It is a grim tally that defies comprehension. More than 700 civilians slaughtered in six months, their lives erased by the Myanmar army in a campaign of such brutality that even the United Nations, notoriously cautious in its condemnations, has been moved to speak out. The figure, released by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, is not just a statistic. Behind each number lies a story of a family torn apart, a village reduced to ash, a child who will never grow up.
This is not war as we conventionally understand it. This is a deliberate, systematic assault on civilian life. The report details mass executions, indiscriminate airstrikes, and the use of heavy artillery in populated areas. The army, it seems, has declared war on its own people. And the world, for the most part, watches in silence.
What drives such savagery? The answer lies in the labyrinth of Myanmar’s fractured politics. Since the military coup in 2021, the country has been gripped by a violent power struggle. The army, facing resistance from well-armed militias and civilian defense forces, has responded with scorched-earth tactics. The target is not just armed opponents but the communities that support them. In this logic, every villager is a potential enemy, every home a bunker to be demolished.
The UN report points to a pattern of violence that amounts to crimes against humanity. Yet the international response has been tepid. Sanctions have been imposed, but they are easily circumvented. Diplomatic condemnations ring hollow when no action follows. Meanwhile, the killing continues.
The human cost is staggering. Entire villages in Sagaing Region, Mandalay Region, and Kayah State have been destroyed. Families fleeing the violence find themselves trapped in a nightmare: nowhere safe, no one to trust. The army has blocked humanitarian aid, leaving survivors to fend for themselves with dwindling food and medicine.
One survivor, a farmer from a village in Sagaing, described the horror: “They came at dawn, shooting everyone they saw. My wife and I ran into the jungle. When we returned, our house was ash. Our neighbor’s child was dead in the road.” This is the texture of daily life in Myanmar now: a landscape of constant fear.
The cultural shift is profound. Myanmar, once known for its pagodas and gentle people, is now a byword for atrocity. The army’s actions have shattered the social fabric. Trust between communities has evaporated. The trauma will persist for generations, shaping a future darkened by memory.
The UN’s condemnation is a start, but it is not enough. The international community must act: impose targeted sanctions on those responsible, arm the resistance, and push for accountability through the International Criminal Court. For without consequences, the slaughter will continue. And the world will have to answer for its silence.









