Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Can Myanmar's Many Parts Make It Whole Again?
The New Indian Express Kollam
|February 06, 2025
British policies accentuated divisions among the country's communities. Allegiances have shifted since then, but the schisms haven't healed. The junta is taking advantage now
N February 1, Myanmar completed four years of military rule. On this day in 2021 General Min Aung Hlaing ousted the National League for Democracy government, which had won the November 2020 election, on the charge the election was fraudulent. The coup, however, failed to be a swift usurpation of power, as the Myanmar armed forces or Tatmadaw had expected. Instead, it has thrown the country into anarchy amid strong resistance from an overwhelmingly large section of the people.
Myanmar is not new to such crisis, having faced them time and again ever since its independence from the British on January 4, 1948. At the time of independence, other than the Buddhist Bamar, who now constitute over 68 percent of the country's 5.46 crore population, a few other ethnic communities began fighting for their own independence. Shelby Tucker's Burma: The Curse of Independence profiles this chaos convincingly, as does Bertil Lintner's Burma in Revolt: Poppy and Insurgency Since 1948.
The post-independence turmoil is best illustrated by the fact that two divisions of Kuomintang soldiers entered Myanmar's Shan state and stationed themselves there without consent for a decade starting 1949, preparing for counter-offensives against Mao Zedong's Communist regime assisted by the CIA.
Tucker says it was the Kuomintang soldiers who started systematic poppy cultivation to fund themselves after the US withdrew support in order to befriend China, taking advantage of a fissure that had appeared between China and the Soviet Union. When the Kuomintang soldiers finally left Myanmar for Formosa (now Taiwan), the drug infrastructure they built were inherited by local warlords such as Khun Sa. Thus was born the notorious Golden Triangle between northeastern Myanmar, northwestern Thailand and northern Laos.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 06, 2025-Ausgabe von The New Indian Express Kollam.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The New Indian Express Kollam
The New Indian Express Kollam
A Helping of Goodwill
When the Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA) first began a modest tiffin service for a few office-goers in Ahmedabad, no one could have guessed that those humble lunchboxes would one day spark a café movement.
1 mins
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
Everyone Preaches Justice, No One Lives It
Everybody has their own version of hell.
2 mins
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
The Future of a Stable India Depends on UBI
Kerala, we are told, is now the first state in India to be declared \"extreme poverty-free.
4 mins
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
Connect Before You Correct
Facts rarely change minds; warmth does. Connection disarms defensiveness, turning resistance into willingness to learn
4 mins
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
S’pore submits Zubeen’s autopsy, toxicology reports
THE Assam Police have received crucial postmortem and toxicology reports of music icon Zubeen Garg from Singapore authorities.
1 min
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
A Dam Good Weekend
Punekars have a new getaway, and it's not Goa or Karjat, but quiet waters just outside the city
2 mins
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
EC ORDERS TRANSFER OF PATNA SP OVER MOKAMA VIOLENCE
THE Election Commission of India (ECI) on Saturday ordered the transfer of Patna Superintendent of Police (Rural) Vikram Sihag and disciplinary action against three other officials, two days after a violent clash between supporters of the JD(U) candidate Anant Singh and those of Jan Suraaj Party, including gangster-turned-politician Dular Chand Yadav in Mokama, leaving the latter dead.
1 min
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
A Road Trip to White Male Meltdown
This twisted take on the great American road novel explores guilt, ego, and the restless mind of a man fleeing a failing marriage
3 mins
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
'We can't Live Under a Threat'
Rebecca Ferguson speaks with Hilary Morgan about her latest film, A House of Dynamite, and why it is important to have conversations about nuclear powers
3 mins
November 02, 2025
The New Indian Express Kollam
THE LONG GAME OF BELONGING IN A CITY
WHO does the city really belong to? Those who are born there, those who made it their home, those who migrate there to work and build a life, or those who work for it?
3 mins
November 02, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
