Dozens killed in Myanmar after armed paraglider attack: Reports

Amnesty International says the military launched a paraglider attack on a nighttime civilian gathering.

More than 20 people were killed in central Myanmar after the military launched motorised paraglider attacks during an antigovernment candlelight vigil, according to Amnesty International and media reports.

The attacks hit a village in Myanmar’s Sagaing Region twice on Monday night as community members gathered to mark a Buddhist festival and call for the release of political prisoners, among other demands, the reports said.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 items

end of list

“This would be the latest in a long line of attacks that stretch back almost five years to the start of the 2021 military coup,” said Amnesty International Myanmar Researcher Joe Freeman.

“As the military attempts to solidify power with a stage-managed election later this year, it is intensifying an already brutal campaign against pockets of resistance,” he said.

The attacks on Chaung-U Township came in two waves at 8pm (13:30 GMT) and then again at 11pm (16:30 GMT), killing between 20 and 32 people and injuring dozens more, according to The Irrawaddy, an independent news outlet based in Thailand.

The official death toll has not been confirmed, but the use of motorised paragliders is a known tactic from Myanmar’s military to drop munitions on civilian locations, according to the UN Human Rights Office.

Myanmar has been torn by civil war since 2021 between the military-led government, armed opposition groups, and ethnic armed organisations following a military coup that removed a democratically elected leadership.

The conflict has killed more than 75,000 people and displaced more than 3 million, according to UN estimates.

The military has frequently attacked ethnic minority civilians or communities like Chaung-U Township that are near strongholds of armed groups, according to rights groups.

A 2024 BBC investigation estimated that the military only controlled about 20 percent of the country, while armed opposition and ethnic armed groups controlled about 40 percent of Myanmar’s territory, with the rest territory contested by the various forces.

The military government lifted a long-running state of emergency in July and called for elections at the end of the year, but critics, like the government of Japan, say a peace process is first needed before Myanmar can restore a “democratic political system”.

Amnesty International’s Freeman called for more action from international groups like the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the UN.

“[ASEAN] must increase pressure on the junta and revise an approach that has failed the Myanmar people for almost five years, since the coup deposed the country’s democratically elected government,” he said. “The UN Security Council should also refer the situation in Myanmar as a whole to the International Criminal Court.”

Read More

  • Related Posts

    I was almost killed in Australia’s tobacco wars, ex-criminal turned journalist Ryan Naumenko reveals

    Speaking exclusively to The Trial Australia podcast, former criminal turned journalist Ryan Naumenko revealed how his insider coverage of Melbourne‘s tobacco wars nearly cost him his life. The tobacco wars…

    Two workers killed in explosion at Cobar mine

    Man and woman killed in underground explosion Tragedy has rocked outback mining town  READ MORE: Four injured in mine collapse By KYLIE STEVENS, SENIOR BREAKING NEWS REPORTER, AUSTRALIA Published: 16:37…

    You Missed

    Lucy Letby ‘used as scapegoat for failings of senior doctors’ according to her childhood friend

    Lucy Letby ‘used as scapegoat for failings of senior doctors’ according to her childhood friend

    Distraught woman admits to using ‘homeless man’ from viral AI prank to file fake sex abuse report

    Distraught woman admits to using ‘homeless man’ from viral AI prank to file fake sex abuse report

    Reform UK gets first House of Lords member as Tory donor jumps ship

    Reform UK gets first House of Lords member as Tory donor jumps ship

    ‘See me one more time before I die’: Thomas Markle issues desperate plea to Meghan from hospital bed  

    ‘See me one more time before I die’: Thomas Markle issues desperate plea to Meghan from hospital bed  

    ‘I don’t want to die estranged from Meghan. I want to meet my grandkids and Harry’: Thomas Markle speaks to the Mail’s CAROLINE GRAHAM from his hospital bed in this world exclusive interview

    ‘I don’t want to die estranged from Meghan. I want to meet my grandkids and Harry’: Thomas Markle speaks to the Mail’s CAROLINE GRAHAM from his hospital bed in this world exclusive interview

    Multiple homes DESTROYED as out-of-control bushfires wreaks havoc on suburbs north of Sydney

    Multiple homes DESTROYED as out-of-control bushfires wreaks havoc on suburbs north of Sydney