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China-backed militia new power brokers in Myanmar peace process
SAM Staff, May 28, 2017
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Two Wa soldiers from the United Wa State Army (USWA) patrol a newly-constructed road. Photo: AFP
Branded as Asia’s most heavily-armed drug dealers, the China-backed ethnic Wa rebels have emerged as key players in Myanmar’s peace process, a development seen as strengthening Beijing’s influence over its violence-wracked neighbour.

When Myanmar’s new civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi convened the first round of peace talks with the country’s myriad ethnic groups last year, the United Wa State Army’s (UWSA) attendance was a side-show to the main action.

But as hundreds of delegates gathered in the capital this week for round two of the peace negotiations, all eyes were on the militia.

A scrum of media surrounded their five grinning representatives as they strode into the vast conference hall in Naypyidaw sporting traditional studded red blazers emblazoned with their symbol of a horned buffalo head.

With them were members of several ethnic groups who have rallied behind Myanmar’s most heavily-armed militia after an explosion of violence in the country’s northeast.

For years the group has kept a low profile in Myanmar’s politics after a 1989 ceasefire deal granted them their own independent territory the size of Belgium on the Chinese border.

The secretive ‘statelet’ is like a little piece of China — signs are written in Mandarin, people trade in the Chinese currency the yuan, and the casinos are filled with Chinese gamblers.

From there the Wa are accused of running one of the world’s largest drug-trafficking operations, pumping out millions of meth pills across Southeast Asia and increasingly into Bangladesh and India.

Beijing’s bargaining chip
Analysts say the UWSA’s growing muscle in the peace talks is strengthening Beijing’s hand as it looks to tap Myanmar’s vast natural resources and secure new energy projects.

Publically Beijing has declared its support for Myanmar’s peace process, sending a delegate to the talks and mediating with armed rebels, which have fought against the country’s military for decades in a horseshoe of conflict-wracked border regions.

In March, China held military drills in a show of strength after thousands of refugees poured across the border to escape the worst fighting in decades between one insurgent group and Myanmar’s army.

At a meeting in Beijing this month, President Xi Jinping pledged to SuuKyi that China would “continue to provide necessary assistance for Myanmar’s internal peace process”.

But analysts say Myanmar’s giant neighbour is also fuelling the conflict by arming the UWSA with heavy artillery, surface-to-air missiles and light armoured vehicles, and helping them arm their allies.

China’s support for the rebels “provides a lever by means of which to apply pressure, actual or potential, on (the government),” said IHS Jane security analyst Tony Davis.

Beijing is also keen to “secure the stability in the border regions” to drive through its One Belt One Road initiative, he said, referring to a huge infrastructure project intended to link Asia to Europe and Africa that would run through northern Myanmar.

‘The big boys’
Experts warn the formation of the new UWSA-led bloc of powerful rebel groups now threatens to scupper Suu Kyi’s Western-backed peace process.

“The UWSA are the big boys in town,” one political consultant to the armed groups told AFP. “Even if you don’t agree with everything they say you want them on your side.”

On Friday, the militia and its allies held private talks with the Nobel laureate over changes to a controversial ceasefire agreement.

First touted in 2015 by the former military-backed government, the deal has been a cornerstone of her push to end the civil wars raging in Myanmar’s border regions.

But the UWSA has rejected it, saying it is “no solution” to the conflict.

At a gathering of ethnic groups in the Wa’s secretive capital in February, UWSA chairman BaoYouxiang told delegates they must forge a “new path to peace” of their own.

Angshuman Choudhury from the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies said the new grouping “will complicate the dialogue process”.

“The UWSA is a highly influential and powerful group… (and likely to) be far more assertive and forthright in its demands.”
SOURCE AFP
http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/05/28/china-backed-militia-new-powerbrokers-myanmar-peace-process/
 
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I have a question to the Chinese member here :

Aren't the Wa people the descendant of the KMT army who run away from China when the mainland was takeover by CCP in 1949? They then became one of the biggest drug lord in the world, that we know as Golden Triangle. Is it true?
 
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Wa people are one of the ethnic group in China's 56 official recognized group. I thought they are indigenous to the area, just the border separate them in two countries.
 
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Wa people are one of the ethnic group in China's 56 official recognized group. I thought they are indigenous to the area, just the border separate them in two countries.

Yes kinda like Kurds who are split into 3 different countries.
 
