Analysts: US missile deployment expected to assist Philippines’ defense

The U.S. Army’s deployment of a mid-range missile launcher in the Philippines earlier this month is expected to help Manila prepare to defend its territories amid geopolitical tension over the South China Sea, security analysts said.

It’s the first time the United States has deployed the Mid-Range Capability (MRC) missile system – also known as the Typhon System – in the Asia-Pacific region, but it was not immediately clear whether the Americans would keep this easily transportable system in the northern Philippines only as part of joint military drills or for longer.

The MRC is a land-based, ground-launched system that can fire the Standard Missile 6 and Tomahawk missiles and support strike capabilities from land to sea to air, according to the U.S. Congressional Research Service.

The system was deployed on April 11 as part of Salaknib, a military drill for 1,800 Philippine and 1,700 U.S. troops that ran from April 8 to 21 in the central and northern regions of Luzon island.

The deployment is “an example of the continuous transformation of the U.S. Army in the face of a complex and challenging environment,” said Gen. Charles Flynn, commanding general of U.S. Army Pacific, said in a statement in response to emailed questions from BenarNews, a online news organization that is affiliated with Radio Free Asia. 

The move “supports a safe, stable, and secure Indo-Pacific in partnership with our allies from the Armed Forces (of the) Philippines,” he said.

Officials at the U.S. Army Pacific command in Hawaii did not immediately respond to follow-up questions from BenarNews seeking more details about the deployment of the missile system in the Philippines. The Philippine military also declined to provide details, deferring to U.S. Army officials for comment.

The deployment came amid a worsening maritime row between Manila and Beijing over the South China Sea.

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The Mid-Range Capability Launcher is loaded into a U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster III for deployment from Joint Base Lewis-McChord on April 4, 2024. [U.S. Army photo by Capt. Ryan DeBooy]

Salaknib (“shield” in Filipino), is an annual drill between the two nations but it is much smaller than the Balikatan, a multilateral military exercise involving at least 16,000 troops that began in the Philippines on April 22 and is scheduled to end on May 18.

“The first deployment of this state-of-the-art missile system in the Salaknib exercises will boost the interoperability and jointness of the Philippines’ armed forces with its military ally,” said Chester Cabalza, a security strategist and founding president of Manila-based think-tank International Development and Security Cooperation. “This is an opportunity also for Manila to invest in high-caliber military materiel to increase its deterrent force amid geopolitical tension in the region.”

“The MRC has a versatile capability that has been used in the multi-domain attacks in the Russo-Ukraine and Hamas-Israel wars for land-based protection of territories,” Cabalza told BenarNews. “The MRC is a strong weapon but it has limitations since its capability is mid-range for launcher missiles.”

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A rocket is fired from a High Mobility Artillery Rocket System during a live drill involving Philippine and U.S. troops in Fort Magsaysay, Philippines, March 31, 2023. [Eloisa Lopez/Reuters]

Security analyst Ray Powell said the missile deployment was part of efforts to boost Manila’s defense mechanisms amid the ongoing South China Sea dispute. Powell is founder and director of SeaLight, a maritime transparency project of the Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation at Stanford University.

“If you’re having a military exercise, then what you have to exercise is the military,” Powell told BenarNews. 

“If you’re going to have one in the Philippines, the things that you’re going to be concerned with is one of the things that threaten the Philippines and what are the things that can defend the Philippines against those threats. These missiles are clearly in that category.”

‘Philippines shouldn’t be held back’

Previously, security analysts had raised concerns that China could ramp up its militarization activities in the South China Sea following the deployment of the missile launcher.

“With or without the MRC, China has been active in militarizing the region,” Cabalza said. “This is part of (Beijing’s) own military agenda to attain greatness in the world’s military history as it tries to control the entirety of the South China Sea.”

Lately, tensions between two countries have occurred in South China Sea waters within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone, where Chinese coast guard ships have fired water cannons at Filipino boats trying to deliver supplies to a Philippine military outpost in Second Thomas Shoal (Ayungin Shoal).

