Myanmar’s Kayah Continues to Seek Justice for Military Killings: A Never-Ending Wait

Myanmar’s Kayah Continues to Seek Justice for Military Killings: A Never-Ending Wait

Kayah State, ‌Myanmar – On December 28, in his clinic in Myanmar’s ‌eastern Kayah ​State, Dr Oak wrapped ⁢up ⁤a routine‌ check on a pregnant woman and removed some non-threatening shrapnel ‍from⁤ the leg of a resistance fighter.

Exactly two years earlier, he was living a nightmare, examining the charred remains of 33 civilians brutally ⁣killed by the Myanmar ⁢military.

Exactly two years⁣ earlier, he⁢ was living a nightmare, examining the charred ‌remains ⁢of 33 civilians brutally killed by the Myanmar military.

“Before, when I was working in the hospital,‍ I might⁣ see one or⁢ two bodies ⁢at a time. But when I saw ⁢that many bodies at once,‌ and understood the cruelty of the way the military killed them, I felt ‌devastated and terrified,” he ⁤told Al Jazeera.⁤ “I felt so sorry for their family members because they ⁤can’t ‍even identify their loved ones and say a proper ‌goodbye.”

Dr Oak, who asked to be identified by a nickname to ‍protect his family, has been living in Kayah State since ⁢December 15, 2021. ‍After‍ the military seized power in ‍a coup in February of that⁣ year, he quit his job at a government ‌hospital ‍in his native Ayeyarwady Region and ‍joined ⁤a ‌mass strike of civil servants known as the Civil Disobedience Movement.

After‍ a few months of participating in ‌street protests and then hiding⁣ in safe⁣ houses‍ in Ayeyarwady‍ and Yangon, he headed to Kayah intending to join the burgeoning ⁢armed resistance.

“In the beginning, I was planning to get a‍ gun and fight. I just wanted to ‌fight the⁣ military so‌ badly. But when I arrived here,⁤ they already had‍ so ⁤many soldiers but they really needed doctors. So I realised this ‍was the ⁤best way‌ for‌ me ⁤to help,” he ⁤said.

Link from www.aljazeera.com

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