Saturday, August 31, 2013

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


A Legendary Artist, an Austere Life: ‘Less is More’ for Kin Maung Yin

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 06:01 PM PDT

Burmese artist Kin Maung Yin, 75, paints on the floor at his home in north Rangoon. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — In a one-room wooden house in the northern part of Burma's former capital, happy the man is Kin Maung Yin whose only wish and care is to paint.

Recognized as a leader in the first generation of Burma's modern art movement, Kin Maung Yin is a living legend in Burmese contemporary art today, but he leads an austere lifestyle. He does not own a refrigerator or a washing machine at his home in Rangoon. Blank canvases are piled high where a television might otherwise stand, and he sleeps on the floor, not far from the spot where he paints. He has no family.

"Less is more," says the 75-year-old. "I have everything I need here."

With no easel, the old painter sits on a floor littered with brushes and Winsor & Newton acrylic paint tubes, brushing vibrant colors onto a canvas that leans against a wooden shelf. He spends the day listening to his favorite European classical music, and when the power cuts, he shakes his head, wailing out in a trademark shrill crescendo and then uttering, "This is Burma, this is Burma."

When he tires of working, he drags himself across the floor with his arms, unable to stand without assistance, He reaches his favorite chair, near the door, and pulls himself up onto the worn-out cushion, reading for a while or gazing outside to his overgrown garden.

"These knees trouble me," he complains. "I can no longer move as freely as I did before. And I have some memory loss. Doctors blame that on the stroke I suffered in 2000.

"I want to survive for another five years. That's enough, as I have been through so many years."

As a younger artist, Kin Maung Yin used to say that his paintings were not so popular in Burma. But he was a poor prophet, because collectors today are on hot on his trail. At his latest show, earlier this month in Rangoon, nearly all of his 50 paintings on display sold out. "Maybe they like it, I'm not sure," he says.

But he's being modest.

"He is a very rare artist," says Aung Soe Min, an art collector who co-founded Pansodan Gallery in Rangoon. "He's famous not only for his style—his personality and lifestyle have also become artistic. You cannot leave him out if you're talking about Burmese modern art.

His paintings, Aung Soe Min says, feature unexpected colors. "His unique style and lifelong creations have become an inspiration for younger artists. … He is leading a solitary life, devoting himself only to art, paying no attention to popularity or making money."

Kin Maung Yin started painting in the 1960s but trained earlier as an architect, gaining an appreciation for form and color that would later influence his art, according to his friend and fellow artist Sun Myint.

As an architect, he devoured books about art and tried his hand at portraits, abstracts and any other form he learned through reading. "I'm a self-taught painter," he says. "All I know about art is that simplicity is perfection."

Indeed, many of his paintings are almost child-like in their simplicity, according to Sun Myint, who wrote a forward in a biography about his friend and noted, "He thinks and paints freely."

Anyone familiar with Kin Maung Yin's style would agree. His abstracts include riots of vivid colors and bold brushstrokes. He says the Italian modernist Amedeo Modigliani inspired him to paint portraits with mask-like faces and elongated forms.

"I even prefer him to Picasso," Kin Maung Yin says of Modigliani, primarily a figurative artist. "So I painted in his style for nearly 10 years."

He adhered to that style in his famous portrait series "Seated Dancers," as well as another series six years ago depicting democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi. The Suu Kyi series was especially renowned among collectors because it was created when the former military regime was still in power, Suu Kyi was being held under house arrest, and the police could arrest anyone in the country who possessed a photo or painting of her.

These days, now that a quasi-civilian government is in power and Suu Kyi has won a seat in Parliament, the old Burmese artist continues to spend his hours simply, painting. He wakes up every morning at 6 and spends half an hour keeping still, thinking about the good old days and his parents. Sometimes he tries to visualize what he will create later in the day. "The result always turns out different," he says.

He opens his house to anyone who visits, warmly welcoming strangers and friends alike to a seat on the floor and offering a cup of coffee or tea.

If asked to name the most important thing in life for an artist, he answers frankly: food.

"It would be nonsense for me to name something 'big'" he says. "We all need food to survive, whether you are an artist or not. That's all."

The World Wants to Know: Where is Sombath?

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 09:19 PM PDT

Still of CCTV footage apparently showing Laotian civil society leader Sombath Somphone about to be detained by unknown men approaching in a white car. (Photo: Youtube)

BANGKOK — At a recent reception in Vientiane, a Western diplomat approached a senior Laotian government official with a query about Sombath Somphone, a respected civil society leader who was grabbed off the streets of the capital on a December evening and has not been seen since. The question elicited a rebuff.

"It is the standard official reaction," a foreign guest at the reception recalled. "They get into denial mode even though there is CCTV footage of Sombath being forced into a vehicle near a police post in Vientiane."

A similar wall of silence and denial was erected days later, when a delegation from the European Parliament landed in the Southeast Asian nation on a fact-finding mission over the whereabouts of the soft-spoken 61-year-old. "The Foreign Ministry [officials] presented ridiculous lies that the man abducted wasn't Sombath," said the visibly irate Danish lawmaker and head of the delegation, Soren Bo Sondergarrd, speaking to journalists in Bangkok on Wednesday. "They are unwilling to get deeper into this case."

Sondergarrd's delegation was the third made by foreign lawmakers, both from Europe and from Southeast Asia, since January this year. And a fourth from Europe is expected on Oct. 28—an indication of the increasing pressure the notoriously secretive communist government is under from the international community.

"There has never been such mobilization around one person before, considering that prior human rights abuses in Laos have attracted little attention," Anne-Sophie Gindroz, policy and advocacy advisor of Helvetas, a Swiss development agency, told The Irrawaddy. And Gindroz should know, since she was forced out of Laos, abruptly ending her work in the agriculture sector, a week before Sombath was "disappeared."

But behind this façade of blank looks and "insulting denials" another story is unfolding. A campaign is underway within the hierarchy of the Laos People's Revolutionary Party (LPRP)—which has ruled the country with an iron grip since the mid-1970s—and sections of the government to "slander and discredit Sombath," a Vientiane-based source with links to official circles revealed. "They are sending the message right down to some village levels of the party to condemn Sombath."

Even cabinet ministers have displayed this touch, as one did during a preparatory session ahead of the mid-year sitting of the rubber-stamp National Assembly. He discussed Sombath's work in "a negative way" and even refused to touch a book authored by the disappeared civil society veteran that had been on display at the session, according to a bureaucrat who had been present.

Early signs of this strategy emerged in January, when the government of the landlocked, impoverished country released its first official response. "It may be possible that Mr. Sombath has been kidnapped perhaps because of a personal conflict or a conflict in business or some other reason," stated Yong Chanthalangsy, Laos' ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, in a statement that was published in the state-controlled Vientiane Times newspaper.

