THE country’s junta is on the verge of being expelled from a western-most state bordering Bangladesh, according to a new report, marking the one of the biggest military losses since a 2021 coup led to renewed civilian conflict across the country.
The Arakan Army has made rapid advances across Rakhine state since November last year and is set to create the single largest area controlled by an ethnic armed group since the coup, the International Crisis Group said in a report yesterday.
Formed in the borderlands of China, the armed group is responsible for some of the military junta’s most decisive battleground losses over the past year.
Their victories are rallying other ethnic armed groups and pro-democracy fighters to dislodge the military regime led by coup leader-turned-President Min Aung Hlaing.“The Arakan Army is carving out a proto-state of over a million people on the Myanmar-Bangladesh border,” International Crisis Group said in the report.
“Although the Myanmar military has countered with indiscriminate attacks and a blockade that is causing huge economic distress, the armed group has pushed on.”Other reports show the military has lost control over most of the nation’s townships. Last month, it extended emergency rule again as the security situation deteriorates.
Compounding those problems is a worsening economic picture with 76% of the population living below or perilously close to a subsistence existence, the United Nations Development Programme said in April.
The Arakan Army has achieved key victories along Rakhine’s coast and is now poised to attack Sittwe, the state capital. A key target is the island township of Kyaukphyu, which hosts critical Chinese infrastructure projects.
Rakhine is also home to Myanmar’s vulnerable Rohingya population. This month marks seven years since the start of military operations that drove 700,000 people across the border into Bangladesh, events the US later determined were “genocide and crimes against humanity”.
Violence against the Muslim-minority group has continued. Volker Turk, the United Nations human rights chief, expressed “grave alarm” last week about the sharply-deteriorating situation in Rakhine State, where hundreds of civilians have reportedly been killed as they flee the fighting.
According to information documented by the UN Human Rights Office, both the military and Arakan Army have committed serious human rights violations and abuses against the Rohingya, including extra-judicial killings, some involving beheadings, abductions and forced recruitment. — Bloomberg