolling, burning villages and building new camps. Between
18 November and 27 November, Burma Army Divisions 33 and 88 were building camps
at the villages of Hpaw Kawn, Hkrawng Kawng, Man Da, Pang Mu, Law Mon and Kung
Pi, and in the Bum Kapaw Bum area between Hpaw Kawn Village and Hkrawng Kawng
Village.
In late November, these units were actively patrolling and using 81mm and
120mm mortars every day. One mortar round dropped into Hkrawng Kawng Village
destroying one family's kitchen. People from this village fled to a nearby village.
On 25 November 2011, 200 soldiers dropped from helicopters to join in attacks.
On 30 November, the Burma Army was shooting from their new camp at Pang Mu toward
Zin Lum Village. There are 1600 to 2000 recently displaced people from 18 villages
in Momauk Township, Baw Maw District. The displaced people are in need of medicine,
plastic tarps, warm clothes, blankets and food.
Remains of a Burma Army Mortar
On 8 October 2011, Burma Army Battalions 601, 74 and 276 totaling approximately
200 soldiers entered and attacked Nam Lim Pa Village, Kachin State. Soldiers
fired six mortars and small arm fire forcing 297 households, 1573 people, from
their homes. In addition to property destruction, soldiers looted over 250 houses
and took ten porters to carry the confiscated property. Five people were killed
and seven people were injured in the attack. All those killed were civilians
and included two adult men and three children.
Labang Brang Nan, 34 years old, was killed by Burma Army soldiers because he
had been providing food for Kachin Independence Army (KIA- pro-democracy ethnic
resistance), though was not himself a KIA soldier. He was found half-buried
in this shallow grave, wearing a KIA uniform and showing visible signs of torture.
His 9-year-old son was found buried beside him; his tongue had been cut out
and he had been shot multiple times in the upper body.
Soldiers took 33 women and children hostage in the Roman Catholic Church pictured
below. They were held for three days while the Burma Army looted over 250 households.
KIA soldiers claim they were unable to shoot into the bunkers because BA soldiers
were keeping children present to serve as human shields. None of the hostages
were harmed, though upon their release, all hostages returned to looted and
destroyed homes.
Soldiers also captured and held male villagers during the looting. The picture
below is a burned house belonging to 73-year-old farmer Labang Tu. After being
held for three days, he was allowed to return to his home where he found it
in ashes. He is now displaced in the jungle with his daughter.
The family pictured below has had to flee their home twice in the past 3 months,
leaving them now to live in this small hut with no walls. They have little food
and only the clothing on their back. At the time the picture was taken, all
three had malaria.
On 20 August 2011, the Burma Army mortared Nam Gau Village in 3rd brigade,
Shwigu District. Of the 5 mortars fired, one went through the roof of a girl's
school dormitory, injuring 4 girls under the age of 13 and killing an 8-year-old
girl.
The Free Burma Rangers (FBR) mission is to provide hope, help and
love to internally displaced people inside Burma, regardless of ethnicity
or religion. Using a network of indigenous field teams, FBR reports on human
rights abuses, casualties and the humanitarian needs of people who are under
the oppression of the Burma Army. FBR provides medical, spiritual and educational
resources for IDP communities as they struggle to survive Burmese military
attacks.