KOMPAS.com - At least 11 schoolchildren died in an air strike on a Myanmar village, according to the United Nations children’s agency, an attack the country’s junta said targeted rebels hiding in the area.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday, Sept. 20 condemned the strike, according to his office, which said at least 13 people died, including those 11 students.
The Southeast Asian country has been in chaos since the military seized power in a coup Feb. 1, 2021, with nearly 2,300 civilians killed in a crackdown on dissent according to a local monitoring group.
The Sagaing region in the country’s northwest has experienced some of the fiercest fightings, and clashes between anti-coup fighters and the military have seen entire villages burned down.
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The UN children’s agency UNICEF condemned Friday’s violence in Depeyin township in Sagaing.
“At least 15 children from the same school are still missing,” UNICEF said in a statement issued Monday, calling for their immediate safe release.
Guterres, who on Tuesday was hosting world leaders at the UN General Assembly, “strongly condemns the attacks by Myanmar armed forces on a school in Let Yet Kone” and offered his condolences to victims’ families, his spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said in a statement.
Such attacks on schools in contravention of international humanitarian law constitute “grave violations against children in times of armed conflict strongly condemned by the Security Council,” the Guterres spokesman said, calling for the perpetrators to be held accountable.
The junta said they had sent troops in helicopters to Let Yet Kone after receiving a tip that fighters from the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), an ethnic rebel group, and from a local anti-coup militia were moving weapons in the area.