Arab News

Suu Kyi meets leaders of notorious Myanmar rebel group

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PATNA, India: Indian police on Friday arrested a Hindu nationalis­t leader on charges alleging he insulted a senior female politician by describing her as “worse than a prostitute.”

Police officer Upendra Kumar Sharma said Dayashanka­r Singh was arrested in his hometown in Bihar state where he was found hiding in a relative’s home.

Singh was expelled last week from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party for making the remark against Mayawati, a leader representi­ng millions of lower-caste Dalits. He has been hiding since then.

Singh held a senior BJP position in northern Uttar Pradesh state.

Singh accused Mayawati, leader of the Bahujan Samaj Party, of selling party nomination­s for state elections for millions of rupees and said “her character is worse than that of a prostitute.”

Singh later apologized for his remark, but Mayawati demanded his arrest as she rejected his accusation. NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar: Myanmar’s most heavily armed ethnic group held “positive” talks Friday with the country’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi, a spokesman for her office said, in a major boost for peace prospects.

The United Wa State Army (UWSA) stopped fighting the government in 1989 in exchange for control of a remote portion of territory bordering China which is believed to be awash with drugs.

But they have a 20-25,000-strong standing army and are yet to commit to a full nationwide cease-fire, undercutti­ng Suu Kyi’s aim of swiftly securing a lasting peace.

Several complex ethic conflicts are rumbling across Myanmar’s borderland­s, hampering efforts to build the country’s economy after the end of junta rule.

Some groups who fought the army for decades have signed cease-fires but those are fragile, adding urgency to Suu Kyi’s task.

The Wa are accused of producing and traffickin­g huge amounts of methamphet­amine and heroin from their secretive holdout and buying weapons with the proceeds.

Friday’s “very positive discussion­s” between leaders of the Wa, a powerful group called the Mongla army, and Suu Kyi were an “important first step” in building trust, Zaw Htay, spokesman for her office, told reporters.

Suu Kyi wants to convene a meeting to thrash out the precepts of greater federal autonomy for ethnic groups in exchange for peace.

It is dubbed the 21st Panglong conference in a nod to a historic conference called by her independen­ce hero father — Aung San — in 1947 that saw major ethnic groups commit to joining Myanmar.

But that deal collapsed under the junta that took control several years after Aung San’s assassinat­ion and embarked on almost 50 years of devastatin­g rule.

Suu Kyi has not set a date for the meeting but is ramping up efforts to ensure all rebel groups are at the table.

Both the USWA and Mongla army “support the 21st century Panglong conference and they will try to participat­e,” Zaw Htay added.

Experts say Myanmar’s myriad conflicts are entwined with the illicit trade in drugs, jade and timber, which makes ending them all the more complicate­d.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed or displaced by the decades of war.

 ??  ?? POSITIVE STEPS: Myanmar’s Foreign Minister Aung San Suu Kyi, center, sits with members of the United Wa State Army (UWSA) as they pose for photograph­s after a meeting of armed ethnic groups at a hotel in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, on Friday. (AP)
POSITIVE STEPS: Myanmar’s Foreign Minister Aung San Suu Kyi, center, sits with members of the United Wa State Army (UWSA) as they pose for photograph­s after a meeting of armed ethnic groups at a hotel in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, on Friday. (AP)
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