spot_img
Sunday, July 6, 2025
Today's Print

Myanmar junta extends truce again after quake

YANGON — Myanmar’s junta has extended a post-earthquake truce, after the expiry of a previous humanitarian ceasefire it was accused of flouting with a continued campaign of air strikes.

The junta initially declared a truce in the many-sided civil war after a huge quake in late March killed nearly 3,800 people and left tens of thousands homeless.

- Advertisement -

The truce has been extended before, although conflict monitors say fighting has continued, including regular air strikes.

A statement from the junta information team on Saturday said there would be an extension of the armistice — which expired May 31 — until June 30.

This would “facilitate rehabilitation and reconstruction activities in earthquake-affected areas”, it said in the statement.

It added that the state was “intensively engaging in reconstruction of damaged government offices and departments, public residences and transport facilities”.

The ceasefire would also allow the country to hold “a free and fair multi-party democracy general election”, according to the statement.

The country’s junta chief said earlier this year that a long-promised election will be held by January, the first in the war-torn nation since the military staged a coup in 2021.

In the statement, the military also warned it would still strike back against any offensives by the array of ethnic armed groups and anti-coup fighters.

Leave a review

JUST IN

spot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img
Popular Categories
Advertisementspot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img