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KHRG Photo Gallery 2006: Latest additions to the Gallery (part 2)
Latest additions to the Gallery (part 2)
This page contains the second part of the Latest Additions to the Gallery section, which has been divided into three web pages to speed internet access.
The photos below commence where those of the previous part left off, in September 2006. To continue viewing the photos of this section, scroll down.
All photos are by KHRG except where specifically noted otherwise.
Due to the large number of photos in this section of the gallery, it has been divided into three web pages to speed internet access. When finished viewing this page, click on the link at the bottom of the page to proceed to the next part.

B-131
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B-132
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An SPDC Army-run rubber plantation in rural Pa'an district. The land for this plantation was confiscated without compensation from local villagers, who have since been forced to do labour tending the trees and harvesting the rubber. Photo B-134 below shows some of the processed rubber sheets hanging to dry before being shipped. None of the profit from this enterprise is returned to the villagers; it is probably divided between local and higher-level SPDC military officers. Similar large-scale rubber plantations in other districts are joint ventures between military officers and Burmese corporations, such as the joint venture in Thaton district between the Army and the company 'Max Myanmar' (see photos 7-50 through 7-52 in KHRG Photo Set 2005A). [Photos: KHRG] |

B-133
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B-134
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B-135
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This young soldier from SPDC Light Infantry Division #66 was part of the columns destroying villages and shooting at villagers in Toungoo district, but ran away from the Army in September 2006 because he says his commander, a non-commissioned officer (NCO), beat and tortured him. [Photo: KHRG] |

B-136
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B-137
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Children and the elderly move into the forest on October 13th 2006 as an SPDC column approaches their village at Htee Si Kee in the upper Yunzalin River valley of northern Papun district. People throughout the area headed into the forest.
A few days later on October 16th, photos B-138 and B-139 show people from Kler Kee heading back from their hiding sites to retrieve rice and other supplies from their hidden food storage barns. On October 17th, some villagers from Kler Kee went to harvest some of their rice crop (photo B-140). These activities are extremely dangerous, because SPDC troops often mine the villages, food storage barns and rice fields or set up positions nearby to snipe at villagers or fire mortar shells at them. [Photos: KHRG; ignore the incorrect dates burned on the photos] |

B-138
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B-139
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B-140
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B-141
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Saw H--- (age 59, left) is from Si Kheh Der village in Toungoo district. He was living in the forest to evade SPDC control, but in October 2006 (shortly before harvest) an SPDC Light Infantry Division #66 patrol went through his rice field and pulled up most of his paddy plants by the roots, leaving him with nothing to harvest, so he left and headed for the Thai border. This photo was taken along his way, in Papun district. He was with several others from his village whose crops had also been uprooted or destroyed.
Naw S--- (right) is a 20 year old woman from Saw Mu Der village in Toungoo district. In early September 2006, troops from SPDC Infantry Battalion #2, Military Operations Command #16, came through her area and laid landmines along paths used by the displaced villagers and in front of any rice storage barns they found. Naw S--- returned to fetch rice from her paddy storage barn and stepped on the mine they had laid in front of it. |

B-142
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Her right lower leg was blown off (it was one of the SPDC's new small mines, modelled on the American M14, because the SPDC's larger mines would have done more damage). Her leg was amputated without anaesthetic by a mobile medic, and a group of villagers leaving for the Thai border carried her all the way across the mountains in a nylon hammock slung from a bamboo pole, a march of two weeks. Photo B-142 was taken when the group was taking a brief rest at a hut in Papun district in mid-October. In photo B-143 (right), the group continues its journey. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-143
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B-144
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B-145
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A family from Si Daw Koh in Toungoo district picks their way down a stream and across a river while fleeing across Papun district on their way to the Thai border in mid-October 2006. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-146
Photo B-146 taken in October 2006 shows one of the many rice fields which people in Kay Pu village tract of the upper Yunzalin valley, Papun district, had to abandon after sowing their crop because the fields were too close to the new SPDC posts at Twih Mee Kyoh and Shoh Kyoh. When SPDC troops began patrolling the area and shelling villages many people moved into the forest with few belongings. On October 17th, the men in photo B-147 (right) were heading back to retrieve some food and belongings from P--- village and their rice barns near the SPDC post. |