Such a view was immediately pooh-poohed by locals and foreigners familiar with the work of Sombath, a winner of the Magsaysay Award, the Asian equivalent of the Nobel Prize, for his decades in rural development. They link his enforced disappearance to the leading role he played at last October's meeting of the Asia-Europe People's Forum (AEPF) in Vientiane. That four-day event, held ahead of a summit of Asian and European leaders, attracted an unprecedented gathering of local and international community activists.

In the run-up to the 2012 AEPF, international development organisations and analysts based in Laos viewed the gathering as a sign of the country loosening its grip on community activism and opening to the world. "The Foreign Ministry had approved the space for civil society at the AEPF as proof that the country was comfortable with different views," says Shalmali Guttal, senior researcher at Focus on the Global South, a Bangkok-based think tank. "It fit in with the attitude of Laos policymakers over the previous five to six years of reaching out to their own people, their critics."

But the aftermath of the AEPF proved both Guttal and Sombath wrong. Hawks within the party hierarchy and the security establishment had reportedly become alarmed, according to a diplomatic source, about some of the issues openly raised at the AEPF. They saw red at local communities and villagers complaining about being displaced or affected by the loss of land given to foreign investors.

Ounkeo Souksavanh, a local journalist who hosted a popular radio program, had already got a foretaste of the government's displeasure. A weekly call-in show that he ran for four years was abruptly pulled off the air in January last year. "I had a hotline that the audience could call and they often talked about the rise in land conflicts in their community," he recalled.

Laos, which opened its abundant natural resources to foreign investors in 1996, has attracted many foreign companies from Vietnam and China. An estimated two million hectares have been leased out or given as concessions, accounting for some 2,000 approved projects. They range from copper and gold mines to industrial scale rubber and cassava plantations.

The state's heavy-handed response to criticism has prompted Ng Shui-Meng, Sombath's wife, to tread cautiously in the tireless quest for her husband. The Singapore national was travelling ahead of him in a car on that fateful evening of Dec. 15. Sombath was in his battered old jeep, heading home for dinner, when he was stopped at a police post at one of the busiest intersections in Vientiane. That scene and his being led to another vehicle were captured on a CCTV camera, proof of which Shui-Meng has.

"I have deliberately not accused the state in my comments over the past eight months," the former UNICEF staffer admitted in an interview. "I have no bargaining chip on my side except to promise silence. And I don't know if I am doing the right thing or the wrong thing."

Burma Business Roundup (Aug. 31)

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 05:30 PM PDT

Japan Spreads Business Tentacles Across Burmese Businesses

Japan is widening its investments in Burma with moves into electricity generation, air transportation and agriculture.

An agreement has been signed between Rangoon's Hlaing Tharyar Industrial Zone and Japan's Ministry for Economy, Trade and Industry to help finance a 500-megawatt natural gas power station, said Eleven Media, quoting the zone's chairman, Myat Thin Aung.

The ministry will provide technical aid for the power plant, and also for a much smaller 50-MW project to help fuel development of the stalled Thilawa Special Economic Zone on the outskirts of Rangoon.

However, it's unclear who will actually build these power stations and when.

In the aviation sector, Japanese airline All Nippon Airways (ANA) will buy a 49 percent stake in local airline Asian Wings Airways, Reuters reported. ANA will pay US$25 million for the shareholding, Reuters reported.

Asian Wings was established in 2011 and currently flies only domestic routes but has plans to expand abroad, starting with services to Thailand in October, said Reuters.

ANA said earlier in August that it would begin operating daily flights between Tokyo and Rangoon from the end of September to meet rising demand from businesspeople and tourists. At present it operates direct flights between the two cities three times per week.

Meanwhile, Megumi No Sato of Japan is teaming up with Burma's City Mart Holding Company in a joint venture to produce vegetables and fruit for sale in Burma. The venture will grow crops in the Pyin Oo Lwin area of central Burma, according to the Myanmar Investment Commission.

In Japan, Megumi No Sato is noted for supplying quality produce to supermarkets and helping farmers to establish steady incomes, said Eleven Media.

Hotel Rates for SEA Games Set by Ministry to Allay Inflation Fears

Hotel room rates have been set for the Southeast Asian Games (SEA), which Burma is hosting in December and is expected to involve thousands of athletes, media and spectators.

Hotels rates will range between US$55 and $150 a night, according to the travel industry magazine TTR Weekly, quoting Burma's Ministry of Hotels and Tourism. The lowest set price will be for journalists covering the 11-day event, and the highest prices will be paid by spectators, TTR said.

The ministry set the rates following concerns among the participating countries that accommodation prices would be speculatively inflated for the event, said TTR.

The SEA Games take place from Dec. 11 to Dec. 22. Reports have suggested that up to 5,000 athletes and supporters from 11 countries could put a severe strain on Burma's facilities.

The games will take place in Naypidaw, Rangoon, Mandalay and Ngwe Saung beach in Irrawaddy Division.

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) has offered to provide technical assistance for the games.

Siam Cement Factory at Moulmein to Feed Demand From Thailand

Major Thai infrastructure component supplier Siam Cement is planning to start construction soon of a US$388 million cement production factory in Burma, according to a report.

The plant will be at Moulmein on Mon State's southeast coast. It will have an annual production capacity of 1.8 million tons and could be in operation by the middle of 2016, said Reuters, quoting company officials.

Siam Cement is also expanding into Indonesia and Cambodia to cater to Southeast Asia's developing economies.

Although some of the new Burma production will supply the Burmese market, the Moulmein factory is expected to export cement across the border into Thailand.

Siam Cement is one of Southeast Asia's two biggest cement producers. It is 30 percent owned by Thailand's Crown Property Bureau, an investment agency controlled by the Thai royal household.

Multimillion Dollar Loans from Tokyo to Revamp Burma's Broken Roads

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) will provide about US$900 million in loans for road renovation and other infrastructure enhancement in Burma, said World Highways magazine.

The loans are separate from financial aid, which is also being provided for infrastructure development at the Thilawa Special Economic Zone.

"Currently, JICA is working on a master plan to develop [Rangoon], including more than 70 programs that include renovation of the city's public transportation system," said World Highways this week.

The magazine quoted an unnamed JICA official as saying about $900 million of loans for infrastructure projects are in the pipeline for Burma.

"Of the total loan, $380 million will be allocated for the Thilawa Special Economic Zone project, which covers the construction of roads, bridges, drinking water and electric power generation," the magazine said.

Bangladesh to Resume Dhaka-Rangoon Flights after Six-Year Break

Direct flights linking the Bangladeshi capital and Burma's commercial center Rangoon will restart in November.

The resumption, after a six-year break, follows an agreement signed in Dhaka this week between the Civil Aviation Authority, Bangladesh (CAAB), and Win Swe Tun, deputy director of Burma's Department of Civil Aviation, Bangladeshi media reported.

Biman Bangladesh Airlines, the national airline, stopped flights between Dhaka and Rangoon in 2007 because of what it termed economic losses.

