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Jailed Japanese executive released from prison; Arakan Army and military accused of targeting Rohingya

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A customer leaves one of the AEON Orange supermarkets in Yangon on July 1. (Credit: AP)

Jailed Japanese executive released from prison

Japanese media reported that Hiroshi Kasamatsu, the director of the AEON Orange supermarket chain in Yangon, was released from prison on Monday. The 53-year-old executive was convicted of selling rice up to 70 percent higher than the rate set by the Myanmar Rice Federation (MRF) and sentenced to one-year in prison on July 11.

“He was released [Monday],” said regime spokesperson Zaw Min Tun. Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed the release of Hiroshi Kasamatsu on Tuesday. It has not been reported whether he has returned to Japan. Tokyo continued to demand his release throughout the ordeal

Hiroshi Kasamatsu was among 11 business leaders who were arrested for selling rice at prices higher than those set by the regime since it began inspecting rice merchants on June 17. Two other Japanese nationals have been jailed since the 2021 military coup, but have been released by the regime.

An unproductive meeting between the regime and China’s envoy

A meeting between regime leader Min Aung Hlaing and the Chinese Special Envoy Deng Xijun reportedly “did not go well,” sources close to the military told DVB. China’s envoy met with regime officials in Naypyidaw on Aug. 8.   

“The army is unable to protect most of China’s interests,” said Lynn Htet Aung, a former army captain who defected to the Civil Disobedience Movement (CDM). “China might communicate [directly] with groups that could potentially protect its business interests.”

Min Aung Hlaing reportedly requested that Beijing stop supplying arms factories operating in areas under the control of ethnic armed groups along the border. He also questioned China’s tacit support for the Brotherhood Alliance, claiming it has supplied weapons to resistance forces fighting the military since the 2021 coup. Beijing has not responded to these allegations.  

Arakan Army and military accused of targeting Rohingya

Human Rights Watch stated that the military and the Arakan Army (AA) have been carrying out arson attacks and killings of civilians, including members of the Rohingya and Rakhine communities in northern Arakan State’s Maungdaw and Buthidaung townships.

“Rohingya and Rakhine civilians are bearing the brunt of the atrocities that the Myanmar military and opposition Arakan Army are committing,” said Elaine Pearson, the Asia director at Human Rights Watch. She added that both sides have used hate speech to cause communal tension, which has exacerbated violence in the region.

The AA claimed to have rescued more than 13,000 Maungdaw residents – including Rohingya – on Aug. 9. Four days earlier, witnesses stated that the AA targeted Rohingya fleeing from Maungdaw into Bangladesh. It was also accused of burning down Rohingya homes when it seized control of Buthidaung on May 18. Khaing Thukha, the AA spokesperson, has denied all accusations and has blamed the military and Rohingya armed groups.

Read our op-ed: A genocide against the Rohingya is continuing to unfold with global inaction by Pacifist Farooq, a Rohingya refugee living in Bangladesh.

News by Region

The 74th anniversary of Karen Martyrs’ Day was held in Hpa-An District of Karen State on Aug. 12. (Credit: DVB)

KAREN—The Karen National Union (KNU) Chairperson Padoh Saw Kwe Htoo Win said that the regime is weak and that it may soon collapse due to the military’s continuing defeats on the battlefield. He made these remarks in a statement released on the 74th anniversary of Karen Martyrs’ Day.  

He called on the Karen people to unite and defeat the “chauvinistic military dictatorship.” Karen Martyrs’ Day commemorates the death of Saw Ba U Gyi, the first KNU president, who was killed by the military in 1950. It honors all who have fought in the Karen resistance every Aug. 12.

MANDALAY—The People’s Defense Force (PDF) seized control of the ancient town of Tagaung, located in Thabeikkyin Township of northern Mandalay Region, on Monday. An unknown number of homes were destroyed by airstrikes since the fighting began on Sunday. 

“There were nearly 100 army personnel in the town. The military staged retaliatory attacks with their aircraft, but we successfully took control of the town,” a Tagaung PDF spokesperson told DVB. Burmese royal chronicles claimed that Tagaung was founded in 850 BCE.

