Friday, September 20, 2013

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Central Bank Confirms $7.6B in Burmese Funds Held in Overseas Accounts

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 07:13 AM PDT

A US $100 dollar bill sits beside the kyat equivalent. (Photo: Giles Orr)

NAYPYIDAW — Burma's Central Bank chairman confirmed recent claims that the government holds billions of dollars of foreign reserves in overseas bank accounts. He said on Friday that a total US $7.6 billion was kept offshore by Burmese state-owned and private banks.

Central Bank Chairman Kyaw Kyaw Maung, President's Office Minister Soe Thein and Deputy Energy Minister Myint Zaw held a general press conference in Naypyidaw on Friday morning.

Asked by The Irrawaddy about recent reports that claimed that the government held up to $11 billion in several bank accounts in Singapore, Kyaw Kyaw Maung said the claims were partially true.

"We only keep $7.6 billion [abroad] legally," he told reporters. "These are foreign exchange reserves; it includes national [government] budget funds as well as privately-held accounts."

"We use it when needed," the bank chairman said, adding, "We don't know about the $11 billion that people are talking about."

Kyaw Kyaw Maung declined to specify in which offshore locations and banks the $7.6 billion in Burmese funds were held. He also failed to clarify exactly how much of these funds were government-owned and how much was in private company hands.

The Central Bank, the Myanma Foreign Trade Bank and the Myanma Investment and Commercial Bank, are among the government institutions that have overseas foreign reserves, Kyaw Kyaw Maung said, adding that several private Burmese banks also owned part of the $7.6 billion.

Deputy Energy Minister Myint Zaw denied past claims made by international non-government organizations (NGOs) that the overseas billions had been generated from the export of Burma's natural gas.

Last week, Jelson Garcia, Asia Program Manager with the Banking Information Center (BIC), said World Bank, Asian Development Bank (ADB) and International Monetary Fund officials informed him in 2012 that Burma's government held up to $11 billion in several Singaporean bank accounts.

"These were estimates given to us […] I drew it from our meetings with the WB and ADB staff," Garcia told The Irrawaddy on Sept. 13.

He said ADB staff told him that Burmese government officials had disclosed to ADB the existence of an estimated $7 billion in government funds in Singaporean banks. According to Garcia, ADB officials considered Naypyidaw's decision to lift the secrecy surrounding these accounts "encouraging."

BIC, a US-based non-profit organization, monitors international financial institutions like the ADB and the World Bank, which have recently begun reengagement with Burma, after President Thein Sein's government announced wide-ranging political and economic reforms.

Earth Rights International (ERI) has said that the billions of dollars in Singapore were stashed there by Burma's former military junta, which for many years earned hundreds of millions of dollars annually from natural gas exports, much of which was siphoned off and pocketed by members of the regime.

In 2009, ERI claimed to have received evidence showing that the military regime had excluded almost $5 billion in revenues—generated from the Yadana Gas project operated by oil giants Total and Chevron—from the country's national budget.

An ERI investigation found that the funds had been parked in two Singapore-based banks—the Overseas Chinese Banking Corporation and DBS Group—which functioned as "offshore repositories." The banks have denied the allegations.

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International Herald Tribune to Be Printed in Rangoon for the First Time

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 06:29 AM PDT

Myo Aung holds a test-run copy of the International Herald Tribune printed in Rangoon on Thursday. (Picture: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — In other parts of the world, people read the International Herald Tribune (IHT) over their morning coffee. The paper's subscribers in Burma's former capital, however, usually get their daily delivery after lunch, and sometimes later.

But when printing of the paper begins in Rangoon on Monday next week, the readers of the global edition of the New York Times in the Southeast Asian country's financial hub will no longer need to be patient.

"Readers here will be able to enjoy IHT at their breakfast time starting from Sept. 23," said Myo Aung, the owner of Success International Publisher's Distributor Co., Ltd., which has the permission from the IHT's parent company, as well as the Burmese government, to print and distribute the paper six days a week in Burma.

"As far as I'm concerned, it will become the very first international newspaper printed and distributed here."

The IHT has more than a dozen printing-sites across Asia, and Burma is the latest. "Printed in Myanmar" will be clearly printed on the front page.

Myo Aung has distributed the IHT in Burma since 1994 by buying the papers at wholesale price and selling them at retail price in the country. Every morning he has had to ship the papers printed in Bangkok via airlines. Customs procedure at Rangoon airport, fight delays and daily submission to the now-defunct Literary Scrutiny Board for distribution approval in the past made it impossible for Myo Aung to provide a morning delivery to his subscribers.

"Now, with printing here, we don't need to think about [those problems]," he told the Irrawaddy before adding that subscribers in Rangoon will get early morning delivery while those in Naypyidaw, the country's capital, and Mandalay, the second biggest city, will have noon deliveries.

He said the paper printed in Rangoon will not be much different from its counterparts in other countries, except it will not be in color. The IHT printed in neighboring Bangladesh is also in black and white due to technical difficulties.
"But the content is the same," he said. The owner explained that not printing in color also has an upside because it will save some production costs, making the price cheaper than the current newsstand price—US$4.50 per copy. The exact cost of the Rangoon-printed edition has not yet been set.

With diplomats, international organizations, executives and hotels on his subscriber list, Myo Aung said the IHT printed in Rangoon will first go to subscribers and then hit Burma's newsstands in places frequented by foreigners. Currently, the IHT is only available to subscribers.

"Telling you the truth, we don't have much circulation like other dailies published in Burma today," he said. "It's risky, but, with a rise in subscriber numbers, we, hopefully, will be alright."

He also noted that the IHT has announced that it will change its name globally from the International Herald Tribune to 'International New York Times' on Oct. 15, and plans to insert a Burma focus section later.

With the demise of the Literary Scrutiny Board, Myo Aung said, he hopes he will not face many challenges nowadays. There were some days in the past that his crew could not deliver the IHT in Burma until about 7 p.m., if a critical story on events in Burma caught the eye of the censors, he said.

If the officials decided a story was not suitable for Burmese eyes, it would be cut out of each copy by hand, Myo Aung said. When negative Burma news made the front page, the whole paper was banned.

"All I could do was apologize to the subscribers," he recounted. "Thank God, many of them were foreigners who understood about the literary censorship here."

But, Myo Aung admits, there remains a challenge: frequent Internet blackouts in Burma, a country that is infamous for its snail's-pace Internet connections. Every day, he will have to download the whole newspaper in a PDF format before it goes to the printer, any interruption to the connection would be big trouble for him.

"It gives me a serious headache," he said. "If the Internet is totally down, I will have to ship the papers from Bangkok and distribute them, but it will make delivery one day later."

Win Tin, a veteran journalist and one of the founders of the Burma's opposition National League for Democracy, said he welcomes the printing of the IHT in Burma. The 83-year old said he personally likes to read newspapers in print because the Internet is beyond him.

"It will be good for anyone who wants to learn about what is happening in the world today, for IHT has good coverage on international affairs," Win Tin said.

"But being an international newspaper, I think the price per copy will not be that cheap."

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Nissan to Produce 10,000 Cars a Year in Burma

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 06:04 AM PDT

Nissan Motor Company’s logo is seen at a reception with shareholders after the general shareholders’ meeting in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, June 25, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)

TOKYO — Nissan Motor Company will start complete knock down production of the Sunny sedan in Burma with a Malaysian partner in 2015, it said on Friday, becoming the first major global carmaker to assemble cars in the Southeast Asian country.

Nissan’s Malaysian partner Tan Chong Motor Holdings Bhd will build a plant in the Pegu Division, some 70 km (43 miles) northeast of Burma's biggest city, Burma, with an annual capacity of over 10,000 vehicles, Nissan said in a statement.

"We are confident that Myanmar will be an important economic engine for the region and are committed to help develop its automotive industry," said Nissan Chief Executive Officer Carlos Ghosn in the statement.

The companies will use parts sourced from Thailand, India, China and Japan as well as by local suppliers, Nissan spokesman Chris Keeffe said.

Global carmakers are rushing to set up in the Myanmar, which until recently was under international economic sanctions.

Earlier this year, Japan’s Suzuki Motor Corp, a smaller carmaker, resumed production of vehicles in Burma for the first time in three years, manufacturing about 100 small trucks a month.

In July, Nissan and Tan Chong Motor opened Nissan's first showroom in Burma, where they sell a pickup truck and a commercial van as well as provide after service and spare parts.

The post Nissan to Produce 10,000 Cars a Year in Burma appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

NGO to Cut Rations for ‘Self-Reliant Refugees’ on Thai-Burma Border

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 05:16 AM PDT

Bamboo huts with leaf roofs, built by refugees, dot the hills of Mae La Oon camp southwest of Mae Sariang in northern Thailand. (Photo: Dieter Telemans / TBC)

RANGOON — Rice rations for many of the more than 120,000 Burmese refugees living on the Thai-Burma border will be reduced, due to a reduction in funding for a humanitarian organization that has provided food for them for more than two decades.

The Border Consortium (TBC) says its funding for humanitarian work has dropped as donors redirect their funds to programs preparing for the return of refugees to Burma.

"However, donors are continuing substantial funding to humanitarian aid and making sure refugees continue to receive a standard ration while making sure the most vulnerable receive extra and children see no reduction," TBC spokesman Mike Bruce told The Irrawaddy on Friday.

TBC announced this week that less rice would be provided for some households beginning with December's food rations, which are distributed in late November, but that rations would not be reduced for children under the age of 18.

Under the revised rice rations plan, households are categorized according to their level of need, with four groups: self-reliant, standard, vulnerable and most vulnerable. Self-reliant households will see a cut in rice rations for adults.

"In order to ensure that the community's basic needs are met, TBC is continuing to maintain a standard monthly ration while introducing four staged levels of assistance," TBC executive director Sally Thompson said. "People who are in need of extra assistance may receive an increase in their rations."

TBC added that ration changes were not intended to promote an early return to Burma.

"It is important to note that, currently, the refugee community, the Royal Thai Government, the Government of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar and UNHCR [the UN refugee agency] all agree that conditions do not yet exist for an organized return," Thompson said.

TBC also said no changes in rations were being made at refugee camps in Ban Mae Surin and Ban Don Yang, among nine refugee camps on the Thai-Burma border. A fire at the Ban Mae Surin camp this year destroyed most of the property of residents there.

"The two camps that are not being reduced overall are assessed as highly vulnerable. One is still recovering from the fire in March, while the other is very isolated and has limited opportunities for livelihood programs and activities," said Bruce.

He said TBC was concerned about the refugees and working to ensure that all households were aware of the changes in rations so they would have time to prepare.

TBC and other NGOs are currently working in the camps to offer a variety of income, employment and skills training programs.

"In order to give the community more experience in managing their food supply, TBC is also introducing community-managed targeting. This means that the camp community, not TBC, will determine which level of assistance each household qualifies for," said Thompson.

Currently, the standard ration of rice is 12 kilograms per month for adults. The standard ration is being changed to 8, 10, or 12 kilograms, depending on need. Refugees also receive yellow split peas, vegetable oil, vitamin and mineral-fortified flour, fish paste, iodized salt and charcoal, none of which will be affected by the ration changes.

As of July 30, 129,787 people were living in refugee camps on the border, according to TBC.

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‘Smarter’ National ID Cards in the Pipeline

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 04:59 AM PDT

Burma's government plans to replace the National Registration Card, seen here, with digital ID cards. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

Government plans to substitute the current paper National Registration Card issued to Burmese citizens with a "smarter" digital identification card remain on the books, but cost concerns and the nation's underdeveloped infrastructure are holding back a rollout.

Tin Chil, a director at the Ministry of Immigration and Population (MIP), told The Irrawaddy on Thursday that foreign companies from Thailand, Japan, China and Korea were in talks with the Burmese government about the plan.

"The current citizenship scrutiny card was issued according to the Myanmar Citizenship Law, which was enacted in 1982 and really needs a replacement in line with international standards," he said.

He added that MIP Minister Khin Yi was eager to implement the plan but remained mindful of budget constraints and logistical considerations such as the country's notoriously slow Internet connections and unreliable electricity, which would hamper nationwide issuance of the cards. Affordability for the average citizen is also a concern in one of Asia's most impoverished nations.

"We need to consider those who cannot afford the current citizenship scrutiny card, which only costs about six kyats [less than 1 US cent, not including photo costs]," he said, adding that a smart card would cost at least US$1 (about 1,000 kyats).

National Registration Cards, also known as citizenship scrutiny cards, are issued to Burmese nationals by MIP's Immigration and National Registration Department. A special committee was formed in 2011 to issue the cards and household registration certificates under the Moe Pwint ("snowflakes" in the Burmese language) Project, which aimed to accelerate issuances to the country's poorly documented citizenry.

According to MIP data, nearly 487,000 household registration certificates and about 3.5 million National Registration Cards were issued through May of this year under the Moe Pwint Project.

The current national registration card, printed on pink paper, includes the holder's photo, signature, a fingerprint of the left thumb and other personal data.

"This ID card is easily damaged because it is made of paper and it is not made with secure technology so it is difficult to check whether it is valid or not. So it is really necessary to change to a smart card," 20-year-old Burmese national Aye Thandar said while holding her flimsy ID card.

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Foreign Investment in Burma Surges, Office Rents Sizzle

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 04:45 AM PDT

Rangoon's landmark Shwedagon Pagoda can be seen in the distance from a Yadanar Myaing construction site on the Kandawgyi ring road. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Burma has approved more foreign direct investment in the past five months than all of last year, but companies setting up operations in the hot frontier market face a growing problem: Southeast Asia’s highest office rental rates.

Burma has approved FDI projects worth more than $1.8 billion from the start of the fiscal year on April 1 to the end of August, compared with $1.4 billion in the whole previous fiscal year, Aung Naing Oo, a director general at the Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development, told Reuters.

But he said he fears potential foreign investors will be turned away by a severe shortage of office rental space.

The wave of investment comes as Burma’s quasi-civilian government implements political and economic reforms, initiated two years ago by President Thein Sein, a former general who led the country out 49 years of military rule and global isolation.

The European Union agreed in April to lift all sanctions on Burma, while the United States suspended sanctions in May last year and allowed U.S. companies to invest through a general license. Some American executives have urged Washington to go further and lift sanctions entirely.

Most of the approved FDI came from other Asian nations, said Aung Naing Oo.

"Malaysia, which brought about $500 million for manufacturing Nissan cars, is the biggest investor during this fiscal (year) in terms of size followed by Hong Kong and South Korea, who injected funds in the garment industry," he said.

Nissan Motor Co plans to start a complete knock down production of its cars in Burma with a Malaysian partner Tan Chong Motor Holdings Bhd, the Japanese automaker said on Friday, becoming the first major global carmaker to be assembling cars in the Southeast Asian country.

The rising tide of foreign investment is fuelling a property boom in the commercial capital Rangoon with the increasing demand for rental space feeding the highest office rental rates of any Southeast Asian city, according to real-estate firm Colliers International, which opened a branch in Rangoon in July.

Colliers put the average rental rate in Rangoon at nearly $80 per square meter, compared to about $25 in Bangkok and $30 in Hanoi. At about $70 per square meter, even the affluent city-state of Singapore doesn’t match Rangoon, it said.

Scipio Services, a Rangoon-based firm that helps foreign companies establish themselves in Burma, puts prime office rental rates even higher. According to their survey, commercial spaces in the few business towers available jumped from $50 per square meter in mid-2011 to as much as $90 by May this year.

Skeletal Staff

Some companies choose to rent houses and villas in lieu of office space, said Brett Miller, Scipio Services’ managing director. But residential rates have also shot up, with villas ranging in price from $4,000 per month to $25,000, he said.

As a result, some companies "are coming in with a small footprint," stationing only skeleton staff in the country, he said.

Other companies base executives in neighboring Thailand and fly them to Rangoon where they stay at hotels, said Tony Picon, Colliers’ managing director in Burma. "I call them the ‘half-pats’, spending around half their time in Rangoon," he said.

Aung Naing Oo said the government is taking measures to increase the supply of rental space.

"To solve the problem of the shortage of hotel and office apartments, we are now encouraging investors in these sectors by approving their proposals very speedily," he said.

Drastic rises in property prices are being driven partly by land speculators. Miller at Scipio Services said the government could implement a "holding tax" that would encourage landowners to either build on a property or sell it to a developer.

Picon, however, was skeptical the government could enforce compliance.

"For tax on unused land, the owner could build something small and say the land is being used," he said. "Overall I find using tax often counterproductive especially when you have limited capacity within government to enforce laws."

The post Foreign Investment in Burma Surges, Office Rents Sizzle appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Rangoon’s Sedona Hotel Investigating Alleged Secret-Camera Footage

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 04:30 AM PDT

A view of the Sedona Hotel in Rangoon on the website of Singapore-based Kepple Land. (Photo: Kepple Land)

RANGOON — One of Rangoon's high-end hotels has launched an internal investigation after video clips spread on Facebook purporting to be secret-camera footage shot in one of the hotel's rooms.

The murky black-and-white video clips posted on blogs and linked to on the social networking site Thursday, and showed an obscured view of an amorous couple in what appears to be a hotel room. The Sedona Hotel was named online as the venue for the scene.

The video has been widely shared and reported in local media, with concerns raised that the privacy of guests at the hotel may have been breached.

A staff member at the front office of the hotel—a luxury complex near Rangoon's Inya lake—said Friday that the hotel's management was looking into whether the clip was filmed in one of the Sedona's rooms.

"We're now internally investigating in the hotel whether those files are from here or not. We will hold a press conference for the public to know as soon as possible," said the staff member, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because she was not allowed to speak with reporters.

An urgent meeting was held in the hotel on Thursday, she said, adding that business was going on as usual within the Sedona, a five-star hotel owned by Singapore-based Kepple Land.

"What I can say is we're checking now," the staff member said.

In a news report on the videos, the Burmese-language newspaper Eleven Weekly quoted a security guard at the hotel denying rumors that the video clips, taken from large file posted online, were discovered on the hotel's own website by hackers.

The security guard said it was possible a secret camera may have been installed in one of the Sedona's rooms, but he said the hotel's staff had not placed it there, according to the report.

Soe Thura, a public relations officer with an advertising company in Rangoon, suggested the video may have been faked in an attempt to smear the hotel.

"I checked some websites that I heard such video files are already posted on. All of them are fake," he said. "It's unlikely it happened inside the hotel."

The video sparked speculation about who was featured in the clips. In the past, Burmese film and music stars have appeared in sex tapes posted online.

But regular Facebook user Ko Thura said he was unable to watch it.

"It's a big file, I can't even download it because I heard it is 10 hours of video clips, and involves some famous people in the country," he said.

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Burma to Sign Convention on Child Labor

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 03:49 AM PDT

A young boy minds the family business in central Rangoon. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Burma will sign an agreement next month with the International Labor Organization (ILO) to work toward the elimination of child labor in the country.

It will be the first time that the Southeast Asian country has signed an ILO convention on child labor.

"The government of Myanmar has announced its intention to ratify ILO Convention 182 on the worst form of child labor," Steve Marshall, the ILO liaison officer in Rangoon, told The Irrawaddy this week. The ILO defines the "worst form of child labor" as work that can have a lasting impact on a child's mental or physical development.

"As part of its policy commitment, the government would reconfirm that such work is considered illegal and would work, with support from the ILO and others, to prevent it from happening, to remove children from such work and to hold perpetrators accountable," Marshall said.

Child labor is a major problem in Burma, which is emerging from five decades of military dictatorship that wrecked the economy and the education system, encouraging many children to help their families by taking jobs in teashops or factories. Children have long been exploited as part of labor pools both at home and abroad, working for a pittance and receiving few social protections, labor activists and community leaders say.

The ILO is also collaborating with the government to stop a second category of child labor that includes children who, for whatever reason, have fallen out of the education system and are required to work, often to help support themselves and their families.

"The government, again supported by the ILO and others, is already working to put in place the necessary policies and structures to address this issue—this includes moving on regulatory reform and budgetary revision, initiating necessary economic reforms to stimulate growth and reduce poverty, strengthening the education system, and the introduction of a protection floor principle toward providing baseline support for the most vulnerable in society," Marshall said.

Thet Thet Aung, a leading labor activist from the 88 Generation Peace and Open Society, said, "There is child labor in our country because our country is a nation of poverty."

"Child labor starts when families can't get enough food. Children are supposed to study, but they cannot go to school because they need to work to help their families."

In Burma, it is illegal to employ children less than 15 of age, and according to the colonial-era Factory Act, employees from 15 to 18 years old can work no more than four hours a day. However, few underage workers benefit from protections stipulated in the legislation, and youth laborers are routinely forced to work more than the statutorily mandated limit.

Thet Thet Aung says that according to the 1951 labor law, children between the ages of 13 and 15 can also legally work for eight hours daily after receiving a doctor's note saying they are in good health.

"I think 13 years old is too young," she said. "Let's set a limit of four hours of working a day for them. The rest of the time, give an education to those who are interested in studying, or let them learn technical skills so they can advance their future careers."

Many children from townships outside Rangoon travel to the commercial capital to find employment. Among them is 13-old Myo Maung, who works at a teashop in Rangoon's Bahan Township, earning just 20,000 kyats (US$20) monthly.

"Families need support so they can have enough food, as our country works to eradicate poverty," Thet Thet Aung said. "If we do not provide for families, we will have problems, and children will be forced to take bad jobs, perhaps working at brothels.

"First I want the government to offer good protection for children. Second, I want the government to give them time to study and pursue a proper career."

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Burma’s Police, Farmers Clash as Six Charged for Trespassing on Confiscated Farmland

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 03:22 AM PDT

Burmese police officers are seen at Rangoon International Airport last month. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

Burma's police and farmers in Naypyidaw's Popathiri Township clashed early Thursday morning when police raided homes of residents, who are demanding they be allowed to return to farmland confiscated by the Ministry of Information (MOI).

Trespassing charges have been filed against six leaders of the residents, who are now in hiding. The six escaped arrest as angry residents of Weigyi village detained almost 30 police officers and allegedly injured seven police.

The residents were forced off some 500 acres of farmland in nearby Zayyathiri Township in 2006 to make way for the offices of state-owned newspapers. Following complaints from the farmers over the confiscation of their land and the lack of compensation, the MOI's News and Periodicals Enterprise—which publishes the New Light of Myanmar, Myanma Alin, and Kye Mon newspaper—last month started paying compensation to those farmers who did not get compensation seven years ago.

But some are not accepting the compensation. Instead, they demand the return of the land left over after the construction of the newspaper offices, which they say cover only about one-fifth of the total area confiscated.

Earlier this week, about 40 farmers entered the land, cut down some of the eucalyptus trees planted there and began plowing.

Then, in the early hours Thursday, about 40 police from Zayyathiri and Popathiri townships, led by police Major Kyaw Myo, descended on Weigyi.

Zaw Latt, a local National League for Democracy member, said police came to his home demanding to see his household registration documents at 1:30 a.m.

"They stepped on my neck and handcuffed me," he said. "They harassed my wife and slapped my 11 years old daughter, who is just a fifth grade student."

Zaw Latt said the police left him handcuffed in his home, and said he did not see exactly what happened next.

“There were clashes after the villagers came, but I was in the house with handcuff and I did not see whether the police are beaten by the villagers or they beat themselves," he said.

Police also entered the homes of residents Htun Htun, Win Hlaing and Win Shwe, according to Zaw Latt. Police later filed charges against the three, as well as Zaw Latt and two female residents, Win Kyi and Khin Aye.

Ko Zaw, a Weigyi resident, told The Irrawaddy the villagers, angry about the raid, surrounded police. The villagers detained some 27 police until more police came sometime before dawn, when they were let go, Ko Zaw said.

Bo Han, the police captain of Shwetwingone police station in Zayyathiri Township, told The Irrawaddy the raid and the arrests were triggered by a trespassing complaint from the state-run newspapers.

"There were some 30 to 40 villagers, but we cannot arrest all of them, so we picked their leaders—four men and two women," Bo Han said.

He said villagers clashed violently with police, and seven officers from the Kyitaukkhan, Zayyathiri, and Shwetwingone townships were wounded.

"Five of them are severely wounded on their heads and are now at the Naypyidaw Hospital," Bo Han said.

The villagers said the police had no arrest warrant when they attempted to arrest them during the night, but the police say they do not need the court warrant to make arrests in such a case.

Ye Htut, the deputy information minister, told The Irrawaddy on Thursday that the local News and Periodicals Enterprise director had been dealing with the issue since he received complaints from the farmers.

Ye Htut insisted compensation was paid at the time the land was seized, and additional compensation of between 250,000 to 500,000 kyat, or US$260 to $520, had been accepted by more than half of the farmers.

He said the demands of the residents could not be met.

"As the newspaper building is already built and we have eucalyptus trees on the remaining areas," they can't have the land back, Ye Htut said.

"We explained to them that accepting compensation is the only way to solve it."

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US Welcomes Burma Signing Nuclear Agreement

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 12:15 AM PDT

Burma President Thein Sein attends a town hall event in Washington on May 19, 2013. (Photo: Reuters / Yuri Gripas)

WASHINGTON — The United States on Thursday welcomed Burma's signing of an agreement with the UN atomic watchdog that will require it to declare any nuclear activities and allow inspections—the latest step by the former pariah nation toward openness.

But citing concern about human rights abuses and ties with North Korea, Republican lawmakers said it is premature to deepen US ties with Burma's powerful military.

The Obama administration has moved rapidly to ease sanctions against Burma as it has undertaken democratic reforms after decades of repressive military rule. The engagement policy has been motivated partly by a desire to cut the military ties that the former ruling junta forged with North Korea.

On Tuesday, Burma took a step long urged by Washington: the signing of the International Atomic Energy Agency's Additional Protocol to its existing safeguards agreements. That could help address lingering suspicions that the secretive junta may have pursued a nuclear weapons program.

The State Department said Thursday the protocol would help move the country "increasingly in line with international nonproliferation norms and standards."

Independent nonproliferation experts also welcomed the signing as a promising step, but said it could take several years for Burma to ratify and bring the agreement into force.

Robert Kelley, a former US government nuclear expert, said that under the agreement the onus is on the nation itself to declare any nuclear activities, peaceful or otherwise, which would then be open for inspection.

Burma's previous agreement with the IAEA required little disclosure, and Burma was unresponsive when the Vienna-based agency in late 2010 sought an inspection. Burma denies seeking nuclear weapons, and in 2011 declared it had halted long-stalled plans to obtain a research reactor from Russia.

About seven years ago, Burma reportedly acquired precision machinery from Germany, Switzerland and Singapore that defectors and some analysts concluded were part of a half-baked attempt to make equipment for enriching uranium, although other experts disputed that conclusion. Defectors also reported Burma was mining uranium and converting it into oxides and yellowcake.

Kelley, who has researched Burma's alleged nuclear aspirations, said he believed the junta unsuccessfully pursued a nuclear program. He said he never found any evidence of nuclear links with North Korea.

US officials have been more concerned about Burma's purchases from North Korea of missiles and other military equipment. Conventional weapons are beyond the remit of the newly signed agreement, although such trade with North Korea is prohibited under UN Security Council resolutions.

At a congressional hearing on Burma, Republican lawmakers accused the Obama administration of moving too fast in seeking military cooperation. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel briefly met his Burmese counterpart last month, but active cooperation between the militaries has gone little beyond discussions on rule of law and human rights.

Still, Rep. Steve Chabot, the republican chairman of a House panel that oversees foreign policy toward East Asia, said the administration has turned a blind eye to congressional concerns.

Another Republican, Rep. George Holding, said, "Before we move any closer in military-to-military cooperation, we need to ensure that the Burmese military does not have excessive ties with China and North Korea or [that] those ties are severed."

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican, accused Burma's military of launching air strikes on ethnic minority groups, which he said was evidence that despite reforms, "the repression of peoples in Burma continues."

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The Power Behind the Robe

Posted: 19 Sep 2013 11:06 PM PDT

In this cover story first appeared in the October, 2007 print issue of The Irrawaddy magazine, the editor explained why Burma's general fear the influence of the Sangha.

The Lord Buddha shunned worldly affairs, but in his teachings he stressed the need for good governance and good rulers in the practice of politics.

The Buddha said: "When the ruler of a country is just and good, the ministers become just and good; when the ministers are just and good, the higher officials become just and good; when the higher officials are just and good, the rank and file become just and good; when the rank and file become just and good, the people become just and good."

If these admonitions are followed by the large community of monks—the Sangha—in predominantly Buddhist Burma, the lingering "love lost" relationship between the country's military rulers and its monks should be no surprise.

Over the last two decades, Burma's Sangha community, officially estimated to number around 400,000, has had an uneasy relationship with the ruling generals, who have imprisoned several prominent, politically active monks or pongyis. It is estimated that since the present military regime came to power in 1988, about 300 monks have been defrocked and sentenced to long terms of imprisonment.

Monks, considered "sons of Buddha," are the biggest institution in Burma after the armed forces, which number more than 400,000 soldiers and police.

In their close contacts with the common people and during their morning alms rounds of local households, the monks witness firsthand the suffering and poverty of ordinary Burmese citizens. They have a very clear picture of the deteriorating situation in Burma.

More importantly, they probably have a better network, connections and influence than politically active students, who are constantly watched, imprisoned or forced into exile.

Who could imagine that these monks, living quietly in monasteries and studying Dhamma, would ever plan to rebel against the repressive regime? Yet history has shown that monks have long played a pivotal role in politics and that they would indeed dare such a bold and dangerous undertaking.

The role of political pongyis is controversial and potentially threatening to the ruling elite, although there has been a continuing debate on whether monks really should involve themselves in politics.

The Early Rebellion

Monks were involved in early outbreaks of resistance against British colonization, joining lay people in taking up arms against the British after seeing King Thibaw sent into exile.

Monks have their resistance martyrs—U Ottama, for instance, who led 3,000 rebels in the Salin area a year after the invasion of Mandalay. The rebel monk, also known as Bo Ottama, was captured and hanged by the British in 1889.

Interestingly, historians noted that monks who took up arms voluntarily defrocked themselves first, following the precept forbidding monks to take lives.

Another martyr, Saya San, who was  an ex-monk, led a peasant uprising in Tharrawaddy opposing the tax system imposed by the British. Burma's colonial masters sent 10,000 troops to quell the rebellion, capturing Saya San and sending him, too, to the gallows.

One of the top Burmese lawyers who defended Saya San at his trial was Dr Ba Maw, who later became head of state in Burma's Japanese-backed government.

Not all monks advocated armed struggle. Two who preached nonviolent resistance, U Wisara and another monk named U Ottama, spent many years in prison for their opposition to colonialism and their names have joined the list of independence heroes.

U Ottama, a globe-trotting, well-respected monk from Arakan State, was a powerful speaker whose calls for independence were featured in the national newspaper Thuriya. He once famously told the British Governor Sir Reginald Craddock to go home to Britain, in a speech that landed him in prison.

Like U Ottama, U Wisara was imprisoned several times for his public speeches and died in jail in 1929 after 166 days of a hunger strike. His prison sentences included terms of hard labor, and he was also defrocked.

Both monks became an inspiration to activists and students involved in the independence movement.

Scholar Michael Mendelson wrote in his "Sangha and State in Burma," that all politically active monks tended to be labeled by the colonial authorities as "political agitators in the yellow robes." Interestingly, a similar term is used by Burma's current leaders to describe protesting monks.

Historians wrote that the British authorities were surprised to learn the influential role of the Sangha community, and soon after the invasion of 1885 they abolished the position of "Supreme Patriarch," or Thathana-baing.

In former times, Burmese kings appointed Thathana-baing to govern the Sangha community and made them responsible for doctrinal instruction and discipline of all monks. But the position wasn't accepted by the entire Sangha. The progressive Shwegin sect was one group that rejected it. Sectarianism created controversy and bitter rivalry among monks.

During the Kon-Baung period in the 18th century, conflicts arose within the Sangha over how the monastic robes were supposed to be worn, and two conflicting sects arose—the so-called Ton Gaing and Yon Gaing.

The Burmese scholar Tin Maung Maung Than records that the Toun-goo and early Kon-Baung dynasties were drawn into the rivalry by their royal patronage of one party or the other. In 1782, King Bodawphaya intervened in the controversy by siding with Ton Gaing.

One experienced colonial political officer, Col Edward Sladen, conversant with the power of the Sangha, advised British authorities to maintain the Thathana-baing system in order to head off conflicts in governing the predominately Buddhist country.

The role of Thathana-baing was undoubtedly a complicated one, involving a direct link between the monarchy and the Sangha. The Thathana-baing wielded influence and could even intervene in state affairs. One respected abbot even persuaded King Mindon to abandon corvée labor for his irrigation projects. It's ironic that the current regime argues that forced labor is a feature of Burmese tradition and a means of making merit.

After independence, however, the influence of Buddhism and the Sangha went into decline, except for a period under the late prime minister U Nu, a devout Buddhist.

U Nu himself was ordained as a monk several times and rarely exploited Buddhism for his own political ends. Under his government, the Sixth Great Buddhist World Council was held in 1954, and he also created the Buddha Sasana Council.

Tin Maung Maung Than noted in his book, "Sangha Reforms and Renewal of Sasana in Myanmar: Historical trends and Contemporary Practice": "Because of various Gaing and sectarianism U Nu failed to take effective reforms in spite of institutionalization of Buddhism within the state superstructure and notwithstanding the holding of the Sixth Buddhist Synod in 1954."

U Nu also attempted to legalize Buddhism as the state religion in 1961. The attempt was considered to be a misguided policy, and it anyway failed to materialize as U Nu was ousted by Gen Ne Win one year later.

Ne Win regarded monks as a potential opposition and he developed a different strategy to control them. In the mid-1960s, his regime called a Sangha conference to issue monks with identification cards. Young monks and abbots stayed away from the gathering.

It wasn't until 1980 that Ne Win succeeded in containing the monks by establishing a "State Sangha Nayaka Committee," after a carefully orchestrated campaign to discredit the Sangha. Part of the campaign was to discredit a famous monk, Thein Phyu Sayadaw, who was accused of romantic involvement with a woman. He was defrocked.

Before the campaign, intelligence officers and informants of the government infiltrated the temples as monks and gathered information about monks and abbots.

Some well-known abbots, including Mahasi Sayadaw, an internationally respected monk who was invited by U Nu in 1947 to teach Vipassana meditation, were also targeted in the campaign.

Anthropologist Gustaaf Houtmann wrote in his paper "Mental Culture in Burmese Crisis Politics" that the regime had "distributed leaflets accusing Mahasi of talking with the nat spirits, and it was claimed that the Tipitaka Mingun Sayadaw, Burma's top Buddhist scholar, had been involved in some unsavory incident two years after entering the monkhood." Both monks were victims of their refusal to cooperate with the regime.

A number of scholars and historians noted, however, that some abbots accused and charged by the government were indeed involved in scandals and had romantic relationship with women or nuns.

The regime's campaign sometimes took bizarre forms. Rumors were circulated, for instance, suggesting that one Rangoon monk, U Laba, was a cannibal. Several famous abbots were implicated in scandals and were either defrocked or fled to neighboring Thailand. Ne Win successfully launched a "Sangha reform"—also known as "Cleaning Up the Sangha."

The government managed to get some recognition from elderly Buddhists by forming the Sangha Committee. But Ne Win did not pretend to be a devout Buddhist. He rarely participated in Sangha meetings and held few religious ceremonies during the 26 years of his rule. Unlike current leaders, he was rarely seen with monks.

During the 1988 uprising, however, his government asked the Sangha Committee to help restore order, and senior monks appeared in live television broadcasts appealing to the public for calm.

In August, 1988, days after the massacre in Rangoon, monks expressed sorrow for the loss of life, but—to the surprise of many—they also appealed to the regime to govern in accordance with the 10 duties prescribed for rulers of the people. The appeal failed to calm the public mood, but the message did remind many Burmese of the "10 duties of rulers"—the monks were telling Ne Win to be a good ruler.

On August 30, the Working People's Daily reported: "1,500 members of the Sangha marched in procession through the Rangoon streets and gathered in front of the Rangoon General Hospital emergency ward, where they recited "Metta Sutta" in memory of rahans (monks), workers and students who fell in the struggle for democracy." Many young monks were among the demonstrators.

For many Burmese, the struggle for democracy is not yet over and the discord between the Sangha and the ruling generals remains strong.

Unlike Ne Win and U Nu, the generals who came to power in 1988 openly and audaciously schemed to buy off the Sangha community. They have also claimed to be protectors of the Sangha, although their motive is to gain political legitimacy.

Aside from holding numerous merit-making ceremonies, offering hsoon and valuable gifts to monks, the military leaders are launching well-publicized pagoda restoration projects throughout Burma. Nevertheless, confrontations between rebellious monks and the authorities continue.

In Mandalay in 1990, troops fired on the crowds, killing several people, including monks. Angered by the military's brutality, Mandalay monks began a patta ni kozana kan, refusing to accept alms from members of the armed forces and their families.

The same action has now been taken by monks in several provinces after authorities beat protesting monks in Pakokka, central Burma.

"Patta ni kozana kan" can be called in response to any one of eight offences, including vilifying or making insidious comparisons between monks, inciting dissension among monks or defaming Buddha, the Dhamma or the Sangha.

A "patta ni kozana kan" campaign can be called off if the offended monks receive what they accept as a proper apology from the individuals or authorities involved. This procedure involves a ceremony held by at least four monks inside the Buddhist ordination hall, at which the boycott would be canceled.

Some monks in Burma may believe that the "patta ni kozana kan" of 1990 is still in effect, since they haven't yet received any proper apology—only a harsh crackdown. At that time, monks refused to attend religious ceremonies held by military officials and family members.

In one incident, the Mandalay Division commander at the time, Maj-Gen Tun Kyi, who later became trade minister, invited senior monks and abbots to attend a religious ceremony but no one showed up. Military leaders realized the seriousness of the boycott and decided to launch a crackdown.

In Mandalay alone, more than 130 monasteries were raided and monks were defrocked and imprisoned. As many as 300 monks nationwide were defrocked and arrested.

Former political prisoners recalled that monks who shared prison quarters with them continued to practice their faith despite being forced to wear prison uniforms and being officially stripped of their membership of the Sangha.

Several monks, including the highly respected Thu Mingala, a Buddhist literature laureate, and at least eight other respected senior abbots, were arrested. Thu Mingala was sentenced to eight years imprisonment.

Apart from being stripped of their robes, imprisoned monks in Mandalay were forced to wear white prison uniforms and were taunted with nicknames instead of being addressed with their true titles, according to former political prisoners.

One year later, in 1991, the then head of the military junta, Snr-Gen Saw Maung, suffered a nervous breakdown and retired for health reasons. Buddhist Burmese still say this was punishment for his maltreatment of the monks.

The 1990 crackdown divided the Sangha community.  The late Mingun Sayadaw, who was secretary of the State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee, was ridiculed by young monks for not supporting the boycott campaign. He was at one time called "senior general Mingun Sayadaw," and when he visited one temple in Mandalay young monks reportedly saluted him.

Today, while rebellious monks are prepared to go to prison, many senior monks and abbots are allowing themselves to become government tools by accepting gifts and large donations from the generals. By cuddling up to the ruling generals, these elderly abbots can no longer speak for the Sangha community at large, let alone comment on the suffering of the Burmese people. The divisions between abbots and young monks have inevitably widened.

The generals, on the other hand, won't give up easily. In one spectacular bid to win the hearts and minds of the people, they borrowed a Buddha tooth relic from China and toured the country with it and also held a World Buddhist Summit.

In 1999, military leaders renovated Shwedagon Pagoda, after the Htidaw, the sacred umbrella, had been removed amid reports of  minor local earthquakes. Local people said the spirits of Shwedagon had been upset with the removal of the Htidaw. Restoration of the pagoda complex did nothing to help the generals' image, though.

The generals have also applied "divide and rule" strategies in dealing with the Sangha community and the opposition.

In 1996, the regime accused the National League for Democracy of infiltrating the Sangha with the aim of committing subversive acts against the authorities. The generals obviously did not want to see opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi developing too close a relationship with the monks.

In an attempt to neutralize the political role of Suu Kyi, the government sent a famous,  London-based monk, Dr Rewatta Dhamma, to visit the detained opposition leader in 1995. Claiming to be a peace-broker between Suu Kyi and the generals, the monk shuttled between her and top leaders. But his mission failed and he returned to London. Skeptics believe the generals had merely used U Rewatta in a bid to persuade Suu Kyi to relinquish politics.

Ironically, the regime leaders publicly accused Suu Kyi of being a communist and of sacrilege because she had said in a campaign speech that "any human being can become a Buddha in this life."

Soon after her release from her first term of house arrest in 1995, Suu Kyi immediately traveled to Karen State, followed by infuriated intelligence officers. She went there to make an offering to "Thamanya Sayadaw."

Traditionally, temples have provided hiding places for activists, and in 1988 monks offered shelter to fugitives from the intelligence authorities.

At one time, the regime even placed restrictions on opposition members, preventing them from ordaining as monks. Like universities and schools, politically active monasteries are under heavy surveillance.

The widely respected abbot Bhaddanta Vinaya, known as Thamanya  Sayadaw because he lived on Thamanya Hill, was involved in projects to help villagers in the area, work that was shunned by the generals.

He was revered not only for the mystical powers he was said to possess, but also because of his refusal to kowtow to the regime leaders. He once famously refused to accept the gift of a luxury vehicle from the then powerful intelligence chief Gen Khin Nyunt.

Khin Nyunt could not buy Thamanya.

It may indeed be wrong to assume that Burma's regime leaders are devout Buddhists. The generals and their families seem to place more trust in astrology and numerology than in Buddhist ritual. They treasure white elephants and lucky charms and are constantly seeking advice from astrologers.

Birds of a feather, such as the generals and their chief astrologers, not only flock together but fall together, too. Ne Win's family astrologer, Aung Pwint Khaung, was arrested in 2002 when the former dictator and his family were charged with high treason.

Khin Nyunt's chief astrologer, Bodaw Than Hla, was imprisoned after the former Prime Minister and Military Intelligence chief was toppled in 2004.

Many Burmese may find it hard to believe that their military leaders are actually preserving Buddhism. Even when they are building pagodas and erecting Buddha images, the projects are based on astrological predictions and readings.

Who, for instance, advised Ne Win to ride a wooden horse on his aircraft and to ask the pilot to circle his birthplace nine times? Who advised him to issue banknotes in denominations of 45 and 90 kyat?

Who advised Khin Nyunt to dress up in women's clothing, complete with the signature flower that Suu Kyi wears, in order to steal power from "the Lady"? Who told Than Shwe to move his capital to central Burma?

It certainly wasn't a belief in Buddhist tenets. Nor does Buddhism permit the military to beat, defrock, imprison and kill monks.

The decline of Buddhism and the rise of militarism in Burma are a source of concern for the people of Burma. Thus, it is no surprise to hear social critics and political pongyis maintain that the generals who kneel down before images of Buddha are the real threat to Buddhism and Dhamma.

The post The Power Behind the Robe appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

EU, Singapore Conclude Far-Reaching Trade Deal

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 12:05 AM PDT

Skyscrapers of Singapore's central business district are pictured at dusk. (Photo: Reuters)

BRUSSELS — The European Union and Singapore submitted for approval on Friday one of the world’s most comprehensive free trade agreements, which the EU sees as a stepping stone towards a wider deal with Southeast Asia.

The chief negotiators of both sides presented the entire text of the agreement on Friday after initialing each page of the roughly 1,000-page document.

Subject to approval in Singapore and by the 28 EU member states and the European Parliament, the agreement should enter into force in late 2014 or early 2015.

Trade in goods between the two topped 52 billion euros (about US $70 billion) in 2012 and in services 28 billion euros ($38 billion) in 2011. Mutual investment has reached 190 billion euros ($256 billion).

The European Union sees a free trade deal as opening the door to a deal with other members of the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), which has set a goal of economic integration by 2015.

The EU and Asean launched free trade talks in 2007, but abandoned them two years later, the EU choosing instead to conduct bilateral talks with individual members.

The European Commission is already negotiating free trade accords with Malaysia and Vietnam and launched talks in March with Thailand.

Singapore has a population of just 5 million people, against some 600 million for the whole of Asean, but accounts for about a third of all EU-Asean trade and more than 60 percent of all investment between the two regions.

The deal goes beyond many other free trade accords in committing to open up public procurement, an area where the EU has many leading suppliers, and agreeing on technical standards in areas such motor vehicles, electronics and green technologies.

For example, a car made according to EU standards will be accepted for sale in Singapore.

The European Union also gains better protection of "geographical indications", region-specific products such as Parma ham or champagne.

EU tariffs on virtually all items from Singapore will disappear over five years. Singapore has committed to its existing zero tariffs on EU imports.

Singapore is likely to benefit from reduced tariffs for pharmaceutical and petrochemical products.

In services, particularly financial, the agreement will ensure the right to sell directly or establish branches in each other’s markets and promises to provide greater transparency over the award of licenses.

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Diplomatic Tension Over Hong Kong Exposes Fragility of Hopes for Democracy

Posted: 19 Sep 2013 11:38 PM PDT

Pro-democracy protesters, with Hong Kong colonial flags, chant slogans during a protest to demand universal suffrage. (Photo: Reuters / Tyrone Siu)

HONG KONG — From China warning Western nations to stop meddling in Hong Kong to Communist Party-backed newspapers describing "plots" by foreign spies to seize the city, a growing row over electoral reform has exposed the fragility of hopes for full democracy.

Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule in 1997 with wide-ranging autonomy, an independent judiciary and relatively free press under the formula of "one country, two systems"—along with an undated promise of full democracy, a subject never raised by the British during 150 years of colonial rule.

The implications stretch beyond the shores of Hong Kong, a glamorous, free-wheeling global financial hub. The Hong Kong model has been held up by Beijing as a possible solution for self-ruled Taiwan, which China considers a breakaway province that must return to the fold, by force if necessary.

Hong Kong elects its next leader in 2017 in what will be the most far-reaching version of democracy on Chinese soil. But Beijing's top representative in Hong Kong has ruled out open nominations for candidates, meaning he or she will be chosen by a committee stacked with Beijing loyalists.

British Foreign Office minister Hugo Swire this week called for universal suffrage in the 2017 polls, saying Hong Kong people should get a genuine choice. China said it would not tolerate outside interference.

Michael Davis, a constitutional law specialist at the University of Hong Kong, said foreign states had a legitimate interest in Hong Kong, noting how China had once courted international support for "one country, two systems."

But Beijing, he said, was now suspicious of their motives.

"At its heart it is a kind of insecurity," Davis said. "China is at that stage of development where it constantly attempts to edit inbound criticism, and that is what we are seeing here."

The United States and its large Hong Kong consulate are also being targeted by Beijing and its allies—something Washington's new top envoy, Clifford Hart, is expected to address when he delivers his first Hong Kong speech next week.

Diplomats from both Western and Asian nations fear their routine work to reach out to political and business contacts in the city is growing difficult as Beijing rails at "foreign interference."

Party-backed newspapers in the city have long questioned the activities of foreign diplomats, this week upping the ante with claims that British spies are highly active, subverting politics with leaks from colonial-era files.

"The diplomatic community is a core part of Hong Kong's international edge," one Asian diplomat said. "But we feel a bit squeezed and unwelcome … we are entering a very sensitive time."

Hong Kong remains by far the freest city in greater China but tensions are rising. Every year, on the anniversary of the 1997 handover, thousands take to the streets demanding fully democratic elections, some openly declaring their support for the British.

Pro-democracy groups have threatened to seal off the central business district next year as part of a campaign of civil disobedience. The most prominent Catholic in greater China, Cardinal Joseph Zen, warned last month that the government and pro-Beijing supporters might try to incite violence.

"We're at a point where the significance of the issues on the table are such that the [leaders] responsible for Hong Kong are paying very close attention," said a Western diplomat.

The diplomat added the hardening of China's stance toward Hong Kong was a decision made by senior Beijing leaders.

"It's being directed at the [Politburo] Standing Committee level," a Western diplomat said, referring to the Chinese Communist Party's highest decision-making body. "We have solid indications of this."

US, British and other multinationals maintain a strong presence in the city while foreign warships stop frequently in its dynamic and strategic port.

British officials have yet to respond to the Chinese criticism of Swire's comments. China's Hong Kong-based Foreign Ministry representative, Song Zhe, also issued an explicit warning to US Consul-General Hart against interfering in local affairs.

Consulate spokesman Scott Robinson defended Hart's work, saying the envoy had met with a range of leaders across government, business, politics and academia.

"Such meetings are the standard practice of diplomatic representatives of nations around the world at the outset of their tenures, and they are important for building relationships, exchanging views and opening lines of communications," he said.

Long-standing US policy toward Hong Kong was unchanged, he said—including support for progress toward "genuine universal suffrage."

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Philippine President Calls on Rebels to Surrender

Posted: 19 Sep 2013 11:29 PM PDT

The hands of a Muslim rebel of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) who surrendered to government soldiers are seen secured with an electric wire at a police station in Zamboanga city in southern Philippines on Sept. 19. (Photo: Reuters)

ZAMBOANGA, Philippines — The Philippine president called on the last rebel holdouts holding residents hostage in coastal communities in the south to surrender Thursday and prevent further bloodshed as a major government offensive to end an 11-day standoff crawled toward an end.

More than 200 Moro National Liberation Front rebels stormed five communities on the coastal outskirts of Zamboanga city on Sept. 9 and took about 200 residents hostage. A ground, sea and air offensive by 4,500 soldiers and police has left about 40 insurgents holding around 20 hostages, officials said.

Assault troops have calibrated their firepower to protect trapped civilians, slowing down an offensive by an overwhelming number of troops, the military said.

Fresh clashes killed an army commando and six rebels Thursday. Some of the gunmen set clusters of houses on fire in the hard-hit community of Sta. Catalina in an apparent effort to cover their escape, while 15 insurgents, all looking famished and exhausted, emerged from a mangrove and surrendered, police said.

Despite the remaining hostilities, life has crept back to normal in the port city of nearly a million people, with its international airport reopening to two commercial flights from Manila after days of closure and many downtown shops resuming business.

A smiling President Benigno Aquino III, who has overseen the offensive since Friday, went to Zamboanga's airport to welcome the passengers. Facing reporters later, he said the rebels still had the option to surrender.

"Life is precious to me," Aquino said, addressing the rebel holdouts. "You may want to consider your life precious as well."

"It is not too late to end this, so we can put a stop to the deaths and injuries. That is in your hands," Aquino said.

Led by rebel leader Nur Misuari, the group dropped its demand for a separate Muslim state and signed an autonomy deal with the government in 1996, but the guerrillas did not lay down their arms and later accused the government of reneging on a promise to develop long-neglected Muslim regions in the predominantly Roman Catholic Philippines.

Misuari's group later splintered into factions and faded in the background.

Another rebel group, the 11,000-strong Moro Islamic Liberation Front, became dominant and engaged the government in peace talks brokered by Malaysia. As the talks progressed starting last year toward a new and potentially larger autonomy deal for minority Muslims in the south, Misuari and his forces felt left out and increasingly turned restive.

More than 100 rebels and their commanders who have been captured or surrendered will likely be charged with rebellion, as well as violating international humanitarian laws that forbid taking people hostage and using them as human shields and occupying civilian communities.

Misuari has not been seen since the rebel siege began, but Aquino said there was growing evidence of his involvement.

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Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


If not now, then when? The need for a nationwide ceasefire

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 02:21 AM PDT

From 11-12 September 2013, an ethnic delegation led by Saw Htoo Htoo Lay, Saw Ta Doh Moo from the Karen National Union, Sai La, Sai Ngeun from the Restoration Council of Shan State, Lian Sakhong from the Burma Centre for Ethnic Studies, and Harn Yawnghwe from the Euro-Burma Office met with the government's peace making technical team led by Hla Maung Shwe. The meeting was the first major step towards solidifying the peace process and creating a substantial nationwide ceasefire agreement based on the framework created by the Working Group for Ethnic Coordination.

There has been constant discussion, often motivated by concerns in relation to trust and individual control issues, between all ethnic parties in relation to the negotiation process.  However the September meeting, and its outcome, was able to allay many of those concerns and put forward a mutually agreeable framework that could see a nationwide ceasefire by the end of November thus laying the groundwork for an all inclusive political dialogue before the 2015 election.

The nationwide ceasefire, and its implementation as early as possible, is an essential first stage in securing the environment for a future political dialogue. Previous agreements have been characterised by frequent territorial incursions and sporadic clashes. It is hoped, therefore, that a nationwide ceasefire agreement will provide a much more comprehensive mechanism for dealing with such occurrences and will establish joint ceasefire committees responsible for monitoring and settling disputes.

While previous agreements have often contained similar points, they have been ill-defined and territorial boundaries and codes of conduct have been neglected by both sides. The nationwide ceasefire, which includes the provision for the acceptance of a mutually binding code of conduct, will provide a much more all-encompassing agreement including detailed references to humanitarian assistance, troop redeployment and clearly defined areas of operation.

That said, however, a number of detractors in armed ethnic groups still remain and air concerns in relation to the precise timing of a nationwide ceasefire. The Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO), which has had experience dealing with previous military governments, remains sceptical and has demanded that political dialogue should be conducted prior to a ceasefire. The United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC), which is largely influenced by the KIO, maintains that it alone should negotiate with the government thus removing individual armed groups ability to negotiate on behalf of the people they represent.

While the KIO has changed a number of its demands in an effort to negotiate with the government, its involvement with the UNFC, and those of other members, has tied it to following the UNFC position. Most recently the UNFC has collaborated with the United Nationalities Alliance (UNA) which is comprised of ethnic political parties that had contested the 1990 election. The UNA has agreed to work with the UNFC in rewriting the constitution and is also working with the National League for Democracy in writing constitutional amendments.

There is little doubt that constitutional amendments need to be made and neither the government nor the majority of armed ethnic groups disagree on the subject. All relevant actors are prepared to see changes made to the constitution, what remains is the problem of recognising the importance of a nationwide ceasefire prior to constitutional reform, political dialogue and finally the emergence of a federal union.

Two of the largest armed actors, the Karen National Union (KNU) and the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) have distanced themselves from the UNFC's position noting that it is up to individual groups to decide their political destiny. As a result, as the September meeting shows, they are prepared, quite correctly, to move forward with a nationwide ceasefire regardless of the dictates of other armed ethnic groups. While previously, especially at the time of the predominance of the KNU at Manerplaw, ethnic alliances were considered infallible, the environment over the past two years has changed.

A number of ethnic leaders, perhaps understandably, maintain an almost cold war era attitude in relation to the current Burmese government. And it is this attitude that could threaten the peace process and thus endangers any opportunity for the people of their respective states to progress. This, added to the various voices of special interest groups, primarily based outside of the country, adds to the negative image of the process and thus weakens any attempt by armed ethnic groups to move forward.

In reality, most stakeholders, armed ethnic groups, the government, and opposition political parties have admitted that they are prepared to accept the same thing: a nationwide ceasefire, political dialogue, constitutional amendments and finally a federal union. While these voices differ in how to achieve such goals, it is the first time that all sides have agreed on the same issues.

It is quite clear that there is still a long way to go before achieving the said goals, but the time for procrastination is over. A nationwide ceasefire – which, one must note, does not entail the disarmament of armed ethnic groups – is a necessity now, not later. As has often been the case throughout this long conflict, the need for dialogue amongst ethnic groups has often outweighed the need for action. Now is the time to lay down a strong foundation for political dialogue that envisions a future federal