Skip to main content

page search

Library Operation Than L'Yet: Forced Displacement, Massacres and Forced Labour in Dooplaya District

Operation Than L'Yet: Forced Displacement, Massacres and Forced Labour in Dooplaya District

Operation Than L'Yet: Forced Displacement, Massacres and Forced Labour in Dooplaya District

Resource information

Date of publication
September 2002
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
OBL:47970

In January 2002 it appeared that the SPDC considered most of Dooplaya district of southern Karen State to be pacified and under their control. But then Light Infantry Division 88 was sent in and commenced Operation Than L'Yet, forcibly relocating as many as 60 villages by July. Villagers were rounded up and detained without food for days, or force-marched to Army-controlled relocation sites after their houses were burned. Village heads, women and children were tortured. People who tried to flee into the forests were shot on sight, including one brutal massacre of ten people, six of them children under 15. Over a thousand people fled into Thailand, and several thousand more are still trying. Another five thousand are in Army relocation camps, where they have been provided with nothing and are struggling to survive on rice gruel and whatever roots they can forage. Their movements are tightly controlled and they are being used as forced labour to build roads, bridges and Army camps which will help Division 88 to clamp down further on the district. They are also forced to work as porters for the Army columns which go out to loot and destroy even more villages. KHRG researchers expect a renewed onslaught after the rains end in October, when Division 88 will probably set out to hunt down those still in hiding and may extend the forced relocations to more areas.

Share on RLBI navigator
NO