• Burmese
Tuesday, July 8, 2025
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
The Irrawaddy
30 °c
Yangon
  • Home
  • News
    • Burma
    • Politics
    • World
    • Asia
    • Myanmar’s Crisis & the World
    • Ethnic Issues
    • War Against the Junta
    • Junta Cronies
    • Conflicts In Numbers
    • Junta Watch
    • Fact Check
    • Investigation
    • Myanmar-China Watch
    • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Opinion
    • Commentary
    • Guest Column
    • Analysis
    • Editorial
    • Stories That Shaped Us
    • Letters
  • Junta Watch
  • Ethnic Issues
  • War Against the Junta
  • In Person
    • Interview
    • Profile
  • Books
  • Donation
  • Home
  • News
    • Burma
    • Politics
    • World
    • Asia
    • Myanmar’s Crisis & the World
    • Ethnic Issues
    • War Against the Junta
    • Junta Cronies
    • Conflicts In Numbers
    • Junta Watch
    • Fact Check
    • Investigation
    • Myanmar-China Watch
    • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Opinion
    • Commentary
    • Guest Column
    • Analysis
    • Editorial
    • Stories That Shaped Us
    • Letters
  • Junta Watch
  • Ethnic Issues
  • War Against the Junta
  • In Person
    • Interview
    • Profile
  • Books
  • Donation
No Result
View All Result
The Irrawaddy
No Result
View All Result
Home Stories That Shaped Us

Reluctant Exiles: Another ‘Life or Death’ Exodus From Myanmar

Brian Wei by Brian Wei
April 8, 2024
in Stories That Shaped Us
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0 0
A A
Reluctant Exiles: Another ‘Life or Death’ Exodus From Myanmar

Junta soldiers provide military equipment to recent recruits drafted under the conscription law. / Pro-junta Telegram channel

22.1k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

It is an exodus for life. A choice between becoming a human shield or fleeing everything you have – your home, your family, your work and everything familiar to you – for a life of disorientation and confusion.

This is how young people who recently fled the junta’s drive for mandatory military service describe their swift and desperate decisions.

Ko Thakka had never considered leaving Myanmar until the junta activated a law requiring military service on Feb. 10 this year. He was running his own convenience store in Yangon where business was “brisk.” Then, an administrator told young men in his ward to sign up for conscription in the first week of March.

RelatedPosts

Myanmar, Thailand Ramp Up Cooperation on Border Issues

Myanmar, Thailand Ramp Up Cooperation on Border Issues

July 4, 2025
1.5k
Thailand’s PM Suspended by Constitutional Court

Thailand’s PM Suspended by Constitutional Court

July 1, 2025
429
Thailand’s Ruling Political Dynasty Faces Day of Legal Peril

Thailand’s Ruling Political Dynasty Faces Day of Legal Peril

July 1, 2025
324

Ko Thakka, who is in the conscription age range, abandoned his convenience store and everything he knew to flee to Thailand.

Conscription is “the way to death,” the 27-year-old says, adding for emphasis: It is a death sentence. The junta will use conscripts for human shields, he explains. “This is why I fled Myanmar.”

The junta’s shock activation of the People’s Military Service Law immediately made all men aged 18 to 35 and women aged 18 to 27 eligible to be conscripted into two years of military service. The upper age limit rises to 45 for men and 35 for women if they have specialist expertise. For example, if they are engineers or medical professionals.

That’s 14 million people in Myanmar, or 26 percent of the country’s population of 54 million.

After the initial shock of the law’s announcement, young people – and their relatives – began planning escape routes. Thousands of people have been lining up daily at the Thai Embassy in Yangon and the government passport office in Mandalay to try to get entry visas and travel documents.

Ko Khaing, 28, had help from his parents. He arrived in Bangkok in late March with his 22-year-old brother and 19-year-old sister. He had worked as an assistant manager of a PR firm in Yangon but hails from Bago Region.

His exit, along with his siblings, was triggered by a visit from a ward administrator to their family home in Bago. The administrator arrived at the front door to collect information for a list of eligible conscripts.

Ko Khaing’s parents swiftly decided to send their children out of Myanmar. They knew the junta’s military was depleted after suffering casualties, and desertions, in its escalating wars with ethnic armed organizations and other resistance forces nationwide.

They did not want to sacrifice their children’s lives to help the junta cling to a semblance of power.

Like most the majority of others in the exodus, the three siblings ended up in Thailand.

