An ethnic army captured a town near the Chinese border, less than a week after officials met in Myanmar’s capital to discuss cooperation between the two countries, residents told Radio Free Asia on Friday.
Myanmar’s military junta, which seized all major governmental seats in a 2021 coup d’etat, invited a Chinese envoy to Naypyidaw on Monday to discuss the Kachin Independence Army’s mass seizure of military camps and subsequent fighting on the border. Some border gates in Kachin state have still not been reopened, political analysts and residents told RFA.
The rebel group has captured 60 junta camps since fighting began on March 7 and now controls portions of two major trade routes in Myanmar’s northern Kachin state, one of which runs along China’s border.
The Kachin Independence Army, headquartered in border town Lai Zar, captured another major city nearly 160 kilometers (100 miles) south on Thursday. Rebel troops have occupied the city since March 29, but were not able to negotiate the junta’s surrender until Thursday, Lwegel residents said.
All administration departments under the junta have been sealed off and their staff have left the city, a resident told RFA on Friday, adding that Kachin troops are now deployed throughout the city.
"The city has been seized. Kachin Independence Army troops have arrived in the city,” he said. “All administrative departments have been closed, and Kachin national flags were seen in some places. Soldiers and the police are still trapped.”
In addition to Kachin national flags hanging on the General Administration Department, market and hospitals in the city, they have also issued notices that only authorized personnel will be allowed at border gates and administrative departments, he added. Soldiers and other military personnel in Lwegel have been relegated to a junta base nearby.
RFA contacted Kachin state’s junta spokesperson Moe Min Thein for comment on the military’s surrender, but he did not respond by the time of publication.
Kachin Independence Army information officer Col. Naw Bu told RFA that although the former administration staff had left, the anti-junta group’s administrative processes had not yet started in the city’s 21 government offices.
Translated by RFA Burmese. Edited by Kiana Duncan and Mike Firn.
Related articles:
Related suggestion:
BYU hires Suns assistant Kevin Young to replace Mark Pope, who left to coach KentuckySevere storms bring hail, tornadoes to parts of central USChina's spy agency encourages people to see spies everywhere — Radio Free AsiaGordon Ramsay serves papers to masked pub squatters who trashed TV chef's £13million London boozerIt hasn't taken Jude Bellingham long to realize how big a problem racism is in Spanish soccerTravis Kelce to host game show 'Are You Smarter than a Celebrity?'Cardi B, Queen Latifah and The Roots to headline the BET Experience concerts in Los AngelesAnalysis: Kyle Larson settling in quickly as preparation continues for Indianapolis 500 debutGeorgian police fire tear gas to break up protest against soTuition and fees will rise at Georgia public universities in fall 2024
0.1145s , 6504.109375 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by Ethnic army seizes city on Myanmar ,International Investigation news portal