12/02/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 12/02/2024 14:06
"There are now 6,000 reminders that the international community is failing the people of Myanmar," the Human Rights Council-appointed experts stated in a news release on Monday. "It is time for a change, starting with moving this disaster out of the shadows of international attention".
The experts called for an urgent "course correction" in the international response, emphasising that while targeted action has proven effective - with sanctions reducing the junta's weapons procurement by one-third - current measures "remain grossly inadequate and lack the coordination and strategic targeting necessary to deliver the support the people of Myanmar need and deserve".
They urged increased assistance for civil society organisations documenting abuses and delivering humanitarian aid.
"Governments and donors also need to significantly step up assistance to civil society organisations documenting human rights abuses, protecting civilian populations and delivery life-saving humanitarian aid".
The experts revealed recent evidence demonstrates that coordinated international pressure can yield results.
"We know that international action makes a difference. We have documented it has reduced the junta's access to weapons that its uses to attack civilians," the experts said, following the publication of UN Special Rapporteur Tom Andrews' 'Billion Dollar Death Trade' report.
Since seizing power "thousands of lives have been cut short in indiscriminate attacks by the military, which often targets civilian homes and infrastructure".
"Many victims have been tortured to death. Others have been subjected to acts tantamount to enforced disappearance before execution. Beheadings, dismemberment and the disfiguration of bodies are shockingly common," the experts said.
According to credible reports, nearly 2,000 individuals have died in military custody, with 365 victims executed by headshots and 215 burned alive. The experts detailed how "unlawful killings by junta forces are common and characterised by their brutality and inhumanity".
The military's campaign of suppression extends beyond killings. Over 21,000 people have been arrested since the February 2021 coup remain in detention, with many held incommunicado. The experts expressed alarm at the widespread use of arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance to silence opposition.
"Many are held incommunicado and in many instances with their families and lawyers having no information on their fates or whereabouts," they reported.
The experts have strongly condemned the junta's planned elections. "You cannot hold an election when you deposed a democratically elected Government in an unconstitutional coup and continue to arbitrary arrest, detain, disappear, torture and execute opposition leaders, nor when it is illegal for journalists to report the truth," they stated.
"It is time for a change, starting with moving this disaster out of the shadows of international attention. It would be unconscionable to allow thousands more innocent lives to be lost when options for effective action by the international community remain on the table" they concluded.
Special Rapporteurs and other independent human rights experts work on a voluntary basis, are not UN staff and receive no salary for their work.