Burmese president Thein Sein (left) and KIO Chairman Lanyaw Zawng Hra |
Negotiators from Burma's
government and the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) will meet at the
Chinese border town of Ruili on Monday for another round of peace talks,
according to Lah Nan, the KIO's chief spokesperson.
The upcoming talks come a little over a month after both
sides met in Ruili on February 4. As with the previous meeting in Ruili the
next round of talks will also be facilitated by China's government.
Although the last few rounds of negotiations have ended
positively some fighting has continued in Kachin and parts of north western
Shan state since they were held. Yesterday government aircraft attacked KIO
positions along China's border near Pangwa. It is unclear if any KIO staff were
injured or killed during the attack.
The airstrikes against the KIO came less than a day after
Burma's president Thein Sein told reporters in Austria that the fighting had
ended. "There's no more hostilities, no more fighting all over the
country, we have been able to end this kind of armed conflict," Thein Sein
claimed during a joint press conference with Austria's President Heinz Fischer
on Monday.
Thein Sein was in the Austrian capital as part of a 10
day visit to Europe. His trip to the continent has seen him showered with
praise by several governments who previously shunned Than Shwe's military
regime which Thein Sein was a leading member of.
Located north east of the KIO's capital Laiza, the Pangwa
region is the former stronghold of the now officially defunct New Democratic
Army Kachin (NDA-K), a militia group whose troops were adsorbed by the
government's border force in 2010.
A largely paved road connecting Myitkyina to the Chinese
town of Tengchong that passed through Pangwa was one of the busiest trade
routes in Burma until the Kachin conflict resumed in June 2011. Since the KIO
destroyed a series of bridges along the Pangwa to Myitkyina route some 20
months ago much of the cross border trade in Kachin state has been brought to a
standstill.
Other than some Chinese officials who are expected to
attend the talks on Monday is not yet known who any of the third-party
observers will be. Last month in Ruili representatives of the Karen National
Union (KNU) and the Shan Shan State Army South attended as did representatives
of Myanmar Egress, a think tanks close to the government.
It is also unclear whether representatives of the army
will take part. Burma's military did not participate in the most recent talks
in Ruili or during less formal talks that took place in Chiang Mai two weeks
ago between the government and United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC), a
coalition of armed rebel groups that the KIO is a leading member of.
The Chinese government is said to have privately
cautioned the KIO against inviting US officials to the talks. China has instead
made several public overtures indicating that it will continue to support the
Kachin peace process, breaking with long standing practice of not commenting
publicly on internal affairs in Burma.
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