Local uprisings emerge to challenge Myanmar's army
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[April 19, 2021]
By Devjyot Ghoshal and Chanchinmawia
(Reuters) - Sleeping by their makeshift
barricades, knots of young men at Tahan in the western Myanmar town of
Kale had not expected an attack in the pre-dawn darkness.
Armed with a few hunting guns made by village blacksmiths, catapults,
some airguns and Molotov cocktails, they were no match for forces
hardened by decades of conflict and equipped with combat weapons.
The first barrage of shots and rocket propelled grenades from Myanmar's
army, known as the Tatmadaw, came around 5 a.m. on April 7, the
protesters and residents of Kale said.
By evening, the one-sided battle was over, the sandbag barricades had
been cleared and 13 people were dead, three people involved in the armed
group told Reuters. Soldiers deployed on street corners and remain until
now.
"So many people on our side were wounded that we couldn’t do anything
and had to retreat," Aung Myat Thu, one 20-year-old protester in Kale,
told Reuters from there by messaging app.
Although the resistance in Kale was quickly crushed, it points to a new
phase of bloodshed in Myanmar after the Feb. 1 coup, with some
protesters now seeking to take up arms against the junta's forces.
The junta did not respond to requests for comment.
The junta-controlled Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper said 18
rioters were arrested in Kale after attacking security forces with
homemade weapons. "Some of the members of the security forces were
seriously injured," it said
Despite the early setbacks, disparate groups are trying to source better
weapons, sharpen tactics, share intelligence and get training from some
of the two dozen or so existing ethnic armed groups in Myanmar, several
opposition politicians said.
"Some small defence units have been formed across the country, in the
community, villages or wards," said Moe Saw Oo, a spokesman for the
Committee Representing the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH), a body
representing ousted lawmakers that has set up a rival national unity
government.
"At the same time, we are in coordination with ethnic armed
organisations about the establishment of a proper defence force," he
said.
Over 700 people have been killed and more than 3,000 have been detained
by security forces cracking down on the nationwide protests that have
raged since the military deposed the civilian government led by Nobel
Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi on Feb. 1.
Even as the fighters in Kale retreated, other groups have sprung up
elsewhere. Acts of sabotage, such as the burning of administrative
buildings and attacks on businesses linked to the army have broken out
the in the main city of Yangon and the second city of Mandalay.
"It is a sign of the determination and the extreme violence the military
has been using against protesters rather than a strategic assessment
they can take on the might of the military," said analyst Richard
Horsey, who recently briefed the U.N. Security Council on the threat of
national collapse.
Among the new groups, the Ayeyarwaddy Federal Army announced its arrival
last week in the heartland of the Bamar majority, which forms the core
of the armed forces as well as Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy.
"Armed revolution is the only way to return the people's power,"
spokesman Mratt Thu Aung told Reuters via messaging app.
He did not disclose the group's location or the size of its force and
Reuters was unable to do so independently.
'IF WE DON'T FIGHT...'
Pressure to organise an armed group in Kale began in mid-March as the
army stepped up violence against protests sweeping the largely Buddhist
country of 53 million.
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Protesters defend themselves from the troops in Kale, Sagaing
region, Myanmar March 28, 2021 in this picture taken March 28, 2021
obtained by REUTERS
On March 17, police opened fire on an anti-coup rally
- killing four people - after chasing protesters to Myohla on Kale's
outskirts, said a 36-year-old activist who was there.
"From that point, the people, especially the youth,
felt that we needed to do something to defend ourselves," he said,
declining to give his name for reprisals against his family.
By late March, at least three barricades were set-up around the main
market in Tahan, hundreds of people joining to pile up sandbags.
Young people in the town banded together to form the Tahan Civil
Defence Group, local activists said.
The group then raised funds and sought out weapons - mainly
rudimentary hunting guns made by local blacksmiths, they said.
"At first we had seven guns, which then increased to 15 within a
short time," the 36-year-old activist said.
The group went for target practice session in a nearby forest on
March 26. Two days later, the Tahan Civil Defence Group held off an
assault by junta forces. Shortly after, it combined with other local
groups to form the Kalay (Kale) Civil Army.
Such groups were getting help from the CRPH across the country, an
official of the group said.
Several thousand young people had been given basic training in arms
and fighting by at least four ethnic armed organisations, mostly in
Myanmar's border areas, he said.
"More are coming," he said, declining to be named. "If we don't
fight, the future of Myanmar is gone."
'DON’T UNDERSTAND THE TATMADAW'
In Kale, the little-trained fighters were emboldened by early
success.
The 19-year-old fighter said he was sleeping between barricades on
the main road through Tahan when gunfire woke him.
"I grabbed my hunting gun and two soldiers started shooting at me,"
he said. "I had one chance to shoot back, but my gun didn't work."
He sheltered behind a wall, then fled during a lull.
The Tatmadaw advanced systematically, blocking off escape routes,
one resistance member in Tahan said.
"We don't understand the Tatmadaw mindset," the 43-year-old said
from a safe house. "That's our mistake."
Several young fighters were among the 13 dead at the end of a day of
fighting, activists said.
Survivors had now gone underground, they said.
"We were not safe in Kale anymore," the 19-year-old fighter said by
phone from northeastern India, whose border is just over 100 km (60
miles away). Indian authorities declined to comment.
A local NLD lawmaker involved in forming the Kalay Civil Army said
fighters had been asked to lay low for now, while equipment and
training were improved across Myanmar.
"Maybe the time will come to fight with the Tatmadaw," the lawmaker
said, "For that, we will need good training."
(Reporting by Reuters staff; Editing by Michael Perry)
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