(05-28 12:01)
Myanmar's most heavily-armed and powerful rebel group
has said it is looking to carve out a legitimate state, as experts say
it is flexing its muscles amid tense relations with the government.
The United Wa State Army, which commands an estimated 30,000 troops,
holds sway over a remote mountainous area on the northeast border with
China that is believed to be awash with drugs and has long been aloof
from central Myanmar control, writes AFP’s Hla Hla Htay
Observers say the group is using political openings under a new government to push for greater official acknowledgement.
The Wa self-administered region consists of six townships in the rugged
borderlands of Shan state, but UWSA spokesman Tone Sann told AFP that
the current arrangement was “not enough.’’
“We want them to be acknowledged as a state,'' he said on the sidelines
of a religious ceremony in northern Shan that marked a rare public
appearance for officials from the rebel group.
The UWSA has upheld a ceasefire agreement with the government since
1989, one of the longest such deals in a country that has been riven by
pockets of ethnic rebellion since independence in 1948.
“The Wa have proven adept, in the past, at garnering the concessions
they need,'' Nicholas Farrelly of the Australian National University
told AFP, adding that the group's military, economic and political
resources makes them a “force to reckon with''.
“Moreover, given they run what often feels like an independent
borderland fief, it is logical that the Wa leadership would be the
first to test a new style of decentralization.''
Ethnic Wa make up about 1 percent of the Myanmar population, with about
800,000 people of various ethnic groups in the self-administered
region, according to Tone Sann.
He said the UWSA made an official request for their region to be
upgraded to “Wa State'' in talks with a government peace team this
month, adding they received assurances it would be considered in the
country's parliament.
Myanmar has seven ethnic minority states and seven regions, mainly of the majority Burman ethnicity.
Tone Sann said the Wa want their region to be recognized as a state to
take advantage of regional development, as resource-rich and
strategically located Myanmar looks to reap the rewards of ending
decades of isolation.
Sai Pao Nap, an upper house MP from the Wa Democratic Party said the
group is also keen to deal directly with the central government, rather
than the current arrangement of communicating through authorities in
Shan state.
“I do not think their demand to be a state can cause any complication,''
said the politician, who is also a chairman of the parliament's
National Races Affairs Committee.
But he added that there have been heightened tensions between the UWSA
and the military for two years, when the group was asked to join a
so-called border guard force under the command of the Myanmar army.
The Wa claim comes as the country's military is locked in a deadly
conflict with rebels in neighboring Kachin, where a 17-year ceasefire
collapsed soon after the new government came to power in 2011.
Peace talks with the Kachin, which were set to continue today, have
stumbled at several hurdles and the unrest has continued amid suspicions
that the army is determined to bring all the insurgents to heel once
and for all.
A recent report by analysts IHS Jane's said the UWSA ceasefire was
“fragile'' and suggested the group had purchased armed helicopters from
China as part “a program of rapid rearmament'' – a claim denied by both
Beijing and the Wa.
Tone Sann said some aircraft had been bought as “samples'' to put on
display to the public. “These are not real ones and cannot be used. We
just wanted to attract more people to visit our museum,'' he said.
“It is not true that we bought helicopters from China,'' he added, also
rejecting persistent claims of widespread opium and methamphetamine
production in Wa territory as “just accusations''.
Farrelly said China was the “sponsor and facilitator of Wa success'', a
situation that the Myanmar government may “resent'' but would have
little opportunity to counter.
“It is a borderland defined by its entanglements and ambiguities, with
the Chinese playing an inevitable role in what they consider their own
backyard.''
http://www.thestandard.com.hk/breaking_news_detail.asp?id=36731&icid=4&d_str=
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Armed ethnic group backed by China raises stakes in Myanmar, demands separate state
3:47 PM
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