Thursday, May 30, 2013

N4G: Today Hot





Posted:
Microsoft seem to have gone in an arrogant direction. They claim that they will kill Sony at E3 this year.
Posted:
Take-Two Interactive CEO Strass Zelnick doesn't think it necessary to "punish" consumers for purchasing second-hand games, arguing that "pushing up quality" and delivering robust DLC is a more effective way of persuading people to keep hold of the disc. That said, he's bang up for a share of Microsoft's rumoured Xbox One "pre-owned fee", assuming the scheme actually exists.
Posted:
Sony chief executive Kazuo Hirai said that the PlayStation 4 will differ from Microsofts Xbox One, which is being pitched as an all-in-one entertainment box in the living room.
Posted:
EA Sports is supporting the launch of Microsoft's Xbox One and PlayStation 4 later this year with a total of four games. At least three of those games are expected to be available at launch, and online retailer Amazon.com has just published Xbox One and PS4 box art for all three.
Posted:
Craig Davidson, the director of global marketing at Microsoft said to IGN Spain that the Xbox One will surprise the world during E3... We will kill Sony at E3. With that, the Daily Reaction crew of Seb and Dan discuss what MS could do to dominate E3 2013.
Posted:
The next game from Remedy Entertainment, Quantum Break, has just revealed its cover for the Xbox One. And a possible release date as well.
Posted:
"It's not just Sony, it's everyone that we're trying to compete with," says IEB boss. [OXM UK]
Posted:
Last week PC Advisor hosted a poll to find out What are your first impressions of the Xbox One'. The results so far look pretty positive for Microsoft, as a whopping 49 percent of you went for the option I want one!'. Take a look at New Xbox One release date, specs, features and price in UK.
Posted:
GameZone's Matt Liebl writes, "Imagine a world in which you could not play any previously owned games on your console. Given the seemingly tightening restrictions placed upon the used game market through Xbox One, and possibly the PS4, it's not too hard to envision this. A scary thought, indeed. It's well-known and well-documented (thanks to a recent #PS4NoDRM campaign) that consumers oppose any sort of DRM on used games. Yet it seems console makers and publishers don't seem to care much about what the consumer thinks -- though they say they do."
Posted:
VideoGamer.com talks to Pete Dodd, the man leading the campaign against next-gen DRM policies.

