In the five years since Myanmar’s military chief led a coup to overthrow the democratically elected government, civil war has torn the country apart.
Thousands have been killed and millions displaced by the conflict between the military and an alliance of ethnic and rebel groups.
More than two years ago, the rebels made a series of sweeping gains, but things have taken a turn for the worse for them. Forced conscription and increased drone power has put the military on the offensive in most parts of the country.
The BBC’s Quentin Sommerville travelled to Myanmar without the permission of the authorities – the only way to report from rebel-held territory.
During his 10 days there, he spent time with rebel fighters and travelled to hospitals and front-line positions in Bago and Karen states to see how the war is unfolding.
Diamond League: Emmanuel Wanyonyi breaks men’s 1,000m world record in Monaco
Bedford triple murder suspect arrested by South African police
Filing: College app Fizz accuses VC of sharing confidential startup information with rival Sidechat
McGregor vs Holloway 2: Why question marks hang over Conor McGregor’s UFC 329 return
A-Z World Cup quiz: Name the best team for each letter of the alphabet
OpenAI says GPT 5.6 is the ‘preferred model’ for Microsoft Copilot 365 amid breakup chatter
World Cup 2026: Culture, consistency & Lamine Yamal: Inside Luis de la Fuente’s Spain