CAAB said Rangoon was now more commercially viable and would serve as a stopover on routes between Dhaka and Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur.

National News

National News


Dry zone agriculture at mercy of weather

Posted: 31 Aug 2013 03:41 AM PDT

Farmers in Myanmar's central dry zone face an uncertain future as weather patterns take a negative toll on crop yields.

Inle Lake struggles amid tourism boom

Posted: 31 Aug 2013 01:37 AM PDT

As beautiful as Inle Lake – one of the country's most popular tourist destinations – seems to those who visit, a number of urgent problems lurk just below its placid surface.

Friday, August 30, 2013

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


1988: Forgive and forget?

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 06:57 AM PDT

Twenty-five years ago, the streets of Rangoon were spattered with blood. The pro-democracy uprising, known as 8-8-88, continues to haunt Burma's history. Over 3,000 peaceful protestors were massacred by the military regime when commanders were ordered to shoot to kill. Thousands more were tortured and jailed.

But as Burma slowly moves towards democracy, activists have found themselves asking: Is it time to forgive and forget?

Earlier this month, thousands gathered at the Myanmar Convention Centre in Rangoon to pay tribute to the victims of the student-led uprisings. The staging of the event itself is a sign of Burma's dramatic democratic transition, which has seen political prisoners freed and censorship reduced.

"We must not forget the past; we must learn from history," opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who spent nearly two decades under house arrest, told the crowd.

Since a semi-civilian government took power in 2011, claiming an end to military rule, Burma has been moving towards democracy. But although the crimes of the past have been publicly recognised for the first time, nobody has been held to account.

International watchdog Human Rights Watch (HRW) has called for those responsible to finally be brought to justice.

"They have really been calling for it for 25 years, and even though the country is going through an important and complicated transition, I don't think it is possible for the country to really move forward unless those responsible for 1988 are brought to account," said David Mathieson, Senior Burma researcher for HRW.

Khin Ohmar was a student protestor at the time and was an eye witness to what happened.

"I was just up the road. I had a chance to see the security forces firing," said the activist, who was living in exile in neighbouring Thailand until finally being able to return to Burma last year.

Many of the former generals from the military government are still in power today. But the country has come far and some do not want to disrupt the positive changes. A belief in forgiveness resonated strongly at the commemoration ceremony, with some describing it as necessary for the country to move on.

But others say it is not for the leaders to forgive, but the victims.

"We can forgive what happened to us individually, but we don’t have the right or the mandate to speak for the others," said Khin Ohmar.

"They actually have to create a space for the victims or survivors of that injustice to be able to come forward and share what happened to them and also speak about what they want and how they want to see justice done."

The military still dominates Burma, and security forces are handed immunity from prosecution under the current constitution. They have tens of thousands of troops throughout the country and in some border areas human rights abuses continue.

"I think people should be looking at justice and accountability in a potentially positive way in Burma – that it can actually help the transition and put an end to continued violations on the part of the military," said Mathieson. "Not as something negative that is going to destroy the process."

Business Weekly

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 05:03 AM PDT

US war cry sends gold price soaring

Global gold prices have been soaring since the US and its allies threatened military intervention in Syria. On 22 August, gold was sitting at 706,500 kyat per tical, but subsequent fears that a war was imminent encouraged more buyers to invest in gold, traders said. The price soared over the weekend to 720,000 kyat and then leapt again to 726,000 by Thursday before settling back at 724,100 on the afternoon of Friday 30 August. Despite the rise in international oil prices, the instability in the Middle East has not forced up the price of petrol in Burma, and it remains at 814 kyat per litre.

More for your dollar

The kyat rose ever so slightly this week against international currencies. On 21 August its buying price was 967 to the US dollar and selling price 977. By 30 August, the kyat was valued at 965 kyat to the dollar while selling at 973.

Dhaka flights to resume

Bangladeshi and Burmese civil aviation authorities signed an agreement on Thursday in Dhaka to resume direct flights between the Bangladeshi capital and Rangoon after a six-year hiatus. Mahmud Hossain, the chairman of the Civil Aviation Authority of Bangladesh, said, "Yangon [Rangoon] has become now commercially more viable for our carriers. It’s now a good transit on our way to Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur.” Officials expect that the direct air link can be resumed by November.

Japanese airline buys 49 percent share in Asian Wings

Japan's All Nippon Airways (ANA) announced on 27 August that it had acquired a 49 percent stake in Asian Wings Airways (AWA), the first investment in a Burma-based commercial carrier by a foreign airline. The Japanese airline said it will employ larger aircraft and make the currently three-flights-a-week service daily between Tokyo's Narita and Rangoon from the end of September. AWA currently flies to 13 cities in Burma.

World Bank loan to cover development projects

Burma's Union Parliament has approved a plan, recommended by President Thein Sein, to accept a US$261.5 million loan from the World Bank to support various development projects. The 40-year loan – at a fixed 0.75 percent interest rate – would be used to develop the communications sector and to improve schools, as well as pay for the construction of a compressed natural gas and biogas power plant in Mon state's Thaton township. In January, the World Bank announced that it would clear Burma's outstanding debt of some $900 million, allowing the country to reapply for grants and loans from international institutions.

Meanwhile, The Asian Development Bank announced on 26 August that it will administer a Japanese loan of $1.2 million to help Burma improve statistics collection.

Rice exports down, but optimism remains high

Burma exported some 200,000 tonnes of rice between April and July, but that's 100,000 tonnes short of last year's figures. According to Aung Than Oo, the chairman of the Myanmar Rice and Paddy Traders Association, the 50 percent decrease in shipments is due to an increase in the Burmese rice price, a decrease in Indian prices, and adverse weather conditions. Aung Than Oo, remained upbeat however, saying that while Burma exported some 1.4 million tonnes of rice in 2012, this year he expects the total to hit 2 million tonnes.

Vietnam rues missed opportunities in Burma

A delegation of Vietnamese business leaders were quoted in the national press complaining that the country's entrepreneurs have been slow to enter Burma while other Asian and western countries move in to the nascent markets. Pham Dung, Vietnam's ambassador to Burma, is quoted by Thanh Nien as saying that the embassy in Rangoon has been busy receiving and assisting Vietnamese businesses coming to explore the market, but few have returned or invested.

US to boost military ties with Burma, but warns of N Korea connection

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 04:52 AM PDT

The United States has vowed to strengthen its military relationship with Burma, shortly after issuing another warning to Naypyidaw that it must sever its defence ties with North Korea.

US Ambassador Derek Mitchell met with the head of Burma's armed forces Min Aung Hlaing in the Burmese capital this week to discuss legal practices in military combat. Burmese state media described the meeting as a "cordial" effort to strengthen defence relations between the two countries, emphasising the army's "important role" in Burma's democratisation process.

"This dialogue is consistent with continuing efforts to build mutual understanding in order to promote human rights awareness, and promote the values and activities of a modern, disciplined and respected military that acts according to international norms," said Derek Mitchell on Thursday.

But the meeting coincides with news that the US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel admonished the Burmese Foreign Minister Lt-Gen Wai Lwin on the sidelines of the ASEAN conference in Brunei for his country's ongoing military relationship with North Korea.

“The secretary discussed the importance of continued progress on reform and the importance of Myanmar [Burma] severing military ties to North Korea,” US Defense Department spokesman George Little said in a statement.

The US announced in August that it was planning to step up its military engagement with Burma less than a month after blacklisting a senior military general, Lt-Gen Thein Htay, for allegedly "purchasing military goods" from North Korea. But the superpower took great care to avoid sanctioning the Burmese government.

The decision has drawn scorn from some critics, who view it as a "carrot and stick" approach intended to bring Burma into the US's geopolitical ambit. "The US knows that the Burmese military are still dealing with the North Koreans," veteran journalist and Burma expert, Bertil Lintner, told DVB on Friday.

Lintner has previously slammed the notion that Thein Htay, who heads Burma's Directorate of Defence Industries (DDI), could have purchased military equipment from North Korea without authorisation from President Thein Sein and Min Aung Hlaing as "absolutely impossible".

The DDI is a military agency which carries out missile research and development projects, and reportedly has a memorandum of understanding to build ballistic missiles in partnership with North Korea. The agency was already slapped with US sanctions in July 2012 for their continued engagement with the Pyongyang regime.

Lintner explained that the US is sending a "clear signal" to the government that they must move away from North Korea, while offering military training as a reward. "Forget US talk about 'human rights' and 'democracy', that’s just window dressing," he said. "The US main concern in Burma is strategic: to keep China at bay and the North Koreans out."

According to Lintner, North Korea is helping Burma develop a SCUD-type missile, an allegation which the government has denied. In a previous interview with DVB, the president's spokesperson, Ye Htut, claimed to have "no idea" why Thein Htay had been blacklisted, but insisted that it would not affect US-Burma relations.

Burma has received international praise for introducing a series of democratic reforms since March 2011, but continues to be plagued by civil strife, especially in its ethnic minority territories.

Parliament calls for land grab recommendations to be expedited

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 02:46 AM PDT

Burma's Union Parliament on Thursday urged the government to expedite procedures which will allow confiscated farmland to be returned to its original owners across the country.

In a message to President Thein Sein, parliamentary speaker Thura Shwe Mann urged the government to return land – specifically land left unused after being confiscated – to its rightful owners, as recommended previously in a report by the parliament-backed Land Investigation Commission.

"The parliament believes and expects the concerned parties to return land and farmland … out of goodwill and sympathy towards farmers and civilians living in poverty and without much awareness," said Shwe Mann at the parliamentary session on Thursday.

Ye Htun, a lower house representative, said that parliament was sending a reminder to the president as there had been no tangible progress in implementing the recommendations of the commission's report.

"Parliament has conducted surveys … indicating that many of the companies that confiscated lands are now beginning to put fences around the areas previously left unused. This is leading to even more disputes with farmers," said Ye Htun.

The 1963 Land Acquisition Act nationalised land ownership in Burma, and the military and its business cronies spent decades confiscating land from farmers to build economic projects, industrial zones and army bases.

However, the issue of land seizures has come increasing under scrutiny since the new government took power in 2011 with farmers staging protests against the practice across the country and several MPs raising the issue in parliament.

Myanmar Economic Holdings in brewery contract dispute

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 12:43 AM PDT

Singaporean food and beverage conglomerate Fraser & Neave (F&N) has claimed that its Burmese partner is trying to oust it from a joint-venture agreement in Myanmar Brewery, according to various news sources.

F&N owns 55 percent of Myanmar Brewery, which corners a huge part of Burma's domestic beer market with manufacturing plants for Tiger Beer, Myanmar Beer, ABC Stout and Anchor Beer. The remaining 45 percent is held by state-owned Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings Ltd (UMEHL), a conglomerate run by Burma's Ministry of Defence.

The Singaporean firm said that UMEHL filed a claim on Thursday informing F&N that it plans to begin arbitration proceedings to claim F&N’s majority stake in the brewery, citing the Burmese company's reading of the joint venture agreement, according to a report in Singapore's Business Times.

The report said that F&N disputes the basis of the claim, adding that it has engaged lawyers and “intends to vigorously resist the claim”.

When contacted by DVB on Friday, UMEHL declined to comment on the matter.

Although the brewery represents only a small part of F&N's business, losing its stake "would mean being shut out of one of Asia's fastest growing beer markets," said Reuters on Thursday, noting that in a May earnings briefing, F&N said its Burma beer business had recorded double-digit growth from a year earlier.

While F&N is controlled by Thai billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, UMEHL is one of two main conglomerates owned and run by the Burmese military via the Ministry of Defence. UMEHL is no stranger to controversy, being one of the majority partners in the Latpadaung copper mine in Sagaing which it operates on a joint venture basis with China's Wanbao Company.

According to the Wall Street Journal on Thursday, "The [Myanmar Brewery] spat highlights the risk of doing business with Myanmar’s state-owned enterprises and could damp confidence of investors seeking opportunities in a country still emerging from decades of secrecy and isolation under military rule".

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Investors Needed to Link New Airport to Rangoon: Officials

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 06:49 AM PDT

 Passengers board an Air Bagan flight to Chiang Mai at Rangoon's international airport. (Photo: Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

Passengers board an Air Bagan flight to Chiang Mai at Rangoon's international airport. (Photo: Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON – Financial backing from the private sector is needed to link Burma’s proposed new international airport at Hanthawaddy with Rangoon, the country’ biggest city, government officials said.

"We propose a highway and a high-speed train to Yangon," Kyaw Soe, an official at the Department of Civil Aviation, told The Irrawaddy. Unable to put a number on the likely cost of building the new transport links, Kyaw Soe counseled that "We need investors to do this; it is just a proposal at the moment."

The construction of the new airport — aiming to cater for 12 million passengers per year at Hanthawaddy, all of 80km north of Rangoon — will be undertaken by a consortium led by South Korea’s Incheon, which won a government tender for the project on Aug 12.

The new airport will be needed, the government has said, to meet growing tourist interest in the country. By 2020, visitor numbers could be anywhere from 2.8 million to 7.4 million, up from 1 million last year, according to official estimates. The top-end projections for an expanded tourism sector would be worth over US$10 billion per annum to Burma's economy — a massive jump from the approximately 1 million tourist that visited last year.

The transport plans for the new airport would not just link to Rangoon, Burma’s commercial hub and a city expected to double in size to 10 million by 2040, but also include a road link to the giant Japanese-backed Thilawa industrial park, the Transport Ministry says.

"We have a masterplan for Hanthawaddy airport which includes a plan to link to Thilawa," said Min Lwin, Head of Office at the Transport Ministry. Thilawa, currently a port located about 25 km from downtown Rangoon, will be a 2,400-hectare "special economic zone."

The proposed SEZ is key to attracting large-scale Japanese manufacturing to Burma, as it will provide a work-around for companies interested in setting up shop in the country but deterred by Rangoon's infrastructure deficits — such as a lack of office space, high land prices and unreliable electricity supply.

"We expect that they will break ground at Thilawa in December," Masaki Takahara, director of JETRO, Japan’s overseas trade mission in Rangoon, told The Irrawaddy.

Construction of the zone, slated to be finished by 2015, will be a 51-49 percent joint venture between Burmese companies and Japanese counterparts, featuring corporate giants Mitsubishi, Sumitomo and Marubeni.

Min Lwin could not give any details about whether the Hanthawaddy-Thilawa link would comprise rail as well as road, or how the proposed connection would dovetail with existing road and rail connections into Rangoon. Japan’s Itochu Corporation will, however, build a bridge linking Rangoon to Thilawa, according The Construction Ministry.

"We have formed the implementation committee and will discuss this in the future," Min Lwin says, adding that the Transport Ministry will meet with the Incheon-led consortium in September to discuss the overall airport project, which will be comprised of three phases – building the airport, construction of an adjacent ‘airport city’ and the upgrading of transport links to Thilawa.

Aside from the new Hanthawaddy international airport, two other airport projects – the expansion and upgrading of Rangoon’s current international airport and the airport at Mandalay, will be carried out in Burma in the coming years.

The existing Rangoon airport will be upgraded – mainly to cater for domestic flights – by Pioneer Aerodrome Services (PAS), while Japan’s Mitsubishi-Jalux will expand Mandalay’s airport. PAS is linked to Asia World, run by Steven Law, a US-sanctioned businessman who is the son of recently-deceased drug trafficker Lo Hsing Han.

More Than 70 Rohingyas Handed Lengthy Prison Sentences

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 06:36 AM PDT

Policemen move towards burning houses during fighting between Buddhist Rakhine and Muslim Rohingya communities in Sittwe in June 2012. (PHOTO: Reuters)

RANGOON — An Arakan State court reportedly sentenced 76 Rohingya Muslims to lengthy prison terms last week for their alleged roles in an outburst of deadly inter-communal violence in Maungdaw Township in June last year, according to a human rights group and a local media report. At least seven were sentenced to life imprisonment.

The Thailand-based Arakan Project, which advocates for the rights of the Rohingyas, said a total of 76 Muslim defendants from Maungdaw Township had been sentenced at Buthidaung and Maungdaw township courts last week.

"On 20 and 21 August, Buthidaung Court sentenced 43 Rohingya detainees, all from Ba Gone Nar Village Tract in Maungdaw South, in relation to the June [2012] violence. Of them, 35 were sentenced to 17 years, four to 6 years and four to life imprisonment," the group said in a draft report that it recently submitted to the UN special envoy on the human rights situation in Burma Tomás Quintana.

On August 22, another 33 detainees were scheduled to be convicted by the Maungdaw Court, Arakan Project director Chris Lewa said on Friday, adding that she was still finding out what the court had decided.

Burmese newspaper The Voice Daily quoted a local official as saying that the Maungdaw Court handed down three life sentences. "Three Bengalis who killed one monk were sentenced to life in prison. Ten people were sentenced to 10 years," Arakan State Attorney General Hla Thein told the newspaper.

Arakan and central government officials refer to the stateless Muslim minority as "Bengalis" to suggest that they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

The men were convicted for murder and a range of other charges related to the burning down of Arakanese Buddhists' homes, a primary school and a health clinic in Kandayar and Mawyawaddy villages in Maungdaw Township in June 2012, according to The Voice Daily.

Arakan State spokesperson Win Myaing confirmed with The Irrawaddy that dozens of Muslim men had been sentenced last week, but gave few details. "We heard that the court sentenced them. But we do not have detailed information to talk about this case. This authority [to discuss cases] belongs to the court," he said.

The Rohingya men spent more than one year in pre-trial detention in Buthidaung Jail before being sentenced. They are part a group of "hundreds of Rohingyas, including children and four humanitarian workers, [who] were arrested and detained for alleged involvement in violence in June 2012," the Arakan Project said, adding that many had been tortured in custody.

On June 8, Rohingyas attacked Buddhist villages in Maungdaw Township, killing a number of villagers and torching homes. Waves of inter-communal violence subsequently spread through the state and by late October, 140,000 people, mostly Muslims, were displaced and 192 had been killed.

Human rights groups have accused government security forces of supporting the Buddhist communities against the Rohingya, and of carrying out arbitrary arrest and systematic and widespread rights abuses against the Muslim minority.

Lewa said last week's sentences constituted a violation of the defendants' basic rights. "None of these people had any fair judicial process and the sentences were extremely harsh. Some of these people were certainly not even involved in the [inter-communal] violence," she said.

By comparison, Lewa said, "very few" Buddhist perpetrators of the violence were sentenced "and they received lighter sentences."

Myo Thant, a Rohingya politician with the Maungdaw-based Democracy and Human Rights Party, said many Rohingya families in the Muslim-majority area in northern Arakan State had relatives in jail, but they are unable to communicate with them, let alone support them during their trial.

He said that his younger brother, called Kyaw Naing, had been sentenced by the Maungdaw Court on July 12 to 10 years imprisonment for alleged involvement in last year's violence.

The family had been unable to hire a lawyer to aid his brother's defense, he said, "Because they did not even inform our family when they sentenced him. My family still does not dare to speak out about this despite their understanding that the court sentencing of their son was not fair."

Shwe Maung, a Muslim lawmaker from Buthidaung Township who represents the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party, said arrests in Maungdaw Township were often arbitrary and court proceedings biased against Muslim villagers.

"There is no rule of law there because the victims cannot defend themselves in court," he said. "The court only listens to one-side information and the victims have to suffer for this, as they cannot have a lawyer and their families cannot go to defend their people in court."

Burma Military’s New Rangoon Billboard Attracts Attention

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 06:07 AM PDT

In a first for Burma's armed forces, a billboard promoting a "No Child Soldiers" campaign has drawn attention in the country's biggest city. (Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The Burmese military, notorious over the past five decades for its use of child soldiers, erected an eye-catching billboard in downtown Rangoon this week indicating a desire to clean up its image—and perhaps its practices.

In a first for Burma's armed forces, a billboard promoting a "No Child Soldiers" campaign has drawn attention in the country's biggest city, as the quasi-civilian government increasingly cooperates with UN agencies to solve the problem of underage recruitment, although new cases of child soldiers continue to be reported.

The International Labor Organization (ILO), which has long campaigned for an end to child soldiers, said the new billboard campaign was a step in the right direction by the Burmese military, known as the Tatmadaw.

