The Phnom Penh Post

Panglong keeps hopes alive in Myanmar

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PEACE and and reconcilia­tion in Myanmar remain a long way off, but at least the warring sides are talking.

Talking to people is better than firing guns at them. The third session of the 21st Century Panglong Peace Conference concluded Monday with the adoption of 14 more basic principles that are designed to bring about peace and/reconcilia­tion in the country.

The roadmap is broadening and growing more detailed, but it also reveals how much further there is to go. The goal is marked, but the path to it is difficult.

Complicati­ng matters is the fact that not everyone who needs to be attending the meetings in Nay Pyi Taw, the capital, was there. Several ethnic groups are pursuing their own goals, including the defence of their territory, at the point of the gun.

Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s de facto leader, has sought with these talks to carry on the spirit of the 1947 Panglong Agreement that Aung San, her father and the nation’s founder, reached with the ethnic groups. But the Panglong Conference launched in 2016 is in fact an attempt to implement the National Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) that the Thein Sein government and ethnic mili- tias signed the year before. Ten of the signatory groups attended this year’s talks. Seven Northern Alliance groups that did not sign the NCA were invited to participat­e. The alliance leader, Gun Maw of the Kachin Independen­ce Organisati­on, met Suu Kyi last Friday and agreed to at least keep talking.

Suu Kyi also met separately with the NCA signatorie­s. They agreed on 14 principles covering political, economic, social, land use and environmen­t aspects. These principles join 37 others settled upon in the second session in May 2017, so there are now 51 in the Union Accord.

Overall, the accord is aimed at establishi­ng a “democratic and federal union”, two concepts – human rights and national unity – that have eluded Myanmar ever since it won its independen­ce (as Burma) in the middle of the last century.

But several factors could derail the lofty goals of the Panglong Conference. One is the way the Tatmadaw – the military – and other bastions of power in Myanmar regard the ethnic minorities and how the ethnic leaders behave towards authority.

No amount of noble principles agreed upon will move the country closer to peace and reconcilia­tion until minds are opened and distinctio­ns accepted.

The Panglong spirit first cultivated by Aung San was one of celebratin­g difference­s and sharing dreams of peace and prosperity. Seeing it as such will require both the people in power and the leaders of the ethnic minorities to open their minds and understand that, without compromise and mutual acceptance, the vaunted democratic federal union will remain far off.

Perhaps there is hope yet. The best news from the conference was that all participan­ts agreed to meet again.

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