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I have a question to the Chinese member here :

Aren't the Wa people the descendant of the KMT army who run away from China when the mainland was takeover by CCP in 1949? They then became one of the biggest drug lord in the world, that we know as Golden Triangle. Is it true?

No, Wa is a minority tribe that is under Qing dynasty but got seperated by British to Myanmar during the warlord era.

When PRC is founded. Out of good will and friendship with newly founded Myanmar. PRC did not contested these area and agreed to cede to them. I know many KMT leftover soldiers married the Wa tribe people. Wa tribe felt closer to China then Myanmar.
 
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Myanmar and China strengthen their alliance
Larry Jagan, May 30, 2017
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Aung San Suu Kyi (on left) with Chinese president Xi Jinping and his wife

In recent weeks, several signals have emerged that show Myanmar is opting to be part of Beijing’s orbit rather than strengthen relations with the West, particularly Washington. This is in part the result of Beijing’s intense diplomatic charm offensive. But more importantly it reflects Myanmar’s dependence on China to resolve its ethnic instability and violence.

The landmark visit of China’s warships and joint naval exercises earlier this month symbolizes this increasingly symbiotic relationship. These military maneuvers reflected the growing ‘political trust’ between the countries, according to Chinese diplomats.

This followed several important diplomatic exchanges. The most important, was the meeting between Myanmar’s civilian leader, the State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi and the Chinese leader Xi Jinping at Beijing’s ‘Belt and Road’ summit in mid-May — her second visit there in the past year.

Earlier, Myanmar’s titular president, Htin Kyaw, made a six-day state visit to China to strengthen their ties. This paved the way for an agreement with Beijing to create an economic cooperation zone as part of the ‘Belt and Road’ initiative — which is intended to connect Asian and European markets – at the end of Aung San Suu Kyi’s visit.

But the key to Myanmar’s strategic shift towards Beijing is the peace process. This has been one of the new democratic Myanmar government’s key priorities since it came to power more than a year ago. Originally Aung San Suu Kyi tried to build on the legacy of the previous president, Thein Sein – the national ceasefire agreement (NCA). This took several years of negotiation and eventually only eight groups signed the document, in October 2015.

Since then there has been a plethora of meetings and negotiations – primarily centered on getting the other ethnic rebel groups to sign the NCA and start the promised political dialogue that would lead to the creation of a federal state. This has failed and the peace process has stalled. The latest meeting of the 21st Panglong peace conference, which concluded last week, is a clear testament to that. Key ethnic groups boycotted the meeting, because of the government’s insistence that those groups that did not sign the NCA would not be able to participate fully – they could only attend as observers.

Sources close to the Myanmar leader say she has begun to realize the NCA is not the key to kick starting the peace process, but that a new approach is needed. For this she has turned to Beijing for their support, especially in convincing the Northern Alliance – many of whom are still fighting with the Myanmar army – to join the peace process. At Beijing’s behest they attended the recent Panglong meeting in Naypyidaw.

The State Counselor and the Alliance members have had bilateral talks in the aftermath of the conference. Led by the Wa – a major ethnic group closely allied to China – the northern alliance has proposed an alternative approach to the peace process, which may now be the basis of discussion. Behind the scenes, the Chinese are backing this group and their plan.

For Aung San Suu Kyi now China has become key to solving the peace conundrum. She believes she needs China for the successful conclusion of the peace process according to sources close the Lady – as she is commonly referred to. As a result she feels beholden to Beijing – and that has certainly given them the upper hand in the battle for influence.

From once being the darling of the West, policy makers in the US in particular, fear Aung San Suu Kyi’s recent pivot towards China. But apart from the assistance Myanmar needs to achieve national reconciliation, a close friendship with Beijing offers the State Counselor many other benefits: most importantly with the military.

The Myanmar commander-in-chief has long seen the Wa as crucial to the peace process. While the army has no intentions of engaging them militarily, they do want to contain them. The generals fear the Wa extending their influence along the northern border with China to Thailand. Last year the army chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing made a hastily arranged unannounced trip to China in an effort to illicit Beijing’s support to contain the Wa, who at the time seemed to be spreading their tentacles.

So any peace plans, which involve the Wa — with China’s backing — will be fully endorsed by Myanmar’s military leaders. But more importantly Aung San Suu Kyi’s preference for Beijing over Washington would also meet with their strong approval. Although the military want to be accepted by the US – and hanker after better relations, including access to military training and even hardware – they do not entirely trust Washington. Instead they believe Beijing is a more dependable ally.