"The recent 'No Child Soldiers' billboard and poster campaign is extremely positive and acts to further reconfirm the commitment of the government and the Tatmadaw to addressing the problem of child soldiers," Steve Marshall, the ILO's liaison officer in Rangoon, told The Irrawaddy on Friday.

"The campaign will work in several ways, but in particular it demonstrates to the people of Myanmar [Burma], at all levels, that the Tatmadaw as a professional force wants the right type of recruits with which to provide its important defense services. In so doing, it will also play a useful additional role in educating the community that Myanmar Law is clear that the recruitment of children under the age of 18 years is illegal."

The billboard comes as two families in the city publicly alleged at a press conference in Rangoon on Thursday that the military had recruited two of their children.

Khaing Saw Lin, a 15-year-old boy, was allegedly recruited in June and has been training at a military center in Thabeikkyin Township, Mandalay Division, according to Myint Win, who has been assisting the families and is a member of the National League for Democracy (NLD) party.

He said the 15-year-old had been a high school student in South Dagon Township.

"We found that he was registered under a different name at the military center, after we talked with some military officers," the NLD member said. "His name is Zaw Htet Oo now, and they even made a fake ID, which said he's 23 years old."

Despite the family's requests, the military has not released the boy, the NLD member added.

"We are waiting for his release," he said. "If it doesn't happen, we will talk to organizations that are helping with cases of child soldiers."

The ILO has worked for years in cooperation with the government and the Burmese military to raise awareness about the issue of underage recruitment, as part of a greater project to eliminate forced labor.

Marshall said the goal was to discharge child soldiers and to stop the practice of underage recruiting. He urged families who had lost children to the military to contact a local military branch representative to initiate their discharge. "If this is for some reason not possible, they should have no hesitation in contacting the ILO liaison office," he told The Irrawaddy.

The ILO office in Rangoon would then have the recruitment addressed through a forced labor complaints mechanism with the Burmese government.

Rights groups have accused the Burmese military as well as armed rebel groups in the country of using child soldiers for decades—accusations which the military long denied under the former regime.

Burma's quasi-civilian government, which came to power in 2011, signed an agreement with the United Nations to end the practice of child soldiers in the country.

The military discharged 68 underage child soldiers earlier this month, according to the United Nations. A month earlier, it released 42 children and young adults who had been recruited for soldiering and other duties.

The latest report by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Burma's government had made progress in reducing the recruitment of children to serve as fighters but still needed to stamp out the practice.

The report said seven ethnic armed groups, including the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), also recruit and use child soldiers.

The KNLA in July signed an agreement to protect children from armed conflict and prevent the recruitment of child soldiers.

Photo of the week

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 05:56 AM PDT

bigasmall

Nok Air Joins Cadre of Foreign Airliners Linking With Burma

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 04:47 AM PDT

Thai passengers disembark from a Nok Air flight. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — With demand for flights into Burma rising, Thailand's Nok Air will launch a new route from the Thai border town of Mae Sot to the Mon State capital of Moulmein, state-run media announced Friday.

Budget tickets priced between US$55 and $80 will be available for the 25-minute flight, The New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported, with travelers able to pay in Burmese kyat, Thai baht or US dollars.

The new air route, which will be serviced beginning on Sunday, will greatly reduce travel time between the Thai border town and Moulmein, which currently takes more than six hours overland.

The Mae Sot-Moulmein flight is expected to largely benefit Thai tourists and pilgrims who travel to Mon State for a glimpse of Kyaiktiyo Pagoda, also known as Golden Rock.

Kyaiktiyo Pagoda is a well-known Buddhist pilgrimage site, and its iconic stupa-topped, gold-leaf covered rock is a popular attraction for tourists, particularly among the majority-Buddhist Thai contingent.

Airline Manager Aye Min Tun told The New Light of Myanmar that the Nok flights out of Mae Sot were slated to depart every morning.

Nok Air will also launch a new route on Oct. 1 from Mae Sot to Rangoon, Burma's commercial capital, where a consortium led by Pioneer Aerodrome Services, an affiliate of the Burmese conglomerate Asia World, was recently awarded a contract to expand Rangoon International Airport.

As the budget airline of Thai Airways International, Nok Air services 100 flights a day in Thailand.

Meanwhile, fellow budget airliner AirAsia has announced plans to launch regular flights from Bangkok's Don Mueang Airport to Naypyidaw, according to a report by Travel Daily News. According to Thai AirAsia CSO Tassapon Bijleveld, the airline will offer promotional fares until Sept. 8 for travel between Oct. 28, 2013 and Aug. 5, 2014.

"AirAsia is the first and only low-fare airline to serve this route from Don Mueang Airport," he said, adding that new 180-seat Airbus A320s would be used for the one-hour flight between the two Southeast Asian capitals.

The move by AirAsia comes a week after Thai airline Bangkok Airways said it would become the first international carrier to fly directly to the Burmese capital.

Sagaing Police Arrest More Suspects After Latest Sectarian Unrest

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 11:53 PM PDT

Buildings burn last weekend in Htan Gone village, Sagaing Division, in this photo published on the Facebook page of Ye Htut, the deputy minister of information and the presidential spokesman. Members of a 1,000-strong Buddhist mob torched dozens of homes and shops in northwestern Burma following rumors that a Muslim man tried to sexually assault a young woman. (Photo: Ye Htet / Facebook)

MANDALAY — The police are continuing to arrest suspects after a Buddhist mob set fire to dozens of Muslim-owned homes and businesses in northwest Burma's Sagaing Division last weekend in the latest communal violence to hit the country.

Eleven people were initially arrested after a 1,000-strong Buddhist mob rioted late last Saturday night in Htan Gone village, 16 kilometers (10 miles) south of the town of Kantbalu. Police said this week that they were continuing to arrest more suspects from 12 neighboring villages.

"Currently I cannot disclose exactly how many people have been detained," a police spokesman in Htan Gone, told The Irrawaddy. "At the very start of the conflict, we arrested 11 culprits. We had been ordered to do so."

Forty-eight houses and 13 shops owned by Muslims were reportedly burned in the rioting, displacing 292 people.

State-run media reported that fire trucks arriving to the scene were initially blocked by the rioters, who attacked the rescuers with swords, sticks and slingshots. Police fired a warning shot to clear a path for the fire trucks, after earlier firing another warning shot to disperse the mob. A police battalion and firefighters managed to control the fires by about 3:30 am, more than seven hours after the rioting began.

"Responsible persons from respective police stations have been arranging to arrest those who set the fires in the village during the conflict," said Kyi Naing, a minister for border affairs and security in Sagaing Division told The Irrawaddy.

"We wanted to bust the culprits earlier but we couldn't, as we were occupied with the duties of putting down the fires and preventing further religious rioting."

A shelter was set up for displaced Muslim residents at an Arabic school in Htan Gone's Quarter No. 1. Some displaced residents are also staying with relatives.

