This photo obtained by The Associated Press shows injuries a man in his 20s says he received while being tortured by Myanmar's military during an interrogation session in March 2021. He says he was one of six youths who were arrested while sitting at a restaurant one evening. All of them were allegedly beaten during their arrest and questioning. They were released the next day. (AP Photo)
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JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - The soldiers in rural Myanmar twisted the young man's skin with pliers and kicked him in the chest until he couldn't breathe. Then they taunted him about his family until his heart ached, too: 'œYour mom,'ť they jeered, 'œcannot save you anymore.'ť
The young man and his friend, randomly arrested as they rode their bikes home, had been subjected to hours of agony inside a town hall transformed by the military into a torture center.
'œI'm going to die,'ť the young man told himself, stars exploding before his eyes. 'œI love you, mom.''ť
Since its takeover of the government in February, the Myanmar military has been torturing those it has detained in a methodical and systemic way across the country, The Associated Press has found in interviews with 28 people imprisoned and released in recent months. Based also on photographic evidence, sketches and letters, along with testimony from two military captains and an aide to a high-ranking commander, the AP investigation provides the most comprehensive look since the takeover into a secretive detention system that has held more than 9,000 people.
While most of the torture has occurred inside military compounds, the military, known as the Tatmadaw, has also transformed public facilities such as community halls into interrogation centers, prisoners said. The AP identified a dozen interrogation centers in use across Myanmar, in addition to prisons and police lockups.
The prisoners interviewed came from every corner of the country, and ranged from a 16-year-old girl to monks. Some were detained for protesting against the military, others for no discernible reason. Multiple military units and police were involved in the interrogations, their methods of torture similar across Myanmar.
The Myanmar military has a long history of torture, particularly before the country began transitioning toward democracy in 2010. While torture in recent years was most often recorded in ethnic regions, its use has now returned across the country, AP's investigation found. The vast majority of torture techniques described by prisoners were similar to those of the past, including electric shocks, near-drownings and relentless beatings.
But this time, the torture is the worst it's ever been in scale and severity, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, which monitors deaths and arrests. Since February, the group says, security forces have killed more than 1,200 people, including at least 131 detainees tortured to death.
'œThe military tortures detainees, first for revenge, then for information,'ť says Ko Bo Kyi, AAPP's joint secretary and a former political prisoner. 'œI think in many ways the military has become even more brutal.'ť
The military has also taken steps to hide evidence that it has tortured prisoners, with several prisoners saying interrogators brutalized only the parts of their bodies that could be hidden by clothes. An aide to the highest-ranking army official in western Myanmar's Chin state told the AP that soldiers covered up the deaths of two tortured prisoners, forcing a military doctor to falsify their autopsy reports.
A former army captain who defected from the Tatmadaw in April confirmed to the AP that the military's use of torture against detainees has been rampant since its takeover.
'œIn our country, after being arrested unfairly, there is torture, violence and sexual assaults happening constantly,'ť says Lin Htet Aung, the former captain.
After receiving detailed requests for comment, military officials responded with a one-line email that said: 'œWe have no plans to answer these nonsense questions.'ť
All but six of the prisoners interviewed by the AP were subjected to abuse, including women and children. Most of those who weren't abused said their fellow detainees were.
The AP also sent photographs of several torture victims' injuries to a forensic pathologist with Physicians for Human Rights. The pathologist concluded wounds on three victims were consistent with beatings by sticks or rods.
'œYou look at some of those injuries where they're just black and blue from one end to the other,'ť says forensic pathologist Dr. Lindsey Thomas. 'œThis was not just a swat. This has the appearance of something that was very systematic and forceful.'ť
Photographs taken inside several detention and interrogation facilities confirmed prisoners' accounts of overcrowded, filthy conditions. Most inmates slept on concrete floors, packed like sardines.
Some became sick from drinking dirty water only available from a shared toilet. Cockroaches swarmed their bodies at night. There was little to no medical treatment.
Not even the young have been spared. One woman was imprisoned alongside a 2-year-old baby.
The interrogation centers were worse than the prisons, with nights a cacophony of weeping and wails of agony.
'œIt was terrifying, my room,'ť one man recalls. 'œThere were blood stains and scratches on the wall.'ť
Back inside the rural town hall, the young man and his friend survived the night amid a haze of pain. When dawn came, the interrogators sent them to prison.
Their small cell was home to 33 people. They lay next to the lone squat toilet.
Their fellow inmates shared water and biscuits, though the young man's mouth was too torn apart to eat.
After two days, the families of the young man and his friend paid officials to get them out of prison. Both men were forced to sign statements saying they had participated in a demonstration and were anti-police.
For two months, his entire body ached. Even today, his right shoulder - stomped on by a soldier - won't move properly.
'œAfter they caught us, I know their hearts and their minds were not like the people's, not like us,'ť he says. 'œThey are monsters.'ť
___
Gelineau reported from Sydney. Associated Press journalist Sam McNeil in Beijing contributed to this report.
