Myanmar junta air strike kills 28, including children, says ethnic armed group
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The Arakan Army is engaged in a fierce fight with the Myanmar military for control of Rakhine over the past year.
PHOTO: AFP
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BANGKOK - A Myanmar junta air strike killed 28 people, including children, and wounded 25 at a temporary detention area in western Rakhine state, an ethnic minority armed group said on Jan 19.
The Arakan Army (AA) is engaged in a fierce fight with the military
The Rakhine conflict is one element of the bloody chaos that has engulfed Myanmar since the military ousted Ms Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian government in a 2021 coup, sparking a widespread armed uprising.
The AA posted on its Telegram channel that a military jet bombed the detention area in Mrauk-U Township around 4.45pm local time on Jan 18, where family members of junta soldiers were being held by the AA.
“Those who were killed and wounded were family members of soldiers in Myanmar’s army. We arrested them during fighting,” the AA said in the post. “As we were preparing a plan to release them, they were bombed.”
Nine children were among those killed, including a two-year-old boy, it added.
The others killed were women, according to a list of the dead posted by the AA.
Photos of the aftermath posted on the Telegram channel showed a long row of bodies laid on the floor in a grassy area, covered in white sheets. A number of people could be seen grieving close by.
AFP has attempted to contact the junta for comment about the incident but calls have not been answered.
The military is struggling to fight opposition to its rule on multiple fronts around Myanmar, and it has been regularly accused of using air and artillery strikes to hit civilian communities.
It is unclear whether the strike in Mrauk-U Township was mistargeted or if the junta was unaware the area was being used as a detention site for soldiers’ families.
As well as youth-led People’s Defence Forces that emerged to oppose the coup, the military is also battling numerous long-established and well-armed ethnic minority groups.
These groups, which include the AA, control large areas of territory along Myanmar’s borders.
The UN Development Programme warned in November 2024 that Rakhine was heading towards famine
The United Nations said in January that more than 3.5 million people have been displaced by the conflict in Myanmar, an increase of 1.5 million from 2024. AFP

