Chris Sidoti warns that people fleeing the Myanmar military has consequences not only for Myanmar’s neighbours but for everybody else as well in The Sydney Morning Herald
‘They’ve started digging bunkers’: Myanmar descends closer to civil war
By Chris Barrett
“As they were getting on the boats to cross to the other side they received a message that the jet fighters were on their way again,” Naw Wah Khu Shee, the director of Karen Peace Support Network, a civilian group in Myanmar’s southeastern borderlands, told The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.
“They feel scared, they feel frightened. We don’t know if there will be another attack or not so since they have no other choice they’ve started digging bunkers.”
As the atrocities mount in the Myanmar military’s murderous crackdown against the pro-democracy movement, with more than 500 people now killed in the chaos of the past two months, the nation is threatening to descend into civil war.
Three of Myanmar’s ethnic armed organisations, which control large swathes of the country, on Tuesday threatened to enter the conflict and “fight alongside the people” if the junta continued to attack protesters, with security forces firing into funerals, bodies being burnt and dozens of children losing their lives.
The groups – the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, the Arakan Army and Ta’ang National Liberation Army – made the statement a day after one of the main protest organisers, the General Strike Committee of Nationalities, appealed to the country’s many ethnic militias to join in the struggle against the new regime.
There have already been clashes near the Thai border between one of the most established minority armed forces, the Karen National Union, and the military, which on the weekend launched the first air strikes in the region in 25 years, claiming at least three lives.
The air assault induced between 2000 to 3000 people from a refugee camp on the Myanmar side of the border to cross the Salween river and seek refuge in the Thai province of Mae Hong Son.
Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha had said on Monday the country would accept the refugees – “We don’t want to have an exodus into our territory, but we have to take care of human rights, too,” he said – but other local officials said they should be not be allowed to cross the border.
Khu Shee said there had been “indirect pressure” on the refugees to cross back over the border in the day after they arrived.
“So it’s really hard for the kids and the sick and the elderly. The children were asking for food and asking for water, they were crying. Normally we would respond to those humanitarian needs but for this group we unable to access them – the army has not allowed anyone to reach them from the Thai side.”
It is not the first attempted exodus from Myanmar since the February 1 coup. Hundreds including policemen have also fled to India’s Mizoram state but that border has since been sealed and the Myanmar military has asked India to send them back.
The pressure on Myanmar’s borders has signalled the elevation of the bloody crackdown into a regional humanitarian crisis.
“We’ve certainly seen the first signs of mass migration,” said former United Nations investigator Chris Sidoti, a member of the new Special Advisory Council for Myanmar who lives in Sydney.
“There are a lot of people who have gone from the Bamar area in central Myanmar into the ethnic minority areas and the ethnic minorities have said they will provide protection. But there is also increased military activity in those areas. People are fleeing as a result and this has consequences not only for Myanmar’s neighbours but for everybody else as well.”