Democratic Voice of Burma




Posted: 30 May 2013 05:01 AM PDT
The Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO) and government representatives signed a historic seven-point peace agreement on Thursday afternoon, raising hopes that Burma's bloody northern conflict could finally come to an end.
Rebels and the government agreed to establish monitoring offices, demarcate territory and to launch rehabilitation projects for displaced people across the restive state, according to local observers. It is the most significant step towards peace that has been achieved since a 17-year ceasefire broke down in June 2011.
The talks were overseen by the UN special envoy to Burma Vijay Nambiar, as well as representatives from the ethnic umbrella group the United Nationalities Federal Council.
"The agreement includes [provisions] to continue the political discussion between the government and the KIO, to prevent further clashes while efforts are underway to reduce fighting," explained Hla Maung Shwe from the government's Myanmar Peace Centre during a telephone interview with DVB.
He added that monitoring groups and liaison offices will be established to improve communication between the two warring sides, while more third party observers would be considered for inclusion in future peace talks.
The KIO's armed wing – the Kachin Independence Army – and government troops have been locked in two years of bitter fighting after a 17-year ceasefire fell apart in 2011. Nearly 100,000 people have been uprooted by the violence, and human rights groups have accused both sides of violating the laws of war.
Despite numerous rounds of talks, the KIO has refused to sign a new ceasefire deal with Naypyidaw until the country's ethnic minorities are granted greater political autonomy. The rebels have also consistently called for international observers to oversee the peace talks.
The talks were held in the state capital of Myitkyina – the first time a meeting between the KIO and state officials has been held in government-controlled territory, which several analysts said was a clear sign that trust was improving between the two sides.
Posted: 30 May 2013 03:45 AM PDT
Prosecutors in Sittwe have hit seven Rohingyas in Arakan state with myriad charges, including rioting, after they were arrested for refusing to register as 'Bengalis'.
During a hearing on 23 May, senior immigration official Yan Aung Myint charged the seven suspects from Thetkalpyin displacement camp with robbery, intimidation and disturbing officials on duty. Twenty-four individuals, who authorities claimed might be on the run, were also charged in absentia.
The hearing comes after a scuffle erupted between government officials and the Rohingya on 26 April, after authorities tried to register the internally displaced persons (IDPs) as 'Bengalis' in accordance with a programme headed by the Ministry of Immigration and Population.
Prosecutors said that around 100 residents, armed with sticks and swords, quickly gathered at the scene and began attacking authorities, which included policemen and soldiers who were accompanying the officials.
According to the defendants' attorney Hla Myo Myint, the skirmish began after one of his clients, Suleman, was slapped in the face by an official, which prompted children in the camp to begin throwing rocks at authorities.
Army sergeant Win Aung reportedly sustained a head injury after being struck by a rock at the scene, while local Arakanese team member Tun Hla Aung and immigration official Sai Myint Thu sustained lacerations on their backs.
Security forces reportedly fired shots in an attempt to disperse the crowd as they hurled rocks and screamed "Rohingya! Rohingya!" Seven individuals from Thetkalpyin and two from Bawdupha displacement camps were arrested in the skirmish's wake.
According to Hla Myo Myint, the officials who went to the camps to register the IDPs had no legal right to force his clients to identify as Bengalis – a term commonly used by government officials that implicitly infers that the group are illegal immigrants
"The officials had no authority to determine their ethnicity – according to the 1982 Burma Citizenship Law, the decision has to come at the last stage and made by a government body," said Hla Myo Myint.
"Reportedly the [officials] were listing them [as Bengali] by force."
Hla Myo Myint, who has represented high-profile opposition activists including the National League for Democracy's chair Aung San Suu Kyi in the past, said his clients' families and the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) asked that he provide legal counsel to the group. Two of the individuals Kyaw Myint and his son Hla Myint who are being charged are both USDP members.
"I'm doing this for the rule of law – one of the main objectives of the NLD – to allow human rights for them regardless of their religion and ethnicity," said Hla Myo Myint.
The next court appointment has been set for 6 June, but will likely to be postponed until officials can decide if the 24 individuals charged in absentia have actually fled.
Arakan state is home to more than 140,000 IDPs, after two bouts of religious violence pitting Arakanese Buddhists against Muslim Rohingya last year led to massive displacement.
Posted: 30 May 2013 02:24 AM PDT
One of Burma’s most famous actors, Ye Deight, is charged with defaming religion after displaying bizarre behaviour outside a church in Rangoon. He staged a solo demonstration after being kicked out of the St Mary's church in Botahtaung township for causing a disturbance.
Posted: 30 May 2013 12:44 AM PDT
Buddhist mobs armed with sticks and machetes burned Muslim homes for a second day in Shan state’s Lashio on Wednesday, contradicting claims in state media that soldiers and police had restored calm. One person has been killed and five others were wounded in the fighting.
Posted: 29 May 2013 10:39 PM PDT
This week's outbreak of violence against Muslims in Lashio marks nearly a year of targeted attacks on Muslims in Burma. Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) recently interviewed witnesses and victims in Arakan state, Mandalay and Saigaing divisions about the ongoing attacks, and found that the government places a low priority on protecting the human rights of ethnic groups in the country.
Earlier this month, a team of researchers from PHR spent ten days in central Burma investigating attacks on Muslim civilians. The team interviewed 33 people, including 14 eyewitnesses, and compiled a thorough account of the slaughter of at least 20 children and four teachers in Meikhtila, Mandalay division. Other reports estimate that many more were killed.
PHR researchers obtained video footage showing Muslims beaten and burned to death, and confirmed the authenticity of these events with GPS, satellite mapping and eyewitness interviews.
In Meikhtila, investigators found that police were complicit in the violence against Muslims   ̶  they marched unarmed Muslims toward an armed civilian mob, then refused to protect them from beating, stoning, and murder; they did not help injured Muslims; and they failed to apprehend perpetrators. The police force's actions in Meikhtila are in violation of the UN code of conduct for law enforcement officials, and the general lack of an effective response from the central government is a monumental failure to protect its citizens from organised and targeted violence.
In the wake of unspeakable violence carried out in a methodical manner by civilians with the acquiescence of local police, there must be a strong and swift response within Burma. Despite overtures about tolerance, there has been no credible effort thus far to investigate the massacre and hold perpetrators accountable.
The government's weak response to stop the violence and its reluctance to help Muslim victims is a symptom of a larger problem—ethnic groups are not benefitting from fledgling democratic reforms.  Despite some improvements at the political level, they are treated by the new government as they were by the previous regime. Although some analysts suggest the recent violence is a result of new freedoms and democratic reforms, it's actually just the opposite — it is a continuation of abuses against ethnic groups that are done with impunity and either tacit or outright government approval.
The evidence PHR collected in Meikhtila shows a pattern of destruction indicative of targeted and coordinated strikes against Muslim-owned businesses, homes, and mosques, and coordinated efforts to drive Muslims out of the town. Although the government imposed curfews in some towns with threats of violence and arrested some perpetrators, the response has been insufficient. Police continue to respond too slowly to stop mobs, victims are targeted for arrest as often as perpetrators, Muslims are warned not to defend themselves against mobs, and there has been no effort to prosecute those behind the attacks. The government's acquiescence sends a strong message that these attacks can be done with impunity.
The evidence does not suggest that the government orchestrated the attacks, but it does indicate that the government did not act effectively to curb the violence. As new reports of anti-Muslim violence emerge from other parts of the country, the central government as well as local police must do much more to stop the violence from spreading.
Unfortunately, institutionalised impunity has taken root across the country, not only in areas plagued by recent religious violence. In ethnic areas, the abuses have been ongoing for 60 years—military attacks on civilians, forced displacement, environmental destruction, and failure to provide humanitarian aid have not stopped. There has been no effective effort to rein in abuses or prosecute offenders.
Perhaps the most difficult task facing the people of Burma today is the process of social reconciliation.
One of the starkest examples of ongoing violence is in Kachin state, where the Burmese army has ignored orders from President Thein Sein to stop fighting, and continues to violate the human rights of civilians. Human rights groups have documented attacks on civilians in the state throughout the current conflict, which has raged since June 2011. Violence and impunity also persist in Shan state, where fragile ceasefires recently crumbled and civilians are once again being displaced by conflict. Long-running government abuses against Rohingya are now coming to the world's attention, and violations of human rights against Arakanese, Chin, Karen and other groups have continued.
The international community has rewarded the government of Burma for its democratic reforms by lifting sanctions, increasing development aid, and forgiving loans. Yet Burma's roadmap to democracy has yet to include ethnic groups, which make up at least 40 percent of the population. Though most of the sanctions and development concessions were made with the understanding that life for civilians is improving, progress has been far too slow for those in ethnic groups. The international community should not leave ethnic groups in Burma at the mercy of systematic attacks, and it must press for an end to ethnic violence and discrimination in diplomatic negotiations.
There will be no easy or quick transition to a peaceful Burma where ethnic and religious groups enjoy the fullest protections of their rights. Instilling a culture of tolerance across ethnic and religious lines and replacing impunity with accountability will not happen without concerted efforts by government actors as well as civil society leaders.
Perhaps the most difficult task facing the people of Burma today is the process of social reconciliation. After years of military dictatorship, rampant criminality, and a culture of violence, everyone must make the choice to end violence within their communities. Direction should come from recognized leaders within government and civil society, high-level religious leaders, and well-known democracy activists, who must condemn in unequivocal terms all ethnic and religious violence and hate speech.
There must also be an independent and transparent investigation of incidents of religiously motivated violence and discrimination with the ultimate aim of holding any perpetrators accountable. Other countries may be able to assist in these essential efforts, especially with the development of an independent investigation, but the will and the design for a society built on respect and tolerance must originate with the people of Burma.
Bill Davis is the former Burma project director and volunteer medical advisor for Physicians for Human Rights and Andrea Gittleman works as the group's senior legislative counsel.
-The opinions and views expressed in this piece are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect DVB's editorial policy
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:15 PM PDT
Religious riots shook eastern Burma for a second day Wednesday with one man hacked to death and five injured, a top official said, after an orphanage and mosque were burnt down.
Police fired warning shots to disperse rioters after Buddhists and Muslims clashed in the town of Lashio in Shan state, according to presidential spokesman Ye Htut.
“The deceased is a man. He was hacked to death with a knife,” Ye Htut told AFP, adding that the security forces were taking action to halt the unrest.
Several episodes of religious violence have exposed deep rifts in the Buddhist-majority country and cast a shadow over widely praised political reforms since military rule ended two years ago.
Residents said mobs armed with sticks were roaming the streets of Lashio looking for Muslims on Wednesday, while an AFP reporter saw two houses ablaze.
A local hospital confirmed it had received four injured men, all Buddhists.
One of the wounded, 41-year-old Myint Naing, was seen lying in the hospital, wrapped in bandages.
The local electricity board worker said he was attacked by a group of around 30 Muslims as he was leaving the town on his motorcycle on Wednesday.
“My friend was able to run away and escape but I couldn’t… I was attacked. They cut my arm off,” he said, adding he was waiting to go into surgery to reattach the limb.
Security forces had imposed an overnight curfew Tuesday after the initial unrest, which authorities said was triggered by an attack on a local Buddhist woman.
A 48-year-old Muslim man was arrested over that incident, in which the 24-year-old woman suffered burns but was not in serious condition, according to state broadcaster MRTV.
Rioters destroyed a Muslim orphanage, a mosque and several shops, according to a different government official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Ye Htut, who earlier appealed for calm, posted pictures of police making arrests in the town on Wednesday as they tried to quell a second eruption of violence that he said saw “conflict from both sides”.
“The security forces are taking action against people who are involved in the violence in order to stop the fighting in Lashio,” he said.
Fear rippled through the streets on Wednesday, with terrified Muslim residents describing a 30-strong group of men with weapons on motorcycles cruising Lashio and shouting anti-Muslim slogans.
The residents said there was not enough security in the town.
“Almost all Muslim people are trying to stay in safe places…. we don’t know how we are going to get through the night,” one resident said by telephone, asking not to be named.
He said the mob of bikers was threatening to “kill any Muslims they see on the road”.
Religious unrest in the former army-ruled nation has caused global alarm. US President Barack Obama last week voiced “deep concern” about anti-Muslim attacks, during a landmark visit to Washington by President Thein Sein.
Nyan Win, a spokesman for opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy, said the party believed outsiders were whipping up the violence in Lashio.
“The people they know that this violence (does) not happen automatically. They know that there’s a third person there,” he said, without elaborating.
In March, at least 44 people were killed in sectarian strife in central Burma with thousands of homes set ablaze.
Some monks – who were among the most vocal pro-democracy supporters during Burma’s repressive junta era – have been involved in the violence, while others are spearheading a move to boycott shops owned by Muslims.
Wirathu, a monk from Mandalay responsible for some of the most vitriolic anti-Muslim rhetoric, on Wednesday posted several graphic pictures apparently of the injured Buddhist woman on his Facebook page.
Communal unrest last year in the western state of Arakan left about 200 people dead and displaced up to 140,000 people, mainly Rohingya Muslims.

Pocketnow

Pocketnow


HTC should learn from Apple’s comeback

Posted: 30 May 2013 02:17 PM PDT

It seems that 2013 is all about the tech giants that are struggling, or the tech giants that are enjoying an incredible amount of success. It’s funny how there’s hardly any company in between. Even funnier is that most of the tech giants that are struggling singlehandedly owned or invented these markets just a couple of years ago. Whether it’s Nokia, BlackBerry or HTC, we are all somewhat saddened by seeing how these great innovators just can’t figure it out. Albert Einstein once said: “The significant problems we face today cannot be solved at the same level ...

Continue reading »

The post HTC should learn from Apple’s comeback appeared first on Pocketnow.

This alleged HTC Android 4.3 update list is confounding

Posted: 30 May 2013 03:03 PM PDT

Android 4.3 is very likely just around the corner, and while we’ve seen the platform running on Nexus devices, which is no big surprise, the more pertinent question may be which non-Google models will be seeing their own updates to 4.3 arrive. There’s a list going around which purports to reveal some of HTC’s update strategy, but we’ve got more than a few questions about just how accurate it may be. The list in question first surfaced nearly a week ...

Continue reading »

The post This alleged HTC Android 4.3 update list is confounding appeared first on Pocketnow.

