Myanmar: if Security Council won’t act, other nations should step in, urges top rights expert
Horrific testimonies from civilians targeted by Myanmar’s military are yet another reason for the international community to take practical measures to halt the bloodshed, a top human rights expert said on Thursday.
“It is incredibly important for the world to give a damn,” said Tom Andrews, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar. “It is very important for the nations of the world to stop failing the people of Myanmar and act.”
Mr. Andrews, who reports to the Human Rights Council, insisted that the military continued to bomb civilians, in an attempt to subdue opposition to their de facto rule.
He described how the junta’s military forces had attacked a school in Sagaing region last Friday, killing at least 13, including 11 children; the coordinated attack from the air and ground had ended with soldiers picking up children’s bodyparts and taking them away, the Special Rapporteur said.
“A school in a monastery, two helicopter gunships, foreign-made, foreign-provided swooping in on this school while soldiers entered the grounds with automatic weapons firing away; children terrified, running, looking for cover. Eleven of them at least killed, literally blown up, and the story of a young boy whose arm had been blown off screaming to mother to kill him because the pain was so great.”
The Special Rapporteur, who works in an independent capacity, told journalists in Geneva that since a coup by the country’s military last February, the generals in charge had been “holding a nation of 54 million people hostage. I think the best way to think of them is not as any kind of governmental entity but as a criminal gang that has literally taken over a country and are holding its leaders and its people hostage.”
In the absence of unified condemnation of the coup in the UN Security Council and the establishment of targeted economic sanctions, an arms embargo and a request for an international criminal inquiry, Mr. Andrews called for a “coalition of likeminded countries” to take action. “If it can’t be done by the Security Council, then it must be done by those nations who were speaking yesterday and will speak today in support of the people of Myanmar”, he said, in reference to the great gathering of world leaders attending the UN General Assembly in New York this week.
Without action, the situation risked spiralling out of control, the Special Rapporteur warned, noting that South-East Asian nations including China would be hardest-hit, in the first instance.
“I can see a major, major flow of refugees out of that country if the trajectory that we’re on right now continues,” he said.
Ahead of elections planned next year in Myanmar, Mr. Andrews urged countries not to give a “veneer of legitimacy” to them.
Among the war crimes and crimes against humanity that the Myanmar military was committing on a daily basis, the top rights expert listed sexual violence, torture and murder – including the execution of four opposition advocates in July. “They included a former parliamentarian and a prominent, pro-democracy activist,” the Special Rapporteur told the Human Rights Council on Wednesday.
“This is not an election, and to call it an election is to participate in a great wrongdoing of the people of Myanmar,” he said. “If the fundamentals of a free and fair election – the opportunity for people to have a choice, a voice in their future, it’s impossible if you’ve locked up and are killing the opposition”
ends
STORY: Myanmar Presser – Tom Andrews
TRT: 2 mins 59s
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH/NATS
ASPECT RATIO: 16:9
DATELINE: 22 September 2022 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
SHOTLIST
SOUNDBITE(ENGLISH) UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews: “A school in a monastery, two helicopter gunships, foreign-made, foreign-provided swooping in on this school while soldiers entered the grounds with automatic weapons firing away; children terrified, running, looking for cover. Eleven of them at least killed, literally blown up, and the story of a young boy whose arm had been blown off screaming to mother to kill him because the pain was so great.”
SOUNDBITE(ENGLISH) UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews: “If the UN Security Council will not convene and pass a resolution under Chapter Seven which would establish targeted economic sanctions, establish an arms embargo, make reference to the International Criminal Court, I mean, that’s what should be done, but that’s not going to be done, obviously, so if it can’t be done by the Security Council, then it must be done by those nations who were speaking yesterday and will speak today in support of the people of Myanmar.”
1
1
1
Edited News | WHO
DRC Ebola outbreak: hundreds of suspected cases, no vaccine
A fast-spreading Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has health workers rushing to stop transmission while the roll out of any potential vaccine is months away, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.
1
1
1
Press Conferences | IFRC , OCHA , UNCTAD , UNHCR , WHO
UNCTAD: Trade and Development Foresights 2026, update on Trade and Development Report 2025; WHO: Update on WHA and Ebola in Congo and Uganda; UNHCR: Ebola - concerns for displaced people and humanitarian operations; IFRC: Red Cross response to the Ebola outbreak
1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR
A UN Human Rights Office report released today covers 19 months of large-scale violations of international law including atrocity crimes, from October 2023 to the end of May 2025.
1
1
1
Edited News | OCHA , UNICEF
At least six million people in Somalia are going days without enough food, UN aid teams warned on Friday, highlighting that nearly two million of this number are young children “at high risk of illness or death”.
1
1
1
Press Conferences | OCHA , UNICEF , UNOG , WFP , FAO , WHO , UNEP , ILO , WMO
UN Geneva press briefing chaired by Rolando Gómez, Chief, Press and External Relations Section, UN Information Service, with the participation of representatives of OCHA, UNICEF, WFP, FAO, WHO, UNEP, ILO and WMO.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNICEF , WHO
Children shot, stabbed and pepper-sprayed in occupied West Bank; scores of Gaza amputees denied prosthetics, aid teams warn
Israeli military operations and surging settler attacks in the occupied West Bank are killing and maiming Palestinian children, while in Gaza tens of thousands with life-changing injuries lack access to treatment and rehabilitation, UN agencies warned on Tuesday.
1
1
2
Press Conferences | UN WOMEN , UNDP , UNEP , UNICEF , WHO
UN WOMEN: Ukraine war deadlier for women and girls; UNICEF: West Bank and East Jerusalem: children targeted by violence and dismantling of systems and services; WHO: Gaza, medical rehabilitation needs; UNDP: South Sudan: fragility, elections, peacebuilding, justice and resilience; UNEP: Sand and Sustainability report.
1
1
1
Press Conferences | UNEP
Launch of the United Nations Environment Programme’s report: ‘2026 Sand and Sustainability: An Essential Resource for Nature and Development’.
1
1
1
Edited News | WHO
The risk of hantavirus spreading to the general population is “absolutely low”, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) stressed on Friday.
1
1
1
Press Conferences | UN WOMEN , WFP , WHO
UN Women - The situation of women and girls in Lebanon; WFP - Deteriorating humanitarian conditions in Somalia; WHO - Hantavirus interim update
1
1
1
Edited News | UNHCR , IFRC
Death and destruction have continued unabated in Lebanon while communities are still unable to return to their homes despite a ceasefire that began on 17 April, humanitarians said on Tuesday.
1
1
Edited News | WHO
Deadly hantavirus on board cruise ship may be transmitted among humans - WHO
Hantavirus victims on a ship in the Atlantic Ocean may have been infected prior to joining the cruise and human-to-human transmission on board cannot be ruled out – although it is rare - the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.