Mong Ko

Mong Ko (Mān Kang)
Monekoe
Town
Coordinates: 24°6′1″N 98°18′50″E / 24.10028°N 98.31389°E / 24.10028; 98.31389
Country  Burma
State Shan State
District Mu Se District
Township Mu Se Township
Elevation[1] 1,480 ft (450 m)
Population (2014)[2]
  Town 24,565
  Urban 8,847
  Rural 15,718
Time zone MMT (UTC+6:30)

Mong Ko, Möng Ko, Monekoe, Mān Kang or Man Kan, also known as Man Guo[3] and as Panglong[4] is a town in Mu Se Township, Mu Se District, northern Shan State.

Like many places in that hapless region, Mong Ko has been a drug-producing and trading point where 'walking down the main road one can smell the chemicals wafting from the houses'.[5]

Geography

Monekoe lies by the border with China, 25 km east of Pang Hseng (Kyu Koke).[6] There is a border checkpoint in the town.[7]

History

The Communist Party of Burma (CPB) entered Shan State on New Year Day 1968, captured Mong Ko, and established the first war zone ‘303’ of the CPB North-East Command (NEC). This was quickly followed by ‘404’ in Kokang substate winning over the local warlord Pheung Kya-shin.[8] For 20 years Pheung controlled Kokang as a member of the Communist Party of Burma.[9] In 1989, however, the CPB split up[9] and Pheung established his own army, the National Democratic Alliance Army,[10] with which he mutinied and captured Mong Ko town.[11] After this he signed a cease-fire with the military junta, which allowed the Kokang army to retain their weapons, and established an autonomous Kokang region as the "First Special Region" of Myanmar.[10][12]

Further reading

References

  1. GoogleEarth
  2. The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Highlights of the Main Results Census Report Volume 2 – A. Department of Population Ministry of Immigration and Population. 2015. p. 64.
  3. Shelby Tucker, Among Insurgents: Walking Through Burma. p. 27
  4. "Panglong". Mapcarta. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  5. Peter John Perry, Myanmar (Burma) Since 1962: The Failure of Development. p. 152
  6. Möng Ko: Burma
  7. Restricted Area in Myanmar (Burma)
  8. Smith, Martin (1991). Burma – Insurgency and the Politics of Ethnicity. London and New Jersey: Zed Books.
  9. 1 2 Lintner, Bertil; Chiang Mai (28 June 1990). "A fix in the making" (PDF). Far Eastern Economic Review. Retrieved 29 August 2009.
  10. 1 2 果敢乱局当前 传“果敢王”已逃离 (in Chinese). 南国都市报 (Southern Metropolitan). 29 August 2009. Retrieved 29 August 2009.
  11. Tucker, Shelby (2001). Burma: The curse of independence. Pluto Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-7453-1541-6.
  12. "Tense situation in N. Myanmar's Shan state prevails". Xinhua. 28 August 2009. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
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