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Myanmar is “heading towards” a “full-blown conflict” similar to the situation in Syria as hundreds of people have been “slaughtered” by the military junta, UN Human Rights Chief said.
Addressing a press briefing on April 13, Michelle Bachelet cautioned that while the global powers could not stop the bloody war in Syria and elsewhere to escalate, they should not let it be
repeated. As a result, she urged states to take “immediate, decisive and impactful measures” to push military leadership into halting its “campaign of repression” and indiscriminate
“slaughter” of its own people. > “There are clear echoes of Syria in 2011. There too, we saw > peaceful protests met with unnecessary and clearly disproportionate > force. The
State's brutal, persistent repression of its own people > led to some individuals taking up arms, followed by a downward and > rapidly expanding spiral of violence all across the
country. The UN > High Commissioner for Human Rights at the time warned in 2011 that > the failure of the international community to respond with united > resolve could be
disastrous for Syria and beyond. The past ten years > have shown just how horrific the consequences have been for millions > of civilians,” she said in a statement. The situation in
Myanmar has deteriorated since the military junta led by Min Aung Hlaing snatched power from the country’s democratically elected government by staging a Coup d’état on February 1. Since
then, the military junta has killed over 710 people, detained more than 3080 people, according to a tally by Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP). Additionally, Tatmadaw has
also been accused of other crimes such as shooting down residents in cold blood, burning skins of protesters with pro democrat tattoos amongst other callous acts. In its statement, the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) also asserted that the military junta, over the weekend, also opened fire with rocket-propelled grenades,
fragmentation grenades and mortar fire in Bago in the south of the country. “Security forces also reportedly prevented medical personnel from helping the wounded, as well as charging
relatives a "fine" of roughly USD 90 to claim the bodies of those who were killed”, it said. Additionally, OHCHR also revealed that Tatmadaw has been using aerial strikes to quell
protests in many regions of the country including Kachin, Shan and Kayin states. _IMAGE CREDITS: ASSOCIATED PRESS _