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Bao Youxiang (), also known by his name Tax Log Pang (Chinese Wa: Dax Lōug Bang) and his Burmese name Pau Yu Chang ( Pauk Yu-hkyan), is the current president of people's government, general secretary of the United Wa State Party, and commander-in-chief of the United Wa State Army.


Early life
Bao Youxiang was born in 1949 to a chieftain in , a Wa village near Gawng Lang in northern . Bao was the second youngest of eight brothers in his family and did not go further than his village during his childhood. When Bao was 21, he joined and eventually led a Wa group that smuggled across the China–Myanmar border.


Military career

Communist Party of Burma (1969–1989)
Bao joined the armed wing of the Communist Party of Burma (CPB) in 1969, and started out as a battalion commander for his home village of Kumna, but gradually became the leader of a brigade operating near the Myanmar–Thailand border. Like many Wa villagers in the area at the time, Bao saw the CPB as a source of modern weaponry, , and .

In 1989, the leadership of the CPB was challenged by several party members, resulting in an internal rebellion that ended with the disbandment of the armed wing of the CPB and the establishment of various new factions, including the United Wa State Army, which Bao would eventually lead.


United Wa State Party/Army (1989–present)
After the fall of the armed wing of the CPB, Bao joined the United Wa State Party (UWSP), and its armed wing, the United Wa State Army (UWSA). In 1995, Bao was elected general secretary of the UWSP and commander-in-chief of the UWSA, after Zhao Nyi-Lai, the first and preceding general secretary, suffered a stroke. In 2005, Bao's health deteriorated and Bao Youyi, his elder brother, replaced him.

Bao has been the de facto president of since 1995, an autonomous entity in northern that runs independently from Myanmar. He has constantly urged the government of Myanmar to give more regional autonomy to groups in , in exchange for permanent and peace agreements with armed insurgent groups.


See also
  • Internal conflict in Myanmar


Further reading

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