Myanmar rebels satisfied with preparatory peace talks
YANGON, Myanmar — Representatives of ethnic minorities who have been battling Myanmar’s government for decades said Monday their meeting with the country’s de facto leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, was a good beginning but that the peace process remains an uphill task.
Neither side made any promises in the talks to prepare for substantive peace negotiations in August, said Khu Oo Reh of the United Nationalities Federal Council, a coalition of ethnic rebel groups. The ethnic groups are particularly interested in securing a political agreement — the subject of the planned August talks — that would meet their long standing demands for greater autonomy.
“It was just like a family meeting,” he told reporters. “It was a meeting that led to constructive intentions for the future meeting.”
Khu Oo Reh said the Sunday talks did not resolve whether ethnic armed groups who didn’t sign a 2015 nationwide cease-fire agreement would participate in the August meeting, considered by both sides to be crucial to restoring peace after more than five decades of mutual mistrust and warfare. Fighting continues in some areas.