Marin Independent Journal

Myanmar junta deepening violence with new air attacks

- By Tassanee Vejpongsa

Violence in eastern Myanmar, including air raids that drove thousands of members of the Karen ethnic minority to seek shelter across the border in Thailand, deepened Tuesday with new air attacks by the military that seized power from an elected government last month.

Thailand’s prime minister denied that his country’s security forces had forced villagers back to Myanmar who had fled from military airstrikes over the weekend, saying they returned home on their own accord.

But the situation in eastern Myanmar appeared to be getting more, not less, dangerous.

Saw Taw Nee, head of the foreign affairs department of the Karen National Union, the main political body representi­ng the Karen minority there, confirmed that new raids Tuesday left six civilians dead and 11 wounded.

Dave Eubank, a member of the Free Burma Rangers, which provides medical assistance to villagers in the region, provided the same informatio­n.

Vowing to respond

The attacks by Myanmar’s military led the KNU to issue a statement from one of its armed units saying that the government’s “military ground troops are advancing into our territorie­s from all fronts,” and vowing to respond.

“We have no other options left but to confront these serious threats posed by the illegitima­te military junta’s army in order to defend our territory, our Karen peoples, and their self-determinat­ion rights,” said the statement, issued in the name of the KNU office for the district that

was first attacked on Saturday.

It said the attacks were the latest in a series of actions by Myanmar’s military breaking a cease-fire agreement. The KNU has been fighting for greater autonomy for the Karen people.

Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, speaking before the latest air attacks, said his country is ready to shelter anyone who is escaping fighting, as it has done many times for decades. His comments came a day after humanitari­an groups said Thailand has been sending back some of the thousands of people who have fled the air attacks by Myanmar’s military.

“There is no influx of refugees yet. We asked those who crossed to Thailand if they have any problem in their area. When they say no problem, we just asked them to return to their land first. We asked, we did not use any force,” Prayuth told reporters.

“We won’t push them back,” he said. ‘If they are

having fighting, how can we do so? But if they don’t have any fighting at the moment, can they go back first?”

The governor of Thailand’s Mae Hong Son province, where as many as 3,000 refugees had sought shelter, said later that those still on Thai soil were expected to return to their own country in a day or two.

The attacks are a further escalation of the violent crackdown by Myanmar’s junta on protests against its Feb. 1 takeover.

Deaths mount

At least 510 protesters have been killed since the coup, according to Myanmar’s Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners, which says the actual toll is likely much higher. It says 2,574 people have been detained.

Protests continued Tuesday despite the deaths of more than 100 people on Saturday alone.

Engineers, teachers and students from the technology university in the southern

city of Dawei marched without incident.

The number of protesters killed in the city rose to eight with the announceme­nt of the death of a teenager who was shot by soldiers on Saturday as he rode a motorbike with two friends. According to local media, a hospital certificat­e attributed his death to “serious injuries as he fell from a motorbike.”

Medical workers in Mandalay, the country’s second biggest city, honored three of their colleagues who have been killed by security forces. The two doctors and a nurse were remembered in a simple ceremony in front of a banner with their photograph­s and the words “Rest In Power.”

At a cemetery in the biggest city, Yangon, three families gave their last farewells to relatives killed Monday in a night of chaos in the South Dagon neighborho­od. Residents said police and soldiers moved through the streets firing randomly with live ammunition.

 ?? SAKCHAI LALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An injured Karen villager from Myanmar rests at Ban Mae Sam Laep Health Center, Mae Hong Son province, northern Thailand, after crossing Salawin river on a boat, on Tuesday.
SAKCHAI LALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An injured Karen villager from Myanmar rests at Ban Mae Sam Laep Health Center, Mae Hong Son province, northern Thailand, after crossing Salawin river on a boat, on Tuesday.

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