B-147
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B-148
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The village head of S--- (left) took a carbine rifle with him for protection, and is shown here scouting for any SPDC presence before going any further. |
On arriving at their various field huts, the villagers found some of their belongings had been looted by SPDC troops, but others had not been found; in photo B-149, they retrieve a metal storage trunk which the soldiers had not found. |

B-149
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B-150
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Having posted lookouts, the KNLA group accompanying them for security took a break to eat (left). |
Along the way they also found an unexploded 60mm mortar shell (right) which the SPDC troops had fired into one of their rice fields.
On their return to their hidden forest shelters, they carried food, cookpots, a household cat and several ancient bronze drums, which are prized possessions of each village (photos below and below right). [Photos: KHRG] |

B-151
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B-152
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B-153
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B-154
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B-155
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In October 2006, this 75 year old man in Htee Si Kee village in the upper Yunzalin River valley of Papun district told KHRG he has had to spend most of his time since the beginning of 2006 fleeing and hiding in the forest to evade the SPDC, that he is sick and tired of it and just wants to stay in his village without being disturbed. Regardless, his family keeps these baskets (above right) packed and ready to go so they can head into the forest again at a moment's notice. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-156
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B-157
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B-158
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These SPDC-made landmines were among over ten mines unearthed and defused by KNLA troops (left) along pathways and in rice fields surrounding Sho Per Koh village in northern Papun district, clearly targeted at the displaced villagers in the area. The mine on the left in both photos is an SPDC-made MM2, while that on the right is a mine the regime seems to have only begun manufacturing recently, copied from the American M14 mine. It is one of these tiny mines that blew off the lower leg of 20 year old Naw S--- (photo B-142). [Photos: KHRG] |

B-159
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Thay Muh Der village in northern Papun district. When this photo was taken in October 2006, it lay abandoned because SPDC troops had set up a post nearby at Twih Mee Kyoh. [Photo: KHRG] |

B-160
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Villagers from Dtaw Koo Muh Der, near Kay Pu in northern Papun district, head into the forest on October 18th 2006 after SPDC troops set up a post on the hill overlooking their village. [Photo: KHRG] |

B-161
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B-162
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A group of villagers from Shah See Bo, Yeh Loh, Htee Loh, K'Hser Doh and Shee Daw Koh villages in southwestern Toungoo district on their trip toward the border with Thailand in late October 2006. They told KHRG their villages had been burned by SPDC Light Infantry Battalions #71, #349 and #440 and forced to move to two SPDC relocation sites outside Shah See Bo and Yay Shah villages, some in May and some in August 2006. At the relocation site they were used for forced labour, their movements were tightly restricted and they ran out of food, so they escaped in early October and headed back into the hills. |

B-163
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B-164
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B-165
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B-166
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Unable to stay near their home villages for fear of being shot on sight by the SPDC patrols now killing any villagers they see there, they decided to head east and south to try to reach the Thai border. These photos were taken as they were crossing northern Papun district en route for the border in late October. |

B-167
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B-168
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B-169
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B-170
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When they reached the Kyauk Kyi - Pwa Ghaw - Saw Htah road they found it heavily patrolled by SPDC troops and were unable to cross to the south, so on October 26th they had to retreat some distance and wait (photos B-170 and B-171) while their KNLA escort watched for an opportunity to cross the road and continue their journey.
The nights were damp and cold (photos B-172 and B-173) while they waited for the signal for the next attempt to cross the road. They were able to cross the next day and arrived in eastern Papun district, from where they headed on to the Thai border. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-171
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B-172
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B-173
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B-174
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Villagers in southeastern Papun district deal with SPDC and DKBA demands in late October 2006. This area is well south of the region where villagers are being relocated and shot on sight, but villagers here say they face constant demands for materials and forced labour by both SPDC and DKBA officers and their village heads are regularly beaten for failure to comply or for suspected contact with the KNU. |
In photos B-174 and B-175, 55 year old Saw M--- and 65 year old Saw P--- of H--- village prepare some of the 50 shingles of thatch which they then had to send to the SPDC camp at Htwee Thee Aw, 90 minutes' walk away, without payment. |