Young people line up for visas at the Thai Embassy in Yangon in late February. / Ko Thaike / The Irrawaddy

More bloodshed

Besides the conscription law, junta boss Min Aung Hlaing also enacted the Reserve Military Force Law in February, allowing his regime to send retired soldiers to the frontline.

In his speech at the Armed Forces Day parade last month, he clung to his rationale, saying the activation of the two laws would make the armed forces stronger. “After that, necessary measures will be taken step by step to ensure state peace, stability, and the prevalence of law and order,” he added, apparently oblivious to the latest exodus he sparked.

Lin Htet Aung, a former army captain who defected to the Civil Disobedience Movement, sees only more bloodshed in conscription: more people will be forced to kill each other.

“The junta aims to force people to fight each other. They [draftees] will be used in terrorist operations against civilians,” he explains. “They will be forced to fight anti-regime revolutionary groups.”

Reluctant exiles

Myanmar’s latest exodus comprises young people who had lived in the country despite the coup on Feb. 1, 2021.  They could have been arrested for any reason at any time. Still, they stayed.

Under the military dictatorship they lost freedom, educational opportunities and jobs. They may also have been the first generation to have dreams for the future following a brief opening to democratic government. These, too, were lost.

Dr. Thura, a doctor from Mandalay, explains why he left Myanmar: “I don’t want to die.”

His second reason was trouble from the regime if he resisted conscription.

Dr. Thura is 35, but because of his professional expertise he can be conscripted until he turns 45. Moreover, his term of service – under a state of emergency, like the one in Myanmar now – could be for as many as five years.

Dr. Thura ran a clinic in Mandalay. He did not welcome the loss of freedom after the coup, but he could survive.

Then, he found he was on the list of possible recruits. He did not want to die a junta soldier, so he raced to Thailand in early March, he explains.

So far, it has not been easy. “I escaped, but I don’t know what to do here,” he explains. “I feel lost,” he says. He was a doctor but now he’s looking for a job to make ends meet.

The exiles do not trust the junta. Although it announced that the first conscripts would be summoned after the annual Thingyan festival in mid-April, it began summoning conscripts in Yangon, Mandalay and Magwe last month.

The junta is afraid that conscripts might flee during the annual festival, and it is in desperate need to beef up its frontline troops, an analyst explained.

Junta officials meet with new recruited drafted under the conscription law in Bago Region. / Pro-junta Telegram Channel

Cannot be trusted

Twenty-four-year Yuya is less says the junta cannot be trusted. According to announcements, she was not in immediate danger. The junta said women would not be among the initial groups conscripted.

She says she does not believe a word it says. She was frightened she would be swiftly conscripted and felt sure this would result in being turned into a human shield.

It was a life-or-death decision, she explains.

She flew from Yangon to Vietnam to apply for a student visa to the United States soon after the conscription law was activated.

Previously, she had been wavering between two options: starting her own business or continuing her studies. Conscription left only one option, she says.

“I don’t even want to say a word to people connected to the military. I’m scared, and I hate them,” she says.

Ko Khaing says he was reluctant to leave. He says his parents forced him and his younger siblings to flee to Thailand.

Now, he is determined to protect his younger brother and sister.

“We have to start a new life here. We have no choice,” says the eldest son.

Your Thoughts …
Tags: Conscription Lawexodushuman shieldsJunta troop depletionMyanmar warThailand
Brian Wei

Brian Wei

Similar Picks:

Exodus: Tens of Thousands Flee as Myanmar Junta Troops Face Last Stand in Kokang
Burma

Exodus: Tens of Thousands Flee as Myanmar Junta Troops Face Last Stand in Kokang

by Hein Htoo Zan
November 28, 2023
98.4k

Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army troops are opening roads and pathways through forests for people to flee Kokang’s capital as...

Read moreDetails
Burning Alive in Myanmar: Two Resistance Fighters Executed in Public
Burma

Burning Alive in Myanmar: Two Resistance Fighters Executed in Public

by The Irrawaddy
February 7, 2024
89.8k

People’s Defense Force says junta troops told every household in the village to send one member to witness the double...

Read moreDetails
Another Entire Junta Battalion Raises the White Flag in Myanmar’s Northern Shan State
War Against the Junta

Another Entire Junta Battalion Raises the White Flag in Myanmar’s Northern Shan State

by The Irrawaddy
November 29, 2023
87.1k

Brotherhood Alliance member says it now has complete control of Kokang’s northernmost section after the junta’s Light Infantry Battalion 125...

