Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army’s Major-General Peng Deqi commands operations against the military near Lashio town in northern Shan State on October 27. (Kokang Information Network | AFP)

Ethnic armed groups launch attacks across northern Shan State

By AFP

An alliance of ethnic armed groups in Myanmar launched coordinated attacks on the military across northern Shan State on Friday, posing a fresh challenge to the junta as it struggles to quell resistance to its rule.

The military’s 2021 putsch sparked renewed fighting with some ethnic armed groups in northern Shan, home to a planned billion-dollar rail link, part of China’s Belt and Road global infrastructure project.

The Ta’ang National Liberation Army, Arakan Army and Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army launched a “military operation”, they said in a statement.

Pro-military Telegram channels said the resistance groups were attacking 12 towns or settlements across a swathe of Shan state around 100 kilometres across.

The three armed groups – which analysts say can call on at least 15,000 fighters between them – did not immediately provide details on casualties or whether they had taken territory.

A junta spokesman did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.

The MNDAA said its fighters had closed the roads from the trade hub of Lashio to Chin Shwe Haw and Muse on the China border ahead of a “major offensive”.

Footage shared on its media channel showed fighters in what appeared to be an abandoned camp, with weapons and boxes of ammunition scattered across the ground. It did not say where the footage was taken.

Fighting around Lashio – home to the military’s northeast command – and near the towns of Muse, Chin Shwe Haw and Laukkai was ongoing, local media and residents said.

Laukkai is about five kilometres from the border with China.

“All shops are closed and no one is going out,” a resident of Hopang township, around 10 kilometres from Chinshwehaw, told Agence France-Presse.

“We can hear the sounds of aircraft and gunfire constantly,” they said, requesting anonymity for security reasons.

A Muse resident told AFP that locals were staying indoors as soldiers patrolled the streets and that the road from the town to the city of Mandalay – a major trade route – had been closed.

A rescue worker in Lashio who requested anonymity for safety reasons told AFP that resistance fighters had begun shelling the military base near the town from 4:00 am and that the military had responded with artillery fire.

All flights to and from Lashio airport had been cancelled on Friday “because of the situation”, an airline ticketing agency told AFP.

China’s foreign affairs ministry said it was “closely following” the fighting and called on all sides to prevent the situation from escalating.

Northern clashes

In 2017, months of fighting between Myanmar’s army and ethnic insurgents in the Kokang border region claimed dozens of lives and sent thousands fleeing from their homes – many to China.

Myanmar’s borderlands are home to more than a dozen ethnic armed groups, some of which have fought the military for decades over autonomy and control of lucrative resources.

Some have trained and equipped newer People’s Defence Forces that have sprung up since the 2021 coup and the military’s bloody crackdown on dissent.

Earlier this month nearly 30 people were killed and dozens wounded in a strike on a camp for displaced people in neighbouring Kachin State.

The Kachin Independence Army, an ethnic armed group that controls the area, blamed the junta for the attack.

Last week the junta ordered air strikes and troop reinforcements as it tried to recover outposts it had lost in subsequent fighting with the KIA, the military and the armed group said.

A KIA spokesman told AFP he was not sure if its fighters had joined Friday’s attacks.

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