B-175
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B-176
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Photo B-176 (left) shows a pile of bamboo poles stacked by villagers in preparation for delivery to Company 5 commander Saw Pah Dtuh of the DKBA's Ka Hsaw Wah battalion at Meh Mweh Hta on October 22nd. Saw Pah Dtuh demanded a total of 1,000 bamboo poles from Meh Kuh Kee, Meh Kuh Htah, Htee Doh Htah and Dtoh Muh Ler villages and threatened that villagers would be arrested and detained if they were not delivered.
In photos B-177 and B-178 below, two men shave bamboo to tie hundreds of bamboo poles together into rafts which they then had to float downriver and deliver to Saw Pah Dtuh of the DKBA at Meh Mweh Htah by October 25th. He claimed that these bamboo are needed to improve his army camp, but these demands occur almost every month and the materials are often sold for personal profit by the officers who demand them. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-177
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B-178
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B-179
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B-180
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In eastern Papun district, villagers from the plains far to the west in Nyaunglebin district of Pegu division take a rest on October 26th 2006 after crossing the SPDC-patrolled Kyauk Kyi - Saw Htah vehicle road on their way to the border with Thailand. After several weeks, they were now close to the border but their future once there remained uncertain. Their villages were destroyed and they were forced to move into SPDC-controlled relocation sites earlier in the year, but later fled these sites because of forced labour and lack of food. Unable to return to their home villages for fear of being shot on sight by SPDC forces, they began the journey toward the border. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-181
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B-182
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B-183
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B-184
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Displaced villagers from Toungoo district head southward through Papun district on their way to the Thai border in late October 2006. They had stayed in the forests surrounding their destroyed villages for months after their destruction by SPDC troops, but ran out of food and had little option but to head for the border.
In photo B-185 (right) they wait on the path while KNLA soldiers up ahead check whether it is safe to cross the SPDC-patrolled vehicle road from Pwa Ghaw to Saw Htah. During their entire long trip across northern Papun district, they face a constant risk of stepping on landmines and will be shot if sighted by SPDC troops. [Photos: KHRG; disregard the incorrect dates burned on the photos] |

B-185
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B-186
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B-187
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Maung A--- (30, left) and K--- (29, right) were taken from prison to work as convict porters for the troops of SPDC Light Infantry Division #66 attacking villages in Toungoo district. They were portering with Infantry Battalion #80 on October 7th 2006, when they say they witnessed the battalion troops murder 95 convict porters in a single day because they were deemed too sick or weak to be any more use as porters. After seeing this they were so afraid that they would be killed that they fled the battalion with one other porter and managed to escape.
In mid-2006 KHRG estimated that the SPDC had brought 3,000 to 5,000 convict porters to northern Karen State to support its operations; each month more are transported, and estimates of the number already killed range between 300 and 800. Most of these men were in prison for minor offenses like participation in illegal lotteries, while some are innocent but were jailed because they could not bribe the court judge. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-188
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K--- is from Irrawaddy Division. He is only 21 years old, but was already sent to prison and then to northern Karen State as an SPDC convict porter with Light Infantry Battalion #552.
He escaped in October 2006 but suffered mortar shrapnel wounds to his right side which are visible in the photo. [Photo: KHRG; ignore the incorrect date burned on the photo] |

B-189
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Three convict porters who escaped from SPDC forces in Papun district in November 2006, shown still wearing their ragged porter uniforms. These three are from Rangoon and Rakhine State. They join the hundreds of convict porters who have already escaped. |

B-190
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B-191
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No outside aid is provided for these men, so the KNU gives them civilian clothing and a bit of money and tries to help them head home. [Photos: KHRG; ignore the incorrect dates burned on the photos] |

B-192
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Sixteen year old T--- had only completed 5th standard (grade 5) at school when he was inducted into the SPDC Army in 2006 and posted to Light Infantry Battalion #434's Win Maw (Wah Mu) camp in western Papun district.
He says he was persistently abused by his non-commissioned officer (NCO), so he fled the Army in October 2006 and ended up in the care of the KNU. The SPDC claims that there are no soldiers under age 18 in its army. [Photo: KHRG] |

B-193
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B-194
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B-195
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On November 1st 2006, Column 1 of SPDC Infantry Battalion #35, part of Light Infantry Division #66, came to K'Lay Htah village of Tantabin township, Toungoo district, led by column commander Soe Htun.
They fired into the undefended village with assault rifles, belt-fed machine guns, and M79 grenade launchers while the villagers fled into the forest with whatever they could carry. Then they entered the village and set most of the houses on fire.
These photos were taken the following day when some of the villagers returned to find the burned ruins of their houses. |

