Karen people hold posters and shout slogans during a protest against the Tatmadaw at Papun in Kayin State on July 28 (AFP)
Karen people hold posters and shout slogans during a protest against the Tatmadaw at Papun in Kayin State on July 28 (AFP)

Thousands protest against Myanmar army after woman’s killing

By AFP

HPA-AN — Several thousand protesters marched in southeast Myanmar on Tuesday to demand the military’s withdrawal from the area and an end to rights abuses after soldiers allegedly killed an unarmed woman from the Karen ethnic group.

In a rare acknowledgement of wrongdoing, the military confirmed that two soldiers had been arrested for the shooting of Naw Mu Naw, 40, and robbery of her gold jewellery in Papun Township in Kayin State on July 16.

The court-martial of the arrested men was already underway, military spokesman Brigadier-General Zaw Min Tun told AFP on Tuesday.

But the killing has reignited anger in a state that has for decades been the scene of a bloody civil war between the military and ethnic Karen militants.

Mu Naw’s murder sparked a wave of protests over the last two weeks, but Tuesday’s was by far the biggest.

An estimated 5,000 people turned out, many dressed in traditional clothes and waving the Karen blue, white and red flag as they marched to the state capital Hpa-an.

“We demand the military withdraw because we’re worried we might also be shot and killed,” said 57-year-old Khwe Ni.

The Karen National Union (KNU) signed a ceasefire in 2012 with the military after more than 60 years of fighting, one of a number of groups to join the country’s now flagging peace process.

Unrest has flared up again in a state divided into two parallel jurisdictions, one centrally run and one under governance of the KNU, which collects taxes and runs local police, schools and healthcare.

The Karen accuse the military of building roads and other infrastructure to encroach on their territory.

Zaw Min Tun told AFP the military would not withdraw from the area, but said “rules would be tightened”, without giving further details.

Tens of thousands of Karen refugees still live in camps along the Myanmar-Thai border.

Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Mr Phil Robertson called for the two soldiers to be handed over to a civilian court, condemning the lack of transparency in military trials.

“It’s likely that Naw Mu Naw will simply end up as another unresolved case in a pattern of Burmese military brutality,” he said

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