Burma | Junta announces counterattack after offensive by ethnic armed groups

(Rangoon) The head of the Burmese junta promised “counter-offensives” after the coordinated attack by armed ethnic groups who took control of towns and roads near the Chinese border, according to a statement cited Friday by a state newspaper.


“The government will launch counter-offensives,” Min Aung Hlaing said in a speech Thursday in the capital Naypyidaw to military government officials.

The general, cited by the Global New Light of Myanmarindicated that the army would respond to the attack this week on army camps by armed ethnic groups in the north of the country.

The junta is engaged in fighting of an intensity not seen since the 2021 coup, in northern Shan State, an isolated but strategic region which borders the Chinese province of Yunnan.

An alliance of three ethnic groups, long-time opponents of the army, claimed Thursday the takeover of dozens of military positions, four towns and roads leading to China, Burma’s main trading partner.

This union, formed by the Taaung National Liberation Army (TNLA), the Arakan Army (AA) and the Burma National Democratic Alliance (MNDAA), is capable of mobilizing at least 15,000 men, according to analysts.

Min Aung Hlaing also accused the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), another ethnic group that operates in neighboring Kachin state, of attacking “transport infrastructure” and military camps.

The head of the junta warned of possible reprisals against them.

The fighting worries China, which called on Thursday for an “immediate” ceasefire after the junta confirmed the loss of a border town, Chinshwehaw.

Shan State is notably home to a multibillion-dollar TGV project as part of the New Silk Roads policy promoted by Beijing.

More than a dozen armed ethnic groups operate in Burma’s border regions, fighting for political autonomy and control of natural resources.

Some of them trained, and equipped, the armed groups made up of political opponents who spread across the country after the 2021 coup and the military repression that followed.

The sparse access to means of communication, in a region dominated by the jungle, makes any effort to verify the number of victims difficult.

The United Nations said Monday that the clashes had displaced more than 6,000 people in the region.


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