B-196
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B-197
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B-198
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B-199
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They also found the charred remains of Saw Teh Kler, a 47 year old villager who was too ill to flee so he was burned alive in his house by Soe Htun's men (photos B-198 and B-199, above and above right).
The troops also shot livestock and left it to die (right), and slashed and destroyed some of the villagers' baskets, sleeping mats and other belongings before discarding them along the pathway in a clear attempt to undermine the villagers' survival (photo B-201 below). |

B-200
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B-201
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B-202
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B-203
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The unexploded M79 grenade shown in photo B-202 (above) was found in the middle of the village, while photo B-203 (left) shows some of the spent cartridges of bullets and M79 grenades found at a position just outside the village from where the soldiers had fired into the village.
There were no KNLA soldiers in the village at the time, only civilians. |

B-204
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B-205
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A 54 year old woman from the village told KHRG, "On November 1st 2006 the Burmese soldiers came to burn our village again. On this occasion we had no time to bring our materials or food or anything with us because we heard the gun shots and we ran away. Everything which we left was burned with all the houses."
Many people were in the midst of bringing in their rice harvest, but had to abandon it quickly; the half-threshed paddy in photo B-204 above was left as shown, though its owners probably returned for it later by cover of night.
The villagers headed into the forest before the column arrived, set up camp in the forest (photos B-205 through B-208) and continued to evade the SPDC troops. |

B-206
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B-207
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B-208
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B-209
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People from nearby Th'Aye Kee village also fled in the forest in expectation that their village would be burned (photos B-209 and B-210).
As night fell, people laid bamboo or whatever they had on the ground for sleeping (photo B-211 below).
See also further photos below and the KHRG report Bullets and Bulldozers: The SPDC offensive continues in Toungoo district (February 19th 2007). [Photos: KHRG] |

B-210
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B-211
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B-212
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B-213
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B-214
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While Column 1 of SPDC Infantry Battalion #35 was burning villages in Tantabin township of Toungoo district (see above), Column 2 of the same battalion, under the command of Zaw Nay Myo, was patrolling the rice fields to shoot any villagers seen attempting to harvest their crop.
On November 3rd 2006 they shot and killed 19 year old Saw P'Ree Sein (photo B-212, above left) and 45 year old Saw John (photo B-213, above right), both farmers of Hsaw Wah Der village, while they were harvesting and left their bodies as shown in the middle of their hillside rice field. Two others harvesting with them, Naw Muh Htoo (female, 44) and Saw B'Hla Gyi (male, 25) were wounded in the shooting but managed to escape. |
The soldiers then burned several nearby farm field huts and 150 big tins of paddy belonging to Saw John (shown in photos B-214 through B-217).
These photos were taken on November 6th, when the paddy was still smouldering. Burned paddy often smoulders for up to a week as the fire spreads slowly through the grain pile. |

B-215
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B-216
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A group of villagers dug graves at the edge of the ricefield for the two men killed, while Saw John's daughter looked on in tears (photo B-218 below). [Photos: KHRG] |

B-217
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B-218
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B-219
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B-220
Villagers from Dtru Kee head across northern Papun district in November 2006 after SPDC forces set up a camp at Sweh Kyo, very near their village. |

B-221
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The irrigated rice fields shown to the left are theirs and are almost ready for harvest, but the villagers had to leave them because the SPDC camp at Sweh Kyo is too close. [Photos: KHRG; ignore the incorrect dates burned on the photos] |

B-222
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A villager heads back into the forest in November 2006 after retrieving some of his goats from Htee See Kee village in Kay Pu village tract, northern Papun district. He said some of the village goats had already been killed by SPDC soldiers who have set up a camp just 15 minutes' walk from the village. [Photo: KHRG; ignore the incorrect date burned on the photo] |

B-223
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B-224
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On November 14th 2006 at about 3 p.m., SPDC troops from Bp'Leh Koh camp in northern Papun district saw 45 year old Saw Thoo (a.k.a. Kyaw Thoo) outside his farming hut and shot him dead on sight. Saw Thoo was a farmer from Htee Baw Kee but had been displaced to W--- in Saw Mu Bplaw village tract. His eldest son and daughter heard the gunshots that killed him and saw their father fall before running into the forest in different directions.
In photo B-223 above, Saw Thoo's father looks over his dead son. Saw Thoo left a wife and five children shown in photo B-225 (right). His wife Naw C--- said she had been ill ever since delivering their last child while displaced in the rain in mid-2006; this baby died at age five months, shortly before Saw Thoo was shot. After his death, other people from her village helped her to move her family to another displacement site and carried enough food there for them to live on for the time being. [Photos: KHRG; ignore the incorrect dates burned on the photos] |

