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Myanmar : Junta Blamed for Deaths of 165 Children in 2022 : The Guardian / Editors at N&V

Very little trickles down by way of news on Myanmar in the mainstream media these days. And those that do, remain alarming. 

This recent news coverage on the plight of children in Myanmar calls for concern. 5.6 million children are reported to be in need of humanitarian assistance. Compounded to this, the junta is blamed for deaths of more than 160 children in 2022, according to the exiled National Unity Government. The figure "appears credible" according to a senior consultant of the International Crisis Group. 

A UN report released in June'22, put the number of children tortured since the coup at 142 with more than 1,400 arbitrarily detained. Much of diplomatic pressure on the regime through the recent past has yielded negligible results. 

The UN Child Rights Committee has previously called for perpetrators to be held accountable and for assistance to be delivered safely to Myanmar’s children. Nothing has been achieved in this regard to date.

Diplomatic pressures by the ASEAN group for the restoration of democracy has yielded only partial results, with the junta announcing general election expected to be held on 1 August 2023. Given the track record of the regime, it is not expected to be free and fair. 

More than anything else, the deteriorating plight of the vulnerable, women, children and the aged in particular calls for mobilisation of the international community to deliver essential humanitarian supplies 

The Editors


28 December 2022 : Myanmar’s military junta killed 165 children in 2022, according to the country’s exiled opposition National Unity Government (NUG). According to their data, 78% more children died at the hands of the occupying military in 2022 compared with 2021.

“The NUG figure appears credible,” says Thomas Kean, a senior consultant on Myanmar for the International Crisis Group, explaining that reports are often accompanied by evidence.

Analysis by local media suggests artillery attacks targeting forces resistant to the junta were mainly to blame. Myanmar has spiralled into bloody conflict since the military ousted Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian government in February 2021, with thousands of people killed.

Kean said, and according to a spokesperson at the NUG’s Ministry of Women, Youths and Children Affairs, the military regime is intensifying their bombing and airstrikes, targeting schools operating in NUG controlled areas.

In September, over a dozen children were killed in an airstrike on a school in Sagaing, in November children were among the victims of a shelling in Rakhine state and a number of children were among the dead in 2021’s Christmas Eve massacre in Kayah state.

A ministry spokesperson encouraged airstrike drill training among young people. “Local communities, resistance organisations and the NUG have to provide bomb shelters nearby schools,” they said.

The increased reliance on artillery and air power is down to stretched manpower, Kean said, but also serves as collective punishment for communities believed to be supporting the junta’s opponents.

“This fits in with a pattern of how it wages war, civilians are often deliberately targeted,” he said, adding that the torching of homes and destruction of entire villages isn’t uncommon.

There have also been reports of children being beaten, cut, stabbed, burned with cigarettes and having fingernails pulled out, Thomas Andrews, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, said in June.

“They have been forced to hold stress positions; they have been subjected to mock executions; they have been sexually assaulted,” he said, adding that children are often held hostage until their parents give themselves up.

A UN report released in June, put the number of children tortured since the coup at 142 with more than 1,400 arbitrarily detained. As of 27 December the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners listed a total 2,660 people as having been murdered since the start of the coup.

Aside from the threat of violence, children are experiencing malnutrition, limited access to clean water, health care and education, with 5.6 million children in need of humanitarian assistance.

The UN Child Rights Committee has previously called for perpetrators to be held accountable and for assistance to be delivered safely to Myanmar’s children.

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