MYANMAR – The atrocious junta regime reportedly implements the National Service Information Management System (NSIMS) that can control and manage through online of the personal information of young people who are eligible for military service, according to a statement from the junta council and a military source in Nay Pyi Taw.
The junta conducted the 6 / 2024 coordination meeting of the Central Body for Summoning People’s Military Servants, on September 3. During the meeting, Union Minister for Defence General Tin Aung San, in his capacity as Chairman of the Central Body for Summoning People’s Military Servants, said that they had been implementing National Service Information Management System (NSIMS), the relevant ministries need to cooperate in implementing this system as the ministries must work together.
“NSIMS is a system that records and stores the personal information such as name, date of birth, address, registration of young people who are eligible for military service. If people have already served in the military, it is recorded that you have served. The system can be used anytime and everywhere. It is created like this. Now, the committees for Summoning People’s Military Servants in state and division levels have been building the system by recording information. Afterwards, the system can be used at airports, border passes and immigration offices. The NSIMS is similar to unique identification (UID). It can be stricter to young people not to elude from the junta’s Conscription Law,” explained the military source in Nay Pyi Taw.
The terrorist junta council opened military training up to intake -4 and is managing to recruit more conscripts in an orderly and precise numerical table. They had planned to call new recruits from the remote areas where it is difficult to transport by land and water routes, by aircrafts, helicopters, and ships, according to the junta’s statement.
The junta-controlled committees for Summoning People’s Military Servants in state and division levels also submitted the list of young people who are eligible for military service and the statistics of young people who will serve in the military at the Nay Pyi Taw meeting yesterday, September 3.