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Kokang army to withdraw from Lashio under Chinese-brokered ceasefire with Myanmar junta

The agreement comes after months of pressure from Chinese officials on the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA), such as closing border crossings into MNDAA-held territory and holding the group’s leader in China

The Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) had agreed to return control of the northern Shan State capital to the Myanmar military regime in a new ceasefire deal. 

Representatives of the Myanmar junta and the MNDAA—also commonly called the Kokang army—concluded the ceasefire agreement on Saturday following negotiations mediated by Chinese officials, according to Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The MNDAA is an ethnic armed organisation whose members are mostly Kokang people, a Mandarin-speaking ethnic community native to an area of northern Shan State that borders China’s Yunnan Province. 

Although the Chinese ministry’s statement provided few details about the terms of the agreement, sources in Myanmar and China confirmed that the Kokang army’s forces will be required to withdraw from the city of Lashio, northern Shan State, the location of the Myanmar military’s northeastern regional headquarters, by June. 

Chinese authorities have been pressuring the MNDAA to withdraw from Lashio and cease hostilities against the Myanmar junta for months, threatening action against the Kokang group’s commanders and throttling the traffic of fuel, medicine, food and other vital supplies to MNDAA-held territories via the Chinese border. 

With the ceasefire already in force on Sunday, Chinese authorities opened the border crossing in Chin Shwe Haw, northern Shan State, a town in the MNDAA-controlled territory of Shan State Special Region 1 or the Kokang region of Myanmar, previously designated as the Kokang Self-Administered Zone in Myanmar’s 2008 constitution. 

Spokespersons for the United Wa State Party and its armed wing the United Wa State Army—a larger ethnic armed organisation in control of other territories in northern and eastern Shan State—announced on Monday that the Namtit Bridge border checkpoint in Namtit Subtownship had also reopened with permission from Chinese authorities. 

In an alleged bid to pressure the Kokang army, Chinese authorities detained MNDAA head Peng Daxun in China, claiming he was undergoing medical treatment when pressed for an explanation. Peng Daxun’s status and whereabouts are still unknown.

Correction: An earlier version of this story included an incorrect claim that the Chinese foreign ministry’s statement referred to the return of Lashio to junta control as a condition of the MNDAA’s ceasefire agreement with the Myanmar military. The ministry’s statement did not include this information, which was provided by other sources.

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