Since the coup d'etat in Myanmar, military crackdowns on resisting civilians have continued, with local human rights groups summarizing more than 1,000 deaths.


The number of victims continues to increase, with the international community unable to stop military violence.

In Myanmar, since February, when the military carried out a coup d'etat, resisting citizens have continued protests on the streets and disobedience campaigns to abandon their duties.



The military has repeatedly fired, assaulted, and tortured such citizens in custody, killing a total of 1006 people by the 18th after the coup d'etat, according to a summary of the local human rights group Political Prisoner Support Association. It means that it was done.



According to the association, as the number of citizens holding weapons increases, there are cases where the military exerts more severe crackdowns, and in the northwestern Sagaing Region last month, with members of armed groups and their supporters. Approximately 40 villagers suspected and detained were found dead in the woods.



Regarding the situation in Myanmar, the UN Security Council has not been able to take concrete actions because the gap between Europe and the United States, which insists on sanctions on the military, and China and Russia, which are negative to this, has not been filled.



In addition, the ASEAN-Association of Southeast Asian Nations has not been able to dispatch a special envoy to mediate dialogue between the military and pro-democracy forces even nearly four months after the agreement of the summit, and the violence by the Myanmar military has been carried out by the international community. Unstoppable, civilian casualties continue to increase.