Clashes in northern Myanmar town enter second day

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The Ta’ang National Liberation Army  launched dawn attacks on military positions in the town of Kyaukme, which sits on a vital trade route to China.

The Ta’ang National Liberation Army launched dawn attacks on military positions in the town of Kyaukme.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

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- A Myanmar ethnic armed group clashed with junta troops for a second day in northern Shan state, residents and media said on June 26, with two civilians reported killed in the renewed fighting.

The Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) on June 25 launched dawn attacks on military positions in the town of Kyaukme, which sits on a vital trade route to China.

The attacks were the latest breach of

a China-brokered ceasefire

that ended weeks of fighting in Shan state between the military and the TNLA and two other allied ethnic armed groups.

The TNLA attacked a police station in Kyaukme on the morning of June 26, a local rescue worker told AFP, asking for anonymity for security reasons.

“People who live in downtown do not dare to walk out of their homes,” they said.

Another rescue worker said two civilians were killed and two wounded by artillery shelling on June 25, without specifying from which side.

The TNLA said it had clashed with the military on June 25 in Naungcho and Hsipaw townships and in the ruby mining hub of Mogok in neighbouring Mandalay region.

AFP was unable to reach a junta spokesman for comment.

The TNLA is a member of the so-called “Brotherhood Alliance” along with the Arakan Army (AA) and the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army.

In a surprise October offensive, the alliance

seized swathes of territory and several lucrative trade crossings

with China, dealing the junta its biggest blow since it seized power.

In January, China brokered a ceasefire that allowed the alliance to hold on to territory it had captured, but both sides have recently accused each other of breaking the truce.

Border trade with China during April and May was down by almost a third compared with the same period in 2023, junta-controlled media reported earlier in June.

On June 26, Beijing said it “consistently advocates... Myanmar to be able to restore a stable state and society as early as possible”.

“We are also willing to continue to provide any help and support we can to the progress of relevant peace talks,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said.

In November, the AA launched its own offensive in western Rakhine state, where it says it is fighting for more autonomy for ethnic Rakhine people.

It has seized territory along the borders with Bangladesh and India and vowed to capture state capital Sittwe, home to an India-backed deep sea port.

Myanmar’s borderlands are home to a plethora of ethnic armed groups, many of whom have battled the military since independence from Britain in 1948 over autonomy and control of lucrative resources. AFP


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