Myanmar junta troops burning hundreds of homes, villagers say
- A villager said troops set fire to about 200 houses, ‘We could not bring anything with us. We took some warm clothes only, and then we just ran away’
- Mass protests against last year’s coup have been met with a brutal military crackdown in which more than 1,500 people have been killed
Myanmar villagers and anti-coup fighters have accused troops of burning hundreds of homes in the country’s restive northwest, as the junta seeks to crush resistance to its rule.
Mass protests against last year’s coup have been met with a brutal military crackdown, and violence has flared across Myanmar as civilians form People’s Defence Forces (PDF) to oppose the junta.
A woman from Bin village in the Sagaing region, which has seen recent clashes, said troops had arrived in the early hours of Monday. “They shelled artillery and fired guns before coming in,” she said on Friday, adding that the sound had sent villagers fleeing.
Troops then set fire to around 200 houses, including her own, she said, requesting anonymity. “We could not bring anything with us. We took some warm clothes only, and then we just ran away.”
Troops also torched houses in nearby Inn Ma Hte village after a local pro-junta militia was attacked by anti-coup fighters who then fled, according to one of the rebels. “When the PDF left the village, the army burnt it down,” the fighter said, adding that 600 houses had been torched.
Local media also reported that hundreds of homes had been razed in the two villages, and images obtained by AFP purporting to be of Bin village showed the remains of dozens of burnt-out buildings.
AFP could not independently verify the reports from the remote region.