China has always been prepared to come to Myanmar aid, the former military intelligence officer Colonel Hla Min told me nearly two decades ago, during the time of the former military regime. In 1988, when the US Seventh Fleet sailed into the Andaman Sea – and military leaders feared a US invasion was imminent – thousands of Chinese troops amassed on the northern border ready to cross over and come to Myanmar’s assistance, he explained.

While the military is more open to China, it should not disguise their long held suspicion. “We don’t trust the Chinese but we know we must work with them,” a former senior military officer told me recently.

On the other hand, although the Wa maybe prepared to work with the government now, they also harbor deep reservations about Aung San Suu Kyi – especially about her power. “We can never work with Aung San Suu Kyi if she becomes Myanmar’s leader,” the Wa leader Bao Yuxiang told me in the Wa capital Pangsan, fifteen years ago. The reason: “she doesn’t have an army.”

So for now at least Aung San Suu Kyi feels she has no alternative but to depend on China, and strengthen their bilateral relations, especially for the sake of the peace process. However in the longer term, Myanmar – under Aung San Suu Kyi – is likely pursue a more nuanced foreign policy. But for the moment China is a prime position to exert its influence on the Lady.

http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/05/30/myanmar-china-strengthen-alliance/
 
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Images show Myanmar Air Force JF-17/FC-1 conducting flight tests in China
Gabriel Dominguez, London - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
14 June 2017

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Images have emerged showing what appears to be one of the first JF-17/FC-1 fighters on order for the MAF conducting test flights in China. Source: Via zhaizou.com website


Images have emerged on Chinese online forums showing what appears to be one of the first Pakistan Aeronautical Complex/Chengdu Aircraft Industry Corporation (PAC/CAC) JF-17 Thunder/FC-1 Xiaolong multirole combat aircraft on order for the Myanmar Air Force (MAF) conducting test flights in China.

Released around 13 June the images show a single-seat JF-17/FC-1 with the standard camouflage and tail insignia of the MAF being flight-tested at what appears to be CAC's airfield in Chengdu.

Diplomatic sources told Jane's in December 2015 that Myanmar had signed a contract earlier that year for 16 such aircraft at a unit cost of USD16 million.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, sources told Jane's in February 2017 that these aircraft will be of the Block II variant, which was first rolled out from the PAC's Kamra plant in 2015 and which, unlike the Block I variant, features an air-to-air refuelling capability and improved avionics and electronics.

China's state-owned Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) - CAC's parent company - is believed to also be providing technical assistance to Myanmar as the aircraft replaces the MAF's ageing Chengdu J-7 fighters, which were exported as the F-7M Airguard and acquired in the 1990s.

Myanmar is widely believed to be the first export customer for the Sino-Pakistani fighter, deliveries of which are expected to begin before the end of 2017.

http://www.janes.com/article/71422/...e-jf-17-fc-1-conducting-flight-tests-in-china
 
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China receives first oil from Myanmar pipeline
Source: Xinhua| 2017-05-19 21:15:00|Editor: Mengjie

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A staff member inspects China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline in Ruili, southwest China's Yunnan Province, May 19, 2017. The first crude oil from Myanmar has reached China via the China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline, China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) announced on Friday. The oil reached Ruili, a city of Yunnan Province bordering Myanmar, at 4 p.m., according to the CNPC. It will continue to flow through the pipe at a speed of about 50 kilometers per day for 650 km before reaching the city of Anning where the CNPC's Yunnan petrochemical branch is located. The branch has a designed processing capacity of 13 million tons per year. (Xinhua/Yao Bing)

BEIJING, May 19 (Xinhua) -- The first crude oil from Myanmar has reached China via the China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline, China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) announced on Friday. The oil reached Ruili, a city of Yunnan Province bordering Myanmar, at 4 p.m., according to the CNPC. It will continue to flow through the pipe at a speed of about 50 kilometers per day for 650 km before reaching the city of Anning where the CNPC's Yunnan petrochemical branch is located. The branch has a designed processing capacity of 13 million tons per year.

The 1,420-km long cross-border pipeline is a part of the China-Myanmar oil and gas pipeline project. The project, which comprises a crude oil pipeline and a gas pipeline, is a state-operated collaboration between China, Myanmar and international commercial partners.

