Irrawady-Oct 1

Disputes over terminology have been commonplace throughout the endless peace talks seeking to end armed conflicts and establish a federal union in Myanmar.

The latest dispute is over the Burmese term “state basic law” or “state constitution,” although the negotiators representing the government, military and the ethnic armed groups which are signatories to the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) “have agreed in principle” that the right to draft a state law, guaranteeing autonomy, is necessary. A state constitution, once drafted, must guarantee a state/region’s authority over natural resources management, decision-making on finance and revenue, legislative structure, governance and the judicial system.

Read more at: https://www.irrawaddy.com/opinion/analysis/vocabulary-crisis-creates-yet-another-hurdle-myanmars-federalism.html