When the young farmhand returned to his village in Myanmar, he found the still-smoldering corpses in a circle in a burned-out hut, some with their limbs tied.
The Myanmar military had stormed Done Taw at 11am on Dec. 7, with about 50 soldiers hunting people on foot, he said.
The farmhand and other villagers fled to the forest and fields, but 10 were captured and killed, including five teenagers, one who was only 14, he said. A photo taken by his friend shows the charred remains of a victim lying face down, holding his head up, suggesting he was burned alive.
Illustration: Yusha
“I am very upset, it is unacceptable,” said the 19-year-old, who like others interviewed for this story asked to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal.
The carnage at Done Taw is just one of the most recent signs that Myanmar’s military is reverting to a strategy of massacres as a weapon of war, according to an AP investigation based on interviews with 40 witnesses, social media, satellite imagery and data on deaths.
The massacres and scorched-earth tactics — such as the razing of entire villages — represent the latest escalation in the military’s violence against civilians and the growing opposition. Since the military seized power in February, it has cracked down ever more brutally, abducting young men and boys, killing healthcare workers and torturing prisoners.
The massacres and burnings also signal a return to practices that the military has long used against ethnic minorities such as the Muslim Rohingya, thousands of whom were killed in 2017. The military is now accused of killing at least 35 civilians on Christmas Eve in Mo So village in an eastern region home to the Karenni minority. A witness said that many of the bodies of the men, women and children were burned beyond recognition.
This time, the military is also using the same methods against people and villages of its own Buddhist Bamar ethnic majority. The focus of most of the latest killings has been in the northwest, including in a Bamar heartland where support for the opposition is strong.
More than 80 people have died in killings of three or more in the Sagaing region alone since August, according to data from the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), a group that monitors verified arrests and deaths in Myanmar. These include the deaths of those in Done Taw, five people in Gaung Kwal village on Dec. 12 and nine in Kalay township on Dec. 23, part of a trend that has made Sagaing the deadliest region in Myanmar.
The military is also reprising a hallmark tactic of destroying entire villages where there might be support for the opposition. Satellite imagery obtained from Maxar Technologies shows that more than 580 buildings have been burned in the northwestern town of Thantlang alone since September.
The violence appears to be a response to the local resistance forces springing up across the country, but the military is wiping out civilians in the process. In Done Taw, for example, the military moved in after a convoy hit a roadside bomb nearby, but the people killed were not part of any resistance, another villager said.
“They were just normal workers on the betel-leaf plantation,” the 48-year-old welder said. “They hid because they were afraid.”
For the investigation, the AP spoke to dozens of witnesses, family members, a military commander who deserted, human rights groups and officials, along with analyzing data on deaths from the AAPP. The AP also reviewed satellite imagery and dozens of images and videos, with experts checking them against known locations and events.
The numbers likely fall far short of actual killings because they tend to happen in remote locations, and the military suppresses information on them by curtailing Internet access and checking cell phones.
VIOLENCE INCEASING
“There are similar cases taking place across the country at this point, especially in the northwest of Myanmar,” said Kyaw Moe Tun, who refused to leave his position as Myanmar’s UN envoy after the military seized power. “Look at the pattern, look at the way it’s happened. It is systematic and widespread.”
Three days after the Done Taw attack, the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper dismissed reports of the slayings as “fake news,” accusing unidentified countries of “wishing to disintegrate Myanmar” by inciting bloodshed.
“The nature of how brazen this attack was really indicative of the scale of violence we can expect in the coming months, and particularly next year,” Human Rights Watch researcher Manny Maung said.
Just in the week of the Done Taw massacre, the military killed 20 more people in Sagaing. On Dec. 17, soldiers killed nine people, including a child, in Gantgaw township in the neighboring region of Magway, a witness said, adding that troops brought in by helicopter occupied the village for two days, and those who fled returned to find, identify and cremate rotting bodies.
The movement of troops suggests that violence in the northwest is likely to pick up. Two military convoys of more than 80 trucks each with troops and supplies from Sagaing have made it to neighboring Chin State, according to an opposition group, and a former military captain said that soldiers there were resupplied and reinforced in October, and the army is now stockpiling munition, fuel and rations in Sagaing.
