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ConflictsMyanmar

Myanmar accused of war crimes over land mines

July 20, 2022

Amnesty International has said it has "credible information" that Myanmar's military deployed land mines in Kayah State. These mines have injured and even killed civilians.

https://p.dw.com/p/4ENtC
A closeup of someone holding a locally-manufactured M14 landmine.
Amnesty International says locally-manufactured landmines like the one pictured are illegal and "inherently indiscriminate"Image: Amnesty International/AFP

Myanmar's military is committing war crimes by laying land mines "on a massive scale" around villages, human rights group Amnesty International said on Wednesday.

Fighting has ramped up in recent months after armed forces overthrew the democratically-elected government in February 2021 — returning leadership to a military junta.

Amnesty investigators traveled to Kayah State (formerly known as Karenni State) near the border with Thailand, where they interviewed 43 people including land mine survivors, medical workers who had treated them, and others involved in clearing operations.

Desperate Myanmar people flee to escape civil war

Military's 'depraved' land mine use will 'devastate civilians for years'

The team said they had "credible information" that the military placed land mines in at least 20 villages, including near rice fields and around a church, which resulted in civilian injuries and deaths.

The researchers claimed that in at least one case, soldiers booby-trapped the stairwell of a home using a tripwire.

"The military's depraved use of land mines in homes and villages will continue to have devastating effects on civilians in Kayah State for years to come," said Rawya Rageh, a senior crisis advisor at Amnesty International.

A home reduced to rubble by a landmine in the village of Daw Ngay Khu, Kayah State.
A home destroyed by a landmine in the village of Daw Ngay Khu, Kayah StateImage: Amnesty International/AP/picture alliance

Teenager maimed

One 52-year-old mother shared an anecdote with the researchers about the time her teenage daughter was maimed by a land mine.

"I heard the explosion, then I looked and saw a lot of smoke," Rosie recalled. "I heard my daughter yelling, 'Mama, Mama,' and I went to look and saw her lying on the ground."

"I noticed that my daughter had no leg anymore… I went searching for [her leg], but the man who [was passing by and stopped] to help us said, 'Stop! There will be another land mine. The most important thing is to stop the bleeding.'"

At odds with international law

Myanmar's military uses several kinds of locally-manufactured land mines that Amnesty says are "inherently indiscriminate."

The military is currently waging a civil war on multiple fronts — not only in the eastern Kayah State, but also to the west in Rakhine State.

There, the treatment of the Muslim Rohingya population has been condemned as genocide by governments including the United States, France and Turkey, as well as by NGOs like Amnesty itself.

More than 160 countries have joined the 1997 Ottawa Convention that bans the manufacture, stockpiling and transfer of anti-personnel mines.

Myanmar is one of a few countries not to have signed the treaty, along with superpowers the United States, Russia and China. But Amnesty International also claims land mines are nevertheless prohibited under "customary international humanitarian law."

Matt Wells, Amnesty International's crisis response deputy director, said the world must respond "urgently" to Myanmar's "cruel and abhorrent" use of land mines.

"Countries around the world must cut off the flow of weapons to Myanmar and support all efforts to ensure those responsible for war crimes face justice," he said.

zc/jsi (AFP, epd)