TEDIM, Myanmar — A prominent resistance group in northern Chin State has released 20 young people from its custody and issued formal exemption criteria following local protests against a newly implemented mandatory military service policy.
The group, PDF Zoland, which operates in the Tedim and Tunzan townships (collectively known as the Zogam region), had previously decreed on March 24, 2026, that all able-bodied adults—regardless of gender—must serve at least three years in the revolution. However, the move sparked significant friction within local communities.
The release of the 20 youths on March 31 followed a series of demonstrations by villagers. In the village of Laitui, residents took to the streets on March 26 to demand the return of their children, who had reportedly been taken against their will.
“They were initially taken without consent. When people couldn’t be recruited voluntarily, they were forcibly rounded up,” a local source in Tedim told MPA. “The subsequent protests and public dissatisfaction likely pushed the leadership to offer these concessions and clarify exemptions.”
Under the new guidelines released by PDF Zoland, four categories of individuals are now exempt from the mandatory service:
- Minors and students of school-going age.
- Individuals from families already actively serving in the revolution.
- Persons with physical or mental disabilities.
- Only children (single sons or daughters).
While the group aims to bolster its ranks for the ongoing fight against the military junta, the recruitment drive had caused many young people in the Zogam region to flee their homes for fear of being drafted.
In a statement marking its fifth anniversary, the Zomi Federal Union (ZFU/PDF Zoland) maintained that those who join will receive vocational training alongside military instruction. The group portrays its conscription efforts as a necessary measure for national liberation, though the recent pushback highlights the delicate balance between revolutionary needs and civilian rights.
Since late March, dozens of individuals from villages such as Laitui, Mui Zaul, and Dimpi had been taken for service. While 20 have now been returned to their homes, the situation remains tense as communities navigate the realities of living under resistance administration in one of Myanmar’s most embattled border states.
The case underscores the growing complexities faced by ethnic armed organizations as they transition from guerrilla movements into administrative bodies with the power to tax and conscript local populations.





