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Myanmar ethnic armed groups claim capture of regional military headquarters, gem mining centre

BANGKOK (AP) – Ethnic armed groups claimed on Thursday to have captured two strategically important towns in northeastern Myanmar: Lashio, which houses the major regional military headquarters, and Mogok, the centre of the country’s lucrative gem-mining industry.

Their fall would be the biggest in a series of setbacks suffered by Myanmar’s military government this year, and raises questions about whether the ruling military council could be forced to give up trying to hold contested territory in order to consolidate a defence of the central heartland.

The ruling military council denied its Lashio headquarters had been taken over, and two town residents contacted by phone said fighting there was continuing.

Phone contact with Mogok has been cut off, but video posted on social media appeared to show residents cheering the arrival of ethnic guerrilla soldiers.

Lashio, the biggest city in the northern part of Shan state, and Mogok, the ruby-mining centre in the upper Mandalay region, have been the targets of an offensive by the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA), and the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), since late June.

The MNDAA said in a statement published on Thursday on its Facebook page that the group had completely captured the military’s Northeast Command headquarters in Lashio at 4am, after 23 days of the fighting.

File photo shows army officers standing guard as police officers patrol in Lashio, northern Shan State, Myanmar. PHOTO: AP

The MNDAA had captured a regional military headquarters in Laukkaing, a key city on the Chinese border, during the earlier Three Brotherhood Alliance offensive, but the Lashio headquarters is more important. The MNDAA statement said its claimed capture of Lashio was a “historic victory”.

However, ruling military council spokesperson Major General Zaw Min Tun said in a message sent to the journalists on Thursday that the claims of the capture of the military command headquarters were untrue.

He said the insurgents had infiltrated some neighbourhoods on the outskirts of the city, and the army is fighting to clear them out.

“The loss of Lashio would be a major strategic blow for the regime,” Singapore-based analyst Morgan Michaels with the International Institute of Strategic Studies who runs its Myanmar Conflict Map project, said in an email. “The city is home to the Northeast Command and is the junta’s last major line of defence in northern Shan State. There could be about 5,000 regime defenders in the city, so depending on what happens to them – whether they withdraw, surrender, or get destroyed – that could have an impact on the army’s overall force posture as well.”

The TNLA, in a statement published on the Telegram messaging platform, said it had completely captured Mogok after seizing all the military outposts and government offices there in a month of the fighting. Mogok, which is at the centre of Myanmar’s lucrative gem mining industry, is about 110 kilometres northeast of Mandalay, the country’s second-largest city.

It said it captured about 30 army soldiers and more than 200 weapons.

Photos and videos circulating widely on social media were said to show the members of TNLA and its allies in the People’s Defence Force being warmly welcomed by the town’s residents

However, the claims about Mogok’s capture could not be verified independently, with access to the Internet and mobile phone services in the town area mostly cut off.

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