Aung San Suu Kyi has instructed a government-appointed
peace negotiation body to invite all ethnic armed groups to an upcoming peace
conference in Myanmar. The government has been organizing the Union Peace
Conference for late August, but has yet to make it clear if ethnic rebel groups
that did not sign last year's Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) would be
invited.
Although the conference is based on
the NCA -- a historic peace deal signed by the previous government and eight
rebel groups in October -- Suu Kyi is pushing to invite all stakeholders, the
government-owned Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported Wednesday.
Zaw Htay, president office spokesperson,
said that during a meeting Tuesday of the preparatory committee for the
conference in political capital Nay Pyi Taw, Suu Kyi -- a Nobel Peace laureate
-- suggested finding the means for all parties to participate.
“Policies outlined at the meeting
include works for allowing NCA non-signatory groups to join the conference,”
Zaw Htay was quoted as saying.
At least 13 ethnic groups --
including major rebels -- had refused to sign the NCA due to the previous
pro-military government’s exclusion of three small groups.
The ex-president’s administration
and powerful military had demanded the Ta’ang National Liberation Army, the
Arakan Army and the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army surrender in
order to join the process.
The new government's negotiator,
Tin Myo Win, told Anadolu Agency on Wednesday that Suu Kyi “is to discuss with
them [representatives of the three groups] in Yangon next week about the new
government’s peace policy”.
Although the country’s military
chief has vowed to support August's conference to ensure its success, it
remains unclear if the three groups would be allowed to join the process.
“We do hope we could find a way for
this and they join the 21st century Panglong Peace Conference,” Tin Myo Win
said by phone, using the official name for the August meet.
On Wednesday, the Karen National
Union -- one of the biggest rebel groups in Myanmar and a signatory to the NCA
-- welcomed the government’s effort to include all players in the process.
“All-inclusiveness would make the
country a step closer to end the civil war,” joint secretary Phado Saw Kwe Htoo
Win told Anadolu Agency by phone.
Ethnic rebels have been fighting
Myanmar's central government and military for greater autonomy and
self-administration since the country’s independence from Britain in 1948.
Suu Kyi has made peace and national
reconciliation a priority of her National League for Democracy government,
which took over in late March following the Nov. 8 election victory.
In 1947, her father, Gen. Aung San,
signed the Panglong Agreement with leaders of Shan, Kachin and Chin ethnic
minorities in a conference in Panglong town in Shan state to grant them
autonomy.
Aung San was then the deputy
chairman of Burma’s Executive Council -- effectively a prime ministerial
position, but still subject to the British governor’s veto.
His assassination in July 1947
prevented the agreements from reaching fruition, and many ethnic groups took up
arms against the central government in wars that continued for decades and took
Burma (which became Myanmar) into what became known as "the world’s
longest civil war".
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