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Dozens killed in Myanmar military air attacks

12-04-2023

NAY PYI TAW: Myanmar’s military has launched air attacks on a central town known to be a bastion of opposition to the coup carried out two years ago.

Witnesses and local media said dozens of people were killed and wounded in the attack on Tuesday one of the worst since the military seized control of the country.

Citing residents in the Sagaing area about 110km (45 miles) west of the main city Yangon news reports said, at least 50 people, including children, died in the barrage on the town of Pazigyi.

The air raids occurred as residents gathered for the inauguration of an administrative office, journalist Tony Cheng reported from Thailand’s capital Bangkok.

“At 7:35am the crowd was attacked by jets and those were followed by Mi-35 helicopters,” said Cheng, citing one rescuer at the scene.

“He confirmed 40 dead but he suspects the death toll will rise considerably – the carnage there was terrible. All the reports we’re seeing is that these were civilians, and far from being a legitimate military target.”

No immediate response from Myanmar’s military rulers was available.

Three first responders were killed in a second attack while rescue work was being carried out, Cheng reported.

‘Terrorists’

Myanmar’s armed forces have been accused of indiscriminate killings of civilians as it engages in major offensives to suppress armed resistance to its takeover.

Last month, Myanmar’s coup leader Min Aung Hlaing pledged to deal decisively with “terrorists” fighting against his rule.

A member of the local People’s Defence Force (PDF), an anti-junta militia, told media fighter jets fired on a ceremony held to open their local office.

“So far the exact number of casualties is still unknown. We cannot retrieve all the bodies yet,” said the PDF member, who declined to be identified.

Myanmar’s pro-democracy government-in-exile, the National Unity Government, condemned the attack, calling it “yet another example of [the military’s] indiscriminate use of extreme force against civilians”.

Tuesday’s incident could be one of the deadliest among a string of air strikes since a jet attacked a concert in October killing at least 50 civilians, local singers, and members of an armed ethnic minority group in Kachin state.

1 million displaced

On February 1, 2021, the military toppled the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, prompting peaceful protests that security forces suppressed with violence that escalated since then and has been characterized by United Nations experts and others as a civil war.

More than one million people have been displaced as the military steps up artillery attacks and air raids.

Western countries have rolled out sanctions against the ruling generals in a bid to choke off revenue and access to military equipment from key allies and suppliers such as Russia.

A military spokesperson told media recently that previously reported attacks blamed on its forces have been “misreported”.

In October, 2021, Myanmar soldiers gunned down Cung Biak Hum, a 31-year-old Baptist pastor, while he rushed to help put out a fire caused by military shelling. As his town of Thantlang in Myanmar’s northwestern Chin State went up in flames, soldiers sawed off the pastor’s finger and stole his wedding ring.

“The killing of Cung Biak Hum and mutilation of his finger demonstrate the extent of disrespect and brutality with which (Myanmar military) soldiers are conducting themselves in their ongoing war against the people,” Salai Za Uk Ling, deputy director of the Chin Human Rights Organization, told media. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

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