Geographic & Command Chain Analysis of Police, Prisons, Militaries & Militias by Security Force Monitor

incident

Extrajudicial Killing in Tanai Township

An incident is a public claim made by a civil society organization, an international organization, a government, or another source that a violation of human rights was perpetrated by the defense and security forces of a country. Graph analysis can generate linkages based on the dates and locations between these incidents and chains of command.

The Security Force Monitor does not make allegations and nothing in this platform should be taken as the Monitor making an allegation against a unit or person. In our work we treat all claims of human rights violations as โ€œalleged violationsโ€ and clearly indicate that these are claims made by other organizations.

Incident counts are drawn from human rights documentation that has been structured into data and should not be used to make claims about trends in alleged violations, nor should they be considered as the entire human rights record for any given country or location within that country.

Based on 1 claims made by 1 sources, Extrajudicial Killing in Tanai Township occurred on 2018/1/27.

on this page

1 claims based off 1 sources (page 1 / 1)
Report of the detailed findings of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar (A/HRC/39/CRP.2)
Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar
claim/statusaccepted
assertion/incident:location:descriptionsKIA tax post at Aung Ja village
assertion/incident:violation:typesExtrajudicial Killing
assertion/incident:violation:descriptions
According to the Independent International Fact-finding Mission on Myanmar: "\312. As the Tatmadaw progressed into KIA controlled territory, strategic KIA posts were targeted. On 27 January 2018, a group of Tatmadaw soldiers supported by Lisu militia killed five, possibly six, men at a KIA tax post at Aung Ja village. Shortly after, approximately 200 Tatmadaw soldiers entered the area[^672] and eight civilians, including at least two women, were detained by the Tatmadaw and Lisu militia. They we...
annotation/category:violation-typesKilling
assertion/incident:location:refs
โŸ
2018/1/27
2018/1/27
โŸž

Inferred Chains of Command to this Incident

Sources establish claims about the chain of command, commanders, the sites and areas of operations of units, and incidents through time. Security Force Monitor organizes these claims into structured data. The linkages in time between these claims time-bound periods are inferred according to the Monitorโ€™s methodology. Individual time-bound chains of command can be generated from this data using graph analysis.

Every chain of command which included Extrajudicial Killing in Tanai Township is shown below. These chains are disaggregated to show the entire time-range of each chain from the lowest unit in the chain to the highest unit at the top of the chain. Any individual who was part of that chain during the date-range is shown as well.

The chains show any direct or positional incidents which are claimed to have occurred during the time-range. Direct incidents have a source which directly names the unit as a perpetrator. Positional incidents occur when there is an intersection between claims from sources alleging an incident occurred and other sources giving a unit an overlapping location and date-range.

The following chains include Extrajudicial Killing in Tanai Township. Click on a chain to see our inferred time periods as well as every source used to establish the chain of command.

0 chains of command (page 1/1)

Areas of Operation of Units in the Location of this Incident

Claims of sites and areas of operation for units through time can be linked according to Security Force Monitorโ€™s methodology. Graph analysis of these linkages establishes the location of units during the time range of the incident.

1 chains (page 1/1)