Hundreds of workers go on strike at Ministry of Defence factories making Myanmar military vehicle parts 

Some have been pressured into returning to their factories but one employee said he is not doing any work  

Published on Mar 30, 2021
Workers from a military factory in Magway region’s Myaing join an anti-coup rally in early March (Facebook)
Workers from a military factory in Magway region’s Myaing join an anti-coup rally in early March (Facebook)

Hundreds of staff at Tatmadaw-owned factories making parts for military vehicles joined the movement against the regime and went on strike earlier this month, prompting a top general to step in to pressure them to return to work.

The strikes started on March 7 at five factories across the country, but they were partially broken after visits by Major General Ko Ko Lwin, Vice Chief of Defence Industries, which makes arms and other equipment for the Tatmadaw.     

Workers at factories in Yangon, Magway, Myaing, Myingyan in Mandalay region and Htone Bo in Bago region have announced they are joining strikes. 

At Htone Bo, which employs around 600 people, at least 193 workers said they were striking, according to figures compiled from social media by Myanmar Now. Another 65 in Magway and 34 in Myaing said they were joining strikes. 

 

 

It is unclear how many have joined strikes at the other factories.

Many of those at the Htone Bo plant have now returned to work, but others have resigned and others still have been arrested, workers told Myanmar Now, though they were unable to give detailed figures. 

 

 

One worker at the Htone Bo plant said even though he had been pressured into returning to work, he still wasn’t doing anything at the factory.

“We are not working. I am at home,” he said. “I go to the factory only on the days I want to go. Even on the days I’m at the factory, I do not work.” 

All five of the plants are categorised as “No. 3 sub-factories” and operated by the military-controlled Ministry of Defence. The factories were owned by the Ministry of Industry until 2006, when they were taken over by the military.

The industrial action at the plants is likely to have rattled the regime; not only is it symbolically powerful but sustained work stoppages could disrupt military strategic planning in the longer term. 

The Htone Bo factory has continued to pay its workers, the employee there said, adding that 15 workers have fled from staff housing to avoid being forced back to work.

The chief of the factory held negotiations with striking staff, a source told Myanmar Now, after which some returned to work. 

Others were fired after refusing to end the strike and some resigned, the source added, but did not know the exact numbers. 

At the Magway factory, the deputy chief there was arrested for organizing strikes, a factory worker said, adding that he had heard reports that some people at the Yangon plant had also been arrested for striking. 

Photos posted on social media from Myaing in Magway region showed workers from a military factory joining an anti-coup rally.
 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Ye Yint, 22, died after he was shot in the pelvis and captured by junta forces on Saturday

Published on Aug 2, 2021
Anti-junta protesters rally in Mandalay on June 24 (Supplied)

A 22-year-old anti-coup protester who was shot and injured before being detained during a raid in Mandalay on Saturday morning has died in military custody, two protest organisers have told Myanmar Now. 

Ye Yint was among nine protesters who were detained when about 30 soldiers and police raided a house they were staying in in Patheingyi Township’s Nan Oo Lwin neighbourhood. 

He was shot in the pelvis while another young protester, 22-year-old Khaing Tun, was shot in the leg during the raid. 

“Two kids tried to run in panic and one was shot in his leg,” said one of the protest organisers. “The other one got shot in the back and the bullet went cleanly through his pelvis.” 

The detainees were brought to Mandalay Palace, which houses the military’s Central Command headquarters, and Ye Yint’s family was told at around 4pm that he had died, the second organiser said: “His wife told us.” 

As of 8pm, the family still had not been able to retrieve his body, the organiser added. Myanmar Now was unable to reach his relatives for comment. 

Three other protesters were detained in Mandalay on the morning that Ye Yint and Khaing Tun were shot. 

They were captured in Mahar Aung Myay Township after a military-owned vehicle rammed into their motorcycles as they rode back from a march led by Mandalar University students. One of those detained, Zin Myo Khant, is 17 years old. 

