14 suspected illegal Bengali immigrants arrested in Yangon

CREDIT EMG 1 MAY 2013

Fourteen Bengalis have been captured on Saturday near Mingalardon Township in Yangon Region on suspicion of entering the country illegally while two remains at large, according to the North District Police Force.

Police were called to Thitseitkone ward, Thingankyunkyi village at 3:30 am to reports of suspected illegal Bengalis seen on Malikha Road.

“The police went there to investigate as soon as they received the reports and found that a Super Custom vehicle carrying the [suspected] illegal Bengalis went inside a compound on Malikha Road. They were able to capture 14 male Bengalis, but are still searching for the remaining two female Bengalis who fled the scene with the Super Custom vehicle,” said Lieutenant Colonel Soe Myint, chief of the North District Police Force.

The suspected immigrants are currently in custody at Mingalardon Police Station and will be charged in accordance with the immigration law.

“Illegal Bengalis have been frequently found during the inspections as they try to enter the country. The staffs from various departments who are on duty at the inspection gates should make detail inspections. In some cases, [the illegal Bengalis] were able to pass through many gates before they were captured after getting reports from the public. Some of the illegal Bengalis avoid the inspection gates and take cross-country paths so we will conduct more inspections,” said Than Naing Tun, office chief of the Ministry of Immigration and Population.

“[The suspected illegal Bengalis] were between the ages of twelve and twenty-one. They travelled from Rakhine State to Magway with two Pajaro vehicles. They switched the cars to Super Custom before travelling to Nay Pyi Taw,” said Zaw Win Thant, administrator of Thingankyunkyi village.

Tin Win, border affairs and security minster of Yangon regional government, said the police are investigating the linkages of the case.

 

UWSA denies it acquired armed helicopters from China

credit EMG

Myanmar’s ethnic armed group, the United Wa State Army (UWSA), has dismissed report from Janes Intelligence’s that it acquired five armed helicopters from China.

The news posted on the website, http://www.janes.com, said China delivered several Mil Mi-17 ‘Hip’ medium-transport helicopters armed with TY-90 air-to-air missiles to the Wa aermy in late February and early March. The WA received five helicopters but according to a source of the Myanmar government, only two were confirmed.

MI-17 helicopters armed with TY-90 air-to-air missiles can deter Russia-made Mi-24P Hind jet fighters which the government used in its counter-insurgency operations against the Kachin Independence Organisation, Janes Intelligence website said.

But the news was not true and the Wa did not receive any assistance from China, San Khun from the foreign affairs department of the United Wa State Party told the Eleven Media Group.

He also refused to make any comments on the news about the rearmament of UWSA and China’s assistance.

“I don’t want to say any more as the news was not true, San Khun said.

Although the news sources are unconfirmed, the Wa has already acquired weaponry that any ethnic armed groups in Myanmar cannot expected over the last four years, political analyst living in the China-Myanmar border told the EMG.

“Regarding the recent news on purchasing warhead helicopters from China, the official from the UWSA hasn’t made any comments or confirmed when we asked,” Aung Kyaw Zaw said.

However, they could purchase those helicopters if they wish with the current budget, sources say.

“We don’t know whether military weapons, arms and equipment are being imported from China or Ukraine. They are imported via Maekong River from Laos? Sources said, last year, about two hundred trucks loads of arms and weapons were imported. The UWSA did not confirmed over the information leakage either. But It is confirmed that the UWSA has requested the government to allow for an airport project in Tangyan,” Aung Kyaw Zaw added.

The expanding of military power in UWSA shows the country’s unfinished conflicts between the government and ethnic armed forces.

“The government’s troops are not only battling with Kachin Independence Army (KIA) but also with Shan State Army (SSPP/SSA). Besides the government troops are also sometimes fighting with USWA based on the west of Thanlwin River. This is one of the facts for the USWA to beef up military power,” he added.

The UWSA is one of the armed forced army that did not accept to become a border guard force as demanded by the government. It is the strongest ethnic armed force in the country. It has more than 30,000 soldiers and modern weapons. It was the second secession group from Burma Communist Party (BCP). It confiscated the BCP’s headquarter on April 17, 1989. The BCP’s headquarter was located in Wa Region.

Since its inception, UWSP has declared to live peacefully together with the military, and built bilateral relations. At the time of the State Law and Order Restoration Council, UWSP signed a ceasefire agreement with the government, which later designated the Special Region (2) of Northern Shan State as ‘Wa’ region. Then, the UWSA had nearly 10,000 soldiers.

In 1993, representatives from UWSA attended the National Convention of the country, and they cooperated with other ethnic armed forces.

After General Khin Nyunt was expelled from his post in 2004, the Wa people had some arguments with the government. A year later, UWSA officially claimed they had stopped growing opium, but the international community believed their ‘Wa’ groups were still linked to drugs and opium. Continue reading “UWSA denies it acquired armed helicopters from China”