B-225
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B-226
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B-227
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B-228
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A group of villagers who fled SPDC attacks on their hill villages in Toungoo district heading for Ee Thu Htah, a site on the bank of the Salween River which now hosts close to 3,000 internally displaced people like them, in mid-November 2006.
Photos B-226 through B-237 show them during the leg of their journey through eastern Papun district en route to the Salween River. At this point they had already been on the march for several weeks from their home areas far to the north in Toungoo district. |

B-229
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B-230
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Though most people were still keeping their spirits up, the strain and physical exhaustion of the journey through the mountains carrying small children, rice, cookpots, clothing and whatever else they could salvage from their homes is visible in photos B-228, B-231 and others. |

B-231
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B-232
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B-233
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B-234
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Periodic rest stops provided a chance to eat (above and above left), and to fetch and boil water for drinking and cooking (left and below left).
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B-235
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B-236
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B-237
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B-238
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When they finally reached the Salween riverbank (photos B-238 through B-241), they had to wait for the KNU to organise a cattle-boat to take them downriver to Ee Thu Htah. |

B-239
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B-240
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Though Thailand is just the other side of the river, Ee Thu Htah is still in Karen State and is protected against SPDC attack only by the landmines and Karen troops guarding its perimeter. Photo B-242 below shows part of Ee Thu Htah camp, which is constantly expanding as new people arrive. By March 2007, close to 3,000 people were staying here. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-241
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B-242
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B-243
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B-244
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The emaciated body of Naw Heh Nay Say, a young woman in her early twenties, shortly after her death on November 29th 2006. Her family is from Nah Yoh Htah area in northern Papun district and had to flee their village when SPDC troops occupied the area in May 2006. In the forest Naw Heh Nay Say soon fell ill, and without adequate medical treatment her condition progressively worsened until her death six months later. Photo B-245 below shows her siblings, and her father (photo B-246) says he is no longer able to sleep. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-245
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B-246
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Warning: graphic images

B-247
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B-248
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Hsaw Wah Der village lies in the hills of Toungoo district sandwiched between two vehicle roads - the Kler Lah - Mawchi road and the Kler Lah - Bu Sah Kee road. It has been repeatedly destroyed by SPDC troops, so the villagers live in the forest most of the time but sometimes covertly head down to the SPDC-controlled villages along the vehicle roads to buy basic supplies. |

B-249
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On November 20th 2006, Saw Heh Dter (male, 42) and Saw Kwah Hla (37) were returning to their forest hiding place after buying some supplies in Gkaw Thay Der village and fetching one of their buffaloes and some personal belongings, but when they were passing a place called Hsaw Pu they were seen by troops of SPDC Light Infantry Battalion #6 under column commander Aung Soe Win and deputy column commander Aung Lwin. The soldiers opened fire on them and killed both men, while other villagers with them escaped. They looted the bodies and then left them on the ground to rot.
These photos were taken on November 24th when villagers returned to the site, but they could not stay long because it is very near an SPDC camp. Photos B-247 and B-248 above show the remains of Saw Heh Dter, while photo B-249 (left) shows Saw Kwah Hla. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-250
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Various unexploded mortar shells fired by SPDC troops in November 2006 at villages and places in the forest where they thought villagers might be hiding near Htee See Kee village in Kay Pu area of northern Papun district. Here the villagers have gathered three 60-mm shells and one 81-mm shell (second from right). [Photo: KHRG] |

B-251
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B-252
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Throughout their attacks on northern Karen villages, SPDC troops have been firing mortar shells at villagers' farming huts, houses, and randomly into the forests where they think villagers may be in hiding.
Photo B-251 shows the crater where an SPDC mortar shell fell in November 2006; it is in the middle of a rice field worked by a villager from Boh Nah Der village in the upper Yunzalin valley of northern Papun district. Another mortar shell fell just a few metres from the ricefield farming hut shown in photo B-252.
SPDC soldiers also pepper the forests and rice fields at random with medium- and heavy-calibre machine gun fire; twenty year old Saw Hla Shwe (photo B-253) was wounded in the knee in late November by random fire from a medium-calibre belt-fed machine gun which SPDC troops fired at random from a long distance. [Photos: KHRG] |

B-253
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