The Unresolved Year-Long Case of the Two Female Teachers of Kawng Hka

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19 January 2016

Maran Lu Ra (age 20) and Tangbau Hkwan Nan Tsin (age 21) started working as Kachin Baptist Convention (KBC) volunteer teachers in Kawnghka Village, Muse Township, Northern Shan State, in June 2014. While working in the village, on 19 January, 2015, they were gang-raped, inhumanly tortured and brutally murdered with multiple stab wounds in their home inside the village churchyard. Today, 19 January, 2016, is exactly one year since the incident.

Kawng Hka Village has only 28 households and is situated in government-controlled territory. No government troops, ethnic armed groups or militia groups were based there. On the fateful day of 19 January, 2015, about 50 government troops from the Kyaukme-based Light Infantry Battalion 503 arrived and took up positions in the village. The government troops temporarily resided at four houses in the village. The house where the crime occurred was about 100 yards away from the four houses temporarily taken up by the army but well inside its 200-yard security perimeter.

To find out the truth about the two female teachers’ case, KBC formed a committee to conduct investigations. When KBC asked the President to officially recognize the 15-member committee and acknowledge its power and mandate, President Office Minister, U Aung Min, accepted its cooperation.

The Criminal Investigation Department (CID), Lashio Police Force and Muse Police Force are undertaking the investigation regarding the case. However, many flaws were found in the police work following the case. In particular, the police did not arrange for the forensic doctor to do a post-mortem examination of the two teachers’ corpses. Additionally, they did not systematically collect evidence in accordance with the established procedures. They also violated the Code of Criminal Procedure when sending evidence to relevant departments. Moreover, when the KBC Investigation Team asked the police about the evidence, the latter gave two differing answers. They first answered that they had sent the evidence to the lab but next time they replied that the evidence had been damaged or lost. Though the evidence could have been utilized by the testing them in the lab to discover the true culprit, no findings have come out till this day.

In addition, all testimonies and findings obtained by the police have to be submitted to the Tactical Operations Commander, Col. Htun Naing Oo, but the army prevented villagers from taking photos and records of the crime scene, also destroying already documented information. Instead of finding out the truth, the police even accused the KBC Investigation Team of poor cooperation. Currently, the police are trying to pin the crime on two young Kachin men from Kawnghka Village.

Although the crime occurred exactly one year ago, no real culprit has been found. Hence, truth and justice remain elusive for the two teachers and their remaining families.

Since this horrendous crime happened, many such cases of sexual assault, torture and murder of women have continued in ethnic regions in the proceeding year.

For instance:

  • On 20 January, 2015, a soldier from Light Infantry Division 77 committed sexual abuse and near-death torture on a 30-year old woman in Khu Maw Village, Khu Phyat Tract, Namtu Township, Northern Shan State.[1]
  • On 13 April, 2015, Private Zaw Myo Aye (military ID-T/454138) of government army Light Infantry Battalion 438 attempted to commit sexual assault upon a 73-year old local elderly woman in Namlan Village, Momauk Township, Bhamo District. Villagers were able to catch him red-handed but the military tribunal only tried him for night-time trespassing.[2]
  • On 6 June, 2015, a 28-year old Shan woman was found raped, robbed and killed near a building where soldiers from Infantry Battalion 249 were stationed in Hopong Township, Southern Shan State. After the incident, army officers arrived at the scene along with a private and beat him in public view, also announcing that he would be sentenced to death. The Commander of the Eastern Command, Brig. Gen. Aye Win himself came from Taunggyi, and gave money and food to the murdered woman’s husband.[3]

Inability to find the true culprits in such a dreadful case of the two teachers from Kawnghka Village, as well as continued occurrences of similar offences results in terrible concern for women, especially for the life and security of ethnic women living in armed conflict areas and ethnic regions where rule of law is weak. In effect, it is also encourages further abuses in all places and emboldens perpetrators to commit crimes again and again. In such a time as this of striving for peace by all means, guaranteeing women’s lives and security is the utmost requirement. Otherwise, achieving genuine peace and lasting national reconciliation will still be far away.

Therefore, we civil society organizations call for prompt execution of the following demands:

  • To sanction an official mandate and power of investigation to KBC in order to reveal the truth of the two Kawnghka teachers;
  • To request and invite the International Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission (IHFFC) to conduct an investigation in order to find out the truth;
  • For the incoming NLD government to promptly execute the two aforementioned points.

Signed by:

