China sends Vaccine Covid-19 to the Myanmar military government, but at the same time also provides rebellion groups against the army.
China has moved nearly 13 million doses of vaccines to the government of generals overthrowing the State Advisor Aung San Suu Kyi in February. The coup made Myanmar and the country's health care system fall into chaos
Military government seems helpless in preventing the virus from spreading.
Naw Bu, Independent Military Spokesman Kachin (KIA), said Chinese Red Cross staff sometimes comes to help us prevent Covid pandemic.
Health workers prepare Vaccine Covid-19 in a vaccine in Yangon, Myanmar earlier this year.
Kia, with thousands of members, is controlling the territory on the hills rich in the northern Myanmar jade.
Naw Bu said when the third infection wave spilled through the lowland of Myanmar in July, the other was vaccinated for 10,000 people in the area they controlled with Chinese vaccines.
The rebel group spokesman in Shan state progress said the group was vaccinated for 1,000 people in areas controlled by this force and sets half a million doses.
Good neighbors China also pledged to provide vaccines for the National Liberation Army Ta'ang closed on nearby territory, spokesman Tar Phone Kyaw.
Meanwhile, in the Border Town Muse, men working at a new quarantine center have a capacity of up to 1,000 beds.
The above aid is not mentioned in China's foreign policy elsewhere in Asia and across Africa.
China will always provide the help and support needed for Myanmar people according to their needs in the fight against epidemics, a Chinese foreign spokesman said when asked whether Beijing was helping
Enze Han, Associate Professor of Public Administration of Hong Kong University, said the fact that the authorities across the border are easy to understand.
David Mathieson, an analyst who worked in Myanmar, explained that if the big clashes between rebels and the military broke out, as in 2017 made thousands of people running to China, it would be the worst situation