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Philippine and U.S. troops participate in live fire exercises during the Salaknib drills in Fort Magsaysay, Philippines, March 31, 2023. [Eloisa Lopez/Reuters]

Powell also raised concerns about Beijing.

“If China feels hurt or provoked, that’s because China is the one who is acting so aggressively,” Powell said. 

“China is going to do what it wants to do. So, the Philippines shouldn’t be held back by what might provoke China … because you know what provokes an aggressor? Weakness. If they perceived weakness, that is extremely provocative to an aggressor nation. Make no mistake, especially in the South China Sea – China is an aggressor nation and it will take advantage of whatever weakness it perceives.”

China, Russia react

Last week, China and Russia hit back at America’s missile deployment in the Philippines. 

“The U.S.’s move exacerbates tensions in the region and increases the risk of misjudgment and miscalculation,” Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Lin Jian told reporters in Beijing during  an April 18 news conference. “The Philippines needs to think twice about being a cat’s paw for the U.S. at the expense of its own security interests, and stop sliding down the wrong path,” he said.

On Telegram, Anatoly Antonov, Russia’s ambassador to Washington, said the move was another blow to global stability.

Washington is “purposefully escalating the level of military confrontation and fueling hotbeds of tension,” Antonov said on April 17, while accusing the U.S. of “trying to return the world to the darkest times of the Cold War and balancing on the brink of a nuclear conflict.”

BenarNews is an RFA-affiliated online news organization.

Students, residents pressed into North Korean construction projects

North Korean authorities are addressing a labor shortage by conscripting ordinary residents and students as young as 12 to work on state-mandated construction projects, sources inside North Korea told Radio Free Asia.

In the northern province of Ryanggang, officials In Kimhyongjik county have required students to work on factory construction sites as part of leader Kim Jong Un’s plan to accelerate industrial development under the so-called “20×10 Local Development Policy” that was announced in December.

The policy calls for 20 North Korean counties to construct modern factories every year over the next 10 years to improve people’s “material standard of living.” Each corps of the Korean People’s Army was ordered to mobilize troops to contribute to the construction projects.

The groundbreaking ceremony for the Kimhyongjik factory took place on March 10, but the military was only able to provide about 700 personnel, a Ryanggang resident who asked not to be identified told RFA.

With a population of less than 60,000 people, Kimhyongjik county is having a hard time finding workers to build the factory, she said. 

“All of the young people are serving in the military, so there is a severe shortage of manpower needed to build the local factory.”

Looming deadline

The Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of North Korea announced that all 20×10 factory construction projects must be completed by Sep. 9 and begin normal operations on Sep. 10 to coincide with North Korea’s independence holiday.

Another resident told RFA that regional authorities are turning to students, older women and ordinary laborers to meet the deadline.

“Students are not an exception. As of April 5, middle and high school students between the ages of 12 and 17 are being mobilized for pre-meal work to collect sand and gravel for the factory’s foundation,” he explained. 

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A ground-breaking ceremony for the third-stage construction project to build 10,000 flats in the Hwasong area of Pyongyang, Feb. 23, 2023. (KCNA via KNS/AFP)

“From 5 a.m. to 7 a.m., they are collecting sand and gravel,” he said. “They are in school from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., then they collect sand and gravel again from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. They are forced to work even on Sundays, which are rest days.”

Older members of the Socialist Women’s Union of Korea are also being mobilized seven days a week to collect foundation materials from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., while local laborers are tasked with constructing blocks for the factory’s walls.

Residents have expressed concerns about the effect of the harsh labor on the health of children. They argued that high school students should not be working on construction sites before school, and that middle school students should not be working at all.

Some parents have even begun keeping their children home from school under the pretense of illness to protect them from forced labor, the sources said.

Threats and bribes

Meanwhile, authorities in the capital of Pyongyang are struggling to retain laborers for Kim Jong Un’s “10,000-home project.” 

Launched in 2021, the plan calls for 10,000 homes to be constructed per year in Pyongyang for a period of five years. So far, 30,000 homes have been completed.

