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</html><thumbnail_url>https://blog.prif.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/UWSA_soldiers_stand_at_attention_during_ceremonies_BLOG.jpg</thumbnail_url><thumbnail_width>1875</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_height>1025</thumbnail_height><description>The idea of publicly staged trials may appear grotesque or outdated to citizens of modern, functioning states. Yet, for non-state armed actors in contested environments, the power of judicial procedures may lie precisely in their visibility. By staging justice in open spaces and circulating images widely, ethnic armed organizations (EAOs) in northern Myanmar turn punishment into a public performance of order. Such visibility helps construct local legitimacy while signaling responsibility to China, whose leverage over border stability is decisive. In a fragmented frontier, being seen to govern is often as important as governing itself.</description></oembed>
