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Myanmar rebels capture town near Thai border

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Hundreds of refugees crossed over the river fron-tier between Myanmar and Thailand on Friday following the fall of a strategic border town to rebels fighting Myanmar’s military junta.

Some said they feared air strikes by the Myan-mar military after the rebel capture of Myawaddy, a town of around 200,000 people lying across the Moei River from the Thai city of Mae Sot.

“That’s why I escaped here. They can’t bomb Thailand,” said one woman, Moe Moe Thet San, a Myawaddy resident who stood in line at a border check-point with dozens of people in the heat. She had crossed the border with her young son.

Thailand’s foreign minister said on Friday his government was preparing for an influx of refugees and he urged the Myanmar junta to scale back the violence.

Thailand was also working with members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) to revive a stalled peace plan for Myanmar, Parnpree Bahiddha-Nukara said.

“It is our neighbouring country and we don’t want to see violence,” Parnpree told reporters following a visit to Mae Sot. “We want to see them talking with each other. They can use us as a broker if they want.”

Myawaddy was wrested from military control by anti-junta forces led by the Karen National Union rebel group on Thursday. Thailand was considering alternative trade routes in case of road closures caused by the fighting, Parnpree said.

A group of 200 junta soldiers who had retreated earlier this week from their base to the Thai border were still in the area and Thai authorities had so far not received any requests from them to cross over, Parnpree said.

“They have to drop their weapons, change into civilian clothes before we would allow them to cross over the border,” he said.

This group of junta soldiers sheltering near a bridge came under attack from drones deployed by resistance groups late on Friday, local media reported.

Security in the area was tightened following the attack, with armed Thai soldiers patrolling the riverside and cordoning off some parts under one of the two bridges across to Myawaddy, according to a witness.—AFP

 

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