New York: A United Nations rights expert has warned of "mass deaths" from starvation, disease and exposure in the Kayah State of Myanmar after 1,00,000 civilians fled following "brutal, indiscriminate attacks" by the military. "Mass deaths from starvation, disease and exposure could occur in Kayah State after many of the 100,000 forced to flee into forests from junta bombs are now cut off from food, water and medicine by the junta. The international community must act", UN Special Rapporteur for Myanmar, Tom Andrews, tweeted late on Monday.
In his alert, Andrews noted that the Kayah state attacks were just the latest in a series throughout Myanmar that had caused mass displacement and suffering, from Mutraw in Karen state to Mindat in Chin state and Bago city. The independent rights expert, who reports to the Human Rights Council, emphasised that the lives of many thousands of men, women and children were under threat from indiscriminate attacks, on a scale not seen since the 1 February coup, "that likely amount to mass atrocity crimes".
Also read:Myanmar junta to start court case against Suu Kyi next week
The development echoes concern by the UN Country Team in Myanmar, which on Monday underscored the rapidly deteriorating security and humanitarian situation in Kayah State and other parts of the country, linked to protests caused by the military takeover. On February 1, the Myanmar military overthrew the civilian government and declared a year-long state of emergency. The coup triggered mass protests and was met by deadly violence. As of Tuesday, as many as 857 people have been killed as the military government has violent cracked down on peaceful anti-coup protests, while 4,704 are currently under detention, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP).