Spot gold was trading at $2,567.13 per ounce, up 0.31 per cent
Civilians wounded in Myanmar air strikes on rebel positions spoke of their terrifying ordeal after trekking through jungle to seek medical treatment across the border in Thailand.
Military jets hit targets in eastern Kayin state over the weekend, as Myanmar reeled from the deadliest day so far in the junta’s crackdown on anti-coup protests.
Also read:
>> China locks down city on Myanmar border over coronavirus fears
The strikes targeted territory held by the Karen National Union (KNU), one of the nation’s largest ethnic armed groups, which had earlier seized a military base.
They marked the Myanmar military’s first use of air strikes against the KNU in 20 years and sent around 7,000 Karen villagers fleeing for safety, according to the armed group.
Naw Eh Tah, one of a handful who managed to cross the Salween River — which marks the border with Thailand — on Tuesday to seek medical treatment, described the moment the bombs hit.
“We didn’t hear the plane — if we did, we would have run,” the 18-year-old told AFP at the small Sop Moei district hospital in Thailand’s northern Mae Hong Son province.
“By the time I realised what was happening, the explosion hit the roof of my house.
“When I got hit, I couldn’t walk — I had to climb to hide.”
Her legs lacerated by shrapnel, Naw Eh Tah trekked for a day through dense tropical jungle to the river.
“We crossed because I can’t stay — the Myanmar army is all trying to get us,” she said.
“I have never seen it (air strikes) before. I am so afraid.”
The youngest to cross on Tuesday, a 15-year-old, was also the most seriously hurt, with a broken rib and collapsed lung.
Saw Lab Bray, 48, suffered shrapnel wounds all over his body when he was hit in KNU stronghold Day Puh Noh.
“I tried to run away but the bombs dropped so quickly,” he told AFP from a hospital wheelchair, describing how he saw six people wounded and a man die.
“I fell on my side and was coughing blood. I’m afraid because I cannot run, I cannot move.”
Doctor Chakri Komsakorm said the refugees looked like “they have been through war” with many shrapnel wounds becoming infected due to a lack of medicine.
He added that “many appear to have been starving for many days”.
Chakri also said he had heard there were people with more serious wounds still trapped on the Myanmar side of the river, unable to cross because of the severity of their injuries.
Karen groups say as many as 3,000 people fled across the river into Thailand after the air strikes before being sent back to Myanmar, though Thai officials insist they were not forced back.
The Thai foreign ministry said late Tuesday about 2,300 have returned to Myanmar and about 550 remain in Thailand.
Mae Hong Son Governor Sithichai Jindaluang told a news conference that refugees who had not been badly affected by the bombings agreed to go back when asked.
Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha said they had not been “scared off with guns or sticks” and insisted the kingdom would not turn people away if the situation worsened.
The air strikes came as the junta struggles to quell nationwide protests demanding a restoration of the elected government and the release of civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, ousted in the February 1 coup.
The generals’ ruthless crackdown has left more than 500 people dead, according to a local monitoring group, triggering international outrage.
Spot gold was trading at $2,567.13 per ounce, up 0.31 per cent
Wicketkeeper-batter Rishabh Pant will be playing his first test since a horrific car accident in December 2022
Winds will remain light to moderate, occasionally picking up during the daytime
In July 2021, the woman received a mysterious message from her husband's Facebook account that said he had lost his phone
It was once a staple of communication used by upwardly mobile professionals such as doctors and journalists back in the 1980s up to the late 1990s
‘We’ve seen the world through a cracked windshield and every scratch tells a story’
The goal is for the Drone Box system to become the primary first response tool, effectively aiding emergencies and preserving law enforcement resources
The two leaders are also set to discuss responsible artificial intelligence development