Clashes resurge and junta offensive Clashes broke out in August, after the KNDF ambushed dozens of junta soldiers in Loikaw. The KNDF claimed to have killed seven junta soldiers and injured ten more, with only one injury sustained on the KNDF side. The junta rejected claims of this attack occurring. By September, the villages surrounding Loikaw were all ghost towns. On 17 September, the junta launched an offensive into Loikaw from
Pekon, in Shan State, and declared the suspension of the ceasefire. A small clash in the village of Nam Bowan also torched ten houses. On 12 October, three civilians were injured from a landmine near Loikaw. In late October, the
National Unity Government of Myanmar was evidenced to be supporting the KNDF financially, according to the KNDF and NUG Minister of Defense
Naing Htoo Aung. This came at a time when the KNDF and local PDFs were in dire need of ammunition. Between 2 and 6 November, eighteen junta troops and one
Karenni Army soldier was killed in clashes near the village of Sedaw.Around this time, fighting had shifted from the center of
Loikaw Township into the border between Shan's
Pekon Township and the northwestern border of Loikaw township. Karenni militias and PDF groups had all consolidated under allegiance to the NUG as well. On 6 November, a junta medic "conducted civil disobedience" in the center of Loikaw with a gun. The KNDF-PDF congratulated the medic, and claimed he had later defected to the KNDF. The junta attempted to crack down on this, by banning multiple people riding on motorcycles. Loikaw residents objected to the arrests, stating that the care clinic was the only place for medical care in the town, as the Loikaw hospital's services had degraded severely. On 3 December, junta troops blocked off the road between Loikaw, Demoso, and
Bawlakhe, in anticipation of a battle with the KNDF-PDF. A KNDF official corroborated the reports about an imminent battle, claiming the KNDF-PDF were using forest roads and the junta was using the main road. The official also claimed that the junta was preparing for an offensive, and part of the reason the roads were blocked was to root out possible KNDF fighters or supporters. On 18 December, Konna was burnt down during a battle between the KNDF and junta, and parts of the village of Naunglong were set ablaze as well. Fleeing residents claimed that junta troops guarded the fire so as to prevent its extinguishment.
Second battle of Loikaw On 6 January 2022, junta forces launched an offensive into Loikaw, although they were unable to push out KNDF and PDF that were embedded in the city's population. Much of the city's population fled after the battle. == References ==