Myanmar's military regime is perpetrating abuse of the mainly-Christian Chin ethnic group, a rights group has said |
New York-based Human Rights Watch said tens of thousands of the Chin flee across the border to India, only for many of them to be forcibly returned home -- violating their right to refuge under international law.
"For too long, ethnic groups like the Chin have borne the brunt of abusive military rule in Burma," said Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, referring to Myanmar by its former name.
"It is time for this brutal treatment to stop and for the army to be held to account for its actions. India should step forward to protect those desperately seeking sanctuary."
A new Human Rights Watch report carries accounts from Chin describing torture, being forced to work as Myanmar army porters, and having to give their food to the soldiers.
"The Burma army arrested me," a Chin man who fled to India told the group.
"They tortured me and put me in jail for one week. They beat me on my head and ears -- I still have a hearing problem. Then the army forced me to work at road construction and repair the army camp."
The mistreatment compounds the misery in impoverished Chin state, the report said, which is already facing food shortages after farmlands were destroyed by a massive rat infestation.
Myanmar is home to at least 135 ethnic groups, a handful of which have armed factions fighting for independence.
The Chin, 90 percent of whom are Christian, account for about one percent of Myanmar's population and live in the mountainous region near the Indian border. The Chin National Front (CNF) rebel group is still battling the junta.
The report -- featuring interviews carried out between 2005 and 2008 with about 140 Chin living in Myanmar and abroad -- also documents abuses by the armed wing of the CNF.
Human Rights Watch called on the CNF and Myanmar to end all abuses and also demanded that India offer protection to Chin who cross the border and allow the UN refugee agency access to them.