Sub-title:
The UWSA and Statehood
ဖော်ပြချက်/အကြောင်းအရာ:
"Once again, the leader of the United Wa State Party/United Wa State Army (UWSP/UWSA) Bao
Youxiang has reiterated his call for state recognition of the Wa self-administered zone this time
at the organisation’s 30th anniversary.
During his speech in the Wa capital of Panghsang, on northern Shan State’s border with China,
the chairman apparently told the assembled that Wa state is an inalienable part of the Union of
Myanmar, and solemnly promised not to split from it or seek independence.1
In his speech, he was reported as saying,
What we need is ethnic equality, ethnic
dignity, ethnic autonomy, and we ask the
government to give the Wa an
autonomous ethnic state; then we will
fight for our lives . . . Until our political
demands are realized, we will hold high
the banner of peace and democracy on
one hand, and armed self-defence on the
other, and maintain the status quo.
2
The success of the UWSA and its ability to
maintain an all but in name autonomous state in
Myanmar is largely due to its support from
China. The UWSA is especially supported by
members of the PLA and Yunnan Province
administration.
3 Many Chinese advisers,
including Chinese intelligence officers and
former PLA personnel, are close to the Wa leadership, and the UWSA often echoes official
Chinese talking points. China’s links with the Wa are also strengthened by language,
investment, communications, and transport, all of which are linked to Yunnan.
4
While other armed ethnic groups up until the 1990s had also been able to maintain semiautonomous enclaves, the Karen especially, bordering Thailand, this ended when the Thai
Government warmed to successive Myanmar military governments.
As a result, pressure was put on such groups to acquiesce to the then government, the NMSP
ceasefire being an obvious case.
The UWSA had not previously maintained ethnic aspirations but was borne out of the collapse of
the Communist Party of Burma and is largely a political construct underscored by ethnicity.
Khin Nyunt after signing a ceasefire with the group used it to fight against the Mong Tai Army
(MTA) and in doing so it was able to take over large swathes of Shan territory north and south of
Kengtung which they still control today and see as part of a future Wa State. After signing the 1989 ceasefire agreement, the UWSA used money from the narcotics trade and
invested in a number of casinos, hotels, and other entertainment enterprises. One of the five
largest banks in Myanmar, Mayflower Bank, prior to its suspension by the Myanmar
Government, had been linked to the UWSA and was subsequently accused of money laundering
by the U.S. which has designated the UWSA as significant narcotics traffickers under the
Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act. In addition, the UWSA also set up a number of
other businesses including the Hongpang Group, founded in 1998, and involved in import/export,
general trading, production of textiles, wires and cables, electric appliances and agricultural
goods. It is also engaged in livestock breeding, gem mining and highway construction. In
addition to its more legitimate concerns, the UWSA has also been implicated in the arms trade
supplying not only other Myanmar based ethnic armed groups but also Naga and in the past
Maoist rebels.
Currently, the group has used proxies such as Ho Chin Ting to invest in enterprises such as
Yangon Airways and a chain of hotels in Myanmar, among them the luxurious Thanlwin Hotel in
Yangon.5
In reality, the Wa region is a prefecture of China in all but name, despite this, the government
has asked the UWSA to sign the NCA, but as head of the Federal Political Negotiation and
Consultative Committee (FPNCC) alliance which also includes the United League of
Arakan/Arakan Army (ULA/AA), Kachin Independence Organization/ Kachin Independence
Army (KIO/KIA), Myanmar National Truth and Justice Party/Myanmar National Democratic
Alliance Army (MNTJP/MNDAA), Palaung State Liberation Front /Ta’ang National Liberation
Army (PSLF/TNLA), Shan State Progress Party/Shan State Army (SSPP/SSA), Peace and
Solidarity Committee/Shan State East National Democratic Alliance Association (PSC/NDAA),
many of whom continue to fight with government forces, it has rejected calls to do so unless
major changes are made to the agreement.6
While many commentators have generally recognised former CPB organisations on a par with
those ethnic armed groups that emerged since 1948, the objectives and most importantly the
constructs that define them are not similar. While many in the FPNCC believe that the UWSA
shares the same over-arching objective in ethnic unity for all – it remains unclear as to whether
the UWSA see this as a genuine objective or merely a convenient identifier to achieve its own
aims.
For the UWSA, the overall veneer of ethnic equality is a useful tool towards establishing its own
statehood and assuaging doubts about its somewhat controversial past deeds not to mention
those alleged in the present. While Bao Youxiang may call for ‘ethnic equality, ethnic dignity,
ethnic autonomy’ which is a particularly noble aspiration, it could be argued when conflict
occurred in 2009 against the MNDAA it did little to support their brothers in arms with whom
they had an alliance.7 Rather, the UWSA moved to secure its own flank and did little else to
change the course of the conflict.8..."
ရင်းမြစ်:
Euro Burma Office
Date of Publication:
2019-06-00
Date of entry:
2021-04-11
Grouping:
- Individual Documents
အကြောင်းအရာ/အမျိုးအစား:
Countries:
Myanmar
Language:
English
မှတ်တမ်း:
ပုံစံ:
pdf
အရွယ်အစား:
112.67 KB
Resource Type:
text
Text quality:
- Good
Remote URL:
pdf (122.63 KB (Original version))