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Thai soldiers patrol border as resistance groups seize neighbouring Myanmar town

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Thai soldiers patrolled the border today as resistance groups seized a neighbouring town in Myanmar.

Troops and armoured vehicles were dispatched to the second Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge as Burmese junta soldiers were reportedly defeated in the border town of Myawaddy on April 11.

Some 200 Burmese soldiers hoping for safe passage occupied the bridge, which was closed amid fears of clashes.

Cargo trucks coming from Thailand's Mae Sot district were also blocked from entering.

Pro-democracy forces composed of civilians and local militias claimed they have seized the Pha Song outpost - the last remaining base in the key border town of Myawaddy - in the latest blow to Myanmar's struggling military government.

Myawaddy has long been held by the junta and serves as a vital trade corridor between Myanmar and Thailand.

Its fall comes as the Political Prisoners Network Myanmar (PPN) claimed this week that at least 13 political prisoners died in junta detainment in the first quarter of 2024, compared with two in the same period last year. The human rights group said that six inmates were killed by junta forces and seven died after being denied medical care.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has accused the military of forcibly recruiting more than 1,000 Rohingya Muslim men and boys from across Rakhine State since February.

Spokesman Shayna Bauchner said: 'It's appalling to see Myanmar's military, which has committed atrocities against the Rohingya for decades while denying them citizenship, now forcing them to fight on its behalf.

'The junta should immediately end this forced recruitment and permit Rohingya unlawfully conscripted to return home.'

Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin in neighbouring Thailand told Reuters this week that the country would continue to remain neutral on the conflict - despite developed countries imposing sanctions -and instead appeared to prioritise a deal that would benefit Thailand economically.

He said: 'The current regime is starting to lose some strength but even if they are losing, they have the power, they have the weapons.

'Now is a good time to open talks with Myanmar as the military regime that seized power in a 2021 coup is weakening. Maybe it's time to reach out and make a deal.'

Myanmar has fallen into civil war following the removal of democratically elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, with a military coup in 2021.

Soldiers responded with barbaric force on protesting civilians leading to widespread condemnation and financial sanctions. Rebel groups and civilian militias around the country have since been locked in a series of ongoing clashes with the ruling military.

Aung San Suu Kyi has since been jailed for 33 years on politically motivated charges and is likely to die behind bars unless the army is toppled - a tragic end the politician hailed by Barack Obama as an 'inspirational icon of democracy'.

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