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Myanmar’s army seeks to maintain ethnic minority allies on its aspect with anniversary of cease-fire

BANGKOK — Myanmar’s army authorities hosted representatives from ethnic insurgent teams Sunday to mark the eighth anniversary of the signing of a multilateral cease-fire settlement. But the occasion was boycotted by three of the signatories that oppose the present army-installed regime.

The occasion within the capital Naypyitaw was the primary such formal gathering of the army authorities and ethnic minority leaders for the reason that military seized energy from Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected authorities on Feb. 1, 2021.

Maintaining a cease-fire with as many teams as potential is essential for the army authorities, which for greater than two years has been confronted with nationwide armed resistance from opponents of its 2021 takeover. Those pro-democracy forces have essential alliances with, or assist from, a number of ethnic insurgent teams. The army has launched offensives within the territory lengthy underneath the management of the ethnic minority teams.



In order to shake and divide the anti-military rule alliances, the army authorities has additionally carried out a sequence of in-person peace talks with the leaders of ethnic minorities since May final yr, with little to indicate for its effort.

Myanmar has 21 established ethnic armed organizations and a few of the largest and strongest teams, together with the Kachin Independence Army and United Wa State Army, didn’t endorse the cease-fire pact, which they considered as missing inclusiveness.

The settlement had been seen as a step towards ending the longstanding rebellions in opposition to the federal government however the authorities has all the time been reluctant to achieve the great political settlement many of the teams have sought.


PHOTOS: Myanmar’s army seeks to maintain ethnic minority allies on its aspect with anniversary of cease-fire


The military’s seizure of energy undermined possibilities for the peace course of.

Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the pinnacle of the ruling army council who spearheaded the 2021 takeover, mentioned in his opening speech on Sunday that the cease-fire pact – formally known as the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement, or NCA, – would “remain in force eternally and (is) not … subject to nullification” because it was ratified by Parliament.

He mentioned the army “attaches great importance to the implementation of the NCA agreement,” in line with an official translation of his speech. He additionally urged teams that had not been signatories to signal the settlement.

Many ethnic armies have been preventing the ethnic Burman majority authorities for higher autonomy for his or her areas for the reason that nation, then named Burma, gained independence from the British in 1948.

In October 2015, eight ethnic armed teams signed the NCA. In February 2018, two extra ethnic insurgent teams joined the cease-fire underneath Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian authorities, bringing the full variety of signatories to 10.

The Karen National Union, Chin National Front and All Burma Students’ Democratic Front, three NCA signatories, declared they weren’t attending Sunday’s occasion. The three teams have allied with the pro-democracy People’s Defense Force established in 2021 to oppose military rule.

The three teams introduced on Thursday in a joint assertion that the settlement is now not legitimate because the army has destroyed the fundamental ideas of the settlement and repeated vicious assaults that focus on civilians since its takeover.

The assertion mentioned dialogue wouldn’t be held until their calls for have been met. The calls for embrace the army’s withdrawal from politics, implementation of federal democracy and acceptance of worldwide involvement in fixing the nation’s disaster.

Padoh Saw Taw Nee, a spokesperson for Karen National Union – probably the most established and influential of the ethnic minority organizations – mentioned in a video message posted on the group’s Facebook web page on Sunday that the ruling army council is making an attempt to carry peace talks and anniversary occasions to ease the monetary and diplomatic stress they’re underneath and to discover a approach out from dropping a whole lot of territory. Many Western nations preserve powerful financial and political sanctions in opposition to the ruling army.

“Under current conditions, no meaningful peace talks can take place. With the coup, there is no legitimate government, no constitution and no parliament,” Padoh Saw Taw Nee mentioned. “We don’t see any potential positive outcomes from the eighth year anniversary of the NCA that they are organizing now.”

Three members of All Burma Students’ Democratic Front have been listed by the army as being in attendance at Sunday’s occasion however a spokesperson for the group, Ye Baw Sonny, advised The Associated Press mentioned they didn’t characterize it and would face disciplinary measures.

The teams that have been listed as having despatched representatives have been the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army, the KNU/KNLA Peace Council, the Pa-O National Liberation Army, the Arakan Liberation Party, the Restoration Council of Shan State, the New Mon State Party, the Lahu Democratic Union, the All Burma Students’ Democratic Front and another ethnic teams that weren’t NCA signatories.

The army mentioned attendees additionally included 35 members of political events, 11 officers from non-governmental organizations and 32 diplomats, together with Chinese Special Envoy for Asian Affairs Deng Xijun and, Indian Deputy National Security Adviser Vikram Misri.

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