logo
Myanmar military claims recapture of strategic town from rebel force

Myanmar military claims recapture of strategic town from rebel force

Al Jazeera18-07-2025
Myanmar's military government has claimed to have removed rebel fighters and recaptured a town after a yearlong battle near the country's main army training academy, marking a rare turnaround for the regime in the northeast region of the country.
The country's ruling military announced on Thursday that it made the advance in Shan State's town of Nawnghkio, which had been under the control of the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA).
The rebel group, part of the Three Brotherhood Alliance, had seized the strategically important town, which sits on a key highway linking central Myanmar to China, in July 2024.
In a statement published in the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar, the military government said it had retaken Nawnghkio after '566 armed engagements within 11 operational months'. A rare one-page spread in the newspaper showed soldiers holding rifles aloft in celebration. It detailed the battle, admitting initial attacks led to officers and enlisted men 'sacrificing their lives'.
But 'by combining strategic ground and air military tactics', the military captured 'the whole Nawnghkio area' by Wednesday, it said.
Nawnghkio is located about 40km (25 miles) from Pyin Oo Lwin, the town that hosts the country's main military officer training academy, and some 80km (50 miles) from Myanmar's second-most populous city, Mandalay.
In a statement, the TNLA did not acknowledge the military government's claim of victory, saying only that 'it has been difficult to continue administrative work in the town due to the heavy offensive'. The TNLA added that it had 'moved civil administration services to safe locations'.
While the combined rebel offensive against government forces has inflicted sweeping losses since it was launched in October 2023, analysts say the military government's control over large population centres is secure as it wields an air force capable of staving off large-scale rebel advances.
Northeastern Lashio city was also captured by the rebels but was handed back to the ruling military in April after a deal brokered by China.
Since a 2021 military coup toppled the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi and ignited a civil war in Myanmar, a myriad of pro-democracy armed groups and ethnic rebel armies have joined forces to fight against military rule.
The groups in the Three Brotherhood Alliance, which also include the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army and the Arakan Army, have been fighting for decades for greater autonomy from Myanmar's central government. The alliance is also loosely allied with the People's Defence Force, a pro-democracy resistance group that has emerged to fight the military regime.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

N Korea says S Korea ‘cannot be a diplomatic partner' as US drills continue
N Korea says S Korea ‘cannot be a diplomatic partner' as US drills continue

Al Jazeera

time7 minutes ago

  • Al Jazeera

N Korea says S Korea ‘cannot be a diplomatic partner' as US drills continue

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's sister has again dismissed peace overtures from South Korean President Lee Jae-myung, declaring that Pyongyang will never see Seoul as a partner for diplomacy, according to state media. The report by KCNA on Wednesday came as South Korea and its ally, the United States, continued their joint military drills, which includes testing an upgraded response to North Korea's growing nuclear capabilities. Kim Yo Jong, who is among her brother's top foreign policy officials, denounced the exercises as a 'reckless' invasion rehearsal, according to KCNA, and said that Lee had a 'dual personality' by talking about wanting to pursue peace while continuing the war games. She made the comments during a meeting on Tuesday with senior Foreign Ministry officials about her brother's diplomatic strategies in the face of persistent threats from rivals and a rapidly shifting geopolitical landscape, KCNA reported. 'The Republic of Korea [ROK], which is not serious, weighty and honest, will not have even a subordinate work in the regional diplomatic arena centred on the DPRK [The Democratic Republic of Korea],' Kim said, using the official names for the two countries. 'The ROK cannot be a diplomatic partner of the DPRK,' she added. The statement followed the latest outreach by Lee, who said last week that Seoul would seek to restore a 2018 military agreement between the two countries aimed at reducing border tensions, while urging Pyongyang to reciprocate by rebuilding trust and resuming dialogue. Since taking office in June, Lee has moved to repair relations that worsened under his conservative predecessor's hardline policies, including removing front-line speakers that broadcast anti-North Korean propaganda and K-pop. In a nationally televised speech on Friday, Lee said his government respects North Korea's current system and that Seoul 'will not pursue any form of unification by absorption and has no intention of engaging in hostile acts'. But he also stressed that South Korea remains committed to an international push to denuclearise North Korea and urged Pyongyang to resume dialogue with Washington and Seoul. Kim Yo Jong, who previously dismissed Lee's overtures as a 'miscalculation', described the latest gestures as 'a fancy and a pipe dream'. 'We have witnessed and experienced the dirty political system of the ROK for decades… and now we are sick and tired of it,' she said, claiming that South Korea's 'ambition for confrontation' with North Korea has persisted both under the conservative and liberal governments. 'Lee Jae-myung is not that man to change this flow of history' she continued, adding that 'the South Korean 'government continues to speak rambling pretence about peace and improving relations in order to lay the blame on us for inter-Korean relations never returning again'. Kim Yo Jong's comments follow Kim Jong Un's statements, carried by KCNA on Tuesday, which called the US-South Korea military exercises an 'obvious expression of their will to provoke war'. He also promised a rapid expansion of his nuclear forces as he inspected his most advanced warship being fitted with nuclear-capable systems. The North Korean leader last year declared that North Korea was abandoning longstanding goals of a peaceful unification with South Korea and rewrote Pyongyang's constitution to mark Seoul as a permanent enemy. His government has repeatedly dismissed calls by Washington and Seoul to revive negotiations aimed at winding down his nuclear and missile programmes, which derailed in 2019, after a collapsed summit with US President Donald Trump during his first term. Kim has also made Moscow the priority of his foreign policy since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, sending troops and weapons to support President Vladimir Putin's war, while also using the conflict as a distraction to accelerate his military nuclear programme.