At least two civilians have been killed by artillery attacks since Monday as fighting between the PDF and the military began in Taungtha Township, located in western Mandalay Region, on Saturday. The Taungtha PDF claimed that it staged an attack on a factory and a security post for a natural gas pipeline. 

“We set fire to the buildings that they were deployed at,” said a Taungtha PDF spokesperson. Most of the town’s residents have fled their homes due to the fighting. Resistance forces launched an offensive against the military in western Mandalay Region on Aug. 10. 

SHAN—One civilian was killed and one was injured by retaliatory airstrikes carried out by the military on Namhsan, located in the Palaung Self-Administered Zone of northern Shan State, on Monday. “Six bombs were dropped,” said a Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) spokesperson. Five homes were destroyed.

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A genocide against the Rohingya is continuing to unfold with global inaction

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Guest contributor

Pacifist Farooq

According to international and Bangladesh media reports, 34 dead Rohingya were found at a beach near Teknaf, located in southeast Bangladesh across the border from Maungdaw Township of Myanmar. Hundreds of people are still missing. 

The smell of dead Rohingya has spread as far as Cox’s Bazar, where one million refugees languish inside squalid camps. About 300 who were lucky to survive and somehow made it across the river in boats to Bangladesh were detained by the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) on Aug. 9, then deported back to Myanmar. 

When will the world wake up to protect the Rohingya as the international community has promised us?

For me, being a Rohingya means my whole life is a nightmare. As I try to sleep, the corpses of murdered Rohingya float by my eyes. Being born as a Muslim in a Buddhist-dominated country is the biggest crime I have committed.

When I talk on the phone with my relatives living in Maungdaw, all I hear is the sound of gun and artillery fire. No one knows how many thousands of Rohingya have been killed in the crossfire between the Myanmar military and the Arakan Army (AA), under the complete communications blackout by the regime, since the war resumed on Nov. 13.

On Aug. 5, over 200 people were killed and over 200 were injured in the multiple drone attacks. I met a survivor, Mohammed Elias, in the refugee camp of Cox’s Bazar.  

“Because the fighting was intense in the village, thousands of people, including me and my family members, gathered along the fence near the Naf River, waiting for the darkness to cross it,” Mohammed Elias told me. 

“The Arakan Army attacked us with eight to 10 drones. I have lost eight of my family members,” he sobbed.

When I asked him to share his testimony in a video interview, he lamented: “I have nothing left to lose. You can do whatever you like [to highlight what has happened].”

I talked on the phone with another survivor who works with the Myanmar civil society organization, the Center for Social Integrity. He lost five of his children on Aug. 6 when his boat capsized in the river. 

“People got killed here and there. At least 50 people were killed each day. So we left the village at night and boarded a small boat. Just after a few minutes, the boat sank due to rough weather. While my little son was drowning, he tore my shirt and screamed,” the man recounted.

One of my friend’s family members was refused entry into Bangladesh five times by the BGB. Thankfully, this person succeeded on the sixth attempt. In some cases, the AA attacked boats with drones, according to my friend. Rohingya civilians are trapped between the genocidal Myanmar military and an increasingly genocidal AA.

The AA has denied all accusations that it targets Rohingya, but it also doesn’t call them by our names. They call us “Muslims” or “Bengalis,” using the same slur towards us that the military uses. Calling Rohingya “Muslims” is nothing but hypocrisy as it is not the name of an ethnic group and has been used by Myanmar society to discriminate against us and not recognize our community.

We never call Rakhine or Burmese as “Buddhist” only. So they must use our name of Rohingya to refer to us. Islam is our religion, but it’s only part of our identity.

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya genocide survivors are penned into the open-air prison of northern Arakan State’s Maungdaw and Buthidaung. Rohingya are being starved to death with no access to medicine nor medical facilities. 

Over 2,000 have been reportedly arrested by the AA with their family not even knowing their whereabouts. Many more Rohingya youth have been arrested and are in constant fear. The media has been unable to provide up-to-date coverage of this rapidly deteriorating situation on the ground in northern Arakan.

Myanmar media are portraying the AA as heroes for fighting and beating the military. They should understand what is really happening on the ground. If the media remain neutral in times of injustice, they are inadvertently supporting oppression.

