Ceasefire group defies junta over land grab
The Mongla ceasefire group in Shan State East has for 2 months been on a collision course with a Burma Army commander over the latter’s seizure of a 16-acre woodland belonging to local villagers, according to ceasefire sources.
The said woodland between the two villages: Kawnghsarng and Wanyang in Mongyang
township, inside the territory claimed by Mongla, was taken by Infantry
Battalion 281 based in Mongyang on 22 November, according to the report
received by SHAN. The battalion commander Nyan Myint Kyaw then had the area
cordoned off by erecting 4 concrete boundary posts.
Angry villagers, after hearing that the commander had been planning to sell the
woodland to a Chinese businesswoman from Hopong township, Taunggyi district,
reportedly smashed three of the posts to pieces.
“Since
then the two sides have been locked in a stalemate,” said the ceasefire source
who requested anonymity, “with Nyan Myint Kyaw demanding that Brigade 369 (one
of the 3 brigades under Sai Leun, leader of Mongla-based National Democratic
Alliance Army-Eastern Shan State, designated as Special Region #4 by Burma’s
ruling military council) surrender the post smashers and the 369 demanding that
the Army return the woodland back to the villagers.”
From then on, no villagers from the two villages are seen visiting the township
seat, 64 miles
northeast of Shan State East capital Kengtung, fearing they would be detained
and ransomed in exchange for those responsible for the destruction of the
boundary posts set up by the army.
Mongla, together with its closest allies, the United Wa State Army (UWSA) and
Kokang, are also under pressure from Pyinmana, the junta’s new capital, to
surrender. The three had further infuriated the generals when they refused to
sign a junta-prepared statement denouncing the country’s detained democracy
icon Aung San Suu Kyi in November.

