Myanmar military says seven soldiers killed in ambush last week

Rebels want greater autonomy but military stresses need for centralised government

The military has accused insurgents of ambushing an army patrol and laying siege to a base near Kunlong (marked in red on the map above),  last Wednesday. Map: Google maps
The military has accused insurgents of ambushing an army patrol and laying siege to a base near Kunlong (marked in red on the map above), last Wednesday. Map: Google maps

Seven Myanmar soldiers were killed and 20 wounded in an attack by rebels in the northeastern frontier with China five days ago, state media said on Monday.

The military accused insurgents of ambushing an army patrol and laying siege to a base near Kunlong, about 30km from the Chinese border, last Wednesday, the state-backed Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported.

“The remnant Kokang insurgent group launched unprovoked attacks on Tatmadaw camps and columns while the government is implementing the peace process,” the newspaper said, using the traditional name for the Myanmar military.

The latest round of peace talks between guerrilla groups and the semi-civilian government that took over in 2011 after nearly 50 years of military rule ended without agreement on September 27th.

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Most of the rebel groups have been battling for greater autonomy under a federal system but the military has long stressed the need for a strong, centralised government as set down in a 2008 military-drafted constitution.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang said he did not know any details about the latest killings but hoped the border remained stable.

“We hope that Myanmar can maintain peace, stability and development and use talks to push for ethnic reconciliation, and especially maintain peace and stability on the China-Myanmar border,” Mr Qin said.

The Kokang insurgents, also known as the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA), were formerly part of the Communist Party of Burma, a China-backed guerrilla alliance that battled the Myanmar government until it fell apart in 1989.

The MNDAA signed a ceasefire agreement with the government that year, the first of about a dozen ethnic armed groups to do so.

Clashes between government troops and guerrilla groups break out from time to time despite such agreements.

The MNDAA last fought Myanmar’s military in 2009, pushing tens of thousands of refugees into southwestern China, angering Beijing.

Agencies