By NE NOW NEWS
Guwahati: India on Monday launched the ninth United Nations Peacekeeping Officer Course for Myanmar military personnel in Naypyitaw, amid continued criticism of the juntaโs military operations against civilians in resistance-held areas.
The training programme, which will run until May 22, was inaugurated by Myanmar Deputy Commander-in-Chief Kyaw Swa Lin and attended by Indiaโs Ambassador to Myanmar Abhay Thakur, defence attachรฉs, Indian instructors and Myanmar trainees.
Myanmar state media reported that 30 officers from the countryโs army, navy and air force are participating in the course. The programme includes training in UN peacekeeping ethics, protection of civilians and children, military-civilian cooperation, patrolling, convoy security, company base construction and Blue Helmet exercises.
The latest initiative marks Indiaโs second UN peacekeeping course in Myanmar since the military coup in 2021.
The programme comes days after Myanmar military chief Ye Win Oo met Indian Navy chief Dinesh Kumar Tripathi in Naypyitaw. The visit was reportedly the first by a foreign military leader since Ye Win Oo assumed office in late March.
During the visit, Admiral Tripathi also attended a dinner hosted aboard an Indian naval warship at Yangonโs Thilawa port, where he met Myanmar military deputy leader Lt Gen Ko Ko Oo.
With Kyaw Swa Lin presiding over the peacekeeping course, all three of Myanmarโs top military leaders have engaged with Indian military officials within a week.
Reports said discussions between Ye Win Oo and Admiral Tripathi focused on joint military exercises and cooperation against armed groups operating along the Indo-Myanmar border.
The engagements come as Myanmarโs military intensifies operations in the border regions, including efforts to regain control over areas near India. Regime forces have reportedly recaptured Falam in Chin State and Mawlu in Sagaing Region.
The launch of the UN peacekeeping course also coincided with reports of junta airstrikes on civilian areas in Chin Stateโs Mindat and alleged arson attacks on villages in resistance-held parts of Mandalay Regionโs Myingyan Township.
Critics have pointed to the contradiction between the courseโs emphasis on civilian protection and allegations of continuing attacks on non-combatants by Myanmarโs military.
Analysts say Indiaโs engagement with Myanmarโs junta is driven by strategic concerns, including countering Chinaโs growing influence in the region and advancing its โAct Eastโ policy.
While Beijing continues to pursue the China-Myanmar Economic Corridor to secure access to the Indian Ocean, New Delhi has invested in connectivity initiatives such as the Kaladan multimodal transit project and the India-Myanmar-Thailand trilateral highway. However, both projects have faced delays due to instability and shifting territorial control in Myanmar.
Myanmar is Indiaโs only land bridge to Southeast Asia and shares a long border with Indiaโs Northeast, making it strategically significant despite the ongoing conflict.