  1. Legal Aid Network (LAN)
  2. Kachin Women’s Association – Thailand (KWAT)
  3. Women’s League of Burma (WLB)
  4. Burma Partnership (BP)
  5. Karen Human Rights Group (KHRG)
  6. Karen Women’s Organization (KWO)
  7. Kachin National Organization (KNO)
  8. Shan Women’s Action Network (SWAN)
  9. Pan Kachin Development Society (PKDS)
  10. School for Shan State Nationality Youth (SSSNY)
  11. Kachin Youth Organization (KYO)
  12. Kachin Women’s Association (KWA)
  13. Kachin Baptist Convention (KBC)
  14. Lahu Women’s Organization (LWO)
  15. Ethnic Voices
  16. Eastern Naga Development Organization (ENDO)
  17. Bridging Real Integrated Development Grass Empowerment (BRIDGE)
  18. Kachin  Relief and Development Committee (KRDC)
  19. Kachin Development Networking Group (KDNG)
  20. Network for Human Rights Documentation – Burma (ND-Burma)
  21. Chin Agency
  22. Kale Pax Network
  23. Asia Justice and Rights (AJAR)
  24. Civil Authorize Negotiate Organization (C.A.N-Org)
  25. Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays – Myanmar (PFLAG-MYANMAR)
  26. Women Initiatives Platform  (Taunggyi)
  27. Network for Democracy and Development (NDD)
  28. Forum for Democracy in Burma (FDB)
  29. Action Committee for Democracy Development (ACDD)
  30. Students and Youth Congress of Burma (SYCB)
  31. Tavoyan Youth Organization (TYO)
  32. Tavoyan Women’s Union (TWU)
  33. Pyi Gyi Khin (ျပည္ၾကီးခင္)
  34. Gender Equality Network (GEN)
  35. Akhaya (အခရာ)
  36. Colors Rainbow
  37. Association of Human Rights Defenders and Promoters (HRDP)
  38. United ACT
  39. Human Rights Educators Network (HREN)
  40. Tenasserim River and Indigenous People Network (TRIP NET)
  41. Public Legal Aid Network (PLAN)
  42. Dawei Brobono Lawyer Network (DBLN)
  43. Karenni Refugee Committee (KnRC)
  44. Upper Myanmar Lawyers Network
  45. Mandalay Peacekeeping Committee
  46. Karenni National Women’s Organization (KNWO)
  47. Karen Women Empowerment Group (KWEG)
  48. Palaung Women’s Organization (PWO)
  49. Pa-O Youth Organization
  50. All Arakan Students’ and Youths’ Congress (AASYC)
  51. Shan Human Rights Foundation (SHRF)
  52. Myanmar LGBT Rights Network
  53. Gold Star SHG (Mandalay)
  54. Try SHG (Mandalay)
  55. အလင္းမီးအိမ္ (လားရႈိး)
  56. အျမဲစိမ္းခ်စ္သူ (မိုးေကာင္း)
  57. မေနာပန္း (ျမစ္ၾကီးနား)
  58. မုိးၾကိဳး (မလႈိင္)
  59. Sky Dragon (ျပည္)
  60. ေစတနာ့ အားမာန္ (ပဲခူး)
  61. ဧရာ၀တီႏွလုံးသား (ပုသိမ္)
  62. Kuki Women’s Human Rights Organization (KWHRO)
  63. Women’s Rights and Welfare Association of Burma (WRWAB)
  64. Burmese Women’s Union (BWU)
  65. Kayan Women’s Organization (KyWO)
  66. Rakhaing Women’s Union (RWU)
  67. Colorful Girls
  68. Kachin Peace Network (KPN)
  69. Kachin Women Peace Network (KWPN)
  70. Center for Youth and Social Harmony (CYSH)
  71. N’ Center for Education & Research Development (NCERD)
  72. Shan Youth Yangon (SYY)
  73. Freethinkers
  74. The Seagull: Human Rights, Peace and Development
  75. Co-Exist
  76. Myanmar Youth Social and Education Local Focus (MYSELF)
  77. ပန္းပ်ိဳးလက္လူငယ္စင္တာ
  78. ကဗ်ာခ်စ္သူမ်ား အသင္း
  79. ျငိမ္းခ်မ္းေရးရိႈက္သံ
  80. ဂရုဏာေရာင္စဥ္တန္းမ်ား
  81. Peace Machine
  82. Independent Youth For Change (IYFC)
  83. MasterPeace Myanmar Club
  84. Golden Generations
  85. Renovator Youth Network
  86. Women’s Initiative Network for Peace (WIN-Peace)
  87. Association of Myanmar Disabled Women Affairs (AMDWA)
  88. Postmodern Informal Education (Banmauk) (နိစၥဓူ၀ပညာေရးအဖဲြ႔-ဗန္းေမာ္ျမိဳ႕)
  89. Alternative ASEAN Network on Burma (ALTSEAN-Burma)
  90. Equality Myanmar
  91. Chin Human Rights Organization (CHRO)
  92. Ramhkye
  93. Mungchying Rawt Jat (MRJ)
  94. Burma Rivers Network (BRN)
  95. Farmers and Landworkers Union (Myanmar)

Individuals:

  1. Guy Horton (The School of Oriental and African Studies, England)
  2. Ja San Ra (Chaing Mai University student, Thailand)
  3. Sally Kantar
  4. Choetni Phanakoemen
  5. Yin Yadanar Thein
  6. Win Some Aye
  7. Mai Mai (Shan State, Burma)
  8. Hpauda Tu (USA)
  9. Dr Daw Khin Mar Mar Kyi

 Media Contact Persons:

  1. Daw May Sabe Phyu (Kachin Women Peace Network) +95 942 117 0783
  2. Mae Su Su Swe (Women’s League of Burma/Tavoyan Women’s Union)   +95 942 502 7681
  3. Julia Marip (Women’s League of Burma/Kachin Women’s Association – Thailand) +66 907 504 960

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[1] http://kachinlandnews.com/?p=25319 and http://reliefweb.int/report/myanmar/myanmar-investigate-alleged-rape-and-killing-two-kachin-women

[2] http://www.dvb.no/news/soldier-sentenced-in-attempted-rape-case-burma-myanmar/54717

[3] http://shanhumanrights.org/index.php/news-updates?start=18

Click here to download full statement (English) (Burmese)