When the 10,000-home project began in 2021, many Pyongyang residents volunteered to become “stormtroopers” – what North Korea calls soldiers or ordinary people engaged in construction projects – with the hope that they would be assigned housing as a reward,” one Pyongyang resident said.

However, many residents who have yet to receive homes after years of intense labor now wish to return to their original factory jobs and are trying to desert their construction work. And residents who have already been assigned homes since becoming stormtroopers are no longer motivated to continue working on the construction sites.

Pyongyang officials have responded to the desertions with both threats and bribes.

One worker who decided to return to his factory job after receiving a home due to health concerns had his Workers’ Party status threatened by a low-level party secretary.

“If you have received the party’s consideration, you should think about repaying the favor,” the official told him, according to the RFA source. “Why do you pursue your own comfort first? You are not qualified as a member of the party.”

Losing the favor of the party can have serious consequences for individuals and their families, making it difficult for workers to disobey the demands of party leaders.

Other officials have attempted to retain stormtroopers by promising them that if they stay on the construction project until its completion in 2025, they will be rewarded with homes.

Translated by Claire S. Lee. Edited by Claire McCrea and Malcolm Foster.

Is journalist Vicky Xu preparing to return to China?

Chinese social media influencers have recently claimed that prominent Chinese-born Australian journalist Vicky Xu had posted a message saying she planned to return to China.

There is no evidence for this. The source did not provide evidence to support the claim, and Xu herself later confirmed to AFCL that she has no such plans.

Currently working as an analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, or ASPI, Xu has previously written for both the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, or ABC, and The New York Times.

A Chinese language netizen on X initially claimed on March 31 that the changing geopolitical relations between Sydney and Beijing had caused Xu to become an expendable asset and that she had posted a message expressing a strong desire to return to China. An illegible, blurred photo of the supposed message accompanied the post. 

This claim was retweeted by a widely followed influencer on the popular Chinese social media site Weibo one day later, who additionally commented that Xu was a “traitor” who had been abandoned by Australian media. 

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Rumors surfaced on X and Weibo at the end of March that Vicky Xu – a Chinese-born Australian journalist who exposed forced labor in Xinjiang – was returning to China after becoming an “outcast” in Australia. (Screenshots / X & Weibo)

Following the publication of an ASPI article in 2021 which exposed forced labor conditions in Xinjiang co-authored by Xu, the journalist was labeled “morally bankrupt” and “anti-China” by the Chinese state owned media outlet Global Times and subjected to an influx of threatening messages and digital abuse, eventually forcing her to temporarily close several of her social media accounts.

AFCL found that neither Xu’s active X nor LinkedIn account has any mention of her supposed return to China, and received the following response from Xu herself about the rumor:

“I can confirm that I don’t have plans to go back to China. I think if I do go back I’ll most definitely be detained or imprisoned – so the only career I’ll be having is probably going to be prison labor or something like that, which wouldn’t be ideal.”

Neither a keyword search nor reverse image search on the photo attached to the original X post turned up any text from Xu supporting the netizens’ claims.

Translated & edited by Shen Ke. Additional editing by Malcolm Foster.

Asia Fact Check Lab (AFCL) was established to counter disinformation in today’s complex media environment. We publish fact-checks, media-watches and in-depth reports that aim to sharpen and deepen our readers’ understanding of current affairs and public issues. If you like our content, you can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram and X.

Tensions simmer near a shoal both China and the Philippines claim

The Bagong Bayan fishing village is nestled in a coconut orchard next to the clear waters of a small lagoon. 

Fishing boats are moored deck-to-deck, and the village seems ghostly quiet in the midday heat – not the noisy, chaotic scene of the past when fishermen would return from the sea with their daily catch.

Bagong Bayan is in the province of Palawan, the Philippines’ westernmost island. It is about a two-hour drive from the provincial capital, Puerto Princesa, which in turn is an hour-and-a-half by plane from Manila.

From here, fishermen used to set out far into the sea, including to the Second Thomas Shoal, 105 nautical miles (194.4 kilometers) to the west, an area rich in marine resources. 