In spite of “Google Editions,” formal Nexus lineup to continue

Posted: 30 May 2013 12:55 PM PDT

Google’s Sundar Pichai is a regular fount of information as he participates in the D11 conference today; he’s already brought us news of the stock Android HTC One, as well as confirmed plans to bring All Access to Apple users. Now we’ve got one more new piece to add, with Pichai bringing word of how all these “Google Edition” devices will affect the Nexus lineup as we know it. When asked flat-out if in light of the stock Android ...

Continue reading »

The post In spite of “Google Editions,” formal Nexus lineup to continue appeared first on Pocketnow.

HTC T6 phablet specs leak

Posted: 30 May 2013 12:42 PM PDT

A few days back we first heard the name T6, supposedly the internal designation by which HTC was developing a new Android phablet. While some evidence turned up that sure made the T6 seem real, and suggested that it could be coming to a number of different carriers, we didn’t really have all that much to go on. Some earlier rumors of an HTC phablet – back before we had even heard this codename – talked about a device with a display in the five-to-six-inch ...

Continue reading »

The post HTC T6 phablet specs leak appeared first on Pocketnow.

Nokia Lumia 928 Quick Review

Posted: 30 May 2013 11:32 AM PDT

In the mobile world, carrier exclusivity is a mixed bag. Sometimes, it results in a huge boon to both carrier and manufacturer: witness the astonishing heights to which the iPhone propelled AT&T after its exclusive debut on then-Cingular’s network in 2007. On other occasions, though, the mating of a device to a lone provider doesn’t work out as well – as the Sprint/Palm partnership proved with the Pre in 2009. The exclusive mating of Nokia’s Lumia 900 with AT&T resulted neither in runaway success nor dismal failure – but it’s easy to see how the ...

Continue reading »

The post Nokia Lumia 928 Quick Review appeared first on Pocketnow.

Google Play Music All Access coming to iOS

Posted: 30 May 2013 11:56 AM PDT

Earlier this month, Google introduced Google Play All Access during its I/O 2013 keynote. The service gives users the opportunity to access both custom streaming radio stations and on-demand track playback for about $10 a month – $8 if you get you subscription going before the end of June. That was cool if you were an Android user or just wanted to access the music over the web, but what about native support for other platforms? We’ve seen third-party work-arounds (really just dressing-up the ...

Continue reading »

The post Google Play Music All Access coming to iOS appeared first on Pocketnow.

Google Edition HTC One goes official: launches late June

Posted: 30 May 2013 09:25 AM PDT

For the last few weeks, a Nexus-fied “Google Edition” HTC One has been the rumor that just wouldn’t die. HTC initially shot it down, but its momentum just couldn’t be stopped, and we heard voice after voice insist it really was on the way. While we hoped to get to the bottom of the story sooner or later, it turns out that the truth just wasn’t ready to wait, and today ...

Continue reading »

The post Google Edition HTC One goes official: launches late June appeared first on Pocketnow.

Pocketnow Weekly 046: Tablet Z vs TouchPad Go, and other tech podcast tomfoolery

Posted: 30 May 2013 08:45 AM PDT

We had an interesting bit of synchronicity crop up in the offices of Pocketnow -and in the recording studios of our weekly tech podcast- this week: we’re simultaneously in possession of one of the thinnest, newest tablets in the world – and one of the clunkiest, oldest ones. The interesting part about the latter: it never officially existed. We’ll talk about that, plus rumors of yet another mini-Galaxy that ain’t bashful about skimping on specs, and a Motorola smartphone that’s all-American from design to manufacture. We’ll also cover rumors of a newer, ...

Continue reading »

The post Pocketnow Weekly 046: Tablet Z vs TouchPad Go, and other tech podcast tomfoolery appeared first on Pocketnow.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

What’s the sweet spot for 1080p? 6.45-inch full HD Android announced

Posted: 30 May 2013 08:36 AM PDT

Full HD 1080p displays may have first arrived with tablets, but we’ve since seen them shrink-down and start becoming the screens of choice for higher-end smartphones, as well. What we’ve largely been missing out on, though, is the 1080p experience in more of a large phablet or small tablet range – that’s especially unfortunate, because these are the sizes where all the extra pixels could make the most impact. The device we share with you today may not be so compelling overall, but its ...

Continue reading »

The post What’s the sweet spot for 1080p? 6.45-inch full HD Android announced appeared first on Pocketnow.

Will Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie feature a card-based UI?

Posted: 30 May 2013 08:17 AM PDT

When Google released its Google Now app we saw our first look at a card-based UI in an Android app. Touted as being able to show you “the right information at the right time”, this new design for displaying information is elegant. It’s a simple and to-the-point method that standardizes information onto a single “card”, separated from other information. It should come as no surprise. We’ve been using cards for a very long time in our everyday lives. Libraries used to catalog all their books and media offerings on individual cards in something called a ...

Continue reading »

The post Will Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie feature a card-based UI? appeared first on Pocketnow.

The Irrawaddy Magazine





Posted: 30 May 2013 06:51 AM PDT


Government negotiators and KIO leaders exchange the preliminary agreement they signed on Thursday. (Photo: Facebook/ Hla Maung Shwe)
MYITKYINA, Kachin State—Burma's government and ethnic Kachin rebels signed a preliminary agreement on Thursday that would reduce military tensions in northern Burma and lead to further progress towards reaching a peace deal. The parties however, failed to reach an official ceasefire agreement.
On the third day of the negotiations in the Kachin State capital Myitkyina, a government negotiation team and the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) signed a seven-point statement.
The sides agreed to "undertake efforts to achieve de-escalation and cessation of hostilities" and to "continue discussions on military matters related to repositioning of troops," according to two points from a translation of the agreement.
Officials said the agreement—although not a ceasefire—marked an important step towards ending further clashes.
"Even though we cannot yet sign the ceasefire agreement, we are satisfied with the results that we have reached so far" said Lt-Gen Myint Soe, a high-ranking government army official who commands the Bureau of Special Operations-1, which oversees military operations in Kachin State.
“Whatever the Tatmadaw did in the past, we and the KIO are brothers. So this time, we are trying to reconcile with our KIO brothers. This is like a common quarrel between a husband and wife,” he said during a press conference.
"Tatmadaw never breaks the promise we make or our discipline. But there is still an uneasy situation at ground level," Myint Soe added.
Gen Sumlut Gun Maw of the KIO's military wing, the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), said the agreement would help prevent an outbreak of clashes, but he added that it was not a ceasefire.
"We will try to avoid [military] engagement, other than saying that we can guarantee an end to the war," he said. "We will reach out to the front line area for those tasks."
Gun Maw said he was pleased with the preliminary agreement, but added, "We will have to discuss the details."
Burma's military and the Kachin rebels have been engaged fighting in northern Kachin State for decades. The ethnic conflict flared up in June 2011 after a long-standing ceasefire broke down. Fighting escalated between late 2012 and early February this year, after which the clashes largely stopped.
Other points in Thursday's agreement include letting a KIO Technical Team stay in Myitkyina for further discussions with government officials. UN officials, Chinese diplomats and representatives of eight other ethnic militias would also be invited to attend the next round of ceasefire talks.
Two previous rounds of talks had been held in China in recent months, but this week's talks between the Minister Aung Min's peace negotiation team, Burma's military and the KIO were the first to be held on Burmese soil. UN officials and representatives from ethnic militias also attended for the first time.
"This is quite a historic development; the agreements that have been reached here today. That the meeting is being held inside the country is one of several great agreements. And they are being able to lay a framework for sustained peace," UN special envoy Vijay Nambia told The Irrawaddy in a reaction.
Lu Zhi, counselor from the Chinese Embassy in Burma, said, "I think it is very successful, good for mutual understanding and mutual trust. Finally they got better results… I am looking forward to the next round and hope for better, even better, results."
Posted: 30 May 2013 04:34 AM PDT
Destruction is seen in central Lashio, Quarter Three, after anti-Muslim rioting earlier this week. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

