Burma Army fires on known IDP site, displacing 2,000
For five
hours yesterday, the Burma Army fired long-range mortar shells at a high school
in Kesi Township serving as a safe house for internally displaced civilians
(IDPs), a local source confirmed.
Internally displaced refugees arrive in Laikha,
central Shan State. (Photo: Facebook)
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The school
in the village of Wan Saw had been housing 1,500 IDPs since fighting in central
Shan State escalated in October. They said the attack was ongoing, from 11 a.m.
until 4 p.m., and was launched by two groups within Burma Army’s Military
Operation Command—known as Za-Ka-Ka—Nos. 2 and 17.
“They said
the soldiers shot 60 mm shells at them about 60 times,” said Sai Rin, a
54-year-old who works in a Mong Hsu monastery now host to newly displaced IDPs
from Wan Saw.
People hid
in nearby bunkers until the firing stopped, and then fled the area, along with
the 500 original Wan Saw residents, he said. With 2,000 civilians gone, the
area is now nearly empty.
A man internally displaced by fighting in
central Shan State arrives in Laika. (Photo: Facebook)
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The New
Light of Myanmar, the government mouthpiece, reported today in its English
language newspaper that, on November 9, the Shan State Progress Party/Shan
State Army-North (SSPP/SSA-N), who are based in the region, attacked them from
“residential quarters” near their compound; the Burma Army has responded by
“combing the area for enemy combatants.”
Sai Hla,
spokesperson for the SSPP/SSA-N, told SHAN yesterday that they are fighting now
to defend themselves.
“We have no
reason to fight Za-Ka-Ka No. 2. They are 20 miles from Wan Hai,” he said.
“We want to
solve the problem with peace talks,” he added.
Wan Saw’s recently
displaced IDPs followed one of two routes to safety—to SSPP/SSA-N headquarters
in Wan Hai, five miles west, en route to Kesi, or to the neighboring township
of Mong Hsu, twelve miles east.
Those who
arrived in Wan Hai had to flee for a third time when the Burma Army launched an
attack on that area as well, as SHAN reported yesterday.
Infographic showing the location of central Shan State’s IDP crisis (S.H.A.N) |
Around 400
people have now sought refuge in the village of Wan Wa, about three miles south
of the SSPP/SSA-N base. Some continued on to Kesi Town, or to another central
Shan State township, Laikha. For those who took the route to Mong Hsu, hundreds
of Wan Saw’s IDPs have taken shelter in monasteries, both in the town and on
the way.
Yesterday’s
attack occurred two days after Burma held general elections for the first time
in 25 years; voting did not take place in Kesi and Mong Hsu townships, because
polling was cancelled due to ongoing conflict.
By SIMMA
FRANCIS / Shan Herald Agency for News (S.H.A.N)
Reporting by
SAI YIPHONG / Shan Herald Agency for News (S.H.A.N)
Tags: News, War