Try GOLD - Free
Can Myanmar's Many Parts Make It Whole Again?
The New Indian Express Madurai
|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.
This story is from the February 06, 2025 edition of The New Indian Express Madurai.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The New Indian Express Madurai
The New Indian Express Madurai
CBI recreates Twisha death scene in Bhopal
FOUR days after arresting former judge Giribala Singh from her Bhopal house in connection with her daughter-in-law Twisha Sharma’s May 12 death allegedly over a dowry demand, teams of the CBI returned to the double-storied house in Bhopal, where the incident took place, on Monday afternoon with the accused, Giribala and her son Samarth, to recreate the crime scene.
1 min
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
2028 WT20 WC: India to play at neutral venue
WITH Pakistan set to host the 2028 Women’s T20 World Cup, the International Cricket Council has confirmed that India will play their matches at a neutral venue in the 12-team tournament.
1 min
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
Focus on Brahmin votes in UP, RSS ideologue to strengthen BJP structure
AIMED at strengthening its organisational structure, the BJP has begun assigning key responsibilities to its senior leaders, starting with the appointment of Nagendra Nath Tripathi, an RSS ideologue, as the party’s national organiser for senior workers’ outreach.
1 min
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
Annamalai may quit BJP, launch party
FORMER Tamil Nadu BJP president K Annamalai, who left for New Delhi on Monday, is likely to resign from the party, according to sources.
1 min
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
Spurned lover attacks girl, kills cousin; shot dead in Assam police encounter
A jilted lover in Assam died in police firing on Monday after he allegedly snatched the service rifle of a policeman and opened fire at cops to escape from police custody.
1 min
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
US forces escorted 70 commercial ships through the Hormuz: Report
US armed forces have guided around 70 commercial ships over the past three weeks through the Strait of Hormuz, which remains a risky waterway since the US war with Iran began over three months ago, according to a media report.
1 min
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
Tech sector sees decline in hiring activity in June
TECHNOLOGY sector recorded a sharp fall in hiring activity in June 2026, with active tech job openings falling 14% month-on-month to 93,000, according to staffing firm Xpheno.
1 min
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
India may revisit UK tariff reliefs if steel curbs stay
INDIA may reconsider some of the tariff concessions it has offered to the UK under the recently concluded free trade agreement (FTA), particularly on products such as Scotch whisky, if Britain goes ahead with its tightened steel safeguard measures on Indian exports, a senior commerce ministry official said.
1 mins
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
Zojila tunnel set for breakthrough on June 9
THE strategically important 13.15-kilometre-long Zojila tunnel at the border of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh will achieve a crucial stage on June 9 when Union Minister of Roads, Transport and Highways Nitin Gadkari triggers a breakthrough blast.
1 mins
June 02, 2026
The New Indian Express Madurai
Roach party plans Sat spectacle
DELHI'S political climate heated up a tad on Monday after Cockroach Janta Party founder Abhijeet Dipke announced his return to India from Boston on June 6, issuing an 'Delhi airport chalo' call to his followers to lead a protest demanding the resignation of Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan over exam related lapses.
1 min
June 02, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