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Photo taken on May 19, 2017 shows the Ruili station of the China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline in Ruili, southwest China's Yunnan Province. (Xinhua/Yao Bing)

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A staff member of inspection and quarantine bureau tests sample at the Ruili station of the China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline in Ruili, southwest China's Yunnan Province, May 19, 2017.(Xinhua/Yao Bing)


http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2017-05/19/c_136299034.htm
 
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Dry port sets hopes on Belt and Road
By Than Naing Soe | Thursday, 15 June 2017
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The country’s first dry port will be built near Myitnge, in Amarapura township, Mandalay Region, and join the Belt and Road network, said U Myo Win, general manager from Myanma Railways (Upper Myanmar).

“It is a two-year project under UNESCAP agreement between governments,” he said.

UNESCAP refers to the United Nations Economic Social Commission Asia Pacific.

The dry port is 75-acres wide and will feature all functions like a sea port, he added.

A dry port is a port situated near sea. It is an inland terminal which is directly connected to a maritime port.

“After customs clearance procedures are completed at the dry port, goods can be loaded on board at once without having to go through customs clearance in Yangon. This is our plan,” said U Myo Win.

Of the eight companies which applied for tender for the dry port construction, Hong Kong-based Kerry Logistics and Resource Logistics, a domestic firm, have been selected and the contracts were signed on April 3.

Headquartered in Hong Kong, Kerry Logistics is a logistics services provider which specialises in third party logistics, freight services, warehouse operations and supply chain solutions. The firm is active in Hong Kong, greater China as well as the ASEAN region. It has established international freight offices in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Cambodia, Thailand, the Philippines, Vietnam and Myanmar.

“Kerry Logistics has been allowed to operate on 42.674 acres of land and Resource Logistics has been allowed to operate on two separate land areas, 18.47 acres and 13.36 acres.

“Myanma Railways has prepared to make the transfer of land in the first week of June. Companies will start their construction works as soon as we transferred the land,” he said.

U Myo Win added that the dry port will be eventually connected with the China-led Belt and Road Initiative infrastructure network, through the planned Lashio-Muse railway.

Translation by Zar Zar Soe
 
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The country’s first dry port will be built near Myitnge, in Amarapura township, Mandalay Region, and join the Belt and Road network
Of the eight companies which applied for tender for the dry port construction, Hong Kong-based Kerry Logistics and Resource Logistics, a domestic firm, have been selected and the contracts were signed on April 3.
Congrats to Myanmar and Kerry Logistics!

Kerry Logistics Network is a behemoth multinational based in Hong Kong, it's part of a Malaysian empire owned by Robert Kuok (Kuok Hock Nien; 郭鹤年) family. Congrats @Chinese-Dragon @powastick @Nan Yang @Gibbs
 
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Congrats to Myanmar and Kerry Logistics!

Kerry Logistics Network is a behemoth multinational based in Hong Kong, it's part of a Malaysian empire owned by Robert Kuok (Kuok Hock Nien; 郭鹤年) family. Congrats @Chinese-Dragon @powastick @Nan Yang @Gibbs
Robert Kouk lives in HK most of the time, runs his businesses in Malaysia from Singapore. How is it Malaysian?
 
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Robert Kouk lives in HK most of the time, runs his businesses in Malaysia from Singapore. How is it Malaysian?
He is still the richest Malaysian by nationality, but you were right about where he lives and how he runs his empire. He's often viewed as a Hong Kong businessman, and was the among the "tycoon group" of 70 Hong Kong's most influential billionaire that visited Beijing in 2014.

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Xi Jinping meeting a delegation of 70 Hong Kong tycoons, 2014, Beijing.
 
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Congrats to Myanmar and Kerry Logistics!

Kerry Logistics Network is a behemoth multinational based in Hong Kong, it's part of a Malaysian empire owned by Robert Kuok (Kuok Hock Nien; 郭鹤年) family. Congrats @Chinese-Dragon @powastick @Nan Yang @Gibbs
that's nice. bro
kerry logistic intrested in another 2 dry ports which is planned along Ayeyarwady river if they run this sucessfully. hope to see more JVs for another ones.
 
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that's nice. bro
kerry logistic intrested in another 2 dry ports which is planned along Ayeyarwady river if they run this sucessfully. hope to see more JVs for another ones.
Good to hear that, better connectivity always helps. Kerry Logistics is an award-winning and well-accredited multinational, a valuable partner for Myanmar.

http://www.bobsguide.com/guide/news...-best-liquidity-management-award-using-reval/
http://asiatoday.com/pressrelease/k...pany-hkira-3rd-investor-relations-awards-2017
 
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