Wretched life for Mon village headman

Wretched life for Mon village headman
A village headman was accused of supporting a Mon splinter group and was severely beaten on the head by Burmese troops on December 10. A column of State Peace and Development Council soldiers charged ...

Ye -- A village headman was accused of supporting a Mon splinter group and was severely beaten on the head by Burmese troops on December 10. A column of State Peace and Development Council soldiers charged him for not reporting the activities of the small Mon guerrilla group.

The Burmese Army’s Light Infantry Battalion No. 31 based in southern Mon State arrested Nai Aung Tin Nyunt, the village headman of Ma-Kyi (Mang Glon in Mon) and charged him for failing to report the whereabouts of the Mon guerrillas.

Ma-Kyi village, in southern Ye, comprises of about 100 households.  “Most of the village headmen in this area (black area) don’t want to be in the position of reporting the activities of the Mon splinter group or being one of the SPDC’s stooges. They have seen what happened to their predecessors,” said a Mon political observer to Kaowao requesting anonymity for fear of reprisals.

“The more experienced person is called on to work as the village chairman, to take care of their villagers despite facing hazards,” the political observer added. Most of the villagers are unwilling to take part in village administration. Most villagers in this part of southern Mon State cannot read and write Burmese, the official language of the country.

Since 1997 the on-off civil war has created instability in this area when the New Mon State Party and SPDC reached a ceasefire agreement in 1995. The junta’s military unit under General Maung Bo intensified the conflict after a speech he made in 2003 promising to “root out” the splinter groups. He accused the Mon villagers as being sympathizers for the Mon guerrillas and warned them that they would suffer the consequences if they continued to support the guerrillas for he knew they couldn’t survive without their (Mon villagers) help.

Villagers in southern Ye have regularly left the villages choosing to live as internally displaced persons in the jungle, while some go to the border and apply to the UNHCR for resettlement. The New Mon State Party withdrew its troops from this area according to their agreement with the SPDC which is now designated as the black area.

The published report ‘Catwalk To The Barracks’ highlights the sexual abuse by SPDC’s soldiers committed against Mon village women. The report claims that the SPDC soldiers use women as a weapon of war.