New Straits Times

RAKHINE REBELS KILL 9 COPS

No group has claimed responsibi­lity

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NINE policemen have been killed in a militant attack in Myanmar’s western Rakhine State, police said yesterday, as tensions ratchet up in a state riven by ethnic and religious conflict.

A bloody military crackdown in 2017 forced some 740,000 Rohingya Muslims over the border into Bangladesh in violence United Nations investigat­ors have said warrants the prosecutio­n of top generals for genocide and crimes against humanity.

But the armed forces are now waging a war against a militant group claiming to represent the state’s ethnic Rakhine Buddhists, a population that also stands accused of aiding soldiers in their expulsion of the Rohingya.

The Arakan Army (AA) has in recent months mounted several attacks on security forces and officials in its struggle for more autonomy and rights for Rakhine people.

The attack on Saturday took place in Yoetayoke village, just an hour north of Rakhine State’s capital Sittwe.

“Nine police were killed, one was injured and another one is missing,” a senior police officer said, not wanting to be named.

A leaked police report said weapons were also taken from the police post.

No group has yet claimed responsibi­lity and the AA could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

A local administra­tor confirmed investigat­ions are under way.

Northern Rakhine state is inaccessib­le outside of carefully government-chaperoned trips and informatio­n is difficult to verify independen­tly.

But swathes of the state’s north are once again engulfed in conflict.

The military has brought in thousands of reinforcem­ents and is bombarding AA positions with heavy artillery.

Several thousand people have been forced from their homes by the violence.

Yet there is widespread support for the AA’s cause across much of Rakhine, where many feel they have suffered decades of discrimina­tion by the state.

Some 100 local administra­tors submitted their resignatio­n en masse this month calling for the release of four colleagues reportedly arrested for having links with the AA.

The verdict in a treason trial against a popular Rakhine politician is also expected in the coming days and could prove to be a further flashpoint.

Aye Maung stands accused of treason after allegedly inciting Rakhine people in a speech last year to take arms and rise up against the country’s ethnic-Bamar (Burmese) majority.

The AA has expanded its ranks since its formation in 2009 and is now believed to have several thousand recruits.

The group ramped up operations at the end of last year, but it was a deadly attack on four police posts on Independen­ce Day in January that focused the country’s attention and triggered the military’s swift retaliatio­n.

Thirteen police officers were killed in the brazen attack and in an unpreceden­ted move, the government instructed the military to crack down on the insurgents.

This came just a couple of weeks after the military declared a unilateral ceasefire against ethnic armed groups on the other side of Myanmar, allowing the army to concentrat­e its efforts in Rakhine.

Myanmar’s restive borderland­s have been plagued by conflict since independen­ce from British colonial rule 70 years ago.

Violence in strife-torn Rakhine was glossed over by Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi at a recent investment forum where she touted the state’s “untapped” economic potential and blamed the internatio­nal community for focusing “narrowly” on its problems.

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 ?? AFP PIC ?? Bodies of policemen killed in a militant attack are covered at the Yoetayoke police station, near Sittwe in Rakhine State yesterday.
AFP PIC Bodies of policemen killed in a militant attack are covered at the Yoetayoke police station, near Sittwe in Rakhine State yesterday.

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