Late last month Thu Thu Zin, 25, was shot in the head and killed at a protest near the Mahamuni pagoda in Mandalay. Her family had to hold her funeral without her body because the military would not let them retrieve it. 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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The Chinland Defence Force says it is waiting for the signal from the National Unity Government to join a full-scale war against the junta 

Published on Aug 2, 2021
A column of junta soldiers marching towards Mindat in July 21 (Supplied)

Anti-junta resistance forces in Chin State say they are expecting intense clashes in the conflict-hit township of Mindat after their fighters killed a Tatmadaw battalion commander last week.

A spokesperson for the Chinland Defence Force (CDF) said the commander, a lieutenant colonel, died during a clash along the Mindat-Matupi highway early on Friday morning.

Military-controlled newspaper The Mirror announced on Saturday that lieutenant colonel Zaw Zaw Soe, 48, died at around 6.15am while on duty, though it did not give details of where or how he died. 

Zaw Zaw Soe was among 10 junta soldiers killed in Friday’s battle, according to the CDF. Since that clash, the situation in Mindat has become more tense, the group’s spokesperson said. 

“The military has been sending reinforcements. I think they’ve already sent around three columns of their troops,” he told Myanmar Now. “After the battle… around 80 reinforcement troops arrived from Matupi. It looks like the battle will become more serious.”

Fighting along the mountainous highway started on July 21 when the junta’s forces launched an attack, according to the Mindat People’s Administration Team. 

Twenty six junta troops and 15 CDF fighters have died in the two weeks since then, the CDF spokesperson said. There are also unconfirmed reports that civilians have been forced to flee their homes. 

On July 24, the CDF said it seized control of a police station in the remote town of M’kuiimnu without firing a shot after six police and soldiers surrendered and agreed to join the resistance. 

Mindat has become a stronghold of armed resistance to the junta since civilians took up arms there in April, using traditional hunting rifles and later seizing more advanced weapons from the military. 

During the latest clashes, the Chin National Front, an armed group that was largely inactive before the coup, has fought alongside the CDF, as have chapters of the People’s Defence Force from different areas of Chin State, the CDF spokesperson said. 

The CDF says it plans to continue attacks even as it waits for the underground National Unity Government (NUG) to give the signal for full-scale nationwide attacks against junta forces, the spokesperson said. 

“Right now, we’re planning to continue the battles as we prepare for the upcoming war. There’s no way to stop the battles if they’re going to keep trespassing on the areas we are operating in,” he said.

The NUG's defence minister Yee Mon told RFA last month that about 8,000 PDF fighters will finish combat training by the end of July. He urged resistance fighters across the country to wait for its signal to launch a coordinated offensive. 

“During this preparation period, I urge our revolution comrades to prepare for their own individual safety, health and morale,” Yee Mon told the broadcaster.

Last month a spokesperson for the eastern Yangon chapter of the PDF, which has been coordinating closely with the NUG, told Myanmar Now that an “all-out” conflict was on its way.  

“I promise we will arrive at your door very soon,” he said. “We are currently engaging in guerrilla warfare, but please know that it won’t be long before we begin an all-out battle.”

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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Critics of the regime say the move is both a sign of its weakness and evidence of its determination to hold onto power

Published on Aug 1, 2021
Demonstrators hold a placard depicting junta leader Min Aung Hlaing at a protest outside the Chinese embassy in Yangon in February (EPA-EFE) 

Myanmar’s military chief Min Aung Hlaing was appointed prime minister of a newly formed “caretaker government” on Sunday, hours after delivering a televised speech in which he promised to hold an election in two years’ time. 

The senior general, who came to power in a predawn coup exactly six months ago, did not mention his new title or the formation of an interim government in his 52-minute-long address on state television on Sunday morning.

The move, which was announced by state media later in the day, involves not only the creation of a cabinet to be headed by Min Aung Hlaing and his deputy, Vice-Senior General Soe Win, but also changes at the state and regional level.

New cabinets were appointed for the states and regions, which will each have a chief minister, six ministers, and an attorney general, the announcement said.

Yangon and Mandalay, the country’s two largest cities, will also have ministries in their respective regional governments, with their mayors acting as ministers.