But fewer boats are going out these days because of the heavy presence of Chinese vessels. The ships are believed by the Philippine coast guard to be maritime militia, a special force that along with the Chinese navy and the coast guard patrols the disputed waters.

They have turned the area into a dangerous flashpoint in an ongoing confrontation between the Philippines and China over who controls the South China Sea, which also is thought to hold vast mineral and oil resources. 

“In the last decade the Chinese presence has increased measurably, including Chinese maritime militia, coast guard and Chinese navy,” said Maurice Phillip “MP” Albeida, a councilor at the municipality of Kalayaan, an island chain that is part of the Palawan province.  

“At the same time, the number of Filipino boats has decreased, because of the fear that they’re going to get bullied or intimidated by Chinese vessels.”

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Fewer Filipino fishing boats are heading to the fishing grounds due to fears they will be harassed by Chinese vessels. says Maurice Phillip “MP” Albeida, a councilor at the municipality of Kalayaan. (RFA)

This has led to a reduced catch and shrinking fishing grounds for villages like Bagong Bayan – and broader geopolitical questions for the country.

“The Philippines depends on its maritime, ‘blue’ economy. The province of Palawan’s economy depends on fishermen,” Albeida said. “More than that, it also affects our national security, sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

The vast stretch of ocean, dotted with hundreds of islands, is geographically strategic for East and West alike. China claims historical rights over almost the entire South China Sea. Since 2012, it has expanded its military footprint on reefs and atolls based on a 1930s-vintage U-shaped map – the so-called nine-dash line – that bulges out into the sea to delineate its territorial claims. 

For the U.S and the nations that touch its waters, the South China Sea is a crucial passage for commercial and military traffic. One-third of international shipping and trade travels through the sea, according to the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development. 

This week, the Philippines and the United States began their annual Balikatan (shoulder-to-shoulder) military exercise in Palawan and Luzon, the largest island of the Philippines archipelago. 

With some 16,700 troops, the exercise this year is the most expansive Balikatan to date, according to the U.S. Embassy in Manila.

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Beijing has thus far refrained from using lethal force to assert its claims, but some fear that confrontations that are now a regular occurrence could escalate. 

On March 23, the Chinese coast guard fired a water cannon at a Filipino supply boat near the Second Thomas Shoal, seriously damaging it and injuring three people on board. The incident caused an outcry of anger among the Philippine public.

Hottest flashpoint

Known as Ayungin in the Philippines, the submerged Second Thomas Shoal is closely watched in part because of its proximity to another disputed point in the sea. 

Twenty-two nautical miles (40km) further west lies Mischief Reef, an artificial island where China built a naval base in the 1990s. Palawan fishermen have in the past fished the area, but no longer as it is now fully militarized with missiles and a runway.

Although China, the Philippines, Vietnam and Taiwan all claim ownership over the Second Thomas Shoal, Manila in 1999 deliberately ran aground an old warship there to assert its claim over the area. 

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The dilapidated Philippine navy ship Sierra Madre sits in the shallow waters of Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea, March 30, 2014. (Bullit Marquez/AP)

Built as a landing ship for the U.S. Navy during World War II, the BRP Sierra Madre now is home to about a dozen Filipino troops who serve as a deterrent to what Manila sees as further encroachments. 

For a long time, Beijing turned a blind eye to the Philippines’ efforts to resupply and rotate troops at the Second Thomas Shoal. There was an expectation that the BRP Sierra Madre would disintegrate quickly in the hot and humid weather – and the conflict potentially with it.

In recent months, however, Chinese vessels have blocked attempts to deliver supplies to the sailors, believing that the Philippine navy was bringing construction materials to reinforce the ship and permanently occupy the shoal. Beijing says the activity violates an agreement it had with the administration of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte.

“If the Philippines repeatedly challenges China’s bottom line, China will continue to take firm and decisive measures to firmly safeguard its territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests,” China’s Ministry of National Defense said in a statement to the press.


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Manila has said it is committed to maintaining its position at the shoal, which lies in the West Philippine Sea, the name it gives to South China Sea waters within its exclusive economic zone. 