Destruction is seen in central Lashio, Quarter Three, after anti-Muslim rioting earlier this week. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)
LASHIO, Shan State—The northeast Burma town of Lashio appeared like a ghost town on Thursday, two days after the latest religious clashes in Burma broke out between Buddhists and Muslims, with the streets empty as fearful residents stayed indoors and businesses closed their doors.
Mosques and Muslim-owned shops torched in the rioting earlier this week continued to smolder, despite the rain, while nearly every hotel, bank, restaurant and home remained shuttered. Authorities blocked the streets near sites that had been burned, with soldiers from the national army standing guard.
At least one person was killed and five people were injured in clashes this week between Buddhists and Muslims in Lashio, the latest town to be hit by anti-Muslim violence in Burma. The violence began on Tuesday after a Muslim man allegedly poured gasoline on a Buddhist woman to set her alight, with mobs forming to take revenge after the attack. Despite claims by authorities that the situation had stabilized, rioting continued the next day, with casualties confirmed by Wednesday evening.
On Thursday, few people could be seen roaming the streets, and those who did were trailed by calls from family members at the doors of their homes, urging them not to venture far.
Although the situation in the mountain town of around 150,000 people appeared to have stabilized, some residents said they worried another bout of violence could occur at any time. Youths riding motorbikes and clutching knives could also be seen in the area, raising alarm.
The Irrawaddy met three women who said they were walking home from the town's main market after hearing that rioters would target the area. "I didn't buy anything—I was afraid because there were rumors that people would come to attack Muslim shops there," said one of the women.
Sai Kyaw Sein, head of the town's Quarter Three, said he feared the rumors could get out of hand. "I want the media to help stop these rumors. I'm worried people won't have enough food if they keep closing the shops like this for a long time because of the rumors," he told The Irrawaddy.
Journalists have faced resistance and even violence in attempts to cover the clashes, with two journalists from the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) injured yesterday and others threatened.
"We could not use our SkyNet car because we were afraid of them [rioters]," a senior reporter for the TV network SkyNet said. "We got a different car to drive around town."
A member of the Myanmar Red Cross Society said rioters had also threatened members of her organization, which attempted to assist people as shops and mosques were torched. "They told us not to come out on the street," she said. "We were afraid of them, we couldn't do anything."
Township authorities, the police and soldiers evacuated about 1,200 Muslims to a camp in the town as a means of protection. "We need to come and stay with the police here because we need security for our lives," a Muslim man told The Irrawaddy. "They [rioters] tried to kill us."
Aye Aye Win, the Buddhist woman who was allegedly set on fire, was receiving treatment at a public hospital in Lashio on Thursday and could not speak to reporters.
Her younger sister told The Irrawaddy that Aye Aye Win had come to Lashio after traveling to the Shan town of Muse for border trade. She said Aye Aye Win had gone to collect her money and met the Muslim man, who tried to attack her with a stick before pouring the gasoline on her body to set her on fire.
A Buddhist mob including monks reportedly went to the police station after Aye Aye Win was burned, demanding that the authorities hand her over and reacting angrily when their request was refused. Ye Htut, the spokesman for President Thein Sein, told the International Herald Tribune that 80 monks were among that mob.
The series of events is reminiscent of incidents in other towns in Burma that spread to mass anti-Muslim riots. In west Burma's Arakan State, clashes broke out in June last year after a Buddhist woman was reportedly raped and murdered by Muslims. In the ensuing violence that month and in October, hundreds of people were killed and about 140,000 others, mostly Muslims, were displaced from their homes.
Some have speculated that a famous nationalist monk known as U Wirathu played a role in the Lashio violence, after holding Dharma talks in nearby Muse on May 20.
"We really wanted to know what he talked about there," a local journalist in Lashio told The Irrawaddy. "We wonder whether what happened here was related to his talks."
U Wirathu is known for promoting a nationalist Buddhist movement known as 969, which encourages Buddhists to shun Muslim businesses. He has been the subject of much media attention after speculation arose that he was involved in anti-Muslim riots in the central Burma town of Meikhtila, but he denies condoning or encouraging any violence.
In Lashio, a Buddhist woman said her shop, located in part of Jameh Mosque, was destroyed by hundreds of rioters on Tuesday night.
"A lot of people came carrying knives, sticks and gas canisters," said Swe Swe Than, who sells Buddhist statues and tapes of Dharma talks at the shop in Quarter Three. "They stored the gas in cans that we use to kill cockroaches, and they sprayed the walls of my two showrooms, setting the building on fire."
"Those who torched our shop, they were jealous because we had a good business here," she added. "I didn't have a problem with the Muslim people here."
"I couldn't stop the rioters, I needed to escape," she said. "I'm a Buddhist—why did they burn my shop if this is related to a religious conflict? They were just terrorists."
Her younger brother, Maung Maung Htwe, added: "It was sad, everything that happened here. We never thought it would happen like this. It will be something we remember forever."
Posted: 30 May 2013 03:31 AM PDT
RANGOON—Anti-Muslim violence spread to central Burma on Wednesday night, when Buddhist mobs went on a rampage in Kyauk Gyi Township, Pegu Division, and destroyed two religious buildings, according to local police.
"A mosque with a madrasa was destroyed. [The buildings were] not burned downed. No casualties or injured were reported," said an officer with the Kyauk Gyi Township Police Office, adding that the unrest occurred in Mone, a small town some 20 miles (30 km) away from Kyauk Gyi town.
Kyauk Gyi Township is located about 120 miles (200 km) north of Burma's biggest city Rangoon.
"Local police and administration officers are there, investigating the problem. No one was detained yet for the destruction," said the officer, who declined to be named as he was not authorized to talk to the media.
"The area is controlled by the local police. No curfew was announced as the situation is stable now," he said. "Some senior Buddhist monks are giving sermons to the people, telling them to live in peace."
On Tuesday night, Buddhist groups in Lashio, Shan State, went on a rampage in a Muslim neighborhood, burning down a mosque, an orphanage and 15 buildings. Deadly clashes continued in the town on Wednesday, leaving at least one person and four injured, according to initial reports.
Like in Lashio, the violence in Kyauk Gyi Township was sparked by a dispute in the community.
A local youth leader, who preferred not to be named, said two brothers-in-law had become embroiled in a drunken fight on Wednesday evening. One of the men was supposedly Muslim and the other a Buddhist, he said, adding that the latter was injured during the fight.
When police arrested the two men, bystanders intervened to demand that the Muslim man face more serious charges than his Buddhist brother-in-law. The crowds then walked up to the local police station.
"They gathered at the police station and urged to police to do it so. After that, they went to the mosque [and madrassa] and destroyed it," the youth leader said.
In late March and April, central Burma was rocked by a wave of anti-Muslim violence, which first started in Meikhtila town in Mandalay Division. More than 10,000 people were displaced there and 44 were killed, before the attacks spread to more than ten townships in Mandalay and Pegu divisions where a few hundred Muslim-owned buildings were destroyed.
Posted: 30 May 2013 02:48 AM PDT


Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (front, second left) visits the Myanmar International Terminals Thilawa (MITT) port outside Rangoon on May 25, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)
Japan's industrial investors stayed with Thailand through the army coups, the Bangkok-paralyzing massed Red-Shirt protests, and the mismanaged floods of 2011 that swamped so many Japanese-owned factories. But a huge labor force in Burma ready to work for one-sixth of a Thai wage could be a turning point.
The visit to Burma earlier this week by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's has certainly got the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra in Bangkok worried. It helps explain why last week during a trade promotion visit to Tokyo she apologized to Japanese business leaders for "any inconvenience caused" to them and their businesses in Thailand in recent years and promised to do better.
"Please be patient with Thailand and we will amend and change the regulations for you and other investors," Yingluck told a Tokyo conference. "Our government will try to make sure that Thailand will be a good place for investments for you all in the future," she said in response to calls for changes in Thai rules on investment.
"We will try to work out and implement regulations that will suit the investors, as we want to make Thailand the regional hub," Yingluck said.
Political analysts have been quick to the view that Japan's intensifying interest in Burma is about seeking to counterbalance the influence of China, but trade and business pundits note that Japanese investment in large-scale manufacturing follows the cheap labor market.
And it's no coincidence. Japan carefully studies cost issues across the region. A survey by the Japan External Trade Organization, known as Jetro, showed that wages in manufacturing industry in Burma are the lowest among 19 countries.
Jetro is a Tokyo government-financed agency that "promotes mutually beneficial trade and investment".
The "Survey of Japanese-Affiliated Companies in Asia and Oceania" report covering 2012 showed that the average industry wage in Burma per annum is US$1,100.
In Thailand, the average annual wage is six times higher at $6,704.
Vietnamese wages are twice as high as in Burma. The closest to Burma's cheap labor is Cambodia, where the average annual wage in manufacturing is $1,424.
Burma also has the lowest wages in the region for engineers, managers and administrative staff.
Among the problems the Jetro survey found was that Japanese companies in Thailand experience are rising wages and end-user complaints about product prices. Key problems faced in Burma are electricity shortages and poor infrastructure.
"I don't believe that Myanmar [Burma] poses a serious immediate threat to Thailand's attraction as manufacturing base for Japanese companies. However, some of the important benefits which brought Japan to Thailand are eroding, low costs among them," an economist with a Western embassy in Bangkok told The Irrawaddy on May 29.
"It will not have escaped Japanese investors' notice that wages in Myanmar are much, much lower than in Thailand, lower in fact that anywhere else in this region," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the subject.
It seems to be no coincidence that Japan's latest offers of financial help to the Naypyidaw government include aiding construction of a large power plant and other infrastructure development.
There have been repeated complaints in recent months by Japanese investors and developers in the big Thilawa Special Economic Zone on the edge of Rangoon about a lack of electricity and other essentials.
"Wherever Japan has plans to invest seriously in manufacturing industry development in emerging countries it more or less sets preconditions for the host government," Jeff Mead, an independent energy analyst in Hong Kong, told The Irrawaddy.
"We don't hear much about this but it's a little like the 'no money, no honey' rule. No electricity, no factories," he said.
"The Thais have been very assiduous in the last 25 years in ensuring that their country has sufficient electricity to support an expansionary industrial base. This is something the Burmese need to do if they want to draw in major Japanese manufacturing industries. The Burmese will be very aware that the fuel to generate much of Thailand's electricity is actually natural gas imported from Burma."
It is perhaps that drain into Thailand of much-needed energy resources, albeit paid for handsomely, that makes Naypyidaw lukewarm in its enthusiasm for the Thai-promoted port and economic zone at Dawei on Burma's southeast coast.
Despite assurances by Bangkok that the Dawei project would benefit Burma, the biggest beneficiary would be Thailand.
It's Thailand that would benefit from a crude oil transhipment terminal in Dawei, and it's Thailand that would benefit from developing around Dawei a petrochemicals industry, currently stymied at the Map Ta Phut industrial zone outside Bangkok because of environmental health problems.
Dawei is perhaps another sign of Japan's future intent. Prime Minister Yingluck has twice this year—first in Bangkok in January and again last week in Tokyo—button-holed Prime Minister Abe to try to pressure him to support the multi-billion dollar Dawei project, which has yet to attract any serious Thai investment.
On both occasions, Abe politely smiled—evidently more interested in a place called Thilawa.
Posted: 30 May 2013 02:40 AM PDT


A female refugee makes a sheet of leaves for the roof of her house in Ei Htu Hta refugee camp on the Thai-Burma border. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)
More than 140,000 Burmese refugees in Thailand are facing mounting pressure to leave their camps on the border and return to their homeland, with many refugees saying they are not ready or willing to return.
Refugees in camps in northwest Thailand say they have been given three options: move elsewhere in Thailand, return to Burma or resettle in a third country. They say they have been asked to select a choice on a form delivered by Mae Fah Luang Foundation, a Thai organization under royal patronage that is based in Chiang Mai Province.
Most of the refugees on the Thai-Burma border are ethnic Karen who fled their homes in southeast Burma due to civil wars between the government and ethnic armed groups. Many are economic migrants who crossed the border in search of employment.
Several refugees in the Mae La refugee camp, which houses more than 40,000 people in Tak Province, said the Mae Fah Luang Foundation created the survey earlier this month and asked adults and teenagers in the camp to fill out their responses.
"On the form, refugees have three options," said Ah Mu, who lives in the camp. "They [refugees] were asked to choose their top priority. For example, if they want to go to a third country, they have to mark that option…and also specify which country they have in mind."
"They were also asked to mark their second and third priorities, in case if they weren't matched with their first choice," he added.
Ah Mu said other questions focused on the refugees' skills and education levels, as well as where in Burma they would return and what kind of jobs they would pursue there.
The Thai foundation also distributed forms last month to community leaders who administrate another refugee camp known as Umpiem Mai, according to Tun Tun, the general-secretary of that camp.
He said he and other community leaders were consulting with refugees to consider their options as they completed the forms, which he said would be collected by the Mae Fah Luang Foundation in November.
Some refugees said that although they technically had three options, the criteria for traveling to a third country or staying in Thailand was so strict that many people were forced to opt to "voluntarily return" to Burma, even though they did not wish to do so.
Some others, however, said that those who complained were mostly newcomers and economic migrants from urban areas in Burma.
According to regulations from the UN refugee agency's resettlement program, refugees without registration cards do not meet the criteria for resettlement.
So far, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) estimates that 81,700 refugees from Burma have been moved to other countries from Thailand since the UN resettlement program started in 2005.
Vivian Tan, spokesperson for the UNHCR in Asia, said it was not yet time to promote the repatriation of refugees to Burma. However, she confirmed that UNHCR and partners continued to consult with refugee communities and community-based organizations regarding their options and needs.
"We are also collecting information on the situation in the southeast [of Burma] that we will share with the refugees to enable them to make an informed choice when voluntary repatriation eventually becomes feasible," she said.
Tan added that a profiling exercise began earlier this month to collect more information about the refugees, including their hometowns, education levels, skills and future plans.
She said all concerned ethnic armed groups and the Burmese government needed to agree on safeguards for returnees, including amnesties and respect for basic rights relating to freedom of movement, as well as the issuance of identity documents upon return. She also called for preparations in areas of potential return to ensure that returnees had a place to live and access to basic facilities, services and work opportunities.
There has been no public or official announcement about refugee repatriation or the expected closure of nine refugee camps on the Thai-Burma border. Some NGO sources, however, say Thai and Burmese authorities intend to shut the camps by 2015.
NGOs including UNHCR, The Border Consortium (TBC) and community-based organizations are conducting repatriation training and workshops for the refugees.
Representatives from refugee support agencies and international NGOs have been meeting with Burmese government officials in Naypyidaw since last year and engaging in efforts to facilitate the eventual repatriation of refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Burma.
Posted: 30 May 2013 12:45 AM PDT


The meeting between the UN special advisor on Burma and Kachin community leaders is seen in progress on Wednesday in Myitkyina. (Photo: Nyein Nyein / The Irrawaddy)
MYITKYINA, Kachin State—Hundreds of Kachin leaders met this week in the state capital of Myitkyina with the UN special advisor on Burma, who was allowed to attend peace negotiations between Kachin rebels and the Burmese government for the first time on Tuesday.
The leaders on Wednesday warmly welcomed UN envoy Vijay Nambiar and thanked him for participating in the negotiations the day before, which marked the first time the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) had agreed to attend peace talks in the government-controlled region of Myitkyina. The previous two rounds of negotiations this year were held in neighboring China.
The UN's Nambiar said the discussion with Kachin leaders was productive. "There were frustrations, as well as expectations and hopes, which have been expressed," he told reporters.
"I think there is hope," he added. "But people feel everywhere. I think it's necessary that those views come out and are openly expressed."
The KIO, the political wing of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), signed a ceasefire agreement with the former Burmese military regime in 1994, but the agreement broke down in June 2011 when fighting erupted between the government army and KIA soldiers. The KIA is the nation's second-largest armed ethnic rebel group, with an estimated 10,000 fighters.
Also on Wednesday, KIA leaders discussed military affairs with a commander from the government army, although no details of were revealed. Both sides said they were satisfied with the meeting. Gen Gum Maw and Gen Zaw Taung represented the KIA, while Lt-Gen Myint Soe represented the government army.
Myint Soe said the group discussed troop deployments as well as the ongoing clashes between the government army and other ethnic armed groups which have already signed ceasefires.
"We come here because we need to discuss political matters," said Gen Sumlut Gun Maw, the KIA's deputy chief of staff.
They said they expected to conclude the talks on Thursday.
Posted: 29 May 2013 11:40 PM PDT


