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Reports: Myanmar airstrikes target ethnic forces on 2 fronts | The Asahi Shimbun: Breaking News, Japan News and Analysis
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Myanmar: Free Burma Rangers cross rivers, walk up mountains and take shelter in bunkers to deliver aid
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Burma strikes target rebels in north, east
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Stranded refugees need urgent aid
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Karen activist urges govt to allow access to Thai-Myanmar border
published : 31 May 2021 at 04:30
1 Karen refugees fleeing the armed conflict in Myanmar s Karen state wait on the bank of the Salween River along the Thai-Myanmar border. Saw Kha Pay Mu Nu
Thousands of Karen refugees fleeing the armed conflict in Myanmar are still stranded along the banks of the Salween River, with no shelter or access to food and healthcare, activists said, as they called on the Thai military to allow humanitarian aid to be delivered to the border.
Karen Peace Support Network (KSPN) revealed at an online public discussion forum last week that up to 70,000 people, or about 90% of the rural population in Myanmar s Karen state have been displaced by conflict over the past three months.
Myanmar
Saturday 15 May 2021, by Laura Villadiego
A few weeks ago, a strange sight began appearing in the streets of Myanmar (Burma). Women have been hanging their traditional htamein – the pieces of cloth they wear as skirts – from ropes tied to windows or utility poles, suspending them above the streets like decoration for a parade. Some attach them to sticks and carry them as flags. These women are not simply putting out the laundry; they are protesting the coup d’état staged by the Burmese military on 1 February.
“Men think they have special powers just for being men,” Khin Ohmar, a women’s rights activist in Myanmar, tells Equal Times. “And they believe that walking underneath a piece of women’s clothing will make them lose their special powers.” The htamein are thus used as shields to protect the protest areas and prevent the military from entering.