The Star Malaysia

Rebel group calls for no-fly zone to protect civilians

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THE country’s oldest rebel force wants internatio­nal help to establish a “no-fly zone” near the Thai border, after warning that there was a danger of clashes with the army resulting in civilians being targeted by airstrikes.

There has been an escalation in fighting recently between the army and the Karen National Union (KNU), prompting thousands of people to seek refuge in Thailand.

About 3,400 people have taken shelter in Thailand over recent days, Thai authoritie­s said.

Thousands more are stranded on the Myanmar side of the border, waiting to cross.

In a statement, the KNU warned of a “high possibilit­y” of military airstrikes on civilians.

“These airstrikes won’t target military bases but civilian bases as in schools, hospitals, houses and villages,” the head of the KNU’S foreign affairs department, Saw Taw Nee, said, citing his experience from previous bouts of fighting.

A spokesman for Myanmar’s military junta did not answer calls seeking comment.

The KNU urged the internatio­nal community to identify a no-fly zone by seeking an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council.

Last month, the UN Security Council, in a rare statement that was agreed by its 15 members, expressed concern over violence across Myanmar and urged the military to exercise utmost restraint.

Internatio­nal efforts to end the conflict in Myanmar since a February coup have been limited to diplomatic initiative­s and attempts to exert economic pressure through Western sanctions.

Since the military overthrew the civilian government led by Aung San Suu Kyi, the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners (AAPP) has said that more than 1,300 people have been killed by the security forces.

The military has said the figures from AAPP, a monitoring group cited by the UN, are exaggerate­d.

The KNU agreed to a ceasefire in 2012, ending an insurgency for self-determinat­ion that began soon after Myanmar gained independen­ce in 1948, but its forces have been clashing with the army since the coup and it has allowed opponents of the coup to take shelter in territory it controls.

The latest fighting had been triggered by the army’s attempts to arrest people in the Lay Kay Kaw

area, said Saw Taw Nee.

“They came and checked on the town, which we allow. However, they didn’t keep their promise and arrested people, which we totally don’t accept,” he said.

 ?? ?? Caught in the middle: refugees, who earlier fled a flare-up in fighting between the myanmar army and ethnic minority rebels, preparing to voluntaril­y return across the border to myanmar at a pier in mae sot district, Tak province in Thailand. — reuters
Caught in the middle: refugees, who earlier fled a flare-up in fighting between the myanmar army and ethnic minority rebels, preparing to voluntaril­y return across the border to myanmar at a pier in mae sot district, Tak province in Thailand. — reuters

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