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Air strike in central Myanmar kills up to 22 people at school

The strike took place in the central Sagaing region.

By contributor Grant Peck, AP
Published
Footwear scattered with debris in the school
Footwear scattered with debris in the school (White Depeyin People Defence Force/AP)

As many as 20 pupils and two teachers have been killed after an air strike by Myanmar’s military on a village in the country’s central Sagaing region hit a school, reports said.

The morning attack on Ohe Htein Twin village in the region’s Tabayin township, also known as Depayin, also wounded dozens of pupils, sources said.

State-run MRTV television denied the reports of the airstrike on Monday evening’s news broadcast, saying subversive media outlets were intentionally spreading fake news.

The military has increasingly used air strikes to counter a widespread armed struggle against its rule, which began in February 2021 when it seized power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi.

More than 6,600 civilians are estimated to have been killed by security forces since then, according to figures compiled by non-governmental organisations.

A room of the school filled with debris
A room of the school filled with debris (White Depeyin People Defence Force/AP)

A member of the White Depeyin People’s Defence Force resistance group fighting against army rule told The Associated Press that a fighter jet dropped a bomb directly onto a school, where many students from primary to high school levels were studying after 9am.

The area is about 70 miles north-west of Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-largest city.

The resistance fighter, who rushed to the site of the attack to help the victims, said that 20 students and two teachers were killed in the attack on the school, which is operated by the country’s pro-democracy movement, and about 50 others were injured. Three nearby houses were damaged.

He also said that there had been no recent fighting in the area, though Sagaing is a stronghold of the resistance.

Nay Phone Latt, a spokesperson for the opposition’s National Unity Government, told the AP that he received the same information on the number of casualties, and that the death toll could rise.

The organisation is the main opposition group coordinating resistance to military rule.

He accused the military of deliberately attacking civilians in monasteries, refugee camps, schools and hospitals, with the excuse that resistance fighters were sheltering at such sites – though this was not the case and the bombings were intended to alienate the people from the resistance movement.

The death tolls from Monday’s bombing reported by independent Myanmar media ranged from 17 to more than 20.

A volunteer in Tabayin assisting displaced people who asked not to be identified because of fear of government reprisals said he received the information from the ground that 12 pupils were confirmed dead and around 30-50 others were wounded.

Sagaing region, near the border with India, has been a stronghold of armed resistance, and the military in recent years has stepped up air strikes against the local pro-democracy People’s Defence Forces. The resistance has no effective defence against air attacks.

In September 2022, aerial attacks by the military’s helicopters against a school and village in Let Yet Kone village in the same township, killed at least 13 people, including seven children.

Air strikes in April 2023 airstrikes killed as many as 160 people, including many children, who were attending a ceremony held by opponents of army rule outside Pazigyi village in Sagaing region’s Kanbalu township.

The strikes in Myanmar garnered increased attention recently when numerous reports deemed credible by the United Nations and human rights groups said that they continued to be carried out in the wake of Myanmar’s devastating March 28 earthquake, after which the military and resistance groups declared ceasefires to facilitate relief efforts.

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