All 10 /Activities 0 /Arbitrary Taxation 0 /Briefing Papers 0 /Documentary 0 /Elections 2010 0 /Frontpage Article 0 /HR Situation 2 /Human Rights Documentation 0 /Images 0 /Justice Newsletters 0 /Member statements 0 /Multimedia 0 /ND-Burma 0 /ND-Burma Members' Reports 0 /ND-Burma's Reports 0 /News 8 /Other documentation resources 0 /Other Human Rights Reports 0 /Others 0 /Periodic Report 0 /Photo news 0 /Press Releases and Statements 0 /Resources 0 /Torture and Ill-treatment 0 /Uncategorized 0 /Unofficial Truth Seeking 0 /V-Report 0 /Video News 0
Regime Forces Torture and Kill 29 People in Upper Myanmar
Myanmar junta troops have killed 29 people since May 10 in Sagaing…
May 16, 2022/by ND BurmaWeekly Update May 9 – 15 May 2022
The people of #Myanmar deserve better than what ASEAN has offered.…
May 16, 2022/by ND BurmaCharred corpses discovered in Sagaing village occupied by junta troops
It was not clear if the six victims were local people or civilians…
May 13, 2022/by ND BurmaMyanmar’s junta is blocking pathways for transitional justice
Documenting abuses remains a key way for the country to move…
May 10, 2022/by ND BurmaJunta Bars UN Special Envoy on Myanmar From ASEAN Meeting
The UN Special Envoy for Myanmar was blocked by the country’s…
May 9, 2022/by ND BurmaWeekly Update 2 May 8 May 2022
Press freedom is important and fundamental to a flourishing democracy.…
May 9, 2022/by ND BurmaMilitary burns more than 1,000 homes in northwestern Myanmar in one week
The military has been systematically destroying villages in Sagaing…
May 6, 2022/by ND BurmaMyanmar soldiers execute nine IDPs sheltering at Sagaing meditation centre
Local residents said the victims—eight men and one woman—had…
May 5, 2022/by ND BurmaMyanmar’s Health System Is in Collapse, ‘Obliterated’ by the Regime
The surgeon was in the middle of operating on a patient when…
May 2, 2022/by ND BurmaTwo female 88 Generation activists missing following their arrest
The son of one of the two women was also detained in the Kayin…
May 2, 2022/by ND BurmaAbout us
ND-Burma formed in 2004 in order to provide a way for Burma human rights organizations to collaborate on the human rights documentation process.
The 13 ND-Burma member organizations seek to collectively use the truth of what communities in Burma have endured to advocate for justice for victims.
ND-Burma trains local organizations in human rights documentation; coordinates members’ input into a common database using Martus, a secure open-source software; and engages in joint-advocacy campaigns.