The captain, who goes by the assumed name Zin Yaw, or Seagull, is a 20-year military veteran who deserted in March and now trains opposition forces. He said he continues to receive updates from friends still in the military and has access to defense documents, several of which he shared. His identity was verified by an organization of military deserters.
“What the military worries about most is giving up their power,” Zin Yaw said. “In the military, they have a saying: If you retreat, destroy everything. It means that even if they know they are going to lose, they destroy everything.”
The Tatmadaw overthrew the enormously popular leader Aung San Suu Kyi in February, claiming massive fraud in the 2020 democratic election that saw her party win in a landslide. Since then, the military and police have killed more than 1,375 people and arrested more than 11,200, the AAPP said.
One of the earliest mass killings took place on March 14 in the township of Hlaing Tharyar in Yangon, the biggest city in Myanmar, a Human Rights Watch report said last month.
Witnesses said that security forces fired on protesters with military assault rifles and killed at least 65, including bystanders.
RESISTENCE RISING
As the military’s tactics have turned increasingly brutal, civilians have fought back. Opposition started with a national civil disobedience movement and protests, but has grown increasingly violent with attacks on troops and government facilities.
In May, the opposition National Unity Government (NUG) announced a new military wing, the People’s Defense Force (PDF), and in September declared a “defensive war.” Loose-knit guerrilla groups associating themselves PDF have since emerged across the country, with varying degrees of allegiance to the NUG.
An early example of the military unleashing its battle-tested tactics on majority Buddhist areas came just 37km up the river from Done Taw in Kani township. In July, images circulated of massacres in four small villages that Myanmar’s ambassador to the UN called “crimes against humanity.”
Four witnesses said that soldiers killed 43 people in four incidents and discarded their bodies in the jungle.
On July 9, soldiers in trucks rolled into Yin village in Kani, launching an attack that left 16 dead, three witnesses said. The soldiers started shooting and sent people fleeing. Troops surrounded a group in the nearby jungle, said one woman who was captured with her brother.
She was set free, but would never see her brother alive again. When she returned with others three days later, they discovered his body on the forest floor, already rotting in the heat and showing signs of torture.
“We all live in fear,” said the woman, who like the other villagers asked to remain anonymous for safety. “We are worried that they might come back during the night.”
One 42-year-old man said a search party of 50 villagers found three separate clusters of bodies. Some appeared to have been dragged to death along rocky ground with ropes or with their own clothes. The bodies had been pillaged for gold.
“There were some fleshly remains and the odor was so foul,” the villager said. “We couldn’t even get close because of the smell.”
The village is now terrorized into silence, he said, listening for the next attack with their bags packed and the normal rhythms of life frozen in fear.
Another Kani resident said that when soldiers approached his village of Zee Pin Twin on July 26, he fled into the jungle. He returned to find his home broken and blackened by fire. Precious goods were stolen, and important documents, food and other belongings such as wedding photos lay in a smoldering heap.
Two days later, villagers with search dogs found 12 bodies, some buried in shallow pits in the jungle. A villager said that they saw bruises and other signs of torture on the corpses, and that one man’s hands were tied with military boot laces and his mouth was gagged.
The descriptions match photographs and videos of burned and brutalized bodies given to the monitoring group Myanmar Witness.
“When there’s image and videos [in] three separate events, it’s very hard to deny,” said Benjamin Strick, head of investigations for the Britain and Thailand-based group.
The grisly images could not be independently verified, but they match incident reports collected by the AAPP.
Fortify Rights senior human rights specialist John Quinley said that the violence in Kani and in Sagaing is a “direct result” of PDF operations there.
“The Myanmar junta’s strategy is to try to create an environment of terror and try to silence civilians, and also try to drive out the PDF,” he said.
That strategy might not be working. Resistance has only stiffened, the Kani villagers said.
“The whole village plays a role,” one man said. “Some women make gunpowder; people do not work; all the villagers somehow take part in the revolution.”
Another described a few shattered survivors in a village unified by hatred of the military.
“I am not afraid anymore,” he said. “Instead of dying fleeing, I will use my life for a purpose.”
