A summary of local human rights groups has shown that more than 2,000 people have died in Myanmar due to military crackdowns since last year's coup.



Despite the efforts of the international community, the situation is uncertain and the number of victims continues to increase.

In Myanmar, the military conducted a coup d'etat last February, detaining a series of democratic political leaders such as Aung San Suu Kyi.



The military then repeatedly fired and assaulted civilians protesting the coup, killing 2007 people by the 22nd, according to a summary by the local human rights group Political Criminal Assistance Association.



According to groups, the dead are one after another in the northwestern Sagaing Region, where military and pro-democracy resistance battles continue.



The army is attacking the village with heavy firearms and cracking down on the inhabitants, and on the 6th of this month, 11 people fired from behind to the citizens who had evacuated to the Buddhist facility. It means that he died.



The local U.S. Embassy posted on SNS on the 22nd that the death toll had risen to 2,000, "The Myanmar military is committing inhumane and cruel acts to its citizens and needs to be held accountable." And blamed.



Regarding the situation in Myanmar, the ASEAN-Association of Southeast Asian Nations has dispatched a special envoy to mediate the dialogue between the military and the pro-democracy, but it is not expected that the situation will be settled and the casualties of the citizens are increasing.