Kim Jong Un pledges to speed up nuclear build-up over US-South Korea drills
Kim Jong Un pledges to speed up nuclear build-up over US-South Korea drills

Al Jazeera

time16 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

Kim Jong Un pledges to speed up nuclear build-up over US-South Korea drills

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has threatened to accelerate the expansion of his country's nuclear arsenal, condemning ongoing United States-South Korea military exercises as a sign of 'hostile intent', according to state media. Kim, who made the remarks during a visit to a naval destroyer, called the drills 'an obvious expression of their will to provoke war', according to a report published on Tuesday. He insisted North Korea must 'rapidly expand' its nuclear weapons programme, pointing to the inclusion of what he called 'nuclear elements' in the drills. The annual Ulchi Freedom Shield drills began this week, combining large-scale field manoeuvres with upgraded responses to what the US and South Korea claim are North Korea's growing nuclear capabilities. The exercises will run for 11 days, with half of the 40 field training events rescheduled to September. Purely defensive South Korean officials said the adjustment reflects President Lee Jae Myung's call to lower tensions, though analysts doubt Pyongyang will respond positively. Seoul and Washington claim the exercises are purely defensive, but Pyongyang regularly denounces them as preparations for invasion and has often replied with weapons tests. North Korea's position is expected to feature in talks between US President Donald Trump and South Korean President Lee in Washington later this month, with efforts to curb Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions high on the agenda. 'Through this move, North Korea is demonstrating its refusal to accept denuclearisation and the will to irreversibly upgrade nuclear weapons,' said Hong Min, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul. Research published by the Federation of American Scientists last year estimated that North Korea may have produced enough fissile material for up to 90 nuclear warheads, though the number actually assembled was likely closer to 50. Alongside its nuclear ambitions, Pyongyang is also advancing its naval capabilities. The North Korean public broadcaster KCNA reported that the country aims to complete construction of a third 5,000-tonne Choe Hyon-class destroyer by October next year, and is testing cruise and anti-air missiles for the vessels.

Myanmar's military government announces elections for December 28
Myanmar's military government announces elections for December 28

Al Jazeera

time2 days ago

  • Al Jazeera

Myanmar's military government announces elections for December 28

Myanmar's military government has announced that long-promised elections will begin on December 28 amid widespread scepticism that authorities will allow a free and fair vote. The Union Election Commission said on Monday that the vote would be the first phase in 'step-by-step' general elections. 'Further dates for the subsequent steps of the elections will be announced accordingly,' the election commission said. State media said some 55 parties had registered for the polls, including nine that would compete for seats nationwide. The announcement comes after Myanmar's military administration, led by Min Aung Hlaing, last month declared the end of a state of emergency for parts of the country in preparation for elections in December and January. Min Aung Hlaing's administration imposed emergency rule on Myanmar after removing Aung San Suu Kyi's democratically elected government in a 2021 coup. Opposition groups, including Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, have pledged to boycott the elections, viewing them as a sham aimed at buttressing Min Aung Hlaing's hold on power. Myanmar has been racked by civil war since the coup, with large swaths of the country controlled by various rebel groups, including the People's Defence Force, the Arakan Army, and the Ta'ang National Liberation Army. The Southeast Asian country last held elections in November 2020. After the National League for Democracy swept the poll in a landslide, the military claimed the vote was tainted by widespread fraud before arresting Aung San Suu Kyi and numerous other democratically elected leaders. Independent election monitoring groups, including the Asian Network for Free Elections and the Carter Center, have dismissed claims of widespread fraud and said the outcome was broadly in line with the wishes of the public.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store