Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Shan Herald Agency for News

Shan Herald Agency for News


Landmine blast injures Namtu civilian

Posted: 11 Jul 2017 03:13 AM PDT

A man was seriously injured after stepping on a landmine in northern Shan State's Namtu Township on Monday.

Landmines found in temple ground in Namtu Township in May 2017.
Sai Ba Nyan, the vice-chairman of the local aid committee in Namtu, told Shan Herald today that the accident occurred at about 10.30am in Pang Marn village, Zai Khao village tract, in Namtu Township. The victim, Sai Pan Aung, aged 20-30, was walking on a track to his farm.


"Both of his legs were wounded," said Sai Ba Nyan. "He is now being treated at Namtu hospital."

He said there were a lot of landmines all over the area due to the ongoing conflict and that local villagers had been warned about walking outside their communities. Sai Pan Aung was injured because he didn't heed the order, he said.

"As armed clashes keep happening, they [Burmese armed force and ethnic armed groups] will not clear their landmines," the Shan aid worker said. "Many of the villagers in these areas are afraid to return to their own homes."

Clashes have been regularly reported between Burmese government forces, the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army (RCSS/SSA) and the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) in the Namtu area.

 On July 6, Shan Herald reported that over 300 villagers in Namtu Township had reportedly fled their homes due to fighting involving the RCSS/SSA, which is one of eight armed groups to sign a Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) with the government, and the TNLA, which was largely excluded by Naypyidaw from the peace process.

According to the Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor, a research and monitoring arm of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL), Burma was ranked third most dangerous country in the world for landmines in 2014 behind only Colombia and Afghanistan.

The ICBL report on 25 November 2015 also highlighted the numbers of landmine victims between 1999 and 2014. The report said that there were a total of 3,745 people affected by landmines in Burma, which included 396 killed; 3,145 injured; and 204 unknown. However, it noted that the real figure could be much higher.

In May this year, eight novice monks in Namtu were seriously injured after a landmine explodedwhile they were playing with it. The next day another 23 mines were discovered near the temple compound.

Among several other incidents in Shan State, a man was killed after stepping on a landmine in Mong Kyat tract in Lashio Township.


By Shan Herald Agency for News (SHAN)

300 left homeless after Nai Soi Refugee camp fire

Posted: 10 Jul 2017 10:59 PM PDT

More than 300 people have lost their homes after a fire destroyed a small neighbourhood in Nai Soi refugee camp in northern Thailand last week. No casualties have been reported.

According to Shalea, a resident in Nai Soi, also known as Karenni Refugee Camp (1), the fire broke out at about 10pm on July 5. He said that he didn't know the cause of the fire.
"It may have been from a candle," he told Shan Herald by telephone. "It happened at night when most people were already asleep. Thirty-three houses burnt down and about 300 residents left without shelter."
Thai police are investigating the cause of the blaze, he added.

Nai Soi was original established on the Karenni State side of the border in 1989 to house villagers fleeing conflict in eastern Burma. The camp was relocated several times before it was finally settled at its present location in March 1996. Currently, Nai Soi refugee camp houses about 8,000 people, most of whom are ethnic Karenni.
Nai Soi has been the victim of several fires in recent years; more than 40 people were killed in a blaze in 2013 and about 400 left homeless.
"It is lucky this time that no one got hurt," said Maw Mya, a Nai Soi refugee who witnessed last week's fire. "However, this type of incident affects everyone psychologically."


By Shan Herald Agency for News (SHAN)

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