Red flags flutter over bullet-scarred buildings in the strategic Myanmar city of Lashio, which an ethnic minority armed group linked to China seized from the military in its biggest defeat for decades.
Lashio is the largest urban centre to fall to any of Myanmar’s myriad ethnic minority armed groups—who have been fighting the central authorities on and off for decades—since the military first seized power in 1962.
But analysts say the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) will struggle to govern Lashio, which straddles a key trade route to China and normally has a population of 150,000.
Most fled the weeks of fighting that culminated in the city’s capture last month, and those who remain fear a return to the bloody violence.
Residents and rescue groups say dozens of civilians were killed or wounded as the military pounded the town with airstrikes and both. . .