The Myanmar military launched its coup in 2021, sparking a civil war where thousands of people were killed and millions displaced.
Large areas of the country remain under the control of armed opposition groups.
The report, from the UN’s Human Rights Office, states that air strikes “remained the single largest cause of destruction and suffering”.
The region of Sagaing was the “most dangerous region for civilians as the military pressed to gain ground”, with 191 deaths, including of 60 women and 30 children, the report says.
During an attack in October 23 people, including four children, were killed and more than 60 others wounded when munitions struck civilians gathered in front of a school in Chaung-U, Sagaing.
“At the time of the attack, participants were holding a candlelit event to celebrate the end of Buddhist Lent, and to call for the release of political prisoners, oppose military conscription and reject military elections,” the report states.
In December, it says a military aeroplane bombed a tea shop in Tabayin, Sagaing, as people had gathered to watch a football match, killing at least 19 and wounding 20 others.
The report also references abuse of Rohingya people who have been exposed to forced recruitment by the Arakan Army, as well as to killings, arbitrary arrests and sexual violence.
“As if the people of Myanmar have not suffered enough at the hands of the military, they have now seemingly been forgotten by those outside the country,” UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk said.
“Funding for localised protection efforts was in many areas the only solace from the suffering caused by constant targeting and indiscriminate attacks by the military. This pullback just compounds that injury.”
Leave a Reply