The Fiji Times

2500 flee as rebels clash with Myanmar army

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AT least 2500 people including hundreds of children have fled a flare-up in fighting between the Myanmar army and ethnic minority rebels and have taken refuge across the border in Thailand, Thai authoritie­s and an aid group said.

Those displaced had poured into the Thai town of Mae Sot after fighting in the past few days between the Karen National Union (KNU) and Myanmar’s army, Somchai Kitcharoen­rungroj, deputy governor of western Tak province, told a news conference.

Myanmar was plunged into turmoil when the military ousted a civilian government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, triggering protests in cities and sporadic clashes in the countrysid­e between anti-junta militia and the army.

There has also been intensifie­d fighting at times between the army and ethnic minority insurgents in border areas, like the KNU, Myanmar’s oldest rebel force.

Somchai put the number of displaced on the Thai side of the border at 2503. Ye Min, an official at the Aid Alliance Committee, a Thai-based Myanmar migrants group, said that total included 545 children.

“We are providing food assistance working together with Thai authoritie­s,” Ye Min said by telephone, adding most of the displaced were from Lay Kay Kaw and other villages.

The KNU has been seeking selfdeterm­ination in a region of about 1.6 million people.

The KNU said in a social media post said four Myanmar soldiers were killed and four wounded during the fighting on Wednesday.

A report by Public Voice Television, which is backed by Myanmar’s shadow government, posted photograph­s it said showed seized weapons and eight captured members of the Myanmar security forces.

It said 18 government soldiers had been killed.

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