THAN TUN, THAKIN


Meaning of THAN TUN, THAKIN in English

born 1911, Kanyutkwin, Burma (Myanmar) died Sept. 24, 1968 leader of the Communist Party of Burma from 1945 until his death. Than Tun was educated at Rangoon (Yangon) Teachers' Training School and taught at a high school in Rangoon. Influenced at an early age by Marxist writings, he joined in 1936 the nationalist Dobama Asi-ayone (We-Burmans Association). Than Tun helped form the alliance between Ba Maw's Sinyetha (Proletarian) Party and the Dobama Asi-ayone, which resulted in the freedom bloc of 1940. That same year he was imprisoned by the British for sedition. When Ba Maw's pro-Japanese government was established in 1942, Than Tun served as minister of land and agriculture. In 1943, however, he became a leader of the underground resistance movement. After the war he was general secretary of the Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League (AFPFL). When Thakin Soe's Red Flag Communist Party left the Burma Communist Party in early 1946, Than Tun and the majority of Communists continued to cooperate with the AFPFL. In the face of increasing disagreements with the AFPFL, however, he was forced to revolt in March 1948, establishing his White Flag Party. He organized guerrilla forces in central Burma, but the government was largely successful in containing his insurgents. In 1964 the Burmese communist movement was split by the Sino-Soviet rift. Than Tun took the side of Peking, accusing Thakin Soe's Red Flag Party of being Trotskyite, and he sent a number of party members to China to be trained by Chinese revolutionaries. In 1967 he carried out his own cultural revolution, purging the White Flag Party of revisionists. The next year Than Tun was assassinated by one of his own subordinates.

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