‘Excluded’ militias voice support for Wa delegation

The Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) and the Arakan Army (AA) released a statement on Wednesday, expressing their disappointment over a situation that developed at the Union Peace Conference in Naypyidaw last week which led to the ethnic Wa delegation walking out.

aa-tnla-mndaa

The three ethnic armed groups, which were excluded from the peace talks, voiced support for the decision taken by the delegation of the United Wa State Party (UWSP).

“We understand how the UWSP feels about the Panglong Conference,” the statement read, referring to the forum by its informal name.

The UWSP, the political wing of the Burma’s largest ethnic militia, the United Wa State Army, stormed out of the conference on September 1, a day after its opening ceremony.

According to Tar Aik Kyaw from the TNLA’s News and Information Department, the UWSP representatives were invited to attend the conference and they went there with the best of intentions. However, they were treated unequally from other delegations, he said.

“We view this conference as lacking equality,” he said.

The TNLA and MNDAA are members of the United Nationalities Federal Council, an umbrella organization comprised of nine ethnic armed groups. Along with the AA, they were excluded by the Burmese government from attending the first round of the Union Peace Conference on the basis that they refuse to disarm and continue fighting with the Burmese armed forces.

Maj. Tar Aik Kyaw said that the signs of discrimination at the peace conference do not bode well for the future.

“We really disagree with this kind of discrimination,” he said. “They should have invited every group to participate at the conference.

“For us, we are always ready to attend talks,” he added. “At future rounds, we will attend if we are invited.”

Leave a Comments

promotion

SHAN Membership

฿ 19฿ 169 /mo
  • ၶဝ်ႈႁူမ်ႈ ႁဵၼ်းဢဝ်ၵၢၼ်ၶၢဝ်ႇ၊ ရေႊတီႊဢူဝ်ႊ၊ ထႆႇႁၢင်ႈ၊ Blogger, Vlog ထႆႇဝီႊတီႊဢူဝ်ႊ တတ်းတေႃႇ ႁဵတ်းဢွၵ်ႇ ပိုၼ်ၽႄႈ
  • ၶဝ်ႈႁူမ်ႈၵၢၼ်တူင်ႉၼိုင်ၸုမ်းၶၢဝ်ႇၽူႈတွႆႇႁွၵ်ႈ ၼႂ်းၶၵ်ႉၵၢၼ်ပူၵ်းပွင်ၵၢၼ်သိုဝ်ႇ
  • ၶဝ်ႈႁူမ်ႈပၢင်လႅၵ်ႈလၢႆႈပိုၼ်ႉႁူႉပၢႆးႁၼ် ဢၼ်ၸုမ်းၶၢဝ်ႇၽူႈတွႆႇႁွၵ်ႈၸတ်းႁဵတ်း
  • ၶဝ်ႈႁူမ်ႈပၢင်ဢုပ်ႇဢူဝ်းတွင်ႈထၢမ် ၵဵဝ်ႇၵပ်းငဝ်းလၢႆးၵၢၼ်မိူင်း၊ ၵၢၼ်မၢၵ်ႈမီး၊ ပၢႆးမွၼ်း လႄႈ ႁူဝ်ၶေႃႈ ဢၼ်ၶႂ်ႈႁူႉၶႂ်ႈငိၼ်း။
  • လႆႈႁပ်ႉဢၢၼ်ႇ ၶၢဝ်ႇၶိုၵ်ႉတွၼ်း ပိူင်ပဵၼ်ဝူင်ႈလႂ်ဝူင်ႈ ၼၼ်ႉ။

Related article

Latest article

Myanmar’s Joshua Van reacts after defeating Japan’s Tatsuro Taira by TKO

THE FEARLESS BLUEPRINT: How Joshua Van’s Victory Ignites the Fight for a Federal Myanmar

0
In the high-stakes world of mixed martial arts, a victory is usually measured in seconds, rounds, or a single knockout. But on the night...
A scene in Yawnghwe (Nyaungshwe) Township, southern Shan State

Rising Conscription Fees Deepen Hardship for Yawnghwe Families

0
Residents in Yawnghwe (Nyaungshwe) Township, southern Shan State, are facing mounting financial pressure after authorities sharply increased monthly conscription-related fees under the military’s recruitment...
The 48th ASEAN Summit

ASEAN’S PROMISE AND LIMITS: Can It Deliver?

0
ASEAN—the Association of Southeast Asian Nations—is often described as a success story of regional cooperation. It brings together eleven countries with vastly different cultures,...
The 48th ASEAN Summit in Cebu, Philippines

BEIJING’S PARADOX: Why Propping Up the Junta is Costing China Its Stability

0
In the high-stakes chess game of Southeast Asian geopolitics, the People’s Republic of China has long held the position that stability in Myanmar is...
A view of Lashio city, where residents report rising crime and declining security

Robberies and Kidnappings Rise in Lashio as Residents Lose Confidence in Security

0
Residents of Lashio in northern Shan State say robberies, thefts, and kidnappings for ransom have surged since the military regained control of the city,...