The junta appointed army officers with the rank of colonel to head each state or region’s ministry of security and border affairs, while police colonels will head the ministries of transportation.

In his speech, Min Aung Hlaing cited the military-drafted 2008 constitution as the basis for his timeline to hold a new election.

He said the constitution allows for two six-month extensions of the one-year state of emergency that was imposed immediately after the February 1 military takeover. Six more months would be needed to prepare for the election, he added.

“We will accomplish the provisions of the state of emergency by August 2023,” he said. 

He also repeated accusations of electoral fraud against the civilian government led by State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy (NLD) party, which won a landslide victory in last year’s polls. 

A day after seizing power, Min Aung Hlaing said that holding another election within a year would be a priority of his regime. So far, however, the only step it has taken has been to annul the results of last year’s election.

Last week, the junta-appointed election commission announced that it had overturned the results of the election, which delivered a humiliating defeat to the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party.

The commission claimed that there were more than 11 million errors in the vote count, and accused the then ruling NLD of violating Covid-19 public health restrictions in an attempt to stay in power for another five-year term.

The country has become a failed state. And the army has become broken inside, too. So this is to delude the junta’s own army - NUG's judicial minister

Local and international observers have dismissed the military’s claims of fraud and said the election results reflected the desire of the majority of Myanmar’s people.

These latest developments were seen by critics of the regime as evidence of both its weakness and its determination to hold onto power. 

Thein Oo, the judicial minister of the shadow National Unity Government, said the junta’s move was aimed at the military and meant to “delude” its ranks with false hopes of power.

“The country has become a failed state. And the army has become broken inside, too. So this is to delude [the junta’s] own army. It is certainly not about the election, but to keep the army in line,” he said.

A long-time observer of Myanmar’s governance system said that Sunday’s speech and announcement both signalled the regime’s plans to stay in power indefinitely.

“It is pretty certain that they are trying to hold power as a government for the long term,” said the observer, who works with a civil society organisation and asked not to be named for fear of reprisals.

This is not the first time that Myanmar has been under a military caretaker government. In 1958, army chief Ne Win was invited by then Prime Minister U Nu to lead the country for two years amid a growing political crisis.

Although Ne Win duly returned power at the end of this term, he went on to stage a coup in 1962 that ushered in half a century of military rule.

The regime did not attempt to justify the formation of a new caretaker government on constitutional grounds, but in his speech, Min Aung Hlaing reiterated his position that the coup was in line with the constitution and pledged to establish a union of “democracy and federalism” in Myanmar.

He also said the military council would work with any special envoy named by the Association of Southeast Asian Nation (ASEAN) to implement a five-point agreement adopted by the regional grouping at a special summit held to address the crisis in Myanmar in late April.

“Myanmar is ready to work on ASEAN cooperation within the ASEAN framework, including the dialogue with the ASEAN special envoy in Myanmar,” he said.

Reuters reported that the ASEAN foreign ministers plan to meet on Monday in a bid to finalise the appointment of a special envoy tasked with ending the violence in Myanmar and promoting dialogue between the junta and its opponents.

Myanmar has been on the brink of collapse since the coup, which immediately triggered nationwide protests and a strike by hundreds of thousands of civil servants, including healthcare workers.

Brutal crackdowns by the military have since spawned an armed resistance movement targeting the regime’s armed forces and junta collaborators, raising fears of spiralling violence.

The country’s economy has also been in a freefall under Min Aung Hlaing’s rule, with the number of people living in poverty expected to double this year, according to the World Bank.

Over the past month, the country has also battled the third wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. Official figures show that the disease is claiming hundreds of lives daily, although the actual number of deaths is likely much higher.

In his speech, Min Aung Hlaing blamed “terrorists” opposed to his rule for the country’s woes.

“Protests staged across the nation after February 1 were transformed into anarchic and then armed conflict. Innocent people were killed by surprise. Why did they kill the people? Why did they attack the people living in peace? We can’t accept it,” he said.

The junta has killed more than 900 civilians, including dozens of children, and arrested nearly 7,000 in an effort to suppress dissent and control the country. According to Min Aung Hlaing, this response has been in line with international norms.

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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