Irrawaddy, October 12, 2012
Burmese government minister Aung Thaung, left, and KIO Chairman Lanyaw
Zawng Hra exchange a document during a meeting in Ruili, China, on Nov.
29, 2011. (Photo: KIO)
The Burmese government has proposed a new venue for peace talks with
the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO), itsI second offer in a month.
The KIO rejected the government negotiating team’s last proposal to
hold peace talks in Naypyidaw, saying that it would be inappropriate
given that fighting between the sides was ongoing so close to the Kachin
headquarters at Laiza.
Sources who attended previous talks said a letter of invitation was
sent on Oct. 10 inviting the KIO leaders to reconvene peace negotiations
at a venue in either Ruili or Muse, both of which are Sino-Burmese
border towns.
Hla Maung Shwe, one of the brokers for the government’s Peace Committee, told The Irrawaddy
on Friday: “This is the proposition for the fourth round of talks.
Neither side could previously agree on a suitable venue for various
reasons, despite the fact they have already met three times.”
No exact dates or times were proposed, he added.
Naypyidaw’s chief negotiator Aung Min last met with Kachin
representatives in Mai Ja Yan on June 20. Following that meeting, both
sides said they had agreed to further negotiations aimed at resolving
tensions between troops at the front lines.
Hostilities broke out between government troops and the KIO in June
last year, ending a 17-year ceasefire. According to the KIO, 105 acts of
engagement occurred between the armies in September alone.
Aung Min’s negotiation team has reached ceasefire agreements with
several other ethnic militias in recent times, including groups in
Karen, Shan, Mon, Karenni and Chin states.
Irrawaddy reporter Than Htike Oo contributes to this report.
http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/16369
Friday, October 12, 2012
Govt Offers KIO New Venue for Peace Talks
5:54 PM
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