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Civilians killed as Myanmar rebels attack junta forces in the north

Rebel militia fighters of the People’s Defense Forces, including, at right, a former banquet coordinator for a hotel in Yangon, patrol a front line area near government military positions in the Kayin State of Myanmar, March 9, 2022. Myanmar’s newest rebels have abandoned cafes and professions to join longstanding ethnic militias in a near-daily battle with long odds against the country’s military junta. (The United States Institute of Peace/Released)
September 14, 2024

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

Thousands of people have fled from fighting between ethnic minority guerrillas and Myanmar junta troops that entered a fifth day on Thursday, and at least 10 civilians have been killed, residents told Radio Free Asia.

The autonomy-seeking Kachin Independence Army, or KIA, and allied militias loyal to a shadow civilian administration, have made significant gains in Myanmar’s northernmost Kachin state since launching an offensive in March.

The insurgents have forced junta troops in the resource-rich region on the border with China into dwindling areas of control, mirroring setbacks elsewhere in Myanmar for the military that seized power in a 2021 coup.

A resident of Hpakant township, a major jade-producing region, said at least 10 civilians were killed in crossfire between insurgents and the military in Hseng Taung village since the anti-junta forces surrounded it and launched an attack on Sunday.

“People died after being hit by both heavy and small weapons. There are a lot of wounded,” said the resident who declined to be identified for safety reasons.

“Many, many houses have been destroyed. Bullets were raining down.”

Junta airstikes also sparked major fires in the town, witnesses said.

Most of those killed were men, he said, adding that a peace activist named Yup Zau Hkawng, who was wounded in shelling on Monday.

By Thursday, the KIA-led attackers had seized and burned down the Hseng Taung police station, sources close to an anti-junta People’s Defense Force, or PDF, allied with the KIA told RFA.

RFA telephoned Kachin state’s junta spokesperson, Moe Min Thein, for comment but he did not respond by the time of publication and a telecommunications outage in the area made it difficult to check accounts of the fighting.

About 60 soldiers were at the police station when the attack was launched, said another resident, who also asked to remain anonymous.

“The Hseng Taung police station was captured but fighting has been going on after they set it on fire,” he said. “Some junta soldiers are dead, others were caught alive, and the rest were able to flee.” 

KIA fighters had sealed off all roads in and out of the village, said the KIA spokesman, Col. Naw Bu.

Residents said about 10,000 people had fled from the village over the five days of fighting, many seeking refuge in Nam Hmaw, Hseng Awng and Hpakant towns.

The KIA and allied forces control most roads in and out of Hpakant town and have captured all but five junta bases in the township, anti-junta forces say.