<p>Three people were killed and nine wounded in a bomb blast at a railway station in southern <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/myanmar" target="_blank">Myanmar </a>on Monday, the junta and local media said.</p>.<p>The blast hit a station at Nyaunglaybin township in Bago region around 150 kilometres north of commercial hub Yangon at around 12:20 pm local time (0550 GMT), the junta's information team said in a statement.</p>.<p>It released pictures showing debris and roof tiles littering a platform.</p>.<p>Local media, citing residents, also reported three people had died and at least nine had been wounded.</p>.<p>The junta statement blamed anti-coup "People's Defence Forces" (PDFs) for the attack, without offering evidence.</p>.<p>The military and PDF groups have traded blame over several deadly blasts in recent months.</p>.<p>There was no statement from the Bago region PDF, which claimed responsibility for an explosion that damaged a bridge in Nyaunglaybin on February 9.</p>.<p>Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military seized power two years ago, with anti-coup rebels clashing with junta troops across the country.</p>.<p>There are almost daily killings of low-level junta officials or anti-coup fighters, with details murky and reprisals often following quickly.</p>.<p>In December around a dozen people were injured in a blast on a ferry in Yangon.</p>.<p>In October at least two bombs exploded outside a prison in Yangon, killing eight people and wounding 18.</p>.<p>Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing acknowledged recently that more than a third of the country's townships were not under full military control.</p>
<p>Three people were killed and nine wounded in a bomb blast at a railway station in southern <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/myanmar" target="_blank">Myanmar </a>on Monday, the junta and local media said.</p>.<p>The blast hit a station at Nyaunglaybin township in Bago region around 150 kilometres north of commercial hub Yangon at around 12:20 pm local time (0550 GMT), the junta's information team said in a statement.</p>.<p>It released pictures showing debris and roof tiles littering a platform.</p>.<p>Local media, citing residents, also reported three people had died and at least nine had been wounded.</p>.<p>The junta statement blamed anti-coup "People's Defence Forces" (PDFs) for the attack, without offering evidence.</p>.<p>The military and PDF groups have traded blame over several deadly blasts in recent months.</p>.<p>There was no statement from the Bago region PDF, which claimed responsibility for an explosion that damaged a bridge in Nyaunglaybin on February 9.</p>.<p>Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military seized power two years ago, with anti-coup rebels clashing with junta troops across the country.</p>.<p>There are almost daily killings of low-level junta officials or anti-coup fighters, with details murky and reprisals often following quickly.</p>.<p>In December around a dozen people were injured in a blast on a ferry in Yangon.</p>.<p>In October at least two bombs exploded outside a prison in Yangon, killing eight people and wounding 18.</p>.<p>Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing acknowledged recently that more than a third of the country's townships were not under full military control.</p>