The URC merged the
Union of Burma Boy Scouts and the
Union of Burma Girl Guides Association in 1962 to create the coeducational Union of Burma Boy Scouts and Girl Guides (UBBSGG). The URC dissolved the UBBSGG on 1 March 1964 and turned over its assets to the
Ministry of Education, which subsequently formed the
Programme Youth Organisation (PYO; , ) as the UBBSGG's replacement. All students, from elementary to university level, were required to join the PYO. The organisation had three branches: The
Glorious Youth (, ) for primary school students (5 to 9 years old), the
Pioneer Youth (, ) for middle and high school students (10 to 15 years old), and the
Programme Youth (, ) for college or university students and youths (16 to 25 years old). Upon reaching the age of 18 years old, members of the Programme Youth could apply to become provisional members of the BSPP. At the age of 21 years old, a provisional member could apply to become a full-fledged member of the BSPP.
Inspirations Although the BSPP was anti-communist and neutral in Cold War politics, the student wings of BSPP were based on the model of the
Young Communist Leagues of
Eastern Bloc countries, particularly the Soviet Union's
Komsomol. • တေဇလူငယ်: တေဇ (Teiza) has nothing to do with the meaning of its words, but it was the
nom de guerre of
Aung San (ဗိုလ်တေဇ, Bo Teiza), who was one of the
Thirty Comrades. The photo of Aung San as Bo Teiza is their badge, and they wore blue scarf and uniform like children organisations from communist countries. • ရှေ့ဆောင်လူငယ်: ရှေ့ဆောင် (Sheihsaung) is translation of Pioneer. It was formed as the
pioneer movement. They wore school uniform and the
red scarf like pioneer movement of communist countries. • လမ်းစဉ်လူငယ်: လမ်းစဉ် (Lansin) means either "programme" (as in Burma Socialist Programme Party) or "way" (as in
Burmese Way to Socialism) or "path" (as in
Magga Path). They did not wear scarf, but top white and bottom blue uniform either westernised or traditional. == Purge ==