Myanmar Lethwei Federation Explained

Myanmar Lethwei Federation မြန်မာနိုင်ငံရိုးရာလက်ဝှေ့အဖွဲ့ချုပ်
Abbrev:MLF
Sport:Lethwei
Jurisdiction:Ministry of Sports and Youth Affairs
Headquarters:Thuwunna Indoor Stadium
Offices in Thein Pyu Stadium
Location:Yangon, Myanmar
President:U Thein Aung
Chairman:U Sai Zaw Zaw
Vicepresident:Ne Win
Url:https://mtlfederation.org

Myanmar Lethwei Federation (MLF) (Burmese: မြန်မာနိုင်ငံရိုးရာလက်ဝှေ့အဖွဲ့ချုပ်) formerly known as Myanmar Traditional Lethwei Federation is one of two major organizations which sanctions professional Lethwei bouts worldwide and the only one who oversees Lethwei competitions in Myanmar.[1] [2]

History

The Myanmar Lethwei Federation or MLF is a branch of the Myanmar's Ministry of Health and Sports.[3] [4] The federation was initially founded in 1995 as the Myanmar Traditional Boxing Federation,[5] since Lethwei is translated to Boxing in Burmese language.[6] In 2019, the federation adapted its name to the MTLF - Myanmar Traditional Lethwei Federation, reflecting a more modern approach to the world and later updated it to Myanmar Lethwei Federation.

Since 1990's, MLF has been the sponsor of Thein Pyu Stadium in Yangon, Myanmar and holds an office space in the premise.[7]

In 2016, the MLF granted a ‘’Grade-A’’ promoter licence from the International Lethwei Federation Japan[8] allowing them to organize traditional Lethwei events in Japan.[9] [10] [11]

Banning Leduc

On April 28, 2021, Dave Leduc criticized Muay Thai fighter Buakaw Banchamek and historical figure Nai Khanom Tom in a social media post. Leduc questioned the veracity and claimed that the Nai Khanom Tom folklore story is exaggerated and that he was simply a prisoner in ancient Burma, referring to Siamese prisoners captured by Burmese troops during the Burmese–Siamese War.[12] [13] The post sparked considerable backlash from the Muaythai and combat sports community. In a letter, the Myanmar Traditional Lethwei Federation explained that Muaythai promoters made a complaint about Leduc. Muaythai promoter Nuttadaj Vachirarattanawong urged the MTLF to reprimand Leduc.[14] [15] According to the MTLF, Leduc had "committed personal attacks" on Buakaw Banchamek and Muaythai history potentially tarnishing the relationship between Myanmar and Thailand.[16] The federation issued a two-year ban Lethwei competitions under the MTLF.[17] There were speculations that the ban was political due to Leduc denouncing the 2021 Myanmar coup d'état and supporting the freedom movement in the Myanmar.[18]

In response to the letter, Dave Leduc wrote on social media: "They’re not the World Lethwei Federation (WLF), the WLF is the most powerful, they have affiliated federations all the world [...] Nobody in the world tells me anything. The World Lethwei Federation can’t, and especially not the MTLF"[19] "They made an “official letter” saying they ban me from their federation “for 2 years” Am I supposed to care? Not only do I not care, I will go further and say: I will never fight in their federation (MTLF) ever again." Leduc added.[20] [21] [22] [23]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lethwei boxing wins fans worldwide. Cynthia Choo. 1 November 2015. Asia One.
  2. Web site: Myanmar traditional boxing competition to be held in Mandalay. 10 September 2019. Global New Light of Myanmar.
  3. Web site: Tun Tun Min wins Myanmar Lethwei World Championship. 19 August 2019. Myanmar Daily News.
  4. Web site: Slovakia the next stop for Lethwei stars. Kyaw Zin Hlaing. 30 April 2015. Myanmar Times.
  5. Web site: 4th Myanmar Lethwei World Championship. 21 August 2019. Myanmar Traditional Radio.
  6. Web site: Life is tough for Myanmar’s traditional boxing pros. 6 July 2015. Ye Yint Htay. Mizzima.
  7. Web site: Sports Clubs & Associations - Myanmar Boxing Federation. 19 August 2020. Yangon Directory.
  8. Web site: (Japanese) Japan's first MTBF-certified raiding event "Lethwei Grand Prix in Japan 2016" is held at Korakuen Hall. Battle News. 12 September 2016.
  9. Web site: Myanmar-Japan Lethwei fights hosted in Japan. Global New Light of Myanmar. 2 March 2018.
  10. Web site: 後楽園大会出場の外国人戦手が来日&当日券情報(Japanese). ILFJ.
  11. Web site: Burmese kick-boxing champ KOs Australian. Burmese DVB. 28 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20181103210350/http://www.dvb.no/news/burmese-kick-boxing-champ-kos-australian/72131. 3 November 2018. dead.
  12. Web site: Dave Leduc - "This is my last fight.". Facebook. 2021-04-28. 2022-02-13.
  13. Web site: Dave Leduc accuses Thai spies of poisoning him. May 30, 2023. Asian MMA. criticizing Buakaw Banchamek and questioning whether the legendary tale of Nai Khanom Tom was actually true. He was also banned from competing by one of the major sanctioning bodies for lethwei after making these comments.
  14. Web site: ของขึ้น "เสี่ยโบ๊ท" แปลโพสต์แชมป์มวยพม่า ดูถูกมวยไทย แถมด่านายขนมต้ม-บัวขาว. May 1, 2021. Thairath. Thai.
  15. Web site: ดีกรีไม่ธรรมดา! ส่องหวานใจ "เดฟ เลดั๊ค" นักมวยจอมเกรียนชาวแคนาดา (ภาพ). May 1, 2021. Sanook.com. Thai.
  16. Web site: Report:Dave Leduc Banned From Myanmar and International Lethwei Competition. My MMA News. 2022-02-13.
  17. Web site: Myanmar Sanctioning Body Blacklists Its World Champion. Black Belt. Mark Jacobs. May 11, 2021.
  18. Web site: Episode #78: Dave Leduc, a champion stands with the people. Insight Myanmar. 15 November 2021.
  19. Web site: Sanction sévère contre un combattant québécois. May 8, 2021. Journal de Montreal. French. Ils ne sont pas la fédération mondiale de lethwei [WLF]. Celle-ci est la plus puissante, elle a des ententes avec des fédérations partout sur la planète. [...] Personne au monde ne me dit quoi faire. La WLF ne peut pas et encore moins la MTLF.
  20. Web site: Dave Leduc – "FAKE NEWS". Facebook. 31 May 2021. 2022-02-13.
  21. Web site: Lethwei Champion Dave Leduc blasts Thai media over ban from competition. Budo Dragon. July 9, 2021.
  22. Web site: CPC-អ្នកគាំទ្រភ្ញាក់ផ្អើល បន្ទាប់ពី Dave Leduc ហ៊ានធ្វើរឿងមួយនេះដាក់កីឡាករថៃដ៏ល្បីម្នាក់. CPC News. April 4, 2023. Khmer.
  23. Web site: King of Lethwei Dave Leduc BANNED from Myanmar and competing in the sport. VMTV. Matt Pritchard. May 8, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20230407124547/https://www.vmtv.co.uk/2021/05/08/king-of-lethwei-dave-leduc-banned-from-myanmar-and-competing-in-the-sport/. April 7, 2023.