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The ‘Representative Committee of the Federal Government’ (CRPH), which serves as the interim government for the democratic camp of Myanmar, announced on the 31st that it will form a government of national unity against the military regime on the 1st of next month.
CRPH is a group made up of the elected members of the national democratic alliance led by national adviser Aung San Suu Kyi in last year’s general elections against the military regime.
Local Myanmar Now media reported the same day, citing CRPH spokesperson Ye Mon Kaung Tin Thit.
Spokesman Tin Thit said the new national unification government will seek ways to abolish the constitution created by the military in 2008 and adopt the ‘Federal Democratic Charter’ on a temporary basis, media reported.
The media did not mention whether armed ethnic minority groups would participate in the new unified government and, if so, which organizations would participate.
However, as the democratic camp has proposed to join the “federal coalition” against minority armed groups to confront the military armed forces, militants from major minorities are expected to participate.
In this case, a change is expected in the pattern of the coup resistance movement, which has been carried out by the unilateral massacre of protesters by the military.
If the national unified government participates in an armed struggle, it is also possible to unleash a civil war.
In this sense, the UN special envoy, Sasa, spokesman for the international community of CRPH, said in an interview with the media last week that the militants of the main minorities agreed on the need to form a unified government.
He said he is working on a new constitution that will replace the constitution promulgated by the military in 2008 with various militant ethnic minority groups.
“The creation of the Federal Forces has become fundamental,” he added. “The government that we are going to create in April will be called ‘Unified National Government’, so we will try to make it as broad as possible.”
Earlier, the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance (MNDAA) and the Arakan Army (AA) Taang People’s Liberation Army (TNLA) issued a joint statement the day before, and if the army does not stop massacring protesters, all ethnic minorities participating in the ‘Spring Revolution’, a coup resistance movement, is armed and has announced that it will cooperate with the organization’s supporters and pro-democracy camps.
The Kachin Independence Army (KIA) in northern Kachin province and the Karen People’s Union (KNU) in southeastern Karen province have been in conflict with recent attacks such as those by Myanmar troops after the coup.
In a media interview on 27th, General Yot Shun of the Shan People’s Restoration Council (RCSS) said in a media interview on 27th: “If the military continues to fire on protesters, I don’t think all ethnic groups they will sit down. ” yet.”
According to the Myanmar Human Rights Organization’s Political Offender Support Association (AAPP), as of the previous day, 521 people were confirmed to have died as a result of military and police violence, including shootings.
However, there are many cases of military police leaving the body, and there are not a few cases in which life or death has not been confirmed after being unknown, so it is likely that the actual death toll is high. higher.
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