Headlines
  • After a temporary suspension, Emirates said the airline "will resume operations."
  • On Saturday, US President Donald Trump said that Iran will be "hit very hard" and that he was thinking about extending the strikes to other targets..
  • At least five ballistic missile launches from Iran have been detected by the Israelis since midnight.
  • Mehrabad Airport in Tehran is hit by strikes
  • The Prince Sultan Air Base was the target of a ballistic missile that Saudi Arabia's military intercepted and destroyed, according to the country's defense ministry.
  • Heavy gunfire on Friday injured three peacekeepers from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon inside their base in southwest Lebanon.
  • To put an end to the bloodshed, UN Secretary-General António Guterres urged serious diplomatic negotiations..
  • In a social media post, President Trump said that "no deal" other than "unconditional surrender" will be with Iran.
  • Iran reportedly receives intelligence from Russia on US targets.

More Details

One Year On,Still No Justice for Burmese Killed in Christmas Eve Massacre

Rights activists and relatives of victims are determined to hold those responsible to account.

By RFA Burmese

Burning and smoldering vehicles block a road following a massacre of civilians near Moso village, Hpruso township, in eastern Myanmar’s Kayah state, Dec. 24, 2021.Photo Courtesy:Karenni Nationalities Defense Force Via RFA

Rights activists and the relatives of nearly 50 civilians brutally killed and burned a year ago in a Christmas Eve massacre in eastern Myanmar’s Kayah state blamed on ruling junta troops say they are still trying to bring the perpetrators to justice.

Soldiers forced the civilians from their vehicles, killed them and burned their bodies in the incident near Moso village in Hpruso township, drawing strong condemnation from the United Nations and the United States.

Despite clear evidence and witness accounts pointing to national troops as the perpetrators, Myanmar’s military junta denied responsibility for the killings and blamed anti-regime, pro-democratic resistance groups. The junta overthrew Myanmar’s elected government on Feb. 1, 2021.

Karenni State Police, comprised of police officers who participated in the country’s nationwide anti-junta Civil Disobedience Movement, confirmed that three minors and 45 locals, including two employees of the humanitarian aid group Save The Children and four Karenni border guards, had been killed. 

Charred corpses and body parts from the massacre were buried, but the perpetrators have remained at large, said rights activists and family members of those who died. 

“I want the military junta to take action and punish them for their crimes,” said a woman whose brother died in the massacre.

“I want to call on the people of Myanmar to take part in this process in whichever way they can because many people had to lose their lives unfairly,” she said.

The ethnic Karenni Nationalities Defense Force, an armed group fighting the junta, said it captured four junta soldiers from Infantry Battalion 108 under the 66th Division, who were allegedly involved in the massacre, in a battle on Dec. 3. 

The ethnic force was interrogating a sergeant and three soldiers to determine if they were involved, said Mar Wi, secretary-2 of the Karenni Nationalities Defense Force.

“We are continuing with our effort to serve justice to those who were brutally and unfairly massacred,” he told RFA. “We will continue standing up for them.”

Banyar, director of the Karenni National Human Rights Group, or KnHRG, said his organization is preparing to file a lawsuit in Germany over the incident, following another lawsuit against the junta filed in Australia in March by Myanmar’s shadow National Unity Government, or NUG. 

“We can then continue in a legal way to take action against the junta,” he said.

The NUG also is pursuing legal action against the junta in courts in other countries and at the International Criminal Court, for the regime’s rights violations throughout Myanmar, including the Moso massacre, said Aung Myo Min, the NUG’s human rights minister, in May. 

The military junta has blamed the massacre on anti-regime People’s Defense Forces — the armed wing of the NUG — and the Karenni National Progressive Party, an ethnic political organization in Kayah state whose armed wing, the Karenni Army, has fought against government forces for decades. The civilians died during an exchange between anti-regime forces and national troops who tried to intercept seven vehicles driving towards Moso village at that time, said the junta.

The NUG is determined to hold the perpetrators of the mass killing to account, said Kyaw Zaw, spokesman for the NUG president’s office.

“According to international law, the process of suing in international courts sometimes takes a long time, but the perpetrators will never get away with their crimes,” he told RFA. 

Nearly 290 civilians have been killed by junta soldiers in Kayah state between February 2021 and this December, according to the Karenni Social Organizations Network, which records human rights violations.

In addition, more than 200,000 civilians have fled their homes in the state due to ongoing clashes between junta troops and anti-regime forces.

Translated by Myo Min Aung for RFA Burmese. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin. Edited by Paul Eckert.

Copyright © 1998-2020, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036. https://www.rfa.org

Related Article

“Iranian Authorities Use Live Fire, Arbitrary…

In response to the nationwide protests that started on December 28, Iranian authorities have drastic ...
January 7, 2026

UN Urges Iran to Stop Executing…

Despite years of physical and sexual abuse during her marriage as a child bride, Goli Kouhkan, a 25- ...
December 4, 2025

Myanmar Junta Says it Seized 30…

Myanmar’s junta said on Monday it raided one of the country’s most notorious cyberscam centers a ...
October 21, 2025

Myanmar Junta Admits it’s Unable to…

The European Union’s Special Representative for Human Rights Kajsa Ollongren said on Thursday that ...
October 17, 2025

South Korea Issues Travel Ban After…

South Korea issued a “code-black” travel ban for parts of Cambodia on Oct. 15 and dispatched a t ...
October 16, 2025

US, UK Sanction Cambodian Conglomerate, Alleging…

The U.S. and British governments on Tuesday announced a sweeping crackdown on cyber-scam networks in ...
October 15, 2025

Other Article

Pick of the Day

UN Permanent Representative of Iran Briefs…

Amir Saeid Iravani, Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations, ...
March 7, 2026
Bizzare News

Malaysian Man Holds Record for Having…

Malaysian Prathab Muniandy has ten more teeth than the typical human. This indicates that he has the ...
March 6, 2026
Pet Corner

Identify the Dog Breed

Identify dog and cat breeds using pictures.ideal match for you.Consider about these facts before pur ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Fileless Malware

A type of malicious software known as "fileless malware" infects a computer by using reliable apps. ...
Pick of the Day

UN Security Council Meets on Energy,…

Chris Wright, Secretary of Energy of the United States and President of the United Nations Security ...
Bizzare News

Just Before it Collapses, New Jersey…

A horrifying collapse happened minutes after four Jersey Shore police officers were captured on came ...
March 5, 2026

Top