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A resistance group fighting Burma’s military rule said on Sunday its fighters had repelled an attempt by junta troops to advance on the key town of Myawaddy along the Thai border that was seized by the rebels last week.

Reinforcements of junta forces have been trying to advance on Myawaddy for days, but were pushed back in a battle about 40 kilometers away, a spokesperson for the Karen National Union (KNU), Saw Taw Nee, said in an interview.

“It is not easy to come here. They face a lot of difficulty,” he told Reuters, saying the KNU’s forces had been “blocking and intercepting” the junta troops.

THAI FOREIGN MINISTER URGES BURMA’S MILITARY TO AVOID VIOLENT ATTACK ON BORDER TOWN ITS ARMY LOST

The KNU information could not be independently confirmed. A spokesperson for the military junta that seized power from an elected government in 2021 did not answer calls from Reuters.

The border town of Myawaddy, adjacent to Thailand, was wrested from military control by a coalition of anti-junta forces led by the KNU on Thursday.

Fighting took place on Friday between the villages of Kawkareik and Kaw Nwet along the main Asian Highway 1 leading west from the Thai border, Saw Taw Nee said.

A soldier from the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) carries an RPG launcher

A soldier from the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) carries an RPG launcher at a Burma military base at Thing Naga Nyi Naung village on the outskirts of Myawaddy, the Thailand-Burma border town under the control of a coalition of rebel forces led by the Karen National Union, in Burma on April 15, 2024.  (Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha)

The KNU spokesperson said information received from the front line put the junta’s toll of deaths and injuries from the fighting at around 100. “We know that they suffered a loss of one armed carrier and a military truck,” he said.

Burma has been in turmoil since 2021, when the powerful military deposed an elected civilian government, triggering widespread protests it sought to crush with force.

Simmering anger against the junta turned into a nationwide armed resistance movement that is now increasingly operating in coordination with established ethnic rebel groups to challenge the military across large parts of Burma.

Saw Taw Nee said the resistance “will take time”. “We need to have a kind of coordination with other groups… to defeat the military,” he said.

The KNU spokesperson said there were also challenges working in a broad anti-junta coalition.

“We are still in the process of how to negotiate, how to come together and how to move forward among our Karen groups,” he said, referring to members of the ethnic group residing primarily in Kayin State.

Saw Taw Nee said the immediate concern for the KNU is the more than one million displaced people within its territories, and called on the international community, including neighboring Thailand, to provide support.

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“We really need to work together in the future more and more on this issue,” he said.

He urged Burma’s junta to see their recent military setbacks as a sign that they should hand back power to the people.

“Please don’t waste time anymore,” he said. “This is the time, and a good opportunity, to listen to people first.”

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