An archive photo showing ABSDF members in the early 1990s accused of being 'spies' for Burma's then military regime.
RANGOON—The All Burma Students' Democratic Front (ABSDF) said it is carrying out an internal investigation into what happened in the organization 20 years ago, when 35 of its members were killed on accusations of being spies for Burma's military government.
Kyaw Kyaw Lin, the coordinator of the ABSDF's Truth and Justice Commission, said the team was meeting with family members of the victims and ABSDF members who managed to escape after being accused of spying for the government.
"We have interviewed six members so far," said Kyaw Kyaw Lin. "As for families, we have already visited Ma Nge's mother." Nan Aung Htwe Kyi, also known as Ma Nge, was an ABSDF member who managed to escape after being arrested and interrogated by the group.
"What had happened in their camp in Kachin State has had a lot of mental impact on them, so repeatedly speaking about it really hurts them," Kyaw Kyaw Lin said, referring to some of the interrogation and killings that were carried out in Kachin State, where the ABSDF's Northern Region was based.
The ABSDF was founded in November 1988 as an armed rebel group by students and youths who left their homes for Burma's border areas, following the military regime's brutal crackdown on the pro-democracy uprising in September that same year.
Thirty-five ABSDF members died in custody in 1991-92, some of them executed as "enemy spies" and others tortured to death while undergoing  interrogation. In February 1992, 15 members were killed in the jungles on Kachin State under shadowy circumstances, and another 80 members were detained on similar charges in the early 1990s.
Questions have long surrounded the allegations against the victims and some have suggested that the killings were motivated by internal power struggles within the organization.
Among those killed in Kachin State in 1992 was Htun Aung Kyaw, the chairman of ABSDF's Northern Region. During the 1988 democracy movement, he was a prominent student leader in Mandalay, Burma's second largest city, and vice-chairman of the All Burma Federation of Students Union.
On May 17, Htun Aung Kyaw's family opened a criminal case at No. 8 Police Station in Mandalay Division in order start a police investigation into his killing and to take legal action against the perpetrators.
In January 2012, the ABSDF formed the Truth and Justice Commission to investigate the killings, in particular in its Northern Region. The group is currently engaged in peace negotiations with the government and Naypyidaw has allowed members of the group, who still remain in exile, to visit Burma for three weeks to carry out its investigation.
The ABSDF commission will travel to Mon State and Rangoon and Mandalay divisions to interview families of the victims and former members who escaped interrogation.
Kyaw Kyaw Lin said the commission would discuss the background of the accused ABSDF members, the supposed evidence for the accusations made against them, and the health and psychological impacts that the members and their families have suffered as a result of the events.
Former ABSDF members currently resettled in foreign countries will also be contacted, while ABSDF documents being kept in an archive center in the Netherlands might also be studied for more information.
Kyaw Kyaw Lin said the group also planned to consult the victims and their families about how the ABSDF can address some of the impacts they suffered. The group has already issued a public apology for the events of the early 1990s.
"One thing I'd like to add is that this report is not the end of the story. The ABSDF's northern region case has yet to be finished after the publication of the report. It will be just the beginning of the truth and justice we like to focus on," he said.
Posted: 29 May 2013 10:18 PM PDT


A police officer stands near a mosque that was burnt during a riot between Buddhist and Muslims in Lashio on Wednesday. (Photo: Reuters / Soe Zeya Tun)
LASHIO, Burma — It was a terrifying sight: hundreds of angry, armed men on motorcycles advancing up a dusty street with no one to stop them.
Shouting at the top of their lungs, clutching machetes and iron pipes and long bamboo poles, they thrust their fists repeatedly into the air.
The object of their rage: Burma's embattled minority Muslim community.
Residents gaping at the spectacle backed away as the Buddhist mob passed. Worried business owners turned away customers and retreated indoors. And three armed soldiers standing in green fatigues on a corner watched quietly, doing nothing despite an emergency government ordinance banning groups of more than five from gathering.
Within a few hours on Wednesday, at least one person was dead and four injured as this northeastern town of Burma became the latest to fall prey to the country's swelling tide of anti-Muslim unrest.
After a night of heavy rain, downtown Lashio was quiet Thursday morning. Soldiers blocked roads where Muslim shops were burned. At one corner where the charred remains of a building still smoldered, Muslim residents sorted through rubble for anything salvageable. One woman who had fled a mob a day earlier was still in a state of shock.
"These things should not happen," said the woman, Aye Tin, a Muslim resident. "Most Muslims are staying off the streets. They're afraid they’ll be attacked or killed if they go outside."
The violence that started Tuesday in the northeastern city of Lashio is casting fresh doubt over whether President Thein Sein's government can or will act to contain the racial and religious intolerance plaguing a deeply fractured nation still struggling to emerge from half a century of military rule. Muslims have been the main victims of the violence since it began in western Arakan State last year, but so far most criminal trials have involved prosecutions of Muslims, not members of the Buddhist majority.
The rioting in Lashio started Tuesday after reports that a Muslim man had splashed gasoline on a Buddhist woman and set her on fire. The man was arrested. The woman was hospitalized with burns on her chest, back and hands.
Mobs took revenge by burning down several Muslim shops and one of the city's main mosques, along with an Islamic orphanage that was so badly charred that only two walls remained, said Min Thein, a resident contacted by telephone.
On Wednesday fires still smoldered at the ruined mosque, where a dozen charred motorcycles lay on the sidewalks underneath its white minarets. Army troops stood guard. The wind carried the acrid smell of several burned vehicles across town, and most Muslims hid in their homes.
When one group of thugs arrived at a Muslim-owned movie theater housed in a sprawling villa, they hurled rocks over the gate, smashing windows. They then broke inside and ransacked the cinema.
Ma Wal, a 48-year-old Buddhist shopkeeper across the street, said she saw the crowd arrive. They had knives and stones, and came in two separate waves.
"I couldn't look," she said, recounting how she had shut the wooden doors of her shop. "We were terrified."
A couple hours later, the mobs were gone and two army trucks and a small contingent of soldiers guarded the villa. "I don’t know what to think about it," she said. "More casualties are … not good for anybody."
The government, which came to power in 2011 promising a new era of democratic rule, appealed for calm.
"Damaging religious buildings and creating religious riots is inappropriate for the democratic society we are trying to create," presidential spokesman Ye Htut said on his Facebook page. "Any criminal act will be dealt with according to the law," he said.
National police said nine people were arrested for involvement in the two days of violence, but didn't say if they were Buddhists or Muslims.
After nightfall, authorities could be heard issuing instructions on loudspeakers across the city, reminding residents a dusk-to-dawn curfew was in effect. The voice bellowing into the night also said: "You are prohibited from carrying sticks or swords or any kind of weapon."
A local freelance journalist, Khun Zaw Oo, said he was hit on the head with an iron pipe as he photographed mobs ransacking shops. He said he managed to flee but a companion also holding a camera was attacked and badly injured.
Burma's sectarian violence first flared in western Arakan State last year, when hundreds of people died in clashes between Buddhists and Muslims that drove about 140,000 others, mostly Muslims, from their homes. Most are still living in refugee camps.
This month, authorities in two areas of Arakan announced a regulation limiting Muslim families to two children. The policy drew sharp criticism from Muslim leaders, rights groups and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. US State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell on Tuesday said the United States opposes coercive birth limitation policies, and called on Burma "to eliminate all such policies without delay."
The clashes had seemed confined to the Arakan region, but in late March, similar Buddhist-led violence swept the town of Meikthila in centra Burma, killing at least 43 people. Earlier this month, a court sentenced seven Muslims from Meikthila to prison terms for their role in the violence.
Several other towns in central Burma experienced less deadly violence, mostly involving the torching of Muslim businesses and mosques.
Muslims account for about 4 percent of Burma's roughly 60 million people. Anti-Muslim sentiment is closely tied to nationalism and the dominant Buddhist religion, so leaders have been reluctant to speak up for the unpopular minority.
Thein Sein's administration has been heavily criticized for not doing enough to protect Muslims. He vowed last week during a trip to the United States that all perpetrators of the sectarian violence would be brought to justice.
Posted: 29 May 2013 10:14 PM PDT


Principal suspect Naw Kham leaves the detention center for execution in Kunming, Yunnan province, on March 1, 2013. (Photo: Reuters / China Daily)
After executing four killers from Thailand, Laos and Burma last year, China's security forces have extended their reach into Southeast Asia by uniting the countries along the Mekong River into a "war on drugs" and arresting 812 people in the narcotics-rich Golden Triangle.
China's new push is described as an anti-drug operation and includes protecting commercial and passenger ships on the Mekong against thieves, kidnappers and guerillas. The operation, which began on April 19, will end on June 20.
Critics have questioned whether China's interest is about drugs at all or whether the crackdown is just a convenient way for Beijing to project power into its strategic southern flank.
China found the opening it needed to form a multinational anti-drug squad, backed by armed patrol boats, as a result of outrage over the October 2011 execution of 13 Chinese crew members on two cargo ships by a gang led by Naw Kham, an ethnic Shan methedrine smuggler from Burma.
The Chinese caught up with Naw Kham and executed him and members of his gang in the southern Chinese province of Yunnan in February despite his recanting a confession and claiming that rogue Thai soldiers had staged the murders. As an indication of China's presumed fury over the incident, Naw Kham's execution and that of his henchmen included showing them being led away to die live on Chinese state television, although their lethal injections were not broadcast.
In response to the case, which included the discovery of 920,000 amphetamine pills, Thailand, Burma and Laos began for the first time to allow Chinese "border police" gunboats to lead four-nation patrols on the Mekong River beyond China's territory. Left unexplained is what involvement the Chinese boat may have had in the drug trade.
So far, security forces from the four countries say they have confiscated more than two tons of drugs, including heroin, opium and methamphetamine, plus guns and ammunition.
The 812 arrests include citizens from all four participating Mekong countries plus Vietnam, according to Lan Weihong, an official with the Narcotics Department in China's powerful Public Security Ministry.
Lan made the announcement at a command center staffed by drug enforcement agents in Jinghong, a Mekong River port in Yunnan, the state-owned China Daily reported on May 21.
The new center is a second-floor hotel room where 10-plus officers work alongside translators, allowing the four nations to "sit in the same room and talk directly with each other," Lan was quoted as saying. Previously, officials had to send documents and other evidence back to their home countries and ask their superiors how to coordinate cross-border raids, which slowed the process.
"Narcotics officers assigned to a four-nation campaign against smuggling on the Mekong River say reducing red tape and improving communication is boosting the war on drugs," China Daily said. The officers also "protect merchant sailors and residents along the major trading route through Southeast Asia," it said.
There was no immediate indication where the suspects were imprisoned after being busted in 560 separate cases during the past month. It was also unclear where they might stand trial or which countries they came from.
A few hundred miles longer than the Mississippi River, the Mekong originates in Tibetan glacier-fed peaks in China's Qinghai province, runs 2,700 miles, and empties through southern Vietnam into the South China Sea. But it is the river's midway section through the mountainous Golden Triangle which interests the joint patrols.
The region is part of China'a southern frontier—where Burma, Laos and Thailand meet—and was dubbed the Golden Triangle in the 1950s when warlords, rebels, criminals and corrupt officials in all three countries became wealthy from illegal opium and heroin production. Today, the Mekong's murky waters are a lucrative commercial lifeline, especially for Chinese goods exported south through Yunnan to be assembled or sold in Southeast Asia or abroad.
As the region modernizes, illegal drug production has also increased, and seizures are now alarmingly huge. For example, police in Bangkok said they netted Thailand's biggest-ever cache of illegal methedrine on May 22 when they retrieved 4.5 million speed pills, plus 60 kilograms of powdery "ice"—a slang term for smokable methamphetamine.
The drugs were found in suitcases in an apartment, which police said they raided before arresting three Thai couriers who allegedly also possessed four guns. In a separate raid on May 26, Thai police in the Golden Triangle near Chiang Rai said they stopped a convoy of pickup trucks going to Bangkok, arrested four minority ethnic hill tribesmen who were couriers, and seized 600,000 methamphetamine pills.
Thailand points to Burma's northern Shan State as the source of most such drugs.
Many of the region's illegal, makeshift meth labs are located there, though key chemicals in the formula are often purchased in Thailand.
Shan State is also the world's second biggest source of illegal opium, which can be refined into heroin and morphine.
Some Shan state smugglers also secretly ferry their cargo down the Mekong to Thailand's Golden Triangle river ports of Chiang Saen and Chiang Khong, where modern highways link to Bangkok. Others send their illegal drugs on speedboats across a narrow section of the Mekong into Laos, and then march the loads across sparsely populated hills. Those drugs are then brought from Laos across a different section of the Mekong near Thailand's river ports, or north overland into China.
Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist and regular contributor to Asia Sentinel.
Posted: 29 May 2013 10:07 PM PDT


Anti-government "red shirt" protesters hold pictures of killed friends and relatives, and killed Italian photographer Fabio Polenghi during a rally in Bangkok in May 2011. (Photo: Reuters)
BANGKOK—An Italian photographer killed while covering the Thai military’s crackdown on anti-government protesters in Bangkok three years ago was shot by a high-velocity bullet like those issued to soldiers, a Thai judge said on Wednesday.
The inquest said it was unknown who fired the bullet and stopped short of outright blaming the military. Rights groups have repeatedly called for Thailand’s government to hold the powerful army accountable for its part in the violence.
A Bangkok South Criminal Court judge said that the inquest into the death of 48-year-old Fabio Polenghi showed the fatal shot “was fired from the direction of security forces” who were mobilized to quash the demonstration in central Bangkok.
It was likely Polenghi was killed by a bullet from the .223 cartridge which was used with M-16 and HK33 rifles issued to soldiers on the ground that day, the inquest said.
The findings were a stark reminder of a battle fought between the Red Shirt protesters and the government under then-Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, which led to at least 91 deaths during the two months of demonstrations on the streets of Bangkok in 2010, and of a political divide that remains in the country.
Polenghi was shot as he tried to take pictures of the army’s assault on the Red Shirt encampment.
Testimonies from the inquest that began last July showed the bullet went in Polenghi’s back and came through his left chest. The judge said the bullet went through his heart, lung and liver, causing excessive bleeding until he died at the hospital on May 19, 2010.
Born in Italy in 1962, Polenghi had been a fashion photographer for many years but was transitioning to news.
Elisabetta Polenghi, 48, his younger sister, was among 13 witnesses who testified in the court case. She was accompanied by her mother and her elder sister to hear the court’s order on Wednesday.
"It was positive but it’s not the solution," Elisabetta Polenghi said of the inquest’s results. "The solution will come when the responsible will be asked to go out of their duty, away from position that can hurt people."
The Polenghi case is the eighth inquest initiated by Thai authorities to seek the cause of deaths of those killed in the violence. The court previously ruled that five people were killed by guns used by military personnel, while two inquests were inconclusive on who committed the killings.
Abhisit’s government approved the use of live ammunition under limited conditions and deployed sharpshooters and snipers during the demonstration.
The Red Shirt-allied government that succeeded Abhisit’s agreed last year to pay compensation to all the victims of violence in order to promote political reconciliation.
Rights groups have repeatedly called for the government to hold the army accountable.
"It’s the first step towards achieving justice in this case and we’re encouraged that the judges effectively acknowledged that the bullet came from state security forces," said Shawn Crispin, a Southeast Asia’s representative of the non-profit Committee to Protect Journalists.
"It’s clear that the family of Fabio is going to fight this and will effectively try to establish and hold to account those at the highest ranks of the chains of command that ordered soldiers to shoot that day."
Thai authorities have a long history of shielding military personnel from prosecution in political bloodsheds in recent decades.
Polenghi’s lawyer Karom Polpornklang said on Wednesday the inquest will be used in a future court case against Abhisit and his then-deputy Suthep Thaugsuban, who controlled a joint government-military center that ran the operation ending the protests.
"It has to be proven that the orders for the security forces to move in … came from Mr Suthep and Mr Abhisit. They cannot deny their responsibility and cannot be dismissed in this case," Karom told reporters. "Or else an incident like this will happen again."
The Department of Special Investigation began a murder investigation of Abhisit and Suthep last year, but charges have not been brought to court.
Posted: 29 May 2013 10:00 PM PDT


North Koreans sit beside bags of chemical fertilizer in Sinuiju, opposite the Chinese border city of Dandong. (Photo: Reuters / Jacky Chen)
PYONGYANG — New international sanctions aimed at thwarting North Korea's nuclear weapons program are having unintended consequences: halting money transfers by foreign humanitarian groups working to help those most in need and forcing some agencies to carry suitcases of cash in from outside.
At the same time, some restrictions are meant to sting the country's elite by crippling the import of luxury goods, such as yachts, fancy cars and jewelry. But they do not appear to be stopping the well-heeled from living large in the capital Pyongyang.
Much of the aid group difficulties are linked to the state-run Bank of China's decision earlier this month to follow Washington's lead and sever ties with the North's Foreign Trade Bank, the main money transfer route for most foreign organizations, UN agencies and embassies in Pyongyang. With that line cut, aid workers in North Korea say they are left with few other options to receive foreign currency for expenses including rent, bills and salaries for local staff.
The sanctions are not supposed to affect humanitarian aid, but six Pyongyang-based aid organizations headquartered in Europe issued a communique earlier this month spelling out their frustrations and calling the difficulties in transferring money to North Korea a "big problem." They warned that they may be forced to suspend their operations if they cannot find ways to access cash. A handful of American non-governmental organizations also work in North Korea, but they cycle in and out and do not maintain a permanent presence.
Gerhard Uhrmacher, program manager for German humanitarian aid organization Welthungerhilfe, said when recent bank transfers failed, he managed to keep projects running by routing 500,000 euros ($643,000) to Chinese or North Korean accounts in China to pay for building supplies and other goods.
He said Welthungerhilfe, which signed the communique and works on agriculture and rural development projects in North Korea, has some reserves in Pyongyang but must also resort to carrying cash into the country by hand.
"It doesn't give a good impression. We're trying to be transparent, to be open to all sides and now we're more or less forced to do something that doesn't really look very proper because people who carry a lot of cash are somehow suspect," said Uhrmacher, who is based in Germany and has worked in North Korea for the past 10 years.
"Whatever you're doing, everybody looks at you very closely," he said. "That's why we don't like it because bank accounts are proper. Everybody can have a look at it and everybody can control it. Now we are forced to do something else."
Some analysts said aid groups were simply "collateral damage" and that they will find a way to work around the sanctions as they have been forced to do in other countries. Others said the poorest North Koreas would be hurt if some humanitarian groups have to pull out of the country. The aid groups work on a range of issues from food security to improving health and assisting with disabilities.
Aid groups "may not provide as much support as governments, but they have the ability to reach the deep corners of the impoverished North where people are in most need," said Woo Seongji, a professor of international relations at Kyung Hee University in Seoul. "Their help is both symbolic and substantial. It reaches kids, hospitals and food shelters that outside governments may not be able to support consistently because of political considerations."
The latest sanctions have added challenges to the already difficult system of getting money into North Korea since ally China has restrictions on how much foreign currency can be legally taken beyond its borders.
Sanctions and trade embargoes have long been used by the international community to put an economic squeeze on troublesome regimes from Iraq and Burma to Cuba. But they are a blunt tool that can unintentionally add to the suffering of people living under oppressive rule by hindering development and the delivery of aid.
In North Korea's case, the sanctions are meant to stop financing and the smuggling of cash that could help its nuclear and missile programs. They also aim to send a message to the country's elite by crushing the import of luxury goods.
Yet last week at the newly opened six-story Haedanghwa Service Complex in Pyongyang, well-dressed North Koreans chatted on mobile phones and browsed in a high-end boutique that sold everything from fine Italian suits and Dior makeup to glass showcases glittering with diamonds and gold.
The opulent center boasted 17 different themed dining rooms and cavernous banquet halls, some with their own bathrooms and round tables big enough to seat 30 people. Upstairs, young couples played pool, lounged in the sauna and munched on sushi while sipping cans of Coke and beer. Others splashed in a heated indoor swimming pool replete with waterfalls or worked out at a fitness center filled with state-of-the-art equipment. Downstairs at a popular restaurant, a chef delighted guests by cooking on a grill in front of them—at a cost of $50 a plate, not including drinks.
Meanwhile, at the airport, a Toshiba 42-inch flatscreen TV slowly made loops on the baggage carousel. All proof that high-end merchandise is still making its way to the upper class in an impoverished country where two-thirds of its 24 million people don't have enough to eat.
Uhrmacher said that despite repeated European Union vows that sanctions will not affect humanitarian aid, the pinch is being felt by all the organizations working in North Korea. The EU has not sanctioned Foreign Trade Bank, but he said due to US political pressure and fears of becoming entangled in controversy, European banks do not want to be associated with it. Bank of China had typically been used as a channel to route money to the aid groups' North Korean accounts.
Most foreign embassies, NGOs and businesses have accounts at FTB or the Daedong Credit Bank. Daedong was named in an earlier round of US sanctions, leading many embassies and NGOs to open accounts at the FTB.
"We are concerned regarding possible unintended effects of certain sanctions, in particular with regard to humanitarian assistance, and stress the need to overcome these unintended effects," said Maja Kocijancic, spokeswoman for EU foreign policy head Catherine Ashton.
The US Treasury Department hit the North Korean bank with sanctions in March, effectively cutting it off from the US financial system after accusing the country's main foreign exchange institution of funding Pyongyang's missile and nuclear programs. Washington pressured Beijing to also impose restrictions on the bank a month after new leader Kim Jong-un angered his biggest economic supporter by conducting an underground nuclear test.
The UN responded to that move by slapping Pyongyang with its toughest-ever sanctions. Tensions then boiled and North Korea spewed threats for weeks, including plans to launch nuclear strikes against the United States and its allies. The mood has since cooled, with the North sending a high-level envoy to Beijing last week to deliver a message that they were willing to take steps toward rejoining stalled nuclear disarmament talks.
Embassies and UN agencies are also affected by the banking transfer issues, but several officials refused to comment due to the sensitivity of the issue. However, the UN in Pyongyang said last month that the sanctions were hurting its ability to raise funds, resulting in a shortage of drugs and vaccines. The World Health Organization also said it's harder to import equipment and medicine because everyone has become over cautious at all levels before clearing materials.
The World Food Program said it has not yet been affected by the banking problems. It only needs limited funding within North Korea as financial transactions for its food aid are completed outside the country.
Associated Press writers Sam Kim in Seoul, South Korea, Frank Jordans in Berlin and Raf Casert in Brussels contributed to this report.
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:47 PM PDT
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:47 PM PDT
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:46 PM PDT
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:46 PM PDT
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:45 PM PDT
A US-based economic think tank, the McKinsey Global Institute, forecasts that Burma's economy could more than quadruple over the next two decades. In a new study, the institute says the country's economy has the potential to expand to US $200 billion by 2030, up from $45 billion in 2010. “For much of the 20th century, Myanmar largely missed out on the spectacular growth seen across most of the global economy and most recently in its Asian peers. It now has the potential to be one of the fastest-growing economies in emerging Asia,” said the institute's director, Richard Dobbs.
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:45 PM PDT
The recent decline in the value of Burma's currency is putting pressure on domestic rice prices, according to a report by Mizzima. With the lower kyat, rice exports have grown more profitable, resulting in a diminishing supply of the staple food for the domestic market and prices that haven't been seen in the country since Cyclone Nargis devastated the Irrawaddy Delta in May 2008. Demand for cheap Burmese rice has grown in China, Burma's largest trading partner, since the kyat started falling earlier this year, reaching a low of 921.50 kyat to the dollar last week.
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:44 PM PDT
A joint anti-drug campaign by police from Burma, China, Thailand and Laos has led to the arrest of more than 1,100 suspects in 804 drug-related cases, according to a report by China's Xinhua news agency. The campaign, which began in April, has also resulted in the seizure of 2.97 tonnes of drugs, China's Ministry of Public Security was reported as saying. In one of the largest seizures, police from Burma and China on May 12 jointly busted a Burmese drug ring engaged in smuggling methamphetamine processed in Burma into China.
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:44 PM PDT
A delegation of Kuwaiti parliamentarians left Kuwait on Wednesday for an official three-day visit to Burma, reports the state-run Kuwait News Agency. Although no details were provided about what would be discussed during the visit, the Kuwaiti government has been outspoken in its criticism of Burma's treatment of Rohingya Muslims. The visit comes amid an outbreak of anti-Muslim violence in Shan State, the latest in a long series of similar incidents throughout Burma in recent months. The delegation will likely also discuss investment opportunities in Asia's last major frontier market.
Posted: 29 May 2013 09:43 PM PDT
The government of Shan State last week objected to the establishment of an inter-faith group formed earlier this month, according to a report by the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB). The group, bringing together Buddhists, Christians, Hindus and Muslims, was formed in the state capital Taunggyi on May 8 during a workshop sponsored by the Yadanar Myay Social Development Association and Norwegian People's Aid. On its website, the state government slammed the move, saying it had given permission for the workshop, but not for the creation of a new group.