“LT-57 (BRP Sierra Madre) is a commissioned vessel of the Philippine Navy; it is an extension of our national territory in as much as flying a Philippine flag,” Commodore Roy Vincent Trinidad, Philippine Navy spokesperson for the West Philippine Sea, told Radio Free Asia in an interview. 

“It is our responsibility to ensure that the ship is safe, comfortable and habitable for our troops deployed there,” he said.

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The Philippine navy ship BRP Davao del Sur rests at the dock in Puerto Princesa port, Feb. 29, 2024. (RFA)

In an address to a security forum this month, Adm. John Aquilino, head of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, called China’s actions “dangerous” and “destabilizing.”

Jonathan Malaya, the Philippine National Security Council’s assistant director general, told RFA that he didn’t think the dispute would disintegrate into armed conflict. 

“China also understands that it is not to the benefit of China,” he said, pointing to the military expenditure and the damage to China’s public image.

However, the proximity to the Chinese naval base on Mischief Reef makes an armed conflict a real possibility.

The escalating tension also poses a potential test for Philippine allies like the United States, raising the stakes of the South China Sea disputes beyond the interests of local fishing villages or even the country as a whole.

Manila and Washington signed a Mutual Defense Treaty in 1951 under which both parties are obliged to support each other in the event of an armed attack.

Kalayaan Councilor MP Albeida said expectations of security assistance from the United States among the Philippine public are high.

“The U.S. and the Philippines have been partners and our partnerships help us to grow,” he said. “I’d like to believe that the U.S. is truthful to it.”

The Philippines under Marcos is also fostering closer relationships with other partners such as Australia, Japan, India and European countries.

On April 7, Japan and Australia joined the Philippines and the United States in a joint naval exercise in the waters off Palawan, and leaders from the U.S., the Philippines and Japan recently held their first ever security summit in Washington, where the South China Sea was a particular focus. 

Fishermen’s struggle

Several weeks before the April 7 exercise, the strategic sealift ship BRP Davao del Sur was spotted docking at port of the Puerto Princesa province, its gray hull imposing against white civilian boats.

This modern landing platform dock of the Philippine Navy can carry up to 500 fully armed marines with their vehicles and equipment, as well as three 12-ton helicopters, and has been taking part in multinational naval drills.

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Fishermen go about their business in Bagong Bayan, Feb. 29, 2024. (RFA)

But the task of safeguarding Palawan fishermen is being handled by the Philippine coast guard, which with just 25 main patrol ships is dwarfed by China’s coast guard – the world’s largest force with 225 vessels above 500 tons.

“When Chinese boats bully our people at Reed Bank, we report them immediately,” Rollie Magbanua, who is the head of the Bagong Bayan government, said, referring to an area 80 nautical miles (128km) west of Palawan and a traditional fishing ground of local fishermen. 

But he isn’t always sure what Manila is doing about the complaints. 

In 2019, a Filipino fishing boat anchored at the bank sank after it was rammed by a Chinese vessel. China called the collision an accident, and then-President Duterte allowed Chinese ships to continue operating there.

Now, the Marcos administration is building a coast guard post in the Bagong Bayan village, but it isn’t clear when it will be operational or what its intended capabilities will be. 

RFA has contacted the coast guard but has not received any reply.

Earlier this month, hundreds of Filipinos took to the streets in Manila to rally against China’s aggression in the South China Sea, the first major anti-China public protest in five years.

They demanded that the Chinese government move out of the West Philippine Sea, recognize the 2016 international arbitration ruling and stop the harassment of Filipino fisherfolk and Philippine resupply missions.

The protest marks a growing level of frustration among the Philippine population and local politicians.  

“It is the Philippine government’s responsibility to pursue a pro-Filipino foreign policy that protects the life and livelihood of every citizen,” MP Albeida said.

Edited by Jim Snyder, Imran Vittachi and Boer Deng

Biden’s cannibal remarks send US-Papua New Guinea relations to ‘low point’

Papua New Guinea Foreign Minister Justin Tkachenko said Tuesday that relations with the U.S. have hit a “low point” after President Joe Biden claimed his uncle was eaten in the Pacific nation by cannibals during World War II.

