Fighting in Myanmar kills at least 15 after uprising call

The fighting started on September 9, two days after a call for a nationwide uprising was issued by an opposition organisation

September 11, 2021 08:43 am | Updated November 28, 2021 02:30 pm IST - Bangkok:

People stock up on food and other grocery items at a supermarket in Yangon, Myanmar. The human rights group Special Advisory Council for Myanmar, who came together to oppose February’s military takeover of Myanmar, has expressed misgivings, Wednesday, September 8, 2021, that a leading resistance organization, the self-styled National Unity Government, has called for a nationwide uprising

People stock up on food and other grocery items at a supermarket in Yangon, Myanmar. The human rights group Special Advisory Council for Myanmar, who came together to oppose February’s military takeover of Myanmar, has expressed misgivings, Wednesday, September 8, 2021, that a leading resistance organization, the self-styled National Unity Government, has called for a nationwide uprising

Fifteen to 20 villagers, including several teenagers, have been killed in some of Myanmar's deadliest fighting since July between government troops and resistance forces, a villager and reports by independent media said September 10.

The fighting near Gangaw township in the northwestern Magway region started on September 9, two days after a call for a nationwide uprising was issued by the National Unity Government, an opposition organisation that seeks to coordinate resistance to military rule.

The fighting broke out when more than 100 troops arrived in four military vehicles to secure the area in Myin Thar and five other nearby villages, a resident told The Associated Press by phone.

Members of a lightly armed village self-defense militia fired warning shots but could not stop the soldiers from entering the area and clashes continued after that, said the resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity to safeguard his personal security.

The opposition movement that rose against the army's February seizure of power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi was initially peaceful, but gradually began fighting back after security forces used deadly force to break up nonviolent protests.

The National Unity Government's call on September 7 for a “people's defensive war” has received an enthusiastic response on social media, but its actual impact on the ground is hard to measure.

Media sympathetic to the opposition reported an outburst of small-scale shootings and sabotage by the resistance, particularly the toppling of cell phone transmission towers.

But similar activities have been happening for several months and details are difficult to independently verify.

The villager who described the new fighting said at least 11 members of the self-defense group were killed, according to what others in his village told him. Photos of what were described to be their bodies circulated widely Friday on the internet, and were clear enough to be identifiable to those familiar with them.

“We only have handmade guns and percussion lock firearms,” the villager said. “When it rained, the guns became useless. There are many casualties due to the imbalance in weapons.” Myanmar's government troops are well-equipped with modern weapons and have access to air and artillery support.

The villager said other residents told him that most members of the village's defense force are youths and that five of those killed were 9th- and 10th-grade students. A middle-school teacher was also said to have been killed, the villager said.

Members of the more than 2,000 households in the area had fled to the jungle, he added, while soldiers camped in abandoned homes and at the local Buddhist monastery. Four more people were confirmed dead after fighting broke out again September 10 morning, he said, and an unknown number of houses were burned.

 

Reports by independent media put the death toll among the villagers at 20 or more. Khit Thit Media, an online news service, said it was told by villagers that the dead included seven non-combatants in addition to the militants.

According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, an independent organisation that keeps detailed tallies of people killed or detained by the military government, there have been 1,058 activists and bystanders killed since February's army takeover.

The government this week claimed resistance forces have been responsible for the deaths of 933 people, reported Popular News, citing Deputy Home Minister Gen. Soe Tint Naing.

In a September 9 briefing for foreign diplomats also attended by the news service, Soe Tint Naing said those killed included security personnel, civil servants and people believed by the resistance to be government informers.

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