A model of the Insein prison in Yangon, Myanmar is displayed at the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners Museum in Yangon on April 2, 2018. A woman held in solitary confinement at the prison in 2021, after the military takeover, said officials admitted to her that conditions were made as wretched as possible to terrify the public into compliance. (AP Photo/Victoria Milko)
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In this image from video obtained by The Associated Press, soldiers line up arrested protesters in Yangon, Myanmar on March 3, 2021. Since its takeover of the government in February, the Myanmar military has been using torture against those it has detained in a methodical and systemic way across the country, The Associated Press has found in rare interviews with 28 people imprisoned and released in recent months. (AP Photo)
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This illustration provided by a former prisoner in 2021 shows a group of fellow female prisoners in Insein prison in Yangon, Myanmar. One woman detained at Insein said COVID-19 killed her cellmate. "I was infected. The whole dorm was infected. Everyone lost their sense of smell," she says. (AP Photo)
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This undated photo obtained by The Associated Press shows injuries on a man who said he was tortured in June 2021 while being held at an interrogation center in Myanmar's Chin state. The victim reported being stripped naked by his interrogators, forced to lie belly-down on the ground, and then hit repeatedly with a stick. (AP Photo)
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This 2021 photo provided to The Associated Press shows Pone Na Waddi Town Hall in Taungdwingyi, Myanmar, where the military has allegedly interrogated and tortured detainees since its government takeover in February. The military has transformed public facilities, such as community halls, into interrogation centers since February. (AP Photo)
The Associated Press
This photo obtained by The Associated Press shows injuries a man in his 20s says he received while being tortured by Myanmar's military during an interrogation session in March 2021. He says he was one of six youths who were arrested while sitting at a restaurant one evening. All of them were allegedly beaten during their arrest and questioning. They were released the next day. (AP Photo)
The Associated Press
This undated photo provided by Hin Lian Piang in 2021 shows him in front of the No. 3 Basic Education High School building in Pyin Oo Lwin, Myanmar. Hin Lian Piang, who served as a clerk to the North-Western Regional Deputy Commander before defecting in October, witnessed soldiers torture two prisoners to death at a mountaintop interrogation center inside an army base in Chin state in May 2021. The soldiers beat the two men, hit them with their guns, and kicked them, he says. After the men were put into jail, both died. (Courtesy Hin Lian Piang via AP)
The Associated Press
In this image from video obtained by The Associated Press, soldiers, upper right, chase protesters in Yangon, Myanmar on March 3, 2021. Since its takeover of the government in February, the Myanmar military has been using torture against those it has detained in a methodical and systemic way across the country, The Associated Press has found in rare interviews with 28 people imprisoned and released in recent months. (AP Photo)
The Associated Press
In this undated photo provided to The Associated Press in September 2021, monks gather to make a diagram of Obo Prison located in Mandalay, Myanmar. The AP spoke to two monks from the same monastery who were preparing to protest against the military when they were arrested and beaten. While in detention, they say they were forced to jump like frogs -- a common punishment in the Myanmar detention system. (AP Photo)
The Associated Press
This 2015 photo provided by Lin Htet Aung shows him in Ye Township in Myanmar's Mon state. The former army captain, who defected from the military in April 2021, said that the military's use of torture against detainees has been rampant since it overthrew the government in February. "In our country, after being arrested unfairly, there is torture, violence and sexual assaults happening constantly." (Courtesy Lin Htet Aung via AP)
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This combination of 2020-2021 satellite photos provided by Planet Labs shows several of the panopticon-style prisons throughout Myanmar. Top row from left are Thayarwady, Taungoo, Sittwe, Pathein. Second row from left are Myeik, Myaungma, Mawlamyine, Insein. Third row from left are Mogok, Kyaukpyu, Mandalay, Buthidaung. Bottom row from left are Hpa-An, Dawei, Daik-U, Bhamo. Since its takeover of the government in February, the Myanmar military has been using torture against those it has detained in a methodical and systemic way across the country, The Associated Press has found in rare interviews with 28 people imprisoned and released in recent months. (Planet Labs via AP)
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This late 2000s photo provided by the Assistance Association of Political Prisons for Myanmar shows men in the courtyard of a prison in Thayat, Myanmar. The military has a long history of torture, particularly before the country began transitioning toward democracy in 2010. (AAPP via AP)
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This late 2000s photo provided by the Assistance Association of Political Prisons for Myanmar shows men in a labor camp in Upper Burma. The military has a long history of torture, particularly before the country began transitioning toward democracy in 2010. (AAPP via AP)
The Associated Press
This late 2000s photo provided by the Assistance Association of Political Prisons for Myanmar in 2021 shows cell doors at a prison in Thayat, Myanmar. The military has a long history of torture, particularly before the country began transitioning toward democracy in 2010. (AAPP via AP)
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