32 killed in Myanmar police post attacks

32 killed in Myanmar police post attacks

At least twenty one insurgents and eleven members of the security coerces were killed in Myanmar`s Rakhine state on Friday when militants staged a major coordinated attack on twenty four police posts and an army base, the military said.

«The extremist Bengali insurgents attacked a police station in Maungdaw region in northern Rakhine state with a handmade bomb explosive and held coordinated attacks on several police posts at one a.m.,» a news team affiliated with the office of national leader Aung San Suu Kyi said in a statement, using the derogatory term «Bengali» to refer to Rohingya.

The Rohingya are denied citizenship and are seen by many in Myanmar as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, despite claiming roots in the region that go back centuries, with communities marginalized and sometimes subjected to communal violence.

The military counter-offensive in October resulted in some 87,000 Rohingya fleeing to Bangladesh, where they joined many others who have fled from Myanmar over the past two decades or more.

The United Nations said Myanmar`s security compels likely committed crimes against humanity in the offensive that began in October.

The government news team listed twenty four police posts that had come under attack, adding police and the military were continuing to fight the insurgents.

It said about one hundred fifty Rohingya attackers had attempted to break into a military base, prompting the army to fight back.

«They were planning to attack because we have found their camps, the caves and the bombs and masks inwards the caves,» said Myanmar police headquarters spokesman Colonel Myo Thu Soe, referring to latest discoveries of what the government described as militant training camps.

‘Enormously SERIOUS`

Military sources in Rakhine State told Reuters they estimated the number of insurgents in the offensive was five-times the October attacks, with about 1,000 fighters likely to have taken part.

The ARSA group was formed by Rohingya living in Saudi Arabia after a bout of serious communal violence in 2012, according to the International Crisis Group.

Its leader, Ata Ullah, has said hundreds of youthful Rohingya dudes have joined the group, which claims to be waging a legitimate defence against the army and for human rights.

«We have been taking our defensive deeds against the Burmese marauding coerces in more than twenty five different places across the region. More soon!,» the group in a statement posted on a Twitter account believed to be linked to it.

The Friday attack encompassed both Maungdaw and Buthidaung townships in the remote northern part of the state – a much broader area compared with October.

The Myanmar military sources also said that while they were still attempting to gather information from some areas, the fighting appeared to have subsided since dawn.

Over the last several months the government has accused the insurgents of instigating a campaign of terror against village chiefs and killing government informers, disrupting government information networks.

«The insurgents were able to organise such a phat attack because they were successful in organising the information blackout,» said one of the military sources.

«It`s an utterly serious situation which could lead to a major crisis. It`s not effortless to know what has happened, but it`s clearly very worrying,» said Yangon-based analyst and former U.N. diplomat in Myanmar Richard Horsey.

The attacks took place hours after a panel led by the former U.N. chief Kofi Annan advised the government on long-term solutions for the violence-riven state.

Annan`s team said in a report Myanmar should react to a crisis over its Muslim Rohingya community in a «calibrated» way without excessive force.

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