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Published October 19, 2023 | Version v7
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Long-term poverty, discrimination, drugs, civil war, fraud, kidnapping organ harvesting, and massacre in Myanmar: peaceful solutions

Authors/Creators

Description

Medical College of Wuhan University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, 430081,in China.

*To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: LLsunrising@126.com

 

Catalogue

21.1. Long term poverty, civil war, and irreconcilable contradictions

21.2. The four special zones of Myanmar's long-term civil war caused by the British seizure of Chinese land

21.3. Myanmar lacks legal basis to be recognized as a sovereign nation.

21.4. The serious drug problem in Myanmar that the government cannot eradicate.

21.5. The slave societies in the world today, a hub for the largest scams, imprisonments, human trafficking, organ harvesting, and illegal selling activities that go against humanity.

21.6. The October 20, 2023 Massacre (1020 Massacre) at Wohu Villa in Kokang Special Region

21.7. Strategies to address the issues of fraud, illegal detention, organ harvesting, massacre, trial, and compensation in Myanmar. 

21.8. Two Methods to Solve Myanmar's Difficulties

21.9. The premise for completely eliminating one of the world's largest drug production sites

21.10. The premise for Myanmar to seize opportunities

21.11. Lessons learned from Myanmar include the emergence of the world's most serious cases of telecommunications fraud, kidnappings, torture, organ harvesting, massacres, prolonged internal conflicts, and widespread drug abuse.

21.12. There is a system of slave society in Myanmar today, and the legal system must be modified, and definition of civilization must be redefined.

21.13. Government consensus or United Nations declaration to address serious issues in northern Myanmar

21.14. The Hidden Dangers and Disasters of Establishing a Combined New State: Based on Philosophical, Ethical, and Logical Perspectives

21.15. Based on the Myanmar version of the KIKI massacre and burial incident, as well as the Myanmar government's protection of criminal armed groups involved in fraud, human trafficking, organ harvesting, and murder, Myanmar must dissolve and restructure in accordance with the Panglong Agreement. It should settle all crimes, compensate for all losses, and the northern region of Myanmar, which originally belonged to China, must be returned to China voluntarily.

21.16. World records for over 40 crimes set by Burmese people and Burmese government

21.17. The provision of non-interference in the internal affairs of the United Nations should be abolished, and China should immediately repeal the provision of non-interference in the internal affairs.

21.18. The Burmese government's military's air dropped poison gas bombs for crimes against humanity

21.19. The Tragic Situation of Civilians in Northern Myanmar (Formerly Part of China) and the Ethical Aspect of Returning It Under Chinese Jurisdiction

21.20. Should Myanmar be considered a nation based on the open destruction and abandonment of a large number of phones by Myanmar's telecom fraudsters and their protectors?

21.21. Criminal leaders in northern Myanmar give bonuses to the Myanmar government army to fight against the resolute alliance forces that crack down on criminals

21.22. The penalties and punishments for the crimes committed by the perpetrators of atrocities must be determined by the victims.

21.23. The revelation of Myanmar replacing Afghanistan as the world's largest producer of opium in 2023.

Abstract

Myanmar is a strange and loosely united multi-ethnic country that was forcefully formed by British colonial power. The Myanmar government violated the principles of the Panglong Agreement of 1947 by forcibly combining the territories belonging to China and its ethnic groups to other ethnic groups. Myanmar is not a truly independent nation. Due to the Government's violation of the Panglong Agreement, the freedom and human rights of ethnic minorities are not ensured. The people of certain regions are essentially stateless, resulting in long-term conflicts between different ethnic groups with different cultural customs. This has led to over 60 years of civil war and poverty, and has also made Myanmar one of the largest drug production centers in the world. Additionally, Myanmar has become one of the world's largest countries in terms of fraud crimes, illegal detention, organ trafficking, and genocide. The actions of the Myanmar government and military constitute typical serious national crimes.

There are perhaps two ways to solve this complex racial conflict. First, the Government of Myanmar should respect the ethics and spirit of the Panglong Agreement and return the territories belonging to ethnic groups to China. China should then resolve the region's internal war problems and thoroughly address issues such as drug proliferation, poverty, fraud crimes, illegal detention, organ trafficking, and genocide, to avoid prolonged civil war and resource depletion in Myanmar. Secondly, if Myanmar wants to escape poverty, it should consider permanently selling a 20-40 km wide area leading to the Indian Ocean to China, after settling its long-standing involvement in and support of crimes such as telecom fraud that have caused harm to the Chinese people and fully compensating for all losses. This area should be turned into Chinese territory to allow China to establish an energy corridor. This may be Myanmar's only opportunity to hitch a ride on China's economic scale before China achieves major breakthroughs in nuclear fusion, solar energy, superconductivity, and hydrogen energy. At the same time, Myanmar should ask China to construct multiple cities and economic development zones along this economic corridor, which will activate Myanmar economy. As an exchange for selling land in Myanmar, China should provide assistance to build a fast railway in Myanmar to overcome geographical disadvantages, increase employment rates, promote the development of the tourism industry and related industries, achieve long-term and stable economic development, and surpass Vietnam's economic strength, reaching a new milestone. The global harm caused by Myanmar's drug problem in the northern region will also be fundamentally controlled. The international community should reach a consensus on this issue.

The international community should learn from the significant harm caused by Myanmar's long-standing civil war, drug problem, telecom fraud, organ trafficking, and genocide to global humanity. It should reassess the disastrous consequences of haphazardly assembling a new country from ethnic groups with different cultural customs in the region and reconsider the issue of conflicts caused by immigration. The United Nations should establish a government consensus or declaration and establish mechanisms for cross-border operations and punishment and compensation for major crimes that could not be controlled by the country where the crimes occurred. The use of gas bombs by the Myanmar government's military to attack other races is a serious crime against humanity and an unforgivable war crime that should be severely punished.

 

Keywords:  Myanmar · war · civil war  · refugee · peace · ethnic conflict · economic development· strategy · tourism economy · creative thinking · national governance · peaceful solutions · opium · drug production · Panglong Agreement · Shan State · large-scale immigration  · telecommunication fraud  · kidnap · torture · electrocution  · water dungeon  · organ harvesting  · murder · energy · government consensus · the UN declaration · punishment  · compensation · Myawadi  · Kokang · the Wa States  · emergency response  · law · chemical weapons  · gas bombs

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