Myanmar conflict – rights probe update 13 August 2024
/
2:18
/
MP4
/
170.7 MB
Transcripts
Teleprompter
Download

Edited News | UNITED NATIONS

Myanmar conflict – rights probe update 13 August 2024

Myanmar conflict – rights probe update 

TRT: 2 min 17s
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
ASPECT RATIO: 16:9
DATELINE: 13 AUGUST 2024 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

SHOTLIST 

  

  1. Exterior medium: UN Geneva flag alley.  
  2. Medium-wide, Press room, UN Geneva.
  3. SOUNDBITE (English) – Nicholas Koumjian, Head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM): “Aerial bombings have increased very substantially in this last year; in Kayah state in February of this year, four children were killed and around 10 injured when fighter jets dropped bombs and deployed machine gun fire on the school.”
  4. Medium-wide, Press room and podium speakers, UN Geneva.
  5. SOUNDBITE (English) – Nicholas Koumjian, Head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM): “We have a video that showed resistance forces beheading two captured soldiers in Loikaw in Kayah state in November, December of last year. So this kind of incredible brutality is going on.”
  6. Wide, Press room, UN Geneva.
  7. SOUNDBITE (English) – Nicholas Koumjian, Head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM): “Our mandate is to collect evidence of the most serious international crimes in Myanmar and unfortunately, what our report conveys is that the number of these crimes is only increasing and the armed conflict is increasing in intensity and in brutality and crimes are happening more and more frequently.”
  8. Medium-wide, Press room, UN Geneva.
  9. SOUNDBITE (English) – Nicholas Koumjian, Head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM): “There’s no doubt that the military, the junta, is becoming more desperate and we've seen, for example, this big increase in the use of aerial bombing and the targets of these bombings are usually civilian targets; schools and churches and hospitals are often the only structures in the area and those are the structures that are being - major structures - that are being bombed.”
  10. Medium-wide, Press room podium speakers.
  11. SOUNDBITE (English) – Nicholas Koumjian, Head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM): “We see an increase in the violence targeting civilians. So, I think absolutely, it's time for ASEAN to put some bite into its consensus. It's not enough simply to say we support ending the violence, there have to be steps taken to ensure that, in fact, the violence has ended.”
  12. Medium-wide, journalists, participants, one taking video on mobile phone.
  13. Medium-wide, participant taking video of proceedings.
  14. Medium, participant.

Myanmar rights probe warns over ‘incredible brutality’ of warring forces

Conflict in Myanmar between the military junta and opposition forces is increasingly brutal, with both sides likely responsible for international crimes including summary executions, top independent rights investigators said on Tuesday.

In a call to regional bloc ASEAN to help end the violence and support efforts to bring perpetrators to justice, the head of the Human Rights Council-appointed probe into the Myanmar emergency, Nicholas Koumjian, described an increasingly “desperate” junta whose devastating military tactics were being matched by opposition fighters acting with total impunity.

“Aerial bombings have increased very substantially in this last year,” Mr. Koumjian told journalists in Geneva. “In Kayah state in February of this year, four children were killed and around 10 injured when fighter jets dropped bombs and deployed machine gun fire on the school.”

Mr. Koumjian added that his investigators had also seen a video “that showed resistance forces beheading two captured soldiers in Loikaw in Kayah state in November, December of last year”, along with another video posted on social media of two young men being burned to death in Magway region. “So, this kind of incredible brutality is going on,” he said.

The Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM) was created by the Human Rights Council in 2018 to collect evidence of the most serious international crimes committed in Myanmar since 2011. It released its latest annual report on Tuesday.

Civilians frequently targeted

“Unfortunately, what our report conveys is that the number of these crimes is only increasing and the armed conflict is increasing in intensity and in brutality and crimes are happening more and more frequently,” Mr. Koumjian noted.

The veteran rights expert and former international criminal justice prosecutor expressed his opinion that the junta which seized power in Myanmar on 1 February 2021 was becoming more “desperate” over the period covered by the report from 1 July 2023 to 30 June 2024 - a time when armed conflicts increased across Myanmar as challenges to military rule intensified. “The targets of these bombings are usually civilian targets,” Mr. Koumjian said. “Schools and churches and hospitals are often the only structures in the area and those are the structures…that are being bombed.”

ASEAN influence

In a direct appeal to the regional bloc ASEAN, Mr. Koumjian urged it to respond to “substantial evidence” that the Myanmar military was committing war crimes and crimes against humanity “at an alarming rate”, by putting pressure on the junta to halt the conflict.

ASEAN - a “very key player in Myanmar”, according to the human rights investigator – has drawn up a five-point consensus to end the fighting that has been signed by “the junta itself”. Nonetheless, “we see instead an increase in violence and an increase in the violence targeting civilians,” he said. “So, I think absolutely, it's time for ASEAN to put some bite into its consensus. It's not enough simply to say we support ending the violence, there have to be steps taken to ensure that, in fact, the violence has ended.”

Broad reach

The head of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM) noted that the panel’s report was based on information and evidence collected from more than 900 sources, including more than 400 eyewitness testimonies, along with additional evidence such as photographs, videos, audio material, documents, maps, geospatial imagery, social media posts and forensic evidence.

Fighting impunity remains a core objective of the IIMM which has shared its findings and evidence with authorities at the International Criminal Court, the International Court of Justice and in Argentina, Mr. Koumjian said.

Teleprompter
aerial bombings have increased very substantially in in this last year.
In
Caya State, in February of this year,
four Children were killed and around 10 injured
when fighter jets dropped bombs
and deployed machine gun fire. On the school,
we have a video that showed
resistance forces beheading
to captured
soldiers,
uh, in,
uh, local
in
ka state in
November or December of last year.
So this kind of incredible brutality is going on.
Our mandate is to collect evidence of
the most serious international crimes in Myanmar.
And unfortunately, what our report,
um
conveys is that the number of these crimes is only increasing.
The armed conflict is increasing in intensity
in and in brutality, and crimes are happening
more and more frequently
to
there's no doubt that
the
military that the junta
is becoming more desperate.
And we've seen, for example, this big increase in the use of aerial bombing
and the targets of these bombings are usually, uh, C civilian targets.
Uh, schools and churches and hospitals are often
the only structures in the area,
and those are the structures that are being major structures that are being bombed.
We see an increase in the violence targeting
civilians.
So, uh, I think absolutely it's time for
ASEAN
to put some bite into its, uh, consensus.
It's not enough simply to say we we support ending the violence.
There have to be steps taken
to
to ensure that in fact, the violence has ended
on social media at the
Express
and put it in.