
Myanmar junta committing 'systematic' torture: UN report
13 Aug 2025 04:00pm
A policeman walks on a street in Yangon, Myanmar on July 19, 2025. - (Photo by AFP)
YANGON - UN investigators say they have recorded "systematic" torture in Myanmar's military-run detention facilities including beatings, electric shocks and gang rape.
Myanmar has been consumed by civil war since the military deposed the civilian government in a 2021 coup, with troops fighting an array of pro-democracy guerrillas and ethnic armed groups.
The fighting has been accompanied by a crackdown which has seen nearly 30,000 people arrested, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners monitor group.
A report by the UN's Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM) said it had identified "serious abuses during interrogations and in detention facilities".
A junta spokesman could not be reached for comment on the allegations laid out in an IIMM annual report released Tuesday, drawing on testimony from nearly 600 eyewitnesses.
It said there had been "systematic commission" of torture including "sexual slavery", the "burning of sexual body parts with cigarettes or burned objects", and fingernails being pulled out with pliers.
It also found evidence "indicating that children -- ranging from two to 17 years of age -- have been detained, often as proxies for their parents".
"Some of the detained children have been subjected to torture, ill-treatment or sexual and gender-based crimes," it added.
IIMM chief Nicholas Koumjian said the organisation had seen "a continued increase in the frequency and brutality of atrocities" but had made "headway in identifying the perpetrators".
"We are working towards the day when the perpetrators will have to answer for their actions in a court of law," he added.
The International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor has already requested an arrest warrant for junta chief Min Aung Hlaing, who ousted and jailed elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
That warrant request relates to alleged atrocities committed by the military on Myanmar's Rohingya minority in 2017.
All sides in Myanmar's civil war have been accused of committing war crimes, and the IIMM report said it had also identified cases where opposition groups had committed summary executions of captives. - AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
21 minutes ago
- The Sun
Ukraine targets Russian oil refinery, apartment block
KYIV: Ukrainian drones hit a Russian oil refinery and an apartment block in an overnight attack just hours before US President Donald Trump hosts his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin for a high-stakes summit in Alaska. Kyiv has targeted Russia's oil depots and refineries in long-range drone attacks in what it calls retaliatory strikes for Moscow's nightly barrages of Ukrainian cities and its energy grid. The Ukrainian military said Friday it hit a large oil refinery in the central Russian city of Syzran, some 800 kilometres (500 miles) behind the front line. 'The Syzran oil refinery in the Samara region of Russia, one of the largest in the Rosneft system, was hit,' Ukraine's general staff said, referring to the network of facilities owned by Russian state-run energy giant Rosneft. It said the facility produced aviation fuel and supplied the Russian army. Unverified images on social media showed multiple fires and grey smoke billowing from the site at dawn on Friday. A separate Ukrainian drone strike on an apartment block in the Russian border region of Kursk killed one person and wounded 10 others, local Russian officials said. 'Unfortunately, a 45-year-old woman died on the spot,' Governor Alexander Khinshtein said in a video on Telegram, standing in front of a blown-out window. Russian attacks also continued, with Ukrainian officials in the frontline Kharkiv and Donetsk regions reporting six civilians killed in strikes over the last 24 hours. Ukraine has previously vowed to step-up its long-range strikes against Russia as Moscow launched record numbers of missiles and drones at Ukraine in June and July. The attack comes as Putin and Trump are to meet on Friday in Alaska with Trump pushing for an end to the Ukraine war, triggered by Russia's February 2022 invasion. Russia has advanced on the ground ahead of the talks and Trump has publicly mooted the idea of a territorial swap between the warring sides. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was not invited to the Alaska summit, has ruled that out. Russia's army said Ukraine fired 53 drones overnight, while Ukraine's air force said Moscow launched 97 - AFP


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Desperate Myanmar villagers scavenge for food as hunger bites
Famished locals in western Myanmar have been driven to scavenging for bamboo shoots, as humanitarians warn a wartime blockade and aid cutbacks led by US President Donald Trump have caused a "dramatic" rise in hunger. - AFP MRAUK U, Myanmar: People in western Myanmar have been driven to scavenging for bamboo shoots, as humanitarian workers warn a wartime blockade and aid cutbacks led by Washington have caused hunger cases to surge. "Another day has gone, and I have to struggle again for another day," fruit vendor Kyaw Win Shein told AFP in the town of Mrauk U in Myanmar's Rakhine state. "It is getting worse day by day," the 60-year-old, whose business is faltering as prices rise and incomes drop -- a grim equation driving others to scour the countryside for sustenance. Rakhine state -- a riverine slice of coastal Myanmar bordering Bangladesh -- has witnessed intense suffering in Myanmar's civil war, triggered by a 2021 coup deposing the democratic government. As the military fights an ethnic armed group, it has blockaded the territory -- throttling supplies to its estimated population of 2.5 million. The impoverished state has long been a focus of international aid organisations, but worldwide cutbacks spearheaded by US President Donald Trump's "America First" freeze on humanitarian funding have forced them to retreat. The World Food Programme (WFP) -- which received nearly half its 2024 donations from the United States -- warned last week that 57 percent of families in central Rakhine are now unable to meet basic food needs. The figure had risen from just 33 per cent in December. "A deadly combination of conflict, blockades, and funding cuts is driving a dramatic rise in hunger and malnutrition," the WFP said. In northern Rakhine areas such as Mrauk U -- where conflict complicates data collection -- WFP warned the situation is "much worse". Residents said fertiliser is scarce, reducing crop yields and making produce unaffordable, driving people to desperate measures in a tightening spiral of misery. "I am not the only one who has difficulties," said fruit vendor Kyaw Win Shein. "Everyone is the same." The village of Ponnagyun is a short distance from the state capital Sittwe, at the mouth of a delta opening onto the Bay of Bengal. Rakhine cuisine is famed for its fresh, simply cooked seafood, and fish is still on sale in markets. But people have no cash to buy it. "People are starving in my village," said one resident who runs a Ponnagyun payphone shop, but asked to remain anonymous for security reasons. "People find and eat bamboo shoots mostly," he said. "People can eat it, but it's not nutritious." He said only two aid handouts reached their community in the past year. The conflict blockade is so effective that currency notes are not leaving the state to be replaced with new ones for circulation, and instead are left crumbling from wear and tear in the pockets of customers and vendors. "The commodity prices are really high," said 64-year-old Mrauk U resident Hla Paw Tun. "Many people are selling, but few are buying," he said. "We have been struggling to survive day by day." Rakhine has long been wracked by civil conflict -- the site of alleged military atrocities against the resident Rohingya minority around 2017, which some countries have deemed a genocide. More than one million Rohingya now live in Bangladeshi border camps -- and the UN said last month a massive new influx had seen 150,000 arrivals over the previous 18 months. Meanwhile, nearly half a million people remain displaced inside Rakhine. Among them is 49-year-old Hla Aye, who fled her village for Mrauk U when two bombs fell near her house. She set up as a shopkeeper, but that business quickly failed in Rakhine's hostile wartime economy. Still, she believes, her struggles may not be over yet. "I have no idea how the future will be and if it will be more difficult," she said. - AFP


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Jimmy Lai's Hong Kong security trial delayed again over health issues
HONG KONG: The high-profile national security trial of media mogul Jimmy Lai faced another delay on Friday due to the 77-year-old's health concerns. Lai, founder of the now-defunct Apple Daily, requires a heart monitoring device before proceedings can resume. This marks the second postponement this week after bad weather earlier suspended court sessions. Defence lawyer Robert Pang revealed Lai experienced palpitations and a sensation of collapsing but stressed his client wished to avoid focusing on his condition. Lai has been detained since December 2020, with reports indicating solitary confinement and ongoing welfare concerns. Pang told AFP the defence requested Lai's exemption from attending closing arguments as he isn't required to speak. '(Lai) believes the episodes will occur when he is fatigued, and coming to court fatigues him,' Pang explained in court. Judge Esther Toh assured Lai could voice discomfort without disrupting proceedings. Medical staff found no heart abnormalities but arranged a wearable monitor and medication as a precaution. Judge Alex Li deemed it prudent to adjourn until Monday pending medical arrangements. The trial, ongoing since December 2023, has drawn international condemnation as Lai faces life imprisonment for foreign collusion charges. He additionally faces sedition charges over 161 opinion pieces published under his name. The Committee to Protect Journalists stated 'the world is watching how Hong Kong treats its journalists'. Former US President Donald Trump claimed on Fox News he previously discussed Lai's case with China's Xi Jinping. Hong Kong authorities rejected what they called external interference in the judicial process. Lai's British citizenship has prompted his son Sebastien to urge UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to intervene. During testimony spanning 50 days, Lai repeatedly declared himself a 'political prisoner', drawing judicial reprimands. Prosecutors presented evidence alleging Lai's influence networks in the US, UK and Taiwan. Lai denied advocating sanctions or separatism against China and Hong Kong. Apple Daily shuttered in 2021 following police raids and staff arrests. A former employee outside court described Lai as a caring boss with deteriorating health but resilient spirit. 'His health worsened after he was taken into custody, but I think his spirit is strong, and I hope he can persist,' the employee told AFP. - AFP