It is important to note that the Spring Revolution can be destroyed if nobody speaks out against the oppression faced by minority groups like the Rohingya.

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has condemned the atrocities committed by the Myanmar military and the AA against the Rohingya. But this is not enough. 

We need the U.N. Security Council to condemn the massacre and act immediately to protect the Rohingya in Myanmar. The international community’s continued inaction against the Myanmar military is what has left the Rohingya to face a second wave of genocide (as I’ve previously warned). 

Most importantly, the international community should talk to Bangladesh about opening its borders for the Rohingya waiting along the Naf River to escape the violence and genocidal intent of both sides fighting for control of northern Arakan.


Pacifist Farooq is a Rohingya refugee, poet, and teacher living in the world’s largest refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.

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Firebrand Buddhist monk Wirathu criticizes Min Aung Hlaing; Increased scrutiny on citizens traveling abroad

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Ashin Wirathu speaks at a rally in Myeik, Tanintharyi Region in 2019 against proposed changes to the 2008 constitution. (Credit: DVB)

Firebrand Buddhist monk Wirathu criticizes Min Aung Hlaing

Ashin Wirathu criticized regime leader Min Aung Hlaing over the loss of the Northeastern Regional Military Command (RMC) headquarters in Lashio, and other towns in northern Shan State. The firebrand Buddhist monk made the remarks in a video that was circulated by pro-military social media accounts on Aug. 8. 

“It is right that the regional [military] commanders protect their towns from being taken. But does your boss [Min Aung Hlaing] really want to fight? Just ask him if he wants to donate other towns too. Instead of surrendering [the towns and RMC], question him bluntly,” said Wirathu, who is known for inciting violence against Muslims.

The Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) took control of the RMC in Lashio on Aug. 3. The loss of the RMC has led to more criticism of Min Aung Hlaing’s leadership capabilities. Another pro-military monk called on Min Aung Hlaing to step down during a protest against the Brotherhood Alliance in Pyin Oo Lwin on Jan. 16.

Increased scrutiny on citizens traveling abroad

Men aged 18 to 35 traveling abroad have faced increased scrutiny from immigration officials at Yangon International Airport with some being prevented from traveling abroad due to claims of “incomplete documentation,” since Aug. 1, travelers have told DVB. 

“If you’re traveling with a PV [visit] passport, you must provide proof of a round-trip plane ticket, have 20,000 baht or 500 dollars on hand [and] have a hotel booking. If you’re traveling with a PJ [job] passport, you will need a letter of employment,” said Min Min, a man who was recently scrutinized by immigration officials at Yangon International Airport.

Some Burma nationals who work overseas that have returned to their homes have faced issues when leaving if they could not demonstrate proof that they have paid income tax or transferred 25 percent of their wage via banks. The regime has imposed restrictions on international travel after it enacted its military conscription law on Feb. 10.

Daily allowance for workers increased a second time

The regime’s National Committee for Setting Minimum Wages announced on Friday that workers from private companies have been receiving a daily allowance of 2,000 kyat since Aug. 1. This is an increase of 1,000 kyat per day, which was set in 2023 and is in addition to the minimum wage of 4,800 kyat. 

“We want to increase our daily wages instead of allowance fees because most factories don’t count these allowance fees on holidays as well for overtime. Some factories do not give allowance fees,” said a garment factory worker in Yangon. The new adjustment does not apply to small businesses with fewer than 10 workers or family-run companies. 

The minimum wage has remained the same since the ousted National League for Democracy (NLD) government increased it to 4,800 kyat in 2018. “We want the daily wage to be pegged at $3 USD,” said a spokesperson of the Myanmar Industry Craft Service-Trade Unions Federation (MICS-TUsF). The foreign exchange rate reached a record high of 6,000 kyat per $1 USD on Friday.

Read our feature story on how Myanmar factory workers continue to fight for labor rights since the 2021 military coup.

News by Region

The annual Karen wrist-tying ceremony in Mae Sot, Thailand on Monday. The Karen tie threads around their wrists as a way to protect themselves from illness and to preserve their cultural heritage. (Credit: DVB)

ARAKAN—The military has built fences around Sittwe since early August. “Poles for the metal fence panels were installed and the fencing began on Friday. They want the people not to wander along the Kaladan River bank and to prevent the Arakan Army (AA) from entering the town easily,” a Sittwe resident told Narinjara News. 

Sittwe residents claimed that two ships carrying materials to install metal fences from Yangon arrived in July. Regime authorities have increased security and have planted landmines around Sittwe, since the AA seized control of areas surrounding the city. The AA began its offensive against the military on Nov. 13.

MANDALAY—The regime is preventing civil servants who have been attending training at the Central Institute of Civil Service-Upper Myanmar (Zee Pin Gyi) in Pyin Oo Lwin Township, located in northeastern Mandalay Region, from returning to their family homes in other states and regions. 

“The institute might be a target if there are clashes in the town. It is like the military is using civil servants as hostages,” said a mother of one of the civil servants working at the institute. The regime has been evacuating the families of military personnel, police officers, and its administrative officials from Pyin Oo Lwin since Aug. 7.

NAYPYIDAW—The regime accepted the appointment of Ma Jia to the post of China’s ambassador to Burma, regime media reported. Ma Jia previously worked at China’s embassies in Pakistan, Malaysia, Japan, Singapore, and the U.K. 

The appointment comes as fighting between the Brotherhood Alliance and the military continues in northern Shan State near the China border. Beijing has called for peace talks after a ceasefire signed on Jan. 11 broke down on June 25. China’s previous ambassador, Chen Hai, announced his departure from the post during a meeting with Min Aung Hlaing on July 4.

Read: The decline of the military: A cycle of blame, terror, and oppression. DVB English News is on X, FB, IG, Threads, TikTok. Subscribe on YouTube. Find us on YouTube Music.

Myanmar factory workers continue to fight for labor rights

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Soldiers speak to workers at Hosheng garment factory in Yangon's Shwepyitha Township. Six workers there were arrested in June 2023 for demanding a wage increase.

*Wah Wah is a former employee at a Chinese-owned sports equipment factory in Wartayar Industrial Zone, located in Shwepyitha Township of Yangon Region. She was fired after reporting a case of sexual harassment against a workplace colleague. 

“Workers’ complaints are ignored. [Management] does not even attempt to mediate,” she added.

Wah Wah was terminated by the factory without receiving the four warnings required by the employment contract she signed with management. The human resources team at the factory accused her of being rude to them, so they didn’t want to help her.

“Since I was fired unfairly, other workers began making demands. [The owner] summoned the military, and one of the workers in the group was slapped by a soldier,” Wah Wah recounted.

This incident in Shwepyitha was just one example of the human and labor rights violations workers in Myanmar face every day.

Since the 2021 military coup, workers’ unions have claimed that workers have been facing human rights violations that amount to modern-day slavery inside Myanmar’s factories.

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) states that: “No one shall be held in slavery or servitude. Everyone is entitled, in full equality, to a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal.”

The UDHR goes on to state that: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression. Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association. Everyone has the right to social security. Everyone has the right to work with just and favorable remuneration. Everyone has the right to form and join trade unions.”

Following the 2021 military coup, most of the factories still operating in Myanmar are now owned by Chinese nationals. They have aligned themselves with the military and are reportedly committing human rights violations, according to trade unions.

The Myanmar Garment Manufacturers Association (MGMA) stated in its August 2023 report that there are 817 member factories in Myanmar, but 271 have ceased operations.

The MGMA added that workers face unfair labor practices, such as being forced to work overtime, not receiving a fair wage, and not being paid on-time.

“There have been cases of workers losing arms or legs in the workplace, which are clear examples of human rights violations. Those who lost limbs were simply laid off without being notified [by management],” said Wah Wah.

The International Labor Organization (ILO) states that freedom of association and freedom of expression are defined as fundamental rights of workers.

Since 2021, the military has declared many labor organizations illegal, and some labor leaders have been arrested and jailed, causing many labor activists to go underground or to leave the country.

“During this period, the workers are afraid of being arrested with other charges, so they stop talking about serious issues, so the situation can be concluded as that the situation is getting worse,” said Myo Aye, a spokesperson at the Solidarity Trade Union of Myanmar (STUM).

Workers have reported that factory owners have paid bribes to regional military officials. When complaints arise in the factory, the owners call in the military to threaten the workers.