Headlines about Biden’s gaffe at a Pennsylvania war memorial last week went viral in Papua New Guinea and were widely mocked on social media.

Prime Minister James Marape in a statement Sunday said the president’s comments may have been a “slip of the tongue, however my country does not deserve to be labeled as such.”

His foreign minister on Tuesday went a step further – calling for the record to be set straight.

“These apparent untrue remarks by the sitting president [are] a low point in our relations,” Tkatchenko said in a statement, adding the comments were not supported by official documents.

Tkatchenko said records showed that Biden’s uncle was on a flight from Momote to Lae, over the Bismarck Sea, but never made it to his destination.

“PNG hopes that the White House can correct this remark which has the potential to hurt our cordial relations,” he said.

Biden twice last week suggested without evidence his uncle, Ambrose Finnegan, was eaten by cannibals after being shot down during a reconnaissance flight in a single-engine U.S. Air Force plane over Papua New Guinea.

“He got shot down in New Guinea, and they never found the body because there used to be — there were a lot of cannibals, for real, in that part of New Guinea,” Biden said on April 17.

U.S. defense records contradict Biden’s story and state Finnegan was a passenger in a plane that crashed into the Pacific Ocean off the north coast of Papua New Guinea.

The diplomatic incident began to unfold as Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi visited Papua New Guinea at the weekend and signed several agreements between the two countries, including a feasibility study for a free-trade deal.

China and the U.S. are currently engaged in a regional battle for influence and Papua New Guinea, the most populous Pacific island country, is one of their main theaters.

The U.S. embassy in Port Moresby issued a press release Tuesday without directly addressing the “cannibal” remarks.

“President Biden highlighted his uncle’s story as he made the case for honoring our sacred commitment to equip those we send to war,” the embassy said.

“The U.S. respects the people and culture of Papua New Guinea and remains committed to furthering respectful relations.”

Cannibalism in Papua New Guinea was rare by the 1960s after being banned by Australia – the colonial power – the previous decade. It was largely a ritualistic practice.

The Pacific island country was invaded by Japan in 1942 and some of its soldiers committed acts of cannibalism on prisoners of war after their supply lines were cut off, according to Japanese army documents seized by Australian troops and analyzed by academics. 

The Tokyo War Crimes trials, which took place between May 1946 to November 1948, found there was not enough evidence to charge any Japanese for cannibalism but Australian military trials in New Guinea after the war convicted soldiers for the crime and issued death penalties.

This week Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is in Papua New Guinea and will walk with Marape along sections of the Kokoda Track, an infamous battlefield where more than 10,000 U.S., Australian and Japanese soldiers died, as well as an unknown number of Papuans.

At a state dinner in Port Moresby Monday, Albanese said his counterpart had assured him Australia remains Papua New Guinea’s security partner of choice

“This is a relationship that has never been closer, as symbolized by the fact that we’ll be walking side-by-side down the Kokoda Track,” Albanese said.

“We want the Pacific family to look after security in this region.”

The highly symbolic visit to the mythologized campaign site by Albanese comes ahead of Anzac Day commemorations on Thursday, which remember Australians and New Zealanders that served and died during wars.

Stefan Armbruster contributed to this report from Brisbane.

BenarNews is an RFA-affiliated online news organization. 

Rainy season spells misery for hundreds at Myanmar camp for displaced

Yin Sein worries that her plastic-sheet-roofed bamboo shack in Pa Law Ta Moe camp for internally displaced persons will be flooded this coming rainy season. 

The 70-year-old and her husband have lived on the banks of the Thaunggin River for more than three years after fleeing fighting near their home in Htee Mei Wah Khee, about 93 km (58 miles) to the southwest. Her township came under attack from junta forces following the February 2021 coup against the civilian government. 

“I’m concerned about the coming rain. Where would I go? My hut is on the river bank,” she told Radio Free Asia. 

