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Inside Myanmar, rebels are losing ground as military forces men into army
international

Inside Myanmar, rebels are losing ground as military forces men into army

BBC World · Jun 9, 2026, 9:13 PM

Key takeaways

  • Quentin Sommerville Bago and Karen state, Myanmar BBC/Darren Conway.
  • They didn't choose to be soldiers for the military either.
  • One had been a chef on his way home from work when he was grabbed off the street.

Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.

Quentin Sommerville Bago and Karen state, Myanmar BBC/Darren Conway. The four young men in the rebel camp hidden deep in jungle-covered mountains never wanted a part in Myanmar's civil war.

They didn't choose to be soldiers for the military either.

One had been a chef on his way home from work when he was grabbed off the street. His lack of ID was enough for the military to detain him and force him to sign up. Another was taken on his way back from a late-night karaoke session; a third had been working for the forestry department when he was arrested. The fourth man says on being arrested, drugs were slipped into his shoe, and he was framed and made to enlist.

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