“If an incident occurs in the factory, the factory authorities either call the military or contact the highest official in Shwepyitha Township,” said a worker who spoke to DVB on the condition of anonymity, fearing for her safety.

“Workers who cannot finish the targeted number of clothing pieces are forced to walk on their knees, being cursed and hit, pushed around and physically and verbally abused,” said Moe Sandar Myint, the chairperson of the New Light Federations of Labor Unions – Myanmar (NLF – Myanmar).

The wage received by most factory workers is 4,800 kyat ($2.28 USD) per day with an additional allowance of 1,000 kyat (0.48 USD) since last year. They can earn from 5,800 to 6,800 kyat ($2.76-3.24 USD) per day total, according to workers.

There are more than 700 workers at garment factories in Yangon. Most garment workers are women. They are required to work more than eight hours per day depending on the daily targets.

Several said that their lunch and toilet breaks have been limited. Many fear losing their jobs due to the country’s deteriorating economic situation over the last three years.

The ILO stated that since 2021, 41 percent of workers were fired, and only 29.5 percent of them received any compensation. Women and youth workers received less compensation compared to their male counterparts.

Deputy General Secretary of the Confederation of Trade Unions of Myanmar (CTUM) Phyo Sandar Soe was elected as an executive member of the ILO.

She said that she is calling on ILO members to impose sanctions against the military regime in Naypyidaw, which seized the levers of government after it deposed Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party, which was seen as more sympathetic to labor unions and workers’ rights. 

The ongoing violations of human and labor rights in Myanmar shows the need for international attention to the plight of workers. The continued arrest of labor leaders for demanding workplace health and safety, or wage increases, has meant there is nothing to protect them from the regime’s lawfare against them.

As factory workers like Wah Wah, fired for taking a stand against sexual harassment, continue to push for change, additional support from the international community or pressure against the regime would be welcomed.

Wah Wah said that the rights violations she faced at the factory were so severe that she continued to work there thinking the situation would improve, but sadly it continued to worsen.

*name changed to protect identity

Harmony Fest a blend of Myanmar and Lanna Thai jazz music

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Harmony Fest featured the Myanmar Jazz Club and the Lanna Music Band at Bamboo Family Market in Chiang Mai, Thailand on Aug. 10.

Harmony Fest featured the Myanmar Jazz Club and the Lanna Music Band at Bamboo Family Market in Chiang Mai, Thailand on Aug. 10. It was a celebration of music, heritage, unity and “good vibes” according to organizers from the Myanmar Jazz Club, which performed alongside the Lanna Music Band.

Htet Arkar is an entrepreneur and musician who promotes Myanmar traditional music.
Khin Poe Bagyi is a singer, with a repertoire spanning multiple genres including Buddhist religious songs and the Mahagita, Burmese classical songs.
Ito has been a composer, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist over the last 18 years.
Gabriel Phway is a singer.
Lanna Band perform at Bamboo Famiy Market in Chiang Mai, Thailand on Aug. 10.

Gold prices and kyat exchange rate reaches new record; NUG representative to India dismissed

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A gold shop clerk in Yangon selects jewelry for a customer. (Credit: YGEA)

Gold prices and kyat exchange rate reaches new record

Gold prices have reached a record high of up to seven million kyat per tical (0.0164 kg) on Friday. The regime’s Yangon Region Gold Entrepreneurs Association (YGEA) set the price for a tical of gold at 4.6 million kyat ($1,416 USD) on Aug. 7 but it reached nearly seven million kyat ($2,155 USD). 

“The military [regime] set fixed prices to keep commodity prices from rising but actually it didn’t work out in the market. Some gold shops showed the prices set by the association outside their shops but they made [gold] purchases with other prices,” said a gold shop owner with a store on Maha Bandula Road in Yangon. 

In June, the regime arrested 21 gold merchants, accusing them of manipulating gold prices. Several gold shops in Yangon were temporarily shut down. Gold prices have soared since the 2021 military coup. The foreign exchange rate reached a record high of 6,000 kyat per $1 USD on Friday. 