Her shack and a few others stand apart from most of the temporary homes built on higher ground. 

“I badly want to go home but I can’t,” she said. “I don’t know when I’ll be able to.”

She is among more than 1,000 people, including children, who take refuge in the camp, about 20 km (12 miles) south of Myawaddy city. There are three more satellite camps nearby, but Pa Law Ta Moe is the only place with a hospital and surgery.

After the Karen National Liberation Army started attacking the junta’s Infantry Battalion 275 in Myawaddy on April 6, the Myanmar Air Force has bombed the rebels in the township and nearby Kawkareik town almost daily, according to residents and Thai soldiers. 

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Zin Ma U holds her two-year-old at Pa Law Ta Moe camp, in Kayin state, April 17, 2024. (Pimuk Rakkanam/RFA)

Another refugee from the nearby village of Palu said she is also afraid to go home.

“I fled here nearly a month ago. There was fighting in Palu,” Zin Ma U, holding a 2-year-old child, told RFA.

Inadequate assistance

Since the State Administration Council – as the junta is formally known – took power, nearly 3 million residents across Myanmar have been forced to abandon their homes for safety and live in camps, according to the U.N. Many are staying along the Salween River to the north and Thaunggin River to the south.

RFA followed the People’s Empowerment Foundation, or PEF, a Thai humanitarian group, to the camp inside Kayin state to deliver relief aid valued at just over US$4,000. According to Saw Pattayar, the district chief of Myawaddy, that is enough for only 10% of the refugee population here.

They are short of medical supplies, clean drinking water, food and other necessities, including rooftop materials, Saw Pattayar said.

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A group of ethnic Karen people who fled the fighting sit at Pa Law Ta Moe camp, in Kayin state, April 17, 2024. (Pimuk Rakkanam/RFA)

In late March, Thailand’s first shipment of aid arrived in Myanmar for a selected 20,000 people to cover their acute needs. Residents of Pa Law Ta Moe were not on the list, Saw Pattayar, said. 

The shipment was the first of a Thai government initiative, sent through a new humanitarian corridor and delivered by Myanmar’s Red Cross. 

Saw Pattayar said he would prefer it if the Thai government dealt directly with ethnic groups.

The PEF questions the effectiveness of the Thai government program, given the huge number of people displaced by conflict. 

“What does Thailand’s humanitarian corridor mean? Just a one-time event without follow-up,” PEF director Chalida Tajaroensuk said to RFA. “It should go through the Karen National Union [political organization], not the government-directed Red Cross.” 

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People’s Empowerment Foundation director Chalida Tajaroensuk, left, and Myawaddy district chief Saw Pattayar sit in Pa Law Ta Moe camp in Kayin state, April 17, 2024. (Pimuk Rakkanam/RFA)

An official at the Thai foreign ministry said the ministry plans to follow up with more shipments, but has yet to fix the date. 

On Thursday, the member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, issued a statement expressing deep concern “over the recent escalation of conflicts, including in the area of Myawaddy, Kayin state, along the border area between Myanmar and Thailand and in Rakhine state of Myanmar, which have caused displacement of civilians.”

The statement came as the Myanmar junta announced a state-level offensive called “Operation Aung Zeya” to capture the strategic city of Myawaddy. 

The junta’s last infantry battalion base fell on April 10 leaving about 200 soldiers stranded near Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge No. 2 – one of two bridges which regulate both people and goods and connect Myawaddy to Thailand’s Mae Sot.

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A destroyed vehicle after an attack by junta troops on the road from Lay Kay Kaw to Megalahpo in Kayin state, April 17, 2024. (Courtesy of Sunti Teapia)

In order to solve the ongoing conflict, Saw Pattayar said he prefers peaceful means to the use of force.

“People are currently attempting to solve the ongoing political crisis through armed struggle. However, for the sake of those who are facing difficulties, dialogue is necessary,” he told RFA.  

“I believe that the fighting will continue for an extended period. Therefore, all leaders of armed organizations should come together to resolve the crisis through dialogue.”

Edited by Mike Firn and Joshua Lipes.