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Burma: Myanmar (Burma) army raping with
impunity, say Karen activists
By: Emma Batha
April 24, 2008 - (Alertnet) Soldiers in eastern
Myanmar are raping with impunity, according to a rights group.
Their victims, villagers from the Karen minority, have reportedly
included children and nuns.
Activists say that in one case a young woman was gang-raped by
four soldiers in her home. They then killed her by shooting into
her vagina. No action was taken against the soldiers.
The Karen, a predominantly Christian minority, make up about seven
percent of Myanmar's population. Karen rebel groups have been
fighting for greater autonomy in the east for decades. But Myanmar's
military junta is widely accused of targetting civilians as well
as rebels in a campaign of terror which has forced many thousands
to flee for their lives.
Many of the rapes are perpetrated by senior military officers
or done with their complicity, according to the Karen Women's
Organisation. They say the perpetrators know that most villagers
will be too afraid to complain.
Evidence of the systematic rape and abuse of villagers is highlighted
by the KWO in the latest issue of Forced Migration Review which
is devoted to the massive displacement crisis in Myanmar, also
known as Burma.
The KWO says village chiefs risk abuse and torture if they fail
to comply with the military. When women take on the role - as
happens in the absence of men - they face the added risk of rape.
Some are forced to have sex with soldiers as the price of protection
for themselves, their families and communities.
FORCED LABOUR
Women and girls from across Karen State have also been forcibly
recruited to help build roads and bridges, clear landmines and
carry military supplies, the KWO says. Recruits include elderly
women, pregnant and breast-feeding women, and schoolgirls as young
as 11.
One woman told KWO how she has been forced to work as a porter
for the army. "Every day we had to carry up the mountain
and down again," she said. "I was sweating and couldn't
breathe because I am very old and the soldiers prodded me with
their guns because I am slow. I felt like my heart was breaking."
The KWO works in refugee camps on the Thai border and with people
displaced inside Myanmar. Last year it published a report called
State of Terror which drew on thousands of documented cases of
murder, rape and torture of Karen women at the hands of the junta.
The army has designated Karen State and neighbouring Karenni State
as black zones. Black areas are 'free-fire' zones where the army
can kill anyone it comes across, says David Eubank, director of
Free Burma Rangers, which provides help in conflict areas.
Writing in Forced Migration Review, Eubank describes how the army
regularly launches sweeping operations in which soldiers often
mortar and machine-gun a village before looting and raping. They
then lay landmines in and around the village. Sometimes they burn
down entire settlements.
A Karenni pastor quoted in the article asks: "Why do the
Burmese soldiers come to burn our villages? We do not go to burn
theirs. Why do they want to come and bother us? We only want to
have our farms, do our work and live in peace. Our life in the
mountains is already very hard. Why do they want to make it harder?"
In the current military offensive - the largest since 1997 - over
30,000 people have been displaced. Many are hiding in the jungle,
others have fled to Thailand.
"The disruption of food production, burning of homes and
the shoot-on-sight orders of the Burma Army have made staying
in their homeland untenable for thousands," Eubank says.
From:http://www.alertnet.org/db/an_art/19216/2008/03/24-160948-1.htm
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