KIO
No Longer Outlawed
By LAWI WENG / THE IRRAWADDY| June 21, 2012
Refugees from
Kachin State cook meals at a temporary camp by the Chinese border. (Photo:
Reuters
Kachin
State’s Chief Minister La John Ngan Hsai declared on Thursday that Naypyidaw
had told him to instruct the various departments within his regional assembly
in Myitkyina to dismiss or ignore the constitutional act that outlaws the
Kachin Independence Organization (KIO).
Speaking
to The Irrawaddy, San Aung, who has been a mediator at peace talks between the
KIO and the Burmese government, said that the order was given to effectively
repeal Article 17/1, which states that it is illegal for anyone to have contact
with an outlawed organization. The constitutional law, which dates back to
British colonial times, has been used for years to justify the arbitrary arrest
of anyone suspected of supporting anti-government organizations or ethnic armed
groups.
San
Aung said, “The chief minister called the heads of several departments [in
Kachin State] at around 10 am, and told them that Naypyidaw had instructed him
to ‘drop Article 17/1.’
“This
is a very positive development, because this is one of the main issues that the
KIO demanded from [government delegation leader] U Aung Min yesterday at the
meeting,” he said.
The
rescission of the constitutional article, whether as a de jure act in
Parliament or as a de facto policy will have an immediate bearing on 49 ethnic
Kachins who are currently detained under 17/1, accused of being KIO supporters
or sympathizers.
“The
20 people who have been detained this month will probably be released soon,”
said San Aung. “However, the 29 who have already gone to trial will probably have
to complete the legal proceedings.”
Burmese
authorities arrested 20 people they accused of supporting the KIO at IDP camps
in state capital Myitkyina earlier this month. Since then, Kachin sources say,
many displaced Kachin villagers have been afraid to stay in the shelters.
“The
rescission of Article 17/1 will be very good for the refugees,” said San Aung.
“They will be able to leave the camps and look for their families or try to
return to their villages.”
San
Aung was alluding to the common perception among Burmese authorities that
anyone from conflict zone villages or returning from rescue shelters must
inevitably be a supporter of the KIO.
At
Wednesday’s meeting in Maijayang, the government delegation reportedly told the
KIO leaders to propose a list of political prisoners who they believe should be
released.
Meanwhile,
around 70,000 Kachin villagers remain as refugees or as displaced persons,
having fled their homes over the past year to escape fighting between the KIO
and the Burmese army.
Kachin
sources said on Thursday that the leaders of the KIO appear content with the
substance of their meeting the day before in Maijayang where a government
delegation led by Railways Minister Aung Min, who was recently appointed
vice-chairman of the newly formed Union Peacemaking Working Committee, met with
the KIA’s chief of staff, Maj-Gen Sumlut Gun Maw, and other KIA/ KIO leaders.
The
next meeting is reportedly due to take place at an unspecified date in Bhamo
Township if the KIO agree in principal with the map proposed by the government
suggesting sites for the relocation of military bases.
The
KIO representatives told Aung Min that they will meet after they had discussed
the military map proposal at Laiza, the headquarters of the KIO.
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