Read moreDetails
As Myanmar’s Military Stumbles, a Top General’s Dissapearance Fuels Intrigue
Burma

As Myanmar’s Military Stumbles, a Top General’s Dissapearance Fuels Intrigue

by The Irrawaddy
April 19, 2024
46.9k

The junta’s No. 2 has not been seen in public since April 3, sparking rumors that he was either gravely...

Read moreDetails
Myanmar Coup Leader Showers Medals on Troops as String of Defeats Erodes Morale
Burma

Myanmar Coup Leader Showers Medals on Troops as String of Defeats Erodes Morale

by The Irrawaddy
December 8, 2023
32.9k

Min Aung Hlaing was trying to distract attention from a string of military defeats by handing out 147 medals for...

Read moreDetails
Brotherhood Alliance Marching Towards Capital of Myanmar’s Kokang Region
Burma

Brotherhood Alliance Marching Towards Capital of Myanmar’s Kokang Region

by The Irrawaddy
November 25, 2023
31k

Chinese embassy urges citizens to flee Laukkai Town as ethnic armies prepare to drive Myanmar junta troops from Kokang’s capital.

Read moreDetails
Load More
Next Post
Thailand Says Prepared to Receive 100,000 People Fleeing Myanmar

Thailand Says Prepared to Receive 100,000 People Fleeing Myanmar

Myanmar’s Extreme Heat Threatens Lives

Myanmar’s Extreme Heat Threatens Lives

No Result
View All Result

Recommended

Myanmar Regime Leader Rejects World Bank Economic Forecast as Inaccurate

Myanmar Regime Leader Rejects World Bank Economic Forecast as Inaccurate

5 days ago
1.5k
From Foreign Policy Drift to Diplomatic Freefall in Myanmar

From Foreign Policy Drift to Diplomatic Freefall in Myanmar

1 week ago
2.1k

Most Read

  • Myanmar Junta Starves Last Rakhine Strongholds as AA Closes In

    Myanmar Junta Starves Last Rakhine Strongholds as AA Closes In

    shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • TNLA Defies Myanmar Junta Push to Cede Shan Towns in China Talks  

    shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Timor-Leste Hits Back at Myanmar Junta’s Objection to ASEAN Membership

    shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Myanmar’s Civilian Govt Rebuffs Junta’s Appeal for ‘Cooperation’

    shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Myanmar People Skeptical of Junta’s Promises of Election, Peace

    shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Newsletter

Get The Irrawaddy’s latest news, analyses and opinion pieces on Myanmar in your inbox.

Subscribe here for daily updates.

Contents

  • News
  • Politics
  • War Against the Junta
  • Myanmar’s Crisis & the World
  • Conflicts In Numbers
  • Junta Crony
  • Ethnic Issues
  • Asia
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Election 2020
  • Elections in History
  • Cartoons
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Editorial
  • Commentary
  • Guest Column
  • Analysis
  • Letters
  • In Person
  • Interview
  • Profile
  • Dateline
  • Specials
  • Myanmar Diary
  • Women & Gender
  • Places in History
  • On This Day
  • From the Archive
  • Myanmar & COVID-19
  • Intelligence
  • Myanmar-China Watch
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Food
  • Fashion & Design
  • Videos
  • Photos
  • Photo Essay
  • Donation

About The Irrawaddy

Founded in 1993 by a group of Myanmar journalists living in exile in Thailand, The Irrawaddy is a leading source of reliable news, information, and analysis on Burma/Myanmar and the Southeast Asian region. From its inception, The Irrawaddy has been an independent news media group, unaffiliated with any political party, organization or government. We believe that media must be free and independent and we strive to preserve press freedom.

  • Copyright
  • Code of Ethics
  • Privacy Policy
  • Team
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Burmese

© 2023 Irrawaddy Publishing Group. All Rights Reserved

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Burma
    • Politics
    • World
    • Asia
    • Myanmar’s Crisis & the World
    • Ethnic Issues
    • War Against the Junta
    • Junta Cronies
    • Conflicts In Numbers
    • Junta Watch
    • Fact Check
    • Investigation
    • Myanmar-China Watch
    • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Opinion
    • Commentary
    • Guest Column
    • Analysis
    • Editorial
    • Stories That Shaped Us
    • Letters
  • Ethnic Issues
  • War Against the Junta
  • In Person
    • Interview
    • Profile
  • Business
    • Economy
    • Business Roundup
  • Books
  • Donation

© 2023 Irrawaddy Publishing Group. All Rights Reserved

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.