Clergymen Reported Missing after Helping Journalists Cover Bombing of Church Building in Myanmar
Area Christians suspect government forces arrested them
By Michael Ireland, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
YANGON, MYANMAR, (ANS, Dec. 29, 2016)
-- Two assistant priests in Burma (also called Myanmar) are missing
after informing journalists about the bombing of a Catholic church
building in Shan state, sources said.
Morning Star News (www.morningstarnews.org)
reports that Dom Dawng Nawng and La Jaw Gam Hseng went missing on
Saturday evening (Dec. 24) after helping journalists cover the bombing
of their church building earlier this month, according to local
residents. The two were last seen near a Burma Army military base called
Byuha Gon (Strategic Hill) in Mong Ko town, in northern Shan state,
they said.
According
to the Morning Star News report, the clergymen assisted three reporters
from Yangon-based news organizations, including the Democratic Voice of
Burma (DVB), The Irrawaddy, and the Kumudra Journal, who traveled to
war-torn Mong Ko where Burma forces reportedly bombed the Catholic
church building in early December.
“Gam
Hseng helped us with everything,” one of three journalists, who
requested anonymity, told Morning Star News. “He talked about fighting
conditions and how the Burma Army’s jet bombed the church and the town.
He said the church was hit by bombs and bullets fired by the Burma
Army.”
The
Kumudra Journal reported that local residents noticed the disappearance
of the two leaders after they failed to show up for Christmas worship
on Sunday (Dec. 25). The residents asked each other about the church
leaders, who are residents of Mong Ko, and were unable to reach them
when they called them.
“They
were ‘disappeared’ after I published pictures [of damaged churches and
schools],” said the reporter. “So I think it was because they helped us
and talked to us.”
Morning
Star News said local residents believe that the leaders might have been
arrested by Burma Army troops, as they were seen near the Byuha Gon
military base. Area religious leaders investigating their disappearance
tried to access the military base and inquire about the two church
leaders, but Burma Army troops forbade them from entering. The religious
leaders planned to inform local administration authorities if they
don’t find the missing clergymen.
Fighting
between Burma armed forces and ethnic armed organizations broke out in
the area in November, forcing more than 50,000 refugees to flee to
northern Shan state and the China border area.
Morning
Star News went on to state that in a practice a recent U.S. government
report described as “routine,” the Burma soldiers occupied the church
building in Mong Ko, in the country’s northeast near the Kachin state
border, in late November, as they believed armed ethnic groups would not
attack it. After the army retreated in early December, a Burma armed
forces jet reportedly bombed the church building on Dec. 3 in order to
destroy weapons and ammunition the retreating soldiers had left.
Mong
Ko, where the Burma Army also reportedly burned homes and paddies, is
occupied by predominantly Christian ethnic Kachin, as well as Chinese,
Lisu, Palaung (Ta’ang) and Wa peoples.
The
news organization said that after more than five years of intensified
conflict since Burma violated a 17-year cease-fire in 2011, many Kachin
face protracted displacement and are desperate to return home, according
to a report by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.
It
also stated that Burma is about 80 percent Buddhist and 9 percent
Christian. The government has recognized the special status of Buddhism
in Burma and promoted it as a means to consolidate support.
The
Burma Army reportedly retook control of Mong Ko in mid-December and
urged displaced residents to return home. Army officials have said they
rebuilt the damaged Catholic church building for the residents,
according to state-run newspaper The Global New Light of Myanmar.
The
newspaper also reported on Sunday (Dec. 25) that more than 10,000
displaced residents had returned home in Mong Ko as stability has been
restored.
Photo
captions: 1) St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church in Mongkoe town, near
Myanmar's border with China, was destroyed by an air strike on Dec. 3.
(Courtesy of Hkun Awng Nlam). 2) Areas of conflict in Burma (Myanmar).
(Wikimedia, Centre Left Right, Aoetearoa). 3) Michael Ireland.
About
the Writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for
ANS since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. Please consider
helping Michael cover his expenses in bringing news of the Persecuted
Church, by logging-on to: https://actintl.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael.
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