SHAN STATE — A massive explosion tore through a village in northeastern Myanmar on Sunday, killing at least 55 people and wounding dozens more, according to rebel officials and local rescue operations.
The catastrophic blast occurred around midday in Kaung Tat, a border-zone village located in Namkham Township, Shan State, just kilometers away from the Chinese border.
The territory is currently administered by the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), a powerful ethnic insurgent group actively fighting Myanmar's military junta.
Widespread Destruction in Residential Area
A local source monitoring the recovery efforts reported that the deceased included 30 men and 25 women, with children among the victims.
Massive Crater: Visuals emerging from the site showed a deep crater surrounded by shattered concrete, flattened timber, and charred vegetation, with a massive column of dark smoke visible from miles away.
Hundreds of Homes Damaged: Initial assessments indicate that more than 100 residential homes sustained critical structural damage or were reduced to rubble.
Initial Airstrike Fears: Due to the scale of the shockwave, many surviving residents initially panicked, believing the village was under an aerial bombardment by the military junta.
Unstable Mining Gelignite Identified as Cause
In an official statement, the TNLA attributed the disaster to an accidental detonation at a facility managed by its economic department.
The depot was storing large quantities of gelignite, a commercial blasting agent heavily utilized in local quarrying and mining operations.
Many of Myanmar's ethnic armed organizations rely significantly on the extraction of precious minerals and stones to fund their campaigns against the central government.
However, minimal safety enforcement, sub-standard packaging, and improper storage environments make hazardous industrial accidents a persistent danger across these conflict-heavy border regions.
Surrounding Community Demands Accountability
The aftermath of the explosion was marked by absolute panic and grief, with survivors pulling wounded relatives from burning debris.
One local resident recounted a narrow escape, explaining that she survived purely because she was looking at her phone in her bedroom rather than standing in her kitchen, which was entirely obliterated.
While the TNLA expressed deep condolences and confirmed that its local administrators are offering emergency relief and resettlement assistance, community members are demanding a thorough investigation.
Angry villagers are openly questioning why a volatile stockpile of commercial mining explosives was permitted to operate so close to a high-density civilian residential zone.



No comments: