Myanmar junta attacked on new fronts, thousands flee to India
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Myanmar’s junta is facing its biggest test since taking power after three ethnic minority forces launched a coordinated offensive.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
Follow topic:
Ethnic minority insurgent groups attacked security posts in Myanmar on Monday, residents, rebels and an official said, as fighting erupted on two new fronts,
Myanmar’s military junta is facing its biggest test since taking power in a 2021 coup
The military-installed President last week said Myanmar, a country the size of France, was at risk of breaking apart because of an ineffective response to the rebellion. The generals say they are fighting “terrorists”.
One of the three allied insurgent groups, the Arakan Army (AA), which is fighting for greater autonomy in Rakhine State in western Myanmar, seized posts in the Rathedaung and Minbya areas, about 200km apart, AA spokesman Khine Thu Kha said.
“We have conquered some posts and fighting is continuing in some other places,” he said.
A resident of Rathedaung said gunfire was heard before dawn on Monday followed by hours of artillery bombardment, with the military seen blocking entrances to the area and reinforcing administrative buildings.
Fighting also broke out in Chin State, which borders India, where insurgents attacked two military camps, according to an Indian official and two sources with knowledge of the assault.
About 5,000 people from Myanmar crossed into India’s Mizoram state t seek shelter from the fighting, said Mr James Lalrinchhana, the deputy commissioner of a district on the Myanmar border.
Chin State, which had been largely peaceful for years, saw fierce fighting after the 2021 coup, with thousands of residents taking up arms against the military administration.
A spokesperson for Myanmar’s junta did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment on the latest fighting.
Overstretched military
The new combat will be another blow for a junta that is increasingly stretched as armed opposition to its rule grows in scale and strength, fuelled by anger over the coup and ensuing crackdown that ended a decade of tentative democratic reforms.
The coordinated anti-junta offensive launched on Oct 27 in Shan State in the north-east has seen several towns and more than 100 military posts seized near the border with China.
Assaults on urban centres have also taken place in the Sagaing region in central Myanmar, to the west of Shan State, while conflict in neighbouring Kayah State to the south led to the crash on Saturday of a fighter jet.
Rebels said they shot the aircraft down
Mr Richard Horsey, senior Myanmar adviser for the Crisis Group think-tank, said the military had experience fighting in Rakhine State but could struggle as enemy forces probe for weaknesses in multiple areas.
“If combat persists, it will open a significant new front for the regime, which is already overstretched,” he said.
“It will be hard for the regime to focus their efforts across all fronts.” REUTERS