NUG representative to India dismissed

The National Unity Government (NUG) Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that Salai Isaac Khen, its representative to India, was dismissed on Aug. 1 following an investigation into allegations of sexual harassment and exploitation

The NUG added that its Central Committee for the Prevention of Sexual Harassment, Exploitation, and Abuse ruled that Salai Isaac Khen had “indeed committed sexual harassment.” The committee’s findings were based on documents and witness testimony, according to the NUG. 

Rohingya refugees cross a bamboo bridge in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh in May (Credit: Reuters)

A spike in violence-related injuries among Rohingya

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), also known as Doctors Without Borders, released a statement on Aug. 9 that it had treated 49 people with serious injuries for the first time in a year on this scale. Rohingya were targeted in northern Arakan’s Maungdaw Township on Aug. 5

“People must not be subjected to indiscriminate attacks and should be allowed to move to safer areas,” said the MSF Country Representative in Bangladesh Orla Murphy. “It is clear that the safe space for civilians in Myanmar is shrinking more each day, with people caught up in ongoing fighting and forced to make perilous journeys to Bangladesh to seek safety.” 

MSF treated patients who escaped from Maungdaw into Bangladesh. Rohingya reported being attacked while attempting to find boats to cross the Naf River into Bangladesh. Some Rohingya confirmed to MSF that they saw hundreds of dead bodies on the riverbanks. MSF suspended all healthcare services in northern Arakan on June 27

News by Region

ARAKAN—The Arakan Army (AA) announced on Aug. 8 that five inmates, including two political prisoners, were killed at Thandwe Prison when the military attacked its “rescue” operation in southern Arakan. A total of 372 inmates, including 43 political prisoners, were freed by the AA.

The AA stated that the 43 political prisoners have been returned to their families. It is now examining the 372 non-political prisoners criminal cases “in a legal manner.” The AA seized control of Thandwe Township on July 16.  

CHINLAND—Over 700 refugees from Matupi, Paletwa, Hakha and Thantlang townships staged a protest in Lawngtlai, southern Mizoram State of India, against the AA on Saturday. The protesters called on the AA to leave Chinland.

“The protestors chanted for the AA to leave Paletwa and Matupi,” said a Chin refugee in Lawngtlai. The AA seized Paletwa on Jan. 10 and is fighting alongside the Chin Brotherhood in Kanpetlet, Kyatwee (Kyindwe) and Matupi townships in southern Chinland. 

SHAN—At least 120 prisoners – out of the 2,487 total – were either killed or went missing during attacks by the military on Lashio Prison during fighting with the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) July 24-27, according to survivors. The MNDAA took control of the prison on July 28. 

“At least 80 were killed,” Gar Zar, a political prisoner who escaped from Lashio Prison, told DVB. Over 200 political prisoners were released by the MNDAA. Relatives of those freed said that most returned home to their families by Aug. 7. 

The National Democratic Alliance Army (NDAA) chairperson Sai Lin died from lung cancer at a hospital in China on Aug 8. He was 78. “Sai Lin has passed away. He had been battling lung cancer for over 20 years, and his condition worsened to a point where he could no longer endure it,” Kyi Myint, the NDAA general secretary and spokesperson, told DVB. 

Sai Lin founded the NDAA on April 19, 1989. He was from Muse, located in northern Shan State on the border with China. The NDAA, which is based in eastern Shan State, is a member of the Federal Political Negotiation and Consultative Committee (FPNCC). It declared neutrality in Operation 1027 despite its alliance with the MNDAA.  

MANDALAY—Residents and relatives of senior military and police officials in Pyin Oo Lwin have been relocated, sources close to the military told DVB. Rumors of an attack on Pyin Oo Lwin by the People’s Defense Force (PDF) and the Brotherhood Alliance, which includes the MNDAA, the AA, and the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), circulated online.

“How can they protect the people?” asked a Pyin Oo Lwin resident who was leaving for Mandalay, which is located 40 miles (64 km) south. The military’s Defense Services Academy is located in Pyin Oo Lwin. Regime media dismissed rumors of an impending attack, calling them unfounded.  

Watch: The 36th anniversary of the ‘8888 Uprising’ for democracy in Myanmar. DVB English News is on X, FB, IG, Threads & TikTok. Subscribe to us on YouTube.

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