Ta'ang National Liberation Army
The Ta'ang National Liberation Army (Burmese: တအောင်း အမျိုးသား လွတ်မြောက်ရေး တပ်မတော်; abbreviated TNLA) in Myanmar (Burma), is the armed wing of the Palaung State Liberation Front (PSLF).
Ta'ang National Liberation Army | |
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တအောင်း အမျိုးသား လွတ်မြောက်ရေး တပ်မတော် | |
![]() Flag of the Ta'ang National Liberation Army | |
Leaders | Tar Aik Bong Tar Bone Kyaw Tar Hod Plarng |
Dates of operation | January 1992 – present |
Headquarters | Namhsan, Myanmar |
Active regions | Tawngpeng, Shan State |
Ideology | Ta'ang nationalism Federalism[1] |
Size | 6,000+[2] |
Part of | Palaung State Liberation Front |
Allies | Northern Alliance[3]
Other allies |
Opponents | State opponents
Non-state opponents
|
Battles and wars | Internal conflict in Myanmar |
Website | pslftnla |
The TNLA is known for their opposition to drug trade, conducting operations where they actively destroy poppy fields, heroin refineries and meth labs.[7][8][9][10][11] The TNLA claims that they arrest opium smugglers regularly and the narcotics seized are publicly burned on special occasions to deter drug trade.[6]
History
The TNLA was originally founded as the Palaung State Liberation Organization/Army (PSLO/A), which signed a ceasefire agreement with the government in 1991 and disarmed in 2005. After the dissolution of the PSLO/A, Ta'ang (Palaung) leaders Tar Aik Bong and Tar Bone Kyaw founded the TNLA alongside the PSLF to continue fighting for the self-determination of the Ta'ang people. The TNLA is presently allied with the Kachin Independence Army and the Shan State Army - North, and have been conducting operations alongside them in northern Shan State.[2]
Following the 2010 general election and constitutional reforms in 2011, the government created the Pa Laung Self-Administered Zone in northern Shan State as a special self-administration zone for the Ta'ang people. The region is one of the most underdeveloped in the country, with few schools and hospitals.
Clashes with Tatmadaw resumed after the military coup, with TNLA alongside its allies, AA and MNDAA, attacking a police station south of Lashio, killing at least 14 police officers and burning the station to the ground.[12] TNLA and MNDAA further launched attacks in multiple locations in Northern Shan State on 4 and 5 May 2021, inflicting heavy casualties on the Myanmar military.[13]
Combined forces of TNLA and SSPP clashed with RCSS in March and April 2021, injuring several civilians and displacing thousands.[14][15]
Tar Bone Kyaw, the second-in-command of TNLA, voiced his support for the National Unity Government formed in opposition to the military junta.[16]
Abductions
On October 17, 2020, TNLA abducted a local woman from Mogok and demanded 60 millions of kyats and beaten until ransoms were payoff.[17][18]
On December 5, 2020, also in Mogok, another local man was also abducted by TNLA.[19][20]
References
- Hay, Wayne (17 February 2016). "Myanmar rebels continue fight despite ceasefire deal". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
- "Myanmar Peace Monitor - TNLA".
- Lynn, Kyaw Ye. "Curfew imposed after clashes near Myanmar-China border". Anadolu Agency. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- Finney, Richard; Mar (translator), Khet (2 August 2018). "300 Myanmar Villagers Flee Township as Ethnic Armies Approach". Radio Free Asia. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
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has generic name (help) - "Two helicopters used in fighting near northern Shan State's Naungcho". Mizzima. 14 March 2022. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - Veits, Chris (July 2015). "Are the TNLA a threat to peace in Myanmar? - Inside the TNLA's war on drugs". Journeyman Pictures.
- Larsen, Niels (23 April 2015). "On Patrol With Myanmar Rebels Fighting Both the Army and Drug Addiction". VICE News. No. Crime and Drugs.
- "Fire and Ice: Conflict and Drugs in Myanmar's Shan State". Crisis Group. 16 March 2020. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
- Weng, Lawi (16 March 2020). "TNLA Attacks Five Poppy-Growing Hubs in Northern Myanmar". Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- Ferrie, Jared (5 November 2015). "The drug war in Myanmar's mountains". The New Humanitarian. No. Forgotten Conflicts - Myanmar.
- Floramo, Vincenzo (11 July 2014). "The power of the flower". Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- Eckert, Paul (10 April 2021). "Ethnic Army Alliance Kills 14 Myanmar Police in Dawn Raid as Death Toll Mounts in Bago". Radio Free Asia. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
- "TNLA, MNDAA Claim to Have Killed Dozens of Myanmar Junta Troops in Shan State". The Irrawaddy. 5 May 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
- "Clashes Persist Between RCSS and Combined Forces of TNLA, SSPP in Namtu". BNI Multimedia Group. 16 March 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
- "Shan State Villagers Flee Fighting Between Rival Ethnic Armed Groups". The Irrawaddy. 16 April 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
- "ဒီကနေ့ ဖွဲ့စည်းလိုက်တဲ့ အမျိုးသားညီညွတ်ရေးအစိုးရ NUG ကို ကြိုဆိုထောက်ခံကြောင်းနဲ့ ပူးပေါင်းဆောင်ရွက်နိုင်ဖို့ ကြိုးစားပြင်ဆင်သွားမယ်လို့ TNLA အထွေထွေအတွင်းရေးမှူး ဗိုလ်မှူးချုပ် တာဘုန်းကျော် က ကြေညာလိုက်ပါတယ်။" (in Burmese). Democratic Voice of Burma. 16 April 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
- "မိုးကုတ်ဒေသခံများအား TNLA မှ ဖမ်းဆီးပြီး ငွေကြေးတောင်းခံမှုများရှိနေ". Myanmar NOW on YouTube. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
- "ပြန်ပေးဆွဲပြီး ကျပ်သိန်းရာချီတောင်းသည့်အပြင် တုတ်အချောင်းချောင်းကျိုးသည်အထိ ရိုက်နှက်". Myanmar NOW (in Burmese). Retrieved 9 December 2020.
- "DVB - မိုးကုတ်မြို့မျက်နာဖုံးကို TNLA က ဖမ်းဆီးသွားတာဖြစ်". DVB on YouTube. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
- "မိုးကုတ်မြို့ စံပြမုန့်တိုက်ပိုင်ရှင်အမျိုးသားကို လက်နက်ကိုင်လူသုံးဦးက ဖမ်းဆီး". Myanmar NOW (in Burmese). Retrieved 9 December 2020.