It is now becoming quite clear that the 12 Ethnic Armed
Organizations (EAOs), invited by United Wa State Army (UWSA) will be
just a meeting between members of Nationwide Ceasefire Coordination Team
(NCCT) and groups not participating in negotiation directly with UPWC.
According to Gen Gun Maw, deputy chief of staff of Kachin Independence
Army (KIA), it is a UWSA called conference and not the NCCT held
meeting. The meeting scheduled to take place in Panghsang, from 1 to 3
May will discuss about how to go about with the peace process and
evaluate the whole situation, not to decide on the Nationwide Ceasefire
Agreement (NCA) fifth draft, agreed text, on 31 March.
Non-NCCT members, are the UWSA, the Mongla group and Shan State
Army-South (SSA-S), and groups that the government refuses to
acknowledge as participants in the nationwide ceasefire process are
Arakan Army (AA) and the Kokang‘s Myanmar National Democratic Alliance
Army (MNDAA). Both parties, including TNLA, have been involved in heavy
fighting with the Burma Army in northern Shan State in recent months.
In this sense, the NCCT called meeting, involving all members still
need to take place, so that EAO leaders could decide upon the fate of
NCA draft, which would either lead to ratifying it with or without
alteration, from the part of the ethnic leaders, or call another round
of discussion between Union Peace-making Work Committee (UPWC) and NCCT
to finalize the latest draft, should there be additional clauses, from
the ethnic point of view. Either way, the EAOs need to gather and talk
about the latest draft among themselves first and foremost.
The EAO leaders past meetings were held in Kachin Independence
Organization (KIO) capital Laiza and Karen National Union (KNU)
controlled Lawkhila, with the military’s tacit knowledge and regime’s
endorsement. However, the venue of the upcoming meeting is still not
decided, at this writing.
Since logistics is the most important factor to hold such meeting,
involving EAOs spreading all over the country, this has to be in place
or arranged, so that it could materialized. The past meetings were made
possible, due to the regime’s endorsement and help, regarding
transportation of the ethnic leaders to the meeting destination. During
that period, the relationship between the Tatmadaw and the EAOs were
quite good, if not excellent, and it had yielded to the regime’s desire.
But these days, the relationship is worsening, especially with the
MNDAA, KIA, Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) and AA, with
offensives and daily armed clashes going on in northern Shan State and
Kachin State. Apart from that, the military has openly voiced its
displeasure for the invitation of MNDAA, TNLA and AA by the UWSA, which
the regime doesn’t acknowledge as its negotiation partners. It even
issued warning, invoking paragraph 17/1, association with illegal
organizations act, and threatening to arrest those who might be
involved. This means, it could arrest all EAO members and those who
support them anytime, when they pass through the military controlled
areas. And this means, it could block the movement of the ethnic leaders
and could sabotage the meeting, whenever it chooses to do so.
Even though the up-coming Panhgsang meeting will be able to be
convened, presumably with the participation of MNDAA, TNLA and AA, due
to the favorable geographical location of the Wa headquarters, other
locations like Laiza and Lawkhila will become problematic to reach,
which have to make use of Tatmadaw controlled routes, without its
willingness to endorse the free passage for all EAO leaders.
As such, the regime and as well, the military should view the peace
process as a whole package for the betterment of the country, of which
the EAOs meeting is also part and parcel of the whole undertaking; and
allows smooth logistics flow to make the NCA deliberation of the ethnic
leaders possible.
And given that the Thein Sein regime’s insistence and eagerness to
proceed by its tightly scheduled plan, to start political dialogue
before the general elections, slated to be held in November, there is no
time to lose, from the part of the government. It will certainly be an
embarrassment, if the military were to lay stones on the road peace
process for any reason, whatsoever.
Having said that, the military should now rethink its rigid posture,
abandon its territorial gain offensives and opt for cooperation,
especially where the forth-coming Ethnic Leaders’ Summit is concerned.
The contributor is ex-General Secretary of the dormant Shan Democratic Union (SDU) — Editor