Panic in Naikhongchari border as firing, shelling continue by Myanmar

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News Desk :
Firing from artillery and shelling have been going on incessantly on the Myanmar side of the border in Ghumdum area in Bandarban’s Nikhongchari, creating panic among the Bangladeshi residents.
Earlier on Friday night, a Rohingya teen dubbed Md Iqbal, died as mortar shells from a hill in Myanmar fell in a Rohingya shelter center on zero line. Five more Rohingyas including a girl were also injured.
Local people’s representatives and border security force personnel said the Myanmar army started to fire mortar shells continuously on Friday afternoon after a pause of three days. The firing continued till 4 in the morning. The firing started again on Walingdon hill in Rakhine state from 9:00am on Saturday. The incessant firing created panic among the people along the Ghumdum border. SSC examinees of Ghumdum high school centre were shifted to Kutupalang high school due to security reasons.
Meanwhile, in charge of Ghumdum police outpost Sohagh Rana told the media that around 250 SSC examinees have been shifted to the Kutupalang examination centre and many others reached the exam centre on their own arrangement. There were a total of 499 examinees in the Ghumdum high school centre. Police cannot go to the border area but the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) men remain vigilant there.
The journalists could not go to the border area despite several attempts in the morning as they are intercepted at the BGB check post. BGB members also remain mum on the border situation.
The camp’s managing committee chairman Dil Mohammad, 50, was a member of Myanmar’s Border Guard Police (BGP) for 10 years. He is from Medipara in Rakhine state.
Dil Mohammad told the media that incessant shooting and intermittent firing of mortar shells from Myanmar’s hill continued from 6 in the afternoon on Friday to 4 in the morning on Saturday. Many mortar shells and bullets landed on zero line.
A shell hit near the Konorpara canal at the north side of the camp at around “He was arrested for an offence under the Public Order Act and is currently in custody,” London’s Metropolitan Police said.
The queen’s death on September 8 aged 96, after a record-breaking 70 years on the throne, has sparked an outpouring of emotion.
Members of the public are braving waits that have stretched to more than 25 hours, and chilly night-time temperatures, to view her flag-shrouded coffin.
Lines have snaked for miles along the River Thames since Wednesday when her coffin was brought to the UK parliament complex.
Britain’s King Charles III stands guards as he takes part in a vigil around the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, draped in the Royal Standard with the Imperial State Crown and the Sovereign’s orb and sceptre, lying in state on the catafalque in Westminster Hall, at the Palace of Westminster in London on September 16, 2022, ahead of her funeral on Monday. – AFP pic
Fainting
Some 435 people have needed medical treatment, often for head injuries after fainting in the queue, the London Ambulance Service said.
But Fiona Campbell-Bell, 46, was undeterred as she joined the queue.
“I’ve got an iPad, I have downloaded quite a few things to watch, I’ve got a very thick winter coat and hopefully that will get me through the night,” she told AFP.
Police are mounting Britain’s biggest-ever security operation for Monday’s funeral, as hundreds of dignitaries including US President Joe Biden are set to jet in.
Charles will meet on Saturday with the prime ministers of the Commonwealth realms – the 14 former colonies over which he now reigns in addition to the United Kingdom.
From Australia and Canada to Jamaica and Papua New Guinea, they have formally proclaimed him their new sovereign.
But republican movements are gaining ground in many of the countries, and efforts to keep them all in the royal fold will likely be a feature of his reign.
Charles on Friday wrapped up his maiden tour as monarch to the four UK nations with a visit to Wales, part of an operation dubbed “Spring Tide” to launch him in his new role.
Large crowds in Cardiff chanted “God save the king” as he shook hands with well-wishers following a multi-faith service in Llandaff Cathedral, and at Cardiff Castle.
Charles met Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford, an avowed republican, and there was isolated booing on the streets after the new monarch was quick to declare his son William the new Prince of Wales.
But Drakeford said questions over the future of the monarchy were “a footnote to the dominant feelings of the day”.
Britain’s King Charles III attends a vigil around the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, draped in the Royal Standard with the Imperial State Crown and the Sovereign’s orb and sceptre, lying in state on the catafalque in Westminster Hall, at the Palace of Westminster in London on September 16, 2022, ahead of her funeral on Monday. – AFP pic
‘Tide of Emotion’
Back in London, Charles joined the 15-minute vigil with his siblings – Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward – around their mother’s casket on Friday night.
They stood, silent and eyes lowered, while members of the public filed past.
The vigil will be repeated on Saturday evening by the eight grandchildren, including the new heir to the throne Prince William and his estranged brother Harry.
Harry – who served two tours with the British army in Afghanistan – has been given special permission by his father to wear military uniform despite no longer being a working royal.
The move appeared to be the latest olive branch offered to Harry by Charles after the prince and his wife Meghan, now living in California, accused the royal family of racism.
The personal sorrow of the queen’s family has been playing out in the glare of intense international attention.
But the queen’s youngest son Edward said: “We have been overwhelmed by the tide of emotion that has engulfed us and the sheer number of people who have gone out of their way to express their own love, admiration and respect.”
The public have until early Monday to view the coffin before the queen is honoured with Britain’s first state funeral in nearly six decades.
The spectacular ceremony at Westminster Abbey – expected to be watched by millions around the globe – will see 142 sailors pulling the gun-carriage bearing her lead-lined coffin.
It will be attended by more than 2,000 guests, but leaders from countries at loggerheads with the UK such as Russia, Belarus and Afghanistan have not been invited.
China’s vice president Wang Qishan will attend, Beijing’s foreign ministry confirmed, after a diplomatic spat saw Chinese officials barred from visiting the coffin inside parliament.

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