Ceasefire groups divided
Major armed groups that had concluded ceasefire pacts with the Burma Army are inevitably divided between “doves” and “hawks,” as pressure to disarm and contest 2010 elections mounts, according to sources inside Shan State.
10 October 2008
Within the United Wa State Army (UWSA), considered the strongest ceasefire group,
the division appears to be between pro-Bao Youxiang and pro-Wei Xuegang
factions.
While Wei, who commands most of the brigades along the Thai-Burma border, and
his associates have voiced their support for the majority’s decision to resist
pressure by the Burma Army to surrender at meetings, they are reported to be
privately making their own plans. “The Burma Army has offered to buy them off,
which means giving them business concessions,” said a source close to the UWSA
in Mongton, opposite Chiangmai. “They think they should accept the offer and,
if possible, retain their arms as pro-junta militias.”
Members of the Wei faction were formerly ex-Kuomintang officers and men. The Kuomintang
was driven out of China
following its defeat in 1949. Most of them are scattered out in Shan State, Thailand
and Laos.
Meanwhile, followers of the ailing Wa leader Bao Youxiang are making
preparations for “the eventual showdown” with the Burma Army. “Bao may retire,”
said an insider source, “but he has placed high hopes in the hard-liners led by
his nephew Ta Long. Many officers at present have been attending combat courses
organized by Panghsang (Wa capital on the Chinese border).”
Ta Long, 41, a
native of Kunma, is officially the mayor of Namteuk (also written Namtit),
north of Panghsang. “I didn’t meet Wei Hsaitang (a hardline officer who was
released from prison last year and later reported to have been transferred to
Namteuk),” said the source. “But he is believed to be Ta Long’s chief counsel
in military matters.”
Similar reports have been received by SHAN with regards to the Hsengkeow-based
Shan State Army (SSA) North and Mongla-based National Democratic Alliance
Army-Eastern Shan State (NDAA-ESS).
A recent report says the SSA-North would be setting up a political party and
had already consulted Maj-Gen Aung Than Tut, Commander of the Lashio-based
Northern Region Command of the Burma Army. The group has declined either to
confirm or deny it.
“Anything can happen before 2010,”
said a long-time border watcher, “and I won’t be the first to make any
predictions until and after the electoral law has been announced.”
The electoral law is due to be promulgated by the end of the year, according to
some sources. In the mean time, political campaigns by pro-junta groups have
already begun following approval by Naypyidaw of its draft constitution in May.

