Dead Myanmar Girl’s Family Forced To Hide

Family members mourn at the funeral of seven-year-old girl, Khin Myo Chit in Mandalay. (AFP Photo)

The family of a young girl killed in her home by Myanmar's security forces say they have gone into hiding and dare not return for fear of being targeted by the military.

Khin Myo Chit was shot dead in her father's arms after security forces kicked down the door to their home in the city of Mandalay on Tuesday. She is the youngest victim yet in the military's post-coup crackdown. Earlier reports said Khin Myo Chit was seven years old, but her family confirmed Thursday she was only six.

"They shot her as she leaned towards my chest. I ran and was carrying her and could not even take a look at them (security forces) after she was shot," her father told reporters.

Khin Myo Chit was rushed to an emergency clinic, one of many set up by doctors and nurses to care for protesters unable to attend hospitals now occupied by the military.

The doctor who received her said the girl had already died before she arrived at the clinic at around 6:00 pm local time. "We couldn't do anything to save her life," said the doctor.

"Why did they (soldiers) shoot her to death, for what crime? And what sin have we committed?" the girl's sister said from an undisclosed location. "What have we done? And what has the child done?"

The sister said security forces took away her brother. They have no information as to his whereabouts or even if he is alive.

Children Killed

Myanmar was thrown into turmoil when the military, headed by coup leader Min Aung Hlaing, seized power last month, overturning a democratic election, detaining civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, and establishing a ruling military junta.

Anti-coup protests and strikes have since gripped the nation but are being violently suppressed by the junta's police forces and military soldiers, with widespread reports of shootings, enforced disappearances and torture of political prisoners.

At least 320 people have been killed in the bloody crackdown, according to advocacy group Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), though activists say the death toll is likely much higher. More than 20 of those deaths are children, humanitarian organisation Save the Children said.

Many residents in towns and cities across the country live in fear of being dragged out of their homes in night-time raids by security forces. Almost 3,000 people have been detained since 1 February, according to the AAPP. Many of them are young people and students and their families often have no idea where they are being held or what condition they are in.

Families of the dead are also worried soldiers will return to seize the body of their loved ones, as they have done before. It's not clear why the junta would want the bodies, but some families suspect they want to cover up the military's role in their deaths.

Worried the military would attempt to seize Khin Myo Chit's body, her sister said they had difficulty burying her according to the Muslim tradition.

"We have to bury her without letting everyone know (and) we couldn't go with funeral cars as we worried they might steal her body, we could only use the house cars for her funeral," she said.

"When we got to the cemetery, a few people were there so we had to hide her body, we had to wait until they were gone and only when no one was around could we bury her."

The family have been unable to mourn the young child properly. Instead, they have been forced to leave their home and keep watching over their shoulders, terrified they may be picked up by junta forces.

'A Slaughter Ground'

Khin Myo Chit's death has come as a shock even amid the relentless stream of deaths and arrests in Myanmar.

The doctor who received her body said he had lost count of the number of dead and injured that have passed through his clinic. The streets of Mandalay have become "like a slaughter ground" with security forces shooting at "anything they see," he said.

"What they are doing is not cracking down the protest, now they are shooting randomly in the neighbourhoods, it's not safe anymore even in our own houses with locked doors," the doctor said. 

The doctor said hospital workers were hiding bodies to keep them safe from soldiers so they could be handed back to the families.

The military has violated international humanitarian law by occupying hospitals and targeting medics at work. Ambulance workers have been beaten and detained, and there have been numerous reports of security forces stopping ambulances and taking away the injured.

In one case that horrified the country and international community, the military exhumed the body of a young protester shot dead in Mandalay to perform an autopsy, before cementing back over her grave. The Myanmar Police Force said it needed to investigate the death of 19-year-old Angel, but her family had not consented to an autopsy. – CNN

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