Myanmar’s generals have united the country—against themselves
A year since taking power, the junta is fighting on more fronts than ever before
ZIN HTET AUNG had always loathed the Rohingyas, a Muslim ethnic group from Rakhine, a state in western Myanmar. When the Burmese army led mobs on a rampage through Rohingya villages in 2017, burning, raping and killing and prompting some 700,000 Rohingyas to flee to neighbouring Bangladesh, he believed the military campaign was justified. He regarded the minority as “terrorists” and “illegal immigrants”. Most Bamars, the ethnic majority, to which he belongs, felt the same way.
This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “The enemy of my enemy”
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