The Palm Beach Post

Ethnic group challenges military in Myanmar

- Grant Peck ASSOCIATED PRESS

BANGKOK – Myanmar’s military government faced a fresh challenge Monday when one of the armed ethnic groups in an alliance that recently gained strategic territory in the country’s northeast launched attacks in the western state of Rakhine.

The Arakan Army launched surprise assaults on two outposts of the Border Guard Police, a paramilita­ry force, in Rakhine’s Rathedaung township, according to independen­t online media and area residents. The attacks took place despite a yearlong cease-fire with Myanmar’s military government.

Khaing Thukha, a spokespers­on for the Arakan Army, said two military security outposts in Rathedaung were seized by his group and more than 20 police officers from a station in another township, Kyauktaw, had laid down their weapons.

“Some officers of Myanmar’s army have been arrested,” Khaing Thukha said by phone.

Local media outlets reported fighting between the Arakan Army and the military in Minbya, Maungdaw, Mrauk-U and Kyauktaw townships.

The Arakan Army is the well-trained and well-armed military wing of the Rakhine ethnic minority movement seeking autonomy from the central government. Rakhine is also known by its older name of Arakan. It’s the site of a brutal army counterins­urgency operation in 2017 that drove about 740,000 minority Rohingya Muslims to seek safety across the border in Bangladesh.

The Arakan Army, along with 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 in northern Shan state in northeaste­rn Myanmar along the border with China.

The alliance has claimed widespread victories and the military government has acknowledg­ed losing control of three towns, one of which is a major border crossing for trade with China. The Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army claimed to have seized another town, Kunlong, on Sunday.

Myanmar’s ruling military council declared martial law in eight townships near the Chinese border, the state-controlled Global New Light of Myanmar reported Monday.

The offensive in the northern part of Shan state was already seen as a significan­t challenge for the army, which has struggled to contain a nationwide uprising by the members of Peoples’ Defense Force. The pro-democracy resistance organizati­on was formed after the army seized power from Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government in February 2021. It also set up loose alliances with several of the ethnic armed groups.

“If combat persists, it will open a significan­t new front for the regime, which is already overstretc­hed with fighting, including on its eastern border with China,” said Richard Horsey, the senior adviser on Myanmar for the Crisis Group think tank.

The army-installed acting president, Myint Swe, said last week that the country is in critical condition and could split up if the military does not effectivel­y manage the problems in Shan state, the Global New Light of Myanmar reported.

 ?? THE KOKANG ONLINE MEDIA VIA AP ?? Members of the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army pose with a captured truck in Myanmar’s Shan state.
THE KOKANG ONLINE MEDIA VIA AP Members of the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army pose with a captured truck in Myanmar’s Shan state.

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