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RESOLUTION 1325
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Rape Used
as a Weapon of War
By Kao Wao
January 29, 2003- (BurmaNet) According to Shan Women's Action Network
(SWAN), three soldiers who defected from the Burmese Army at the
Thai-Burma border on January 17, 2003 testified that their officer
boasted about raping women.
The soldiers, aged 17, 19 and 26, who had defected with their weapons
from Infantry Battalion 226 testified that their commanding sergeant
Myint Htay had boasted to them last month about having raped "five
or six" women in Shan State.
The three soldiers, all forcibly recruited into the SPDC Army within
the past year, were stationed at the border for only a few months,
after undergoing training near Kengtung. "If officers feel
comfortable boasting to their troops about raping women, it is clear
that the culture of impunity for sexual violence in the SPDC Army
is still in place," said Hseng Noung of the Shan Women's Action
Network.
The soldiers, one of whom was only 16 when arrested at a bus station
in Central Burma and forced to enlist, also said that there were
child soldiers as young as twelve stationed at the SPDC camp opposite
Piang Luang. It remains to be seen how the soldiers testimonies
will affect the Burmese governments denial of SWANs
report on rape charges that attracted international and public condemnation.
The Burmese governments refusal to uphold the rights of woman
on this charge indicates quite clearly the gender bias in Burmese
society that they are devalued in all civil matters and whose testimonies
of rape charges in Shan State were ignored and discredited.
Meanwhile, abuse, violence and discrimination against women go unpunished
in other parts of Burma where the territorial Burmese army patrols.
Recently, according to a source from Khaw-Zar village, Ye township,
troops from Infantry Battalion No. 273 being charged with the attempted
rape of three women on November 7, 2002 in a village replied that
they could do anything they want.
In searching for the Mon armed group, the Battalion No 273, surrounded
the village and attempted to rape three women in the process, they
targeted two Mon cultural dancers and a schoolteacher, a witness
who recently arrived to the border said. They were freed after the
schoolteacher asked the soldiers not to harm them. "The dancers
stalled the soldiers saying they were sick before other people started
to arrive, said the witness.
"This is a black area and we can do anything we want,"
the army officer angrily told the villagers after the village headmen
reported the case to him.
These villagers came from another village for a cultural show
organized by the teachers in the area. They had to travel quite
a distance to see the show but it was cancelled due to incident.
This has routinely happened to us like the Shan women, the only
consistent thing that the Burmese Army seems to be able to do,"
said Nai Ba, a 67-year-old man.
From: http://www.burmanet.org/bnn_archives/2003/20030129.txt
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