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  1. #1
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    New Clashes Break Out in Myanmar’s Shan And Kachin States


    Shan State Army-South soldiers take part in a military parade at their headquarters in Loi Tai Leng in eastern Myanmar's Shan state, Feb. 7, 2015.


    New clashes between armed ethnic groups and Myanmar’s army have resulted in deaths on both sides, commanders of the armed groups said Tuesday, straining the progress that has been made in the lead-up to a signing of a nationwide cease-fire accord to end decades of civil war.

    Fighting in northeastern Myanmar pitting Shan and Palaung rebels against government troops from infantry units 510 and 516 in Shan state resulted in the deaths of troops from both sides in Namhsan and Yatsout townships, said Col. Sai Lai, spokesman for the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army.

    “We heard that one from the government army was killed in Namhsan and one in Yatsout,” he told RFA’s Myanmar Service. “No one from our side was killed.”

    Clashes also ensued between government soldiers and Palaung State Liberation Front (PSLF) troops in Kyautme and Mongmit townships, said Col. Ta Phone Kyaw of the PSLF.

    “The government army has been attacking us with five columns, and we have been fighting for three days," he said. "Three people from our side have injuries, and we heard that about 10 government soldiers had been killed. They have been attacking us with heavy weapons and fusillades.”

    Meanwhile, fighting between the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and government troops, which broke out earlier this month in northern Myanmar’s Kachin state, has forced about 200 villagers in Mansi township to flee their homes, said Naw Mine, a refugee camp official.

    “Both sides have used heavy weapons,” he said. “We don’t know what will happen next with the fighting still going on. We don’t have places to stay and food to eat. It is difficult because all people fled their homes without carrying anything. We have about 200 people from 60 households here.”

    An attack by the KIA on a government military convoy between Khachin and Kaunglwin villages on Sept. 7 killed a warrant officer and 15 troops, according to a report by Eleven Myanmar media group. The KIA also clashed with army soldiers on May 5-24.

    About 40 percent of Myanmar citizens live in areas that routinely experience armed conflict, and roughly 650,000 have been forced to flee their homes because of the hostilities, according to information presented during a Sept. 20 meeting between the government’s Union Peace-Working Committee (UPWC) and civil society organizations, Myanmar Eleven reported.

    NCA essential for peace

    The clashes and casualties come as the government plans to sign a nationwide cease-fire agreement (NCA) with armed ethnic groups during the first week of October, paving the way for political dialogue among the participants to start in January.

    They also come amid campaigning by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who vowed during a televised speech on Monday that her National League for Democracy (NLD) party would pursue peace should it win the Nov. 8 elections. She said an NCA should be based on mutual respect and trust.

    “After signing the NCA, we have to [prepare] to hold political dialogue, which is essential for peace and as a foundation to build a federal union,” she said during the speech. “The government we will have after Nov. 8 election must implement this political dialogue. If people support the NLD, the party is ready to take on the responsibility to form a government.”

    During another campaign speech on Tuesday in Dedaye township of Pyapon district in the Irrawaddy region, Aung San Suu Kyi urged voters not to be afraid of retaliation by officials if they vote for the NLD, as she did the day before when addressing supporters in her rural constituency of Kawhmu just outside Yangon.

    “If some people or some organizations have threatened you not to vote for the NLD, it is a violation of the law,” she said. “Please think about whether to trust people who are violating the law. They do this because they have no respect for people, and it means they believe they can buy people.”

    So far, the UPWC has held nine official meetings with the Nationwide Ceasefire Coordination Team (NCCT), which represents 16 of the country’s armed ethnic groups, to discuss the signing of the NCA.

    New Clashes Break Out in Myanmar?s Shan And Kachin States

  2. #2
    I am in Jail

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    same pic from may go RFA now which country is RFA a propaganda tool for.?

    http://www.rfa.org/english/news/myan...015152919.html

  3. #3
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Scores Displaced Following Fighting in Kachin State’s Mansi Township

    As people around the world, including in Burma’s commercial heart Rangoon, marked the annual International Day of Peace on Monday, conflict continued in the country’s north, leaving scores of newly displaced villagers in its wake.

    Fighting between government troops and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) in Kachin State’s Mansi Township began on Friday and continued over the weekend, with over 180 villagers from Laika Zupja forced to flee their homes.

    Local relief group, the Kachin Baptist Convention (KBC), assisted the villagers in relocating to relief camps in nearby Mai Hkawng village in Mansi Township.

    Rev. Hkalam Sam Sun, a spokesperson with KBC, told The Irrawaddy on Monday that the fighting was less than a mile from the displaced villagers’ current location.

    “We worry about the villagers’ safety if the fighting continues. We have plans to send food assistance to Mai Hkawng,” he said.

    Fighting continued on Monday morning, with Mai Hkawng villagers reporting the sound of artillery.

    Since June 2011, when a 17-year ceasefire between the government and the KIA broke down, over 120,000 people in Kachin and northern Shan states have been displaced, forced to take shelter in IDP camps in both government- and rebel-controlled areas.

    Hkalam Sam Sun told The Irrawaddy that some 200 villagers had also fled to the Chinese border after fighting between allied troops from the KIA and the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) and government soldiers in Muse Township’s Mong Paw in northern Shan State.

    “Clashes have been frequent over the last few days and have caused people to flee,” Gen. Gun Maw, the KIA’s deputy chief-of-staff, told The Irrawaddy on Monday.

    He said the KIA was helping IDPs to reach safe territory held by the armed group, but he could not confirm how many people were displaced due to the recent fighting.

    In Shan State, Burma Army troops have recently engaged with TNLA soldiers in Kyaukme, Mongmit and Kutkai townships; with the RCSS in the Kho Lan area of Loilen district; and with the KIA in Pangsai, Muse Township.

    Col. Sai La, spokesperson for the RCSS, told The Irrawaddy on Monday that despite informing the government’s chief peace negotiator Aung Min of recent fighting, tensions on the ground have failed to dissipate.

    Last week, the Shan armed group released a statement calling on political parties campaigning ahead of Burma’s Nov. 8 general election to postpone their activities in over a dozen townships in Shan State until hostilities had ceased.

    Representatives from both the TNLA and RCSS told The Irrawaddy that sporadic fighting was recurring due to government troops entering territory claimed by the respective ethnic armed groups.

    The RCSS indicated last month that it intended to sign a long awaited nationwide ceasefire agreement that the government is desperate to formalize ahead of the country’s general election.

    Sai La said the group maintained that view, but that “the offensives must stop for it to be a meaningful peace pact.”

    Mai Phone Kyaw, spokesperson for the TNLA, said the Ta’ang group upheld its support for an all-inclusive pact.

    The TNLA is one of three major ethnic armed groups that Burma’s government has shunned as an initial signatory to the ceasefire agreement.

    Scores Displaced Following Fighting in Kachin State?s Mansi Township

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