Rebels raise flag at seized Myanmar base, commander confident of retaining control

The KNU's national flag is raised after Myanmar's national flag is burned at a Myanmar military base at Thingyan Nyi Naung village on the outskirts of Myawaddy. PHOTO: REUTERS

MYAWADDY, Myanmar - Myanmar resistance fighters on April 15 burned the flag used by the military government and raised their own banner at a newly captured army base, as a senior rebel commander vowed they would hold the strategic area near the Thai border.

The celebrations by fighters linked to the armed ethnic Karen National Union (KNU) came less than a week after the capture of Myawaddy, a key trading town on Thailand’s western border.

Myawaddy’s fall marked another battlefield loss for the powerful military regime that seized control in 2021 from an elected government led by Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who remains in detention.

Simmering anger against the junta has turned into a nationwide armed resistance movement that is increasingly operating in coordination with established ethnic rebel groups to challenge the military across large parts of Myanmar.

Since October 2023, the army has lost control of key areas near its borders with both India and China to a loose coalition of allied resistance forces. The loss of Myawaddy at the Thai border could further dent trade revenue for the junta.

In a rare in-person interview, Colonel Nadah Htoo, an operational commander of Brigade 6 of the KNU's military wing that captured the army base, said junta forces tried but failed to retake the area.

“They have been unsuccessful in making a breakthrough twice now,” he said.

He added that the rebels controlled most of the area and would continue to consolidate authority before handing over administration to the KNU’s political arm.

“Our military operation will end at the end of April,” he said.

A spokesman for the military government did not answer calls on April 15 from Reuters.

Faced with the rebel assault, several hundred junta soldiers tasked with defending Myawaddy withdrew from their positions, with a group of fewer than 200 retreating to near a bridge connecting the Myanmar town with Thailand’s Mae Sot.

These soldiers must either surrender to the Thai authorities or to the KNU, failing which they may be targeted by resistance troops, Col Nadah Htoo said.

Thailand’s Foreign Minister Parnpree Bahiddha-Nukara said last week that the junta soldiers would be allowed to cross the border if they gave up arms and requested refuge.

Junta leader Min Aung Hlaing said in a speech in March that the forces fighting the military were “destroying the path towards forming a Union based on democratic values and federalism”.

Soldiers of the People's Defence Forces gather at Infantry Batallion 275 at Myawaddy, the Thailand-Myanmar border town under the control of a coalition of rebel forces led by the Karen National Union. PHOTO: REUTERS

But for the allied resistance forces in Myawaddy, April 15 was a day to celebrate.

“We are very happy that our revolution has come this far. If we can take more Myanmar bases, we will achieve our objective (of overthrowing the junta),” said Mr Myo Myint Keyaw, a 26-year-old fighter in a People’s Defence Force, a militia allied with the KNU fighters.

While the rebels celebrated, Reuters reporters in Myawaddy could hear air strikes as fighting raged on the front lines about 40km to the west, where junta reinforcements were trying to retake the area.

Burned down houses and buildings riddled with bullets were visible near the captured military base, where stray dogs roamed among empty buildings.

On April 14, a spokesman for the KNU said the rebels had pushed back a second military attempt to break through their lines and advance on Myawaddy. REUTERS

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