Peace Process: A lot done, more needs to be done
Summing up the latest round of talks between the ethnic armed
movements’ Nationwide Ceasefire Coordination Team (NCCT) and Naypyitaw’s
Union Peacemaking Work Committee (UPWC), during the last weekend, all
sources have urged both sides to put more effort and time to the ongoing
Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) negotiations.
Dr Hannes Siebert, who has been involved in several peace processes in Colombia, Yemen, Nepal and Lebanon, among others, cautions that one should not expect too much from each round of talks. “Most single text documents, in my experience, have not been finalized after a few drafts,” he said.
The NCCT and the UPWC, since last November, have met 8 times. The first combined draft was drawn up at the 7th meeting, 5-8 April, and the second at the 8th, 25-23 May.
Some of the progresses made include:
- The agreement to include the establishment of a Union Armed Forces on the agenda at the upcoming political dialogue phase
- Joint demining
- Protection of civilians
Several disagreements still divide both sides. One ethnic leader told SHAN, “The main obstacle however is still the mindset:
- Some, forgetting that they are negotiators, come to the talks as if they were entering debates
- We are also apt to think that our demands are just, while the other side’s are insincere. Instead we should judge them as human nature. Everyone wants to get the best of a bargain. Negotiators should therefore not be disturbed by it.”
The venue, according to the sources, may possibly be Laiza, the Kachin stronghold on the Sino Burma border, as Thailand, under military rule since 22 May, has banned unusual gatherings of more than 5 people. The tentative date is 10-13 June.
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