"Frankly speaking, we don't dare return to our houses yet," Than Nweh, whose café was burned down in the rioting, told The Irrawaddy.

The conflict reportedly began after rumors circulated last Saturday that a young Muslim man had attempted to rape a Buddhist woman.

The man was brought to the village police station and transferred to Shwe Bo Prison, but a mob of about 100 men gathered at the station and demanded that police hand him over. Rioting began after the police refused. At the height of the violence, up to 1,000 people were rampaging through the village, according to the Information Ministry.

Aung Kyaw Myint, an administrator of Zi Pin village, said he witnessed part of the incident between the Buddhist woman and Muslim man from which the rumors of attempted rape arose.

He said a 17-year-old Muslim boy met a 25-year-old woman who was riding a bicycle home and attempted to hold her hands.

"On that day, the young lady came running to us from the paddy field to ask for help. So we chased after that boy," Aung Kyaw Myint said. "That boy was running to the village of the young lady, instead of his village. So we went to the village searching for him. After the boy was caught, he was taken by two policemen. In the aftermath of the issue, more and more people accumulated and a crowd went out to stir up problems in Htan Gone village."

The conflict in Htan Gone is the latest sectarian violence to hit Buddhist-majority Burma. Clashes between Buddhists and Muslims in west Burma last year left about 150,000 people displaced and about 200 dead. Violence spread earlier this year, with anti-Muslim riots breaking out in towns in central Burma and east Burma.

Burmese Beauty Queen Wins Over Facebook Fans

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 10:52 PM PDT

Burmese model Khin Wint Wah (R) poses with two other participants in the Miss Supranational 2013 in Belarus. (Khin Wint Wah / Facebook)

RANGOON — Burmese beauty queen Khin Wint Wah, who is participating in the Miss Supranational 2013, an international beauty pageant being held in the eastern European country Belarus, has caught the attention of many Burmese Facebook users. The 19-year-old model gathered almost 50,000 likes on the social networking site since mid-August.

After arriving on Aug 17 in the capital Minsk, Khin Wint has been taking part in promotional activities and rehearsals for the event, along with models from 98 countries. The finale will take place on September 6 and the winner will walk away with US$30,000 in prize money.

Photos of competition rehearsals placed on showing Khin Wint Wah's Facebook page on August 18 have since garnered the interest of Burma's growing number of Facebook users. By Friday morning, the photos had gathered nearly 48,000 likes.

Khin Wint Wah, who studies botany in Rangoon, was selected to represent Burma after winning a domestic beauty competition for Miss Supranational 2013 pageant program in August. She told the organizers' website that she was delighted that she could join the competition.

"I was very excited, because I had never traveled overseas before… My country is very beautiful, but so is Belarus," Khin Wint Wah was quoted as saying. "There are so many people … who are supporting me. It makes me feel happy and confident. I want them to know that I am doing my very best to take this crown back to my country, and that I love them very much."

Asked about the ongoing reforms taking place in Burma, Khin Wint Wah said, "Now it is more open, so you are all welcome to visit my beautiful and colorful country."

Started in 2009, the Miss Supranational pageant is organized by the Panama-based World Beauty Association. Last year's event was held in Poland, but this year the World Beauty Association chose Belarus — often referred to as Europe's last dictatorship as it's been ruled by President Alexander Lukashenko for almost 20 years — as the location for its beauty pageant.

A World Beauty Association spokesperson said on the organization's website that event would help with "promoting Belarus to the world."

Former China Security Chief Faces Corruption Probe: Report

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 10:39 PM PDT

Former Chinese Politburo Standing Committee Member Zhou Yongkang attends the closing ceremony of the National People's Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on March 14, 2012. (Photo: Reuters / Jason Lee)

BEIJING — China's senior leadership has agreed to open a corruption investigation into Zhou Yongkang, one of China's most powerful politicians of the past decade, stepping up its anti-graft campaign, the South China Morning Post reported on Friday.

The reported move against Zhou—a retired member of the Politburo's all-powerful Standing Committee and the former domestic security tsar—follows the five-day corruption trial of ousted politician Bo Xilai, who was widely considered a key Zhou ally.

The Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the report when contacted by Reuters. The State Council Information Office, the public relations arm of the government, did not respond immediately to faxed questions about the report.

Zhou also could not be reached for comment on the report and Reuters could not independently verify it.

He was one rank higher than Bo in the power structure and would be the first Politburo Standing Committee member—retired or sitting—to be investigated for economic crimes since the end of the Cultural Revolution nearly 40 years ago, the Hong Kong-based newspaper said.

Citing sources familiar with the leadership's thinking, it said the decision to investigate was made in view of rising anger inside the party at the scale of the corruption problem and the wealth that Zhou's family has amassed.

President Xi Jinping ordered officials in charge of the case to "get to the bottom of it," the paper said.

Most sources and political analysts have said they doubt Zhou is under investigation because it would risk opening a Pandora's box that could lead to calls for probes into other retired Standing Committee members, including ex-premier Wen Jiabao and his wife and son.

The New York Times reported last year that Wen's family had accumulated at least $2.7 billion in "hidden riches," a story China labeled a smear.

Earlier this month US-based Chinese news site Duowei said Zhou was being investigated for graft. However, the report was later withdrawn.

In a sign Zhou may not be in trouble, the websites of the official People's Daily and China News Service reported on Thursday that Zhou had sent flowers to the funeral of top nuclear scientist Liu Xiyao, as did Xi.

State media typically do not report such stories on party figures who have fallen from grace, so the brief news items could be interpreted as a signal he remains in the hierarchy's good books.

Oil Connection

Chinese authorities revealed this week a probe into China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), which Zhou joined as a senior manager in the early 1990s.

Four top managers at the company have been named as being under investigation in recent days, including group deputy general manager Li Hualin, who once served as Zhou's secretary.

The newspaper said it understood the new probe would center on Zhou's time as a party boss in Sichuan province and at CNPC.

In particular, investigators would examine whether Zhou and his family benefited through oilfield and property deals facilitated by his son, Zhou Bin, and other allies, it said.

Sources told the newspaper it was too early to say whether Zhou—who controlled legal and law enforcement affairs for 10 years from 2002—would face public prosecution or an internal party probe.

Three other Zhou allies are currently under investigation, including the deputy party boss of Sichuan, Li Chuncheng, who had for many years overseen development of the province's prosperous capital, Chengdu.

The South China Morning Post said party investigators typically move against top aides and underlings of a primary target first to weaken their political base.

Awaiting Verdict

Zhou was implicated in rumors last year that he hesitated in moving against Bo.

Former Chongqing party boss Bo is awaiting a verdict on corruption, bribery and abuse of power charges.

The domestic security forces Zhou ran also suffered a humiliating failure when they allowed blind rights advocate Chen Guangcheng to escape from 19 months of house arrest and flee to the US Embassy in Beijing, which happened last year too.