ARMY DEFECTIONS
Thousands of military desertions have been reported, although usually of lower ranks, Quinley said.
“These atrocities are happening to everyday people ... engineers, university students, businesspeople,” he said. “So I think there’s a growing solidarity movement across religious and ethnic lines.”
The Tatmadaw has the advantage of air power and automatic weapons, but the opposition in Sagaing and Chin State relies on knowledge of the terrain and the support of locals, some lightly armed with homemade muzzle-loaded guns.
“They just modify their skills of fighting to the defensive war and guerrilla warfare,” said Aung Myo Min, the NUG’s minister for human rights, in an interview from Europe.
The army’s attacks in Sagaing are thought to be the opening salvo in a campaign to stamp out resistance in Myanmar’s northwest, called Operation Anawrahta.
Anawrahta was an 11th-century Buddhist king who established a Burmese empire, and the name carries a special meaning to the military, Zin Yaw said.
“That means they are going to brutally crush the people,” he said.
More than 51,000 people are already displaced in seven Sagaing townships, including Kani, and another 30,200 in Chin State, the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.
“What we’re seeing in Sagaing is really interesting, because we’re talking about the Bamar heartland that basically should be the core foundation of this military,” Maung said. “It’s telling how worried the military is of its own people.”
There are now growing signs that the military is turning its focus on Chin State. Chin fighters claim to have killed dozens of soldiers, a social media analysis by Myanmar Witness showed.
As fresh soldiers have flowed into Chin State, residents have reported troops putting down protests with live rounds and brutal beatings. A teacher in the town of Mindat said many fled early on, but she was determined not to be forced out.
Then the military fired artillery into the town so the “houses would shake like an earthquake,” she said.
Her cousin, a member of the PDF, was killed by a sniper and his body used as an explosive trap, the teacher said.
That evening, villagers tried to move the body from a distance with a stick. The body blew up.
“We didn’t get back a body,” she said. “Instead we had to collect pieces.”
She fled across the border to India in October.
A half-day’s drive west from Mindat lies Matupi, a town with two military camps that is now bereft of its young people, said a college student who fled with her two teenage brothers in October.
She said the military had locked people into houses and set them alight, hid bombs in churches and schools, killed three protest leaders she knew and left bodies in the middle of roads to terrorize people.
Yet the resistance has spread, she said.
“People are scared of the military, but they want democracy and they are fighting for democracy,” she said from India, where she now lives. “They are screaming for democracy.”
Thantlang, a town near the Indian border, has also been emptied of its people after four months of heavy fighting, the Chin Human Rights Organization said.
Drone footage shot by the group in October and December shows fires raging inside buildings and charred churches, collapsed schools and ruined homes. The footage matches fires detected by satellites and interviews with villagers.
Rachel, a 23-year-old who had moved home to Thantlang in June to escape the COVID-19 pandemic in Yangon, said residents started hearing explosions and gunfire in the distance. The sounds gradually got closer starting in September.
As the shelling hit the town, she and others hid on the ground floor of their local church for four days, she said.
She then fled for a nearby village, but she sneaked back into town on Dec. 3 to gather belongings. While she was in her home with three friends, gunshots and explosions suddenly erupted outside.
She felt a hot burn as a bullet tore into her torso. Two of her friends bolted, leaving her alone with a cousin who has trouble walking due to a birth defect.
She told him she was going to die and asked him to leave, but he stayed, wrapping her scarf around her stomach to stem the bleeding. The two managed to get to her motorbike, and her cousin held her with one hand as he drove with the other.
A local doctor said that the bullet had hit her cell phone and then gone into the left side of her stomach.
“I think I would have died there if it had not hit the phone,” said Rachel, who asked to be identified by one name for safety.
The following day, she went across the border to Mizoram in India. She said she would return home despite the danger so she could look after her ailing 70-year-old mother.
In the meantime, the farmhand who escaped the Done Taw massacre is defiant. He had been passively supporting the PDF before, but is now vowing to avenge the killings of his neighbors.
“I have just decided to fight until the end for them,” he said. “I will do whatever I can until I die or until I am arrested.”
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