Urban guerrillas fire grenades at military base in Yangon

Two Yangon-based urban guerrilla groups carried out an attack on a military base in the city’s Mingaladon Township on Saturday, according to the leader of one of the groups.

Yangon Federal Army (YFA) leader Kyaw Lay said that grenade launchers were used in the early morning assault, which targeted Infantry Battalion 82.

Multiple casualties were reported, he said, citing a member of the military who is acting as a secret informant for the anti-regime resistance.

“We attacked them using 40mm launchers at around 5am. Two soldiers were killed and four more were seriously injured, according to our inside sources,” he said.

Myanmar Now was unable to independently verify these claims.

According to Kyaw Lay, the attack was carried out in collaboration with the Civil Guerrilla Force Yangon (CGF-YGN), which released a statement on the incident on Saturday.

“The military was so scared that they turned off the lights and hid inside the building without shooting back, despite having taunted unarmed civilians to come challenge them,” the group said in its statement.

The two groups vowed to eradicate Myanmar’s military dictatorship once and for all, and also promised to protect civilians.

Last December, the temporary commander of IB 82, Maj Naing Bo Bo, was accused of ramming into a crowd of pedestrians during a crackdown on a flash mob protest in Yangon’s Kyimyindaing Township. Several people were killed and many others were arrested.

On May 5, YFA and CGF-YGN reportedly carried out another mission together targeting a military logistics unit stationed in South Okkalapa Township.

Saturday’s attack was part of an offensive dubbed “Operation Nan Hteik Aung,” which is under the direct supervision of the Yangon Region Military Command of Myanmar’s shadow National Unity Government. 

Resistance forces said that 10 junta bases were targeted over the course of three days—from April 8 to April 10—as part of this operation. 

Targets included the Mingaladon Air Force Base, which was hit with missiles, and a security outpost inside a generals’ residence on Inya Road in Kamaryut Township, according to a statement released on April 11.

The junta has not publicly commented on Operation Nang Hteik Aung.

Observers have noted that the military appears to be fortifying its positions in Yangon in response to these attacks, including by building two-storied bunkers on the sides of the city’s roads.

Protesters urge international community to impose sanctions on MOGE at a rally in Yangon on May 14 (Anti-junta Alliance Yangon/ Facebook)

Want to stop Myanmar military atrocities? Sanction oil and gas

The time has come to cut off the regime’s single largest source of revenue for its war on Myanmar’s civilian population

Protesters urge international community to impose sanctions on MOGE at a rally in Yangon on May 14 (Anti-junta Alliance Yangon/ Facebook)

The time has come to cut off the regime’s single largest source of revenue for its war on Myanmar’s civilian population

Among Myanmar’s state-owned entities, MOGE represents the single largest source of revenue for the regime and has been identified by pro-democracy activists as a key enabler of its human rights abuses. 

Two Western oil companies—the American company Chevron and France’s Total Energies—withdrew from a collaborative energy development project with MOGE in January 2022 citing concerns about violence and human rights violations in Myanmar. However, the EU is the only entity that has imposed legal sanctions against MOGE to date. 

Despite this criticism, JFM spokesperson Yadanar Maung hailed the new sanctions as a needed step towards inflicting costs on the junta and stopping the enablement of its atrocities against Myanmar’s people. 

“We welcome the latest round of sanctions from Australia, Canada, the UK and USA, which target military conglomerates, state-owned enterprises illegally controlled by the junta, and the military’s jet fuel supply chain,” she said in the statement. 

People in Tanintharyi Region's Launglon Township demand sanctions on MOGE in January (Blood Money Campaign)

In ‘significant’ move, EU imposes sanctions on Myanmar state-owned oil and gas company 

The action makes the European bloc the first international entity to introduce such a measure, since previous sanctions have excluded Myanmar’s oil and gas industry

People in Tanintharyi Region's Launglon Township demand sanctions on MOGE in January (Blood Money Campaign)

The action makes the European bloc the first international entity to introduce such a measure, since previous sanctions have excluded Myanmar’s oil and gas industry

When asked whether the new sanctions were likely to succeed in exerting pressure on the Myanmar military,  Chollet addressed potential doubts about their effectiveness. 

“We think it’s very important to try to ensure that the junta has fewer ways to acquire arms, to generate revenue, and to gain legitimacy. And we believe that that’s why sanctions against individuals and entities that are critical to the junta’s ability to generate revenue and acquire arms are very important,” the State Department official said. 

Chollet also emphasised the costs inflicted on junta officials. 

“And we have seen, by the way, the sanctions have had an effect on the junta—the economy last year in Myanmar contracted by nearly 20 percent.  We’ve seen investors fleeing. We see foreign currency reserves dwindling.  And we see it becoming harder for the regime to acquire arms… They’re having to take more extraordinary steps to steer clear of sanctions,” he explained.  

Also on the US list of sanctioned entities was the junta-controlled election commission, which has been preparing to hold a vote designed to legitimise the regime’s claim to power. The designation came a day before military council chief Min Aung Hlaing announced an extension of the declared state of emergency in Myanmar, which could require postponing the planned elections.

Australian foreign minister Penny Wong announced legislative amendments on Tuesday applying sanctions to 16 individuals in or connected with the junta, including coup leader Min Aung Hlaing, and two military conglomerates: Myanmar Economic Corporation and Myanmar Economic Holdings Public Company Limited. 

Australia had previously prohibited trade with Myanmar in arms or related military equipment, but had not changed its regulations regarding business with Myanmar nationals since 2018, despite urging from activists to implement sanctions against the junta after the 2021 coup. 

The new rules targeting the regime are targeted, prohibiting business with specific individuals or entities implicated in human rights violations or corruption, in contrast to broad sanctions imposed on a country and its population as a whole. 

This was the first instance of Australia applying new sanctions to targets in Myanmar since the coup.  

“My judgement is that the time has come for sanctions,” Wong said in a public statement, citing the military’s refusal to abide by international measures aimed at abating the conflict in Myanmar. 

“Australia will continue to monitor the regime’s actions. We will be looking to see improvements for people on the ground and moves towards the restoration of democracy, including credible elections,” she added. 

The Canadian and UK governments’ sanctions took direct aim at suppliers of jet fuel to the Myanmar military, which has enabled indiscriminate aerial attacks by the military causing hundreds of civilian fatalities. 

Canada’s new regulations included a blanket prohibition on the trade of aviation fuel with Myanmar, added as an amendment to a preexisting arms embargo. The UK imposed sanctions on the entities Asia Sun Trading Company Limited and Cargo Link Company Limited, both known suppliers of fuel to junta forces. 

While welcoming the new sanctions, JFM spokesperson Yadanar Maung urged further action, calling on all four governments to sanction MOGE and adopt a total ban on the supply of jet fuel to Myanmar, and appealing to Asian democracies–namely Japan, South Korea, and India–to join the Western governments in sanctioning the junta. 

Protesters at an October demonstration in Shan State’s Namkham Township hold signs calling on Total and Chevron to stop funding the junta (Blood Money/Facebook)

Anti-junta activists celebrate major win as Chevron and Total announce plans to exit Myanmar 

Governments must now announce sanctions on the country’s oil and gas to prevent other companies funding the junta, Justice For Myanmar said 

Protesters at an October demonstration in Shan State’s Namkham Township hold signs calling on Total and Chevron to stop funding the junta (Blood Money/Facebook)

Governments must now announce sanctions on the country’s oil and gas to prevent other companies funding the junta, Justice For Myanmar said 

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