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More than 2,000 people displaced, 19 killed in Myanmar fighting

by Reuters
Wednesday, 21 August 2019 09:51 GMT

Myanmar army soldiers queue to climb into a vehicle after an insurgent attack on the Myanmar-China major trading route in Nawnghkio township, Shan state, Myanmar August 15, 2019. REUTERS/Stringer

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The people displaced in the latest fighting are sheltering in monasteries around Lashio town in the north of Shan State, and are depending on aid groups and the government for their supplies

By Shoon Naing

YANGON, Aug 21 (Reuters) - More than 2,000 people have been forced to flee from their homes, and 19 have been killed, since fighting broke out between government troops and ethnic minority insurgents in northern Myanmar last week, government officials said Wednesday.

The escalation in hostilities in Myanmar's fractured north is another setback for civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi's bid to bring peace amid a stuttering transition from full military rule.

The people displaced in the latest fighting are sheltering in monasteries around Lashio town in the north of Shan State, and are depending on aid groups and the government for their supplies, aid workers said.

"We are providing basic rescue materials as well as cash to displaced people in the camps, the injured people and also to family members of those who got killed," Soe Naing, director of the Department of Disaster Management in Shan State, told Reuters.

Aid would be delivered as long as people needed to stay in the camps, he said.

Tension in the region has risen since Thursday, when a coalition of anti-government insurgent groups known as the Northern Alliance staged attacks including on an elite army college that killed more than a dozen people, mostly security forces personnel.

Nobel laureate Suu Kyi came to power following a landslide election win in late 2016, vowing to prioritise peace talks between ethnic minority guerrilla groups, the military and civilian government.

But conflict has escalated in Kachin State in the north and in Shan State, as the western Rakhine region on the border with Bangladesh.

(Reporting by Shoon Naing Editing by Robert Birsel)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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