MAR WONG VILLAGE, Myanmar — It's one of Myanmar's smallest ethnic insurgencies, just a few thousand fighters scattered between isolated villages in the mist-shrouded mountains of northern Shan state. But as President Thein Sein struggles to reach a nationwide peace agreement by the year's end, the Ta'ang National Liberation Army has turned into one of his biggest obstacles.
The rebels have so far refused to negotiate the terms of a ceasefire, citing the lack of discussion about their aspirations, such as greater control over natural resources for the half-million ethnic Ta'ang people. When they last agreed to hand over weapons in exchange for a "self-administered zone," nearly a decade ago, the insurgents say, they saw little or no real benefits for their people.
"In fact," said Main Aik Kyo, a rebel army spokesman, "things only got worse."
Soldiers and pro-government militias continued to harass local residents, he and others say. They also stepped up involvement in the illegal narcotics trade in the opium-growing region. The widespread availability of drugs has led to alarming addiction rates. One village head said half of all Ta'ang men are now hooked on drugs, some as young as 13.
Myanmar stunned the world by opening politically and economically in 2011 following elections that most rights groups say were neither free nor fair. Though the new president started steering the country from a half-century of dictatorship toward democracy, early much-lauded reforms have since either stalled or started rolling back.
That's upped the stakes of getting ceasefire deals with all 17 ethnic armies, one of Thein Sein's biggest pledges. Many ethnic armies have been fighting since the country gained independence from the British in 1948, and experts say continued civil unrest is slowing development in one of the region's poorest countries.
The TNLA, one of four rebel groups still holding out, claims to have 4,000 troops.
Though those estimates are believed to be inflated, a celebration last month in the isolated village of Mar Wong, nestled deep in the jungle-clad mountains, showed that support among villagers is as strong as ever.