By The Irrawaddy
One letter was sent each to the head of a local police
station in Buthidaung Township, the Nwar Yon Taung village administrator and a
well-connected timber businessman on Friday. The letters said that if someone
disrupts their movement, the AA will decisively take action against them.
The Irrawaddy phoned one of the letter recipients on
Saturday but the mobile phone was switched off.
Ko Zaw Win said, “Villagers from Pa Nyar Wa also fled to
other locations. Most of them are daily laborers and rely on farming. As the
fighting is fierce there, they cannot tend their cattle.”
The AA announced this morning via their official Facebook
page that the Tatmadaw launched artillery fire near Pa Nyar Wa and Maung Hnama
villages today and fighting has intensified since Dec. 18. The military did not
release any update about the skirmishes in northern Rakhine State.
YANGON— The Arakan Army (AA) sent warning letters, each
accompanied by a bullet round and the official AA stamp, warning the recipients
against disturbing those who are “implementing the way of Rakhita,” a phrase
which was coined by the political wing of the AA, the United League for Arakan.
The warnings come just days after reports from locals
that a Myanmar Army (Tatmadaw) helicopter launched hellfire missiles and machine
gun attacks above a village towards the densely forested mountain range where
Arakan Army (AA) fighters are currently based in northern Rakhine State’s
Kyauktaw Township, causing the the entire village of Chin Ma Won Zaung to flee
to neighboring Thalu Chaung Village on Wednesday.
U Kyaw San Tin, a local from Thalu Chaung Village, said
that a group of 84 people from Chin Ma Won Zaung Village are currently
sheltering at Thalu Chaung Monastery. He said that as a helicopter opened fire
into the forest, a number of empty rounds poured down onto the village and some
displaced villagers found a bullet belt which had fallen from the helicopter.
Despite Myanmar President Office’s spokesman U Zaw Htay
stating on Friday at the weekly press briefing that the army did not use
helicopter attacks in fighting with the AA in northern Rakhine, locals who
escaped the conflict zone were able to show photo evidence of the bullet belt
which fell from the helicopter.
A local social worker, Ko Zaw Win from Kyauktaw Township,
who recently went to the conflict area to carry out relief efforts said that
despite the Tatmadaw’s Commander-in-Chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing’s
announcement that they will halt all military operations in five military
commands for four months, fighting continued to take place in northern Rakhine
as of Saturday. On Saturday morning, the army’s artillery unit fired serial
artillery shells, some of which are said to have landed on Panyar Wa Village.
According to him, about 180 displaced people sought
shelter in Thalu Chaung Village yesterday. U Kyaw San Tin also said that a
Tatmadaw artillery unit based one mile away from his village fired heavy
artillery into the forest constantly on Saturday. Some women and children,
feeling threatened by the loud explosions, had already left the village for
safer places while men remain in the village in order to maintain their
properties.
With armed conflicts flaring up in Buthidaung, Rathedaung,
Ponnagyun and Kyauktaw townships, the number of displaced persons has climbed
drastically. U Khine Kaung San, founder of Wunlark Foundation, estimates around
800 displaced villagers are sheltering in neighboring villages in different
townships and local relief groups are overseeing humanitarian assistance for
the internally displaced persons.
In Rathedaung Township, villagers have been ordered by
local authorities to display their family registration documents on the front
of their houses in preparation for surprise headcounts. Some local observers
are speculating that with the Tatmadaw’s Western Commend on high alert,
fighting could further intensify between the AA and government troops on the
ground.