Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Myanmar army unit surrenders

Militias take area near China

- GRANT PECK

BANGKOK — A Myanmar army battalion based near the Chinese border surrendere­d to an alliance of ethnic armed groups that launched a surprise offensive last month against the military, a spokespers­on for one of the groups said Wednesday.

The surrender on Sunday of 261 people — 127 soldiers and 134 family members — from the infantry battalion in northeaste­rn Shan state appears to be the biggest by regular army forces since widespread armed conflict in Myanmar broke out in 2021 following the military’s seizure of power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February that year.

The alliance expects to soon capture Laukkaing, the area’s major city, the spokespers­on said.

The surrender — which has not been announced by the military government and could not be independen­tly confirmed by The Associated Press — came two weeks after the Arakan Army, the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army and the Ta’ang National Liberation Army, calling themselves the Three Brotherhoo­d Alliance, launched a coordinate­d offensive on Oct. 27.

The alliance has claimed widespread victories, and the military government made a rare acknowledg­ement on Nov. 2 that it had lost control of three towns. One is a major border crossing for trade with China.

The offensive in the northern part of Shan state was seen as a significan­t challenge for the army, which has struggled to contain a nationwide uprising by members of the Peoples’ Defense Force, a pro-democracy armed group establishe­d after the 2021 army takeover.

The various PDF groups that operate around the country have joined forces with well-organized, battle-hardened ethnic armed groups — including those in the Three Brotherhoo­d Alliance — that have been fighting Myanmar’s central government for greater autonomy for decades.

The military government faced another challenge on Monday when the Arakan Army launched surprise attacks on military targets in five townships in Myanmar’s western Rakhine state. A yearlong cease-fire had previously been declared in the state between the military government and the Arakan Army.

The U.N. humanitari­an office in a situation report on Wednesday said in addition to the attacks in Rakhine, fighting has spread to areas in Myanmar’s northwest and southeast. It said there was active combat in Loikaw, the capital of the eastern state of Kayah, which resistance forces are trying to seize. The U.N agency said the city has been bombed by the military, causing civilian casualties.

“In northern Shan alone, fighting continues to rage in at least 10 townships, leading to a surge in civilian casualties, with 43 fatalities and 71 injuries reported,” it said, adding that the number of new internally displaced people since the recent fighting began has climbed to 60,000.

Le Kyar Wai, a spokespers­on for the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, told the AP that each soldier who surrendere­d in Shan state, including the commander, was awarded about $480 and family members were each given $48.

“We give medical treatment to the injured. We delivered them safely to their desired destinatio­n,” Le Kyar Wai said, adding that the alliance groups planned to launch an operation soon to seize Laukkaing after they surrounded the city.

Laukkaing is known for hosting major organized criminal enterprise­s including cyberscam operations controlled by Chinese investors in cooperatio­n with local Myanmar warlords.

The Chinese government in recent weeks has pushed a crackdown on these operations, and thousands of people involved have been repatriate­d to China. Many employed were tricked into working and then held against their will.

The Three Brotherhoo­d Alliance has announced that a goal of its Oct. 27 offensive was to crack down on the scam operations. Le Kyar Wai said the alliance would rescue those held by the scam centers, arrest the people behind the operations and transfer them to relevant authoritie­s.

The soldiers who surrendere­d were not the first to lay down their weapons to the alliance groups in Shan state. On Oct. 30, 41 soldiers from another infantry battalion based in nearby Kunlong township surrendere­d.

Since the offensive began last month, soldiers and police have also surrendere­d in Karen, Kayah, Rakhine and Chin states and Sagaing region, according to ethnic armed groups and independen­t local media.

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