Such fumbles gave then-president Hu Jintao and his successor President Xi a shared motive to put a growing array of police forces and domestic security services under firmer oversight.

Xi has made fighting deeply engrained graft a central theme of his new administration, and has promised to take down "tigers"—in other words very senior people—as well as "flies" lower down on the food chain implicated in corruption.

Zhou would be the most senior person caught up in Xi's dragnet to date.

He joined the Politburo Standing Committee in 2007 while also heading the central Political and Legal Affairs Committee, a sprawling body that oversees law-and-order policy.

That double status allowed Zhou to dominate a domestic security budget of $110 billion a year, exceeding the defense budget.

But the hulking, grim-faced 70-year-old stepped down, along with most members of the Standing Committee, at the 18th Party Congress last November and formally retired in March this year.

At the same time, the position he occupied was downgraded, and his successor Meng Jianzhu is only a member of the Politburo, the 25-member body that reports to the elite Politburo Standing Committee.

Since the 1990s, China's efforts to stifle crime, unrest and dissent have allowed the domestic security apparatus—including police, armed militia and state security officers—to accumulate power, which worried many within the party.

Still, Zhou's time in charge of domestic security saw a huge swelling in the number of "mass incidents"—China's euphemism for public protests—fueled by frustration at a yawning wealth gap and official corruption, despite the fact that the Party cracks down hard on dissent.

Japanese Mother Tells of Heartbreak Years After N Korea Abducted 13-Year-Old Daughter

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 10:24 PM PDT

A North Korean prison policewoman stands guard behind fences at a jail on the banks of Yalu River near the Chongsong county of North Korea, opposite the Chinese border city of Dandong, on May 8, 2011. (Photo: Reuters)

TOKYO — For two decades after 13-year-old Megumi Yokota vanished on her way home from school one November evening, Japanese police called her parents whenever they found an unidentified body.

Unimaginably, the teenager had been abducted and taken to North Korea, her mother told a UN Commission of Inquiry panel in Tokyo on Thursday, but there was no clue what had happened to the cheerful girl who liked to sing until reports began to emerge in 1997 of the presence of Japanese in North Korea.

"Up until then, whenever they found a body, or there was a murder, or a skeleton got snagged in the fishing net of a boat, anywhere in Japan, the police would get in touch with us," Sakie Yokota told the commission, the first time Pyongyang's human rights record has been looked at by an expert panel.

"We lived in a sadness that I thought would drive us mad."

Megumi is one of 13 Japanese that Kim Jong-il, the late father of current leader Kim Jong-un, admitted in 2002 had been kidnapped in the 1970s and 1980s to help train spies. Pyongyang says eight of them are dead, including Megumi, but Japan wants more information.

The dispute over the abductees has been a major stumbling block in normalizing relations between the two countries and progress has stalled in recent years, though Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has expressed hope that movement may be possible under the third generation of the founding Kim family.

The North denies that it abuses human rights and has refused to recognize the commission, denying access to investigators.

The nightmare began for the Yokotas in 1977, when Megumi failed to return from playing badminton at school.

"We felt a huge fear," Sakie told the UN panel, her voice shaking. "I took her little brothers by the hand and we ran out in the dark, looking on beaches and calling Megumi, Megumi."

Searches by police and sniffer dogs showed she had reached a street corner just blocks from her home, then the trail went cold.

Following the 2002 visit to North Korea by former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi at which Pyongyang admitted the abductions, it came out that Megumi had married and had a child, though North Korea said she had died some years previously.

Later Pyongyang sent back bones that they said were Megumi's, but DNA testing found they were those of a man.

"Three photos came back with the bones, our first sight of Megumi as an adult. I cried and cried," Sakie said. "Both my husband and I apologized for not being able to help her."

Commission head Michael Kirby, a retired Australian judge, told Reuters that the goal of the inquiry, which will be submitted by the end of the year, was to give a voice to the Yokotas and similar families.

At the very least, it wants to give the families the peace of knowing what happened.

"Who else has engaged in kidnapping—and not kidnapping of nuclear scientists, Internet experts—the kidnapping of a chef, a guard, a schoolchild, a housewife whose two young children were left crying in a creche?" he said.

"It certainly calls out for evidentiary answers. If the evidentiary answers are not given, North Korea will only have itself to blame if the commission of inquiry and the world community believes what these witnesses have told."

Sakie Yokota said that Megumi would turn 49 in October.

"She was just 13 years old," she said. "Did they mistake her for an adult and take her, or did they have something else in mind? We'll never know. Until she comes home."

Additional reporting by Reuters reporter Leng Cheng in Tokyo.

Sri Lankan Minister Criticizes UN Rights Chief

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 10:12 PM PDT

Sri Lankan army snipers in ghillie suits march during the War Victory parade in Colombo May 18, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — A Sri Lankan Cabinet minister questioned the impartiality of the visiting United Nations human rights chief on Thursday, accusing her of supporting ethnic Tamil separatists because of her own Tamil background and having secret talks with activist groups outside of her official program.

Navi Pillay, a South African of Indian Tamil origin, is on a weeklong visit to Sri Lanka to review its progress in investigating alleged abuses during the long civil war between government troops and separatist Tamil rebels that ended four years ago.

Housing Minister Wimal Weerawansa said that after she completed her visit, Pillay would prepare an "extremist and unjust report" that is unfair to Sri Lanka because of her ethnicity.

"Navi Pillay came here, as a Tamil woman, to satisfy the wishes of Tamil separatists," Weerawansa told reporters, adding that a fair report cannot be expected from her.

"She looks at problems in a partial manner, with a preconceived judgment," he said.

Weerawansa also accused Pillay of holding secret meetings with activist groups outside of her official schedule and receiving "forged documents and faked photos."

Pillay's spokesman Rupert Colville said the rights chief was conducting the mission as she would in any country.

Pillay is to present her findings to the UN Human Rights Council next month. The council passed a resolution in March urging Sri Lanka to more thoroughly investigate alleged war crimes committed by government soldiers and the rebels. It also called on Pillay's office to orally report on Sri Lanka's progress in September and submit a detailed report next March.

Government troops defeated the Tamil Tigers in May 2009, ending their attempt to create a separate state for Tamils. A UN report said government troops may have killed 40,000 Tamil civilians in the final phase of the war.

On Tuesday, Pillay visited Mullivaikkal village in northern Sri Lanka, the site of the final battle of the civil war, where hundreds of civilians are alleged to have died. War survivors there complained to Pillay about missing relatives, military land grabs and a life without basic facilities more than four years after the war's end.

Many civilians and rebels said to have surrendered to the military toward the end of the fighting are reported missing.

The rebels are accused of killing civilians, using them as human shields and recruiting child soldiers.

Human rights groups say the military has seized about 6,400 acres (2,589 hectares) of land from war victims since the end of the fighting and now runs farms on the land.

Also Thursday, Pillay met with government officials, including Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe.