International Myanmar opposition carries out drone attack on capital

Blow for Myanmar’s military as rebels say hundreds have surrendered at key border town​


53632313897_76e2ab615c_z.jpg


Thailand PM says army is weakening after junta requests permission to land evacuation flight from Myawaddy across the border

Myanmar’s embattled military is on the brink of losing control of one of the country’s major border crossings, in another humiliating defeat to the junta.

Hundreds of soldiers have surrendered in the town of Myawaddy, near to the border with Thailand, according to opposition groups, while Myanmar junta authorities asked Thai officials for permission to land an evacuation flight across the border on Sunday. Thailand said it granted the request on humanitarian grounds, but clarified on Tuesday that it carried only cargo and no personnel, according to media reports.


Myawaddy, in Karen state, is one of the most important border crossings in Myanmar and crucial to the flow of goods between the country and Thailand. It has been controlled by the military for decades.


The likely loss of the township will be just the latest embarrassing blow for the military, which has also lost control of swathes of territory in the north of the country, along the border with China and India, as well as areas of western Rakhine state.

1616.jpg

Members of the Karen National Liberation Army and the People’s Defence Force collect weapons after they captured an army outpost in the southern part of Myawaddy township in Myanmar on 11 March. Photograph: Noomna Nakhonphnom/AP

Thai prime minister, Srettha Thavisin, told Reuters the military junta was weakening.

“The current regime is starting to lose some strength … but even if they are losing, they have the power, they have the weapons,” Srettha said.

A commander of an anti-coup group, known as a People’s Defence Force, who spoke from a frontline neighbouring Karen state told the Guardian 617 soldiers and their relatives had surrendered, including 67 officers. Only between 40 and 60 military troops were yet to surrender, he estimated.
mqdefault.jpg

The commander, whose areas of operations cover Myawaddy, estimated at least 75% of the township was under resistance control. Among the large weapon hauls seized were four howitzer artillery guns, he said.

Earlier, the Karen National Union, an ethnic armed group that has long fought against the military for independence for ethnic Karen, and which is aligned with the wider pro-democracy resistance, reported that hundreds of military soldiers had surrendered on Friday from a battalion based in Thingan Nyi Naung, a village 12km from Myawaddy.

Myanmar’s military seized power in a coup in February 2021, ousting the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, a move widely opposed by the public and which plunged the country into spiralling conflict. Many civilians took up arms and formed people’s defence forces to fight against the junta’s brutal rule, with some receiving support from older, more established ethnic armed organisations such as the KNU.


The military has struggled to control such opposition and suffered relentless losses since 27 October, when a powerful bloc of ethnic armed groups abandoned an informal ceasefire and launched a coordinated operation in northern Shan State. This placed the military, which was already stretched thin across multiple fronts, under far greater pressure and, as it began to lose ground, other groups elsewhere in the country stepped up their attacks.
bmf520-action-shot-for-web.jpg


The commander who spoke anonymously to the Guardian said some of the troops that surrendered over recent days had previously surrendered in northern Shan state in early January. They were granted safe passage and then relocated to Myawaddy, only to surrender a second time, he said.

The military is struggling with poor morale and a lack of manpower, and has introduced mandatory conscription to try to boost its troop numbers – a policy that has horrified young people and led many to flee military-controlled areas.

Soldiers who surrendered would go through a verification process, and those who wanted to return to military-controlled territory would mostly be allowed to go, the commander said.

The remaining soldiers in Myawaddy who were yet to surrender had previously agreed to do so but reversed their decision when reinforcements arrived in the area, he said.

“Despite the reinforcements, they’re unable to hold that position for long,” he said. “We can overrun them any time we want.”

But the commander added it was likely the military would target the area with aerial bombings. “It’s very difficult to predict their moves. [Junta chief] Min Aung Hlaing is considered a mad dog. There is nothing he dare not do.”

47835321292_729f8c4a22_z.jpg

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ebels-myawaddy-karen-state-surrender-thailand
 

Clashes break out at Thai-Myanmar border between soldiers, armed groups​

Thai police say the latest violence was triggered when Karen groups launched an attack against Myanmar troops.


images


Fighting has broken out between the Myanmar military and armed ethnic groups near a vital trade hub near the Thai border, according to Thailand’s government and media reports.

Witnesses on the Thai and Myanmar sides of the border also reported that they heard explosions and heavy machine-gun fire near a strategic bridge from late Friday that continued into early Saturday.

Fighters from the Karen National Union (KNU), the ethnic armed group that has been leading the attack on Myawaddy, last week captured the last of the Myanmar army’s outposts in and around the border town that is connected to Thailand by two bridges across the Moei River.
sddefault.jpg

The latest clashes were triggered on Saturday morning when Karen groups launched an attack against Myanmar troops who were hiding near the 2nd Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge, a central crossing point for trade with Thailand, said police chief Pittayakorn Phetcharat in Thailand’s Mae Sot district.

He estimated that about 1,300 people fled into Thailand.

AP24111280959032-1713607013.jpg

People cross the Moei River as they flee Myawaddy town in Myanmar to Thailand’s Mae Sot town [Warangkana Wanichachewa/AP]

Pittayakorn said local authorities were searching those who had crossed over for weapons.

“We have given them food and moved them to the safer place,” he added.

Thai broadcaster NBT said in a post on X that the armed groups used 40mm machine guns and dropped 20 bombs from drones to target an estimated 200 soldiers who had retreated from a coordinated assault on Myawaddy and army posts since April 5.

On Saturday morning, a Thai army unit stationed on the border said clashes were ongoing with forces targeting the soldiers under the bridge.
maxresdefault.jpg

“Currently in the middle of fighting, no losses known,” the Rajamnu Special Task Force posted on Facebook.

Thai Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said he was closely monitoring the situation and his country was ready to provide humanitarian assistance if necessary.

“I do not desire to see any such clashes have any impact on the territorial integrity of Thailand and we are ready to protect our borders and the safety of our people,” he said on X.

Myanmar’s military, which seized power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in 2021, is facing a huge setback after losing the trading town of Myawaddy.

Since last October, the army has suffered a series of unprecedented defeats, losing large areas of territory, including border posts, to both ethnic fighters, who have been fighting for greater autonomy for decades, and pro-democracy units that took up arms after the military takeover.

18yysol6511aljpg.jpg

Myawaddy is especially important to the military, with more than $1.1bn worth of trade passing through the town from 12 months to April.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024...-myanmar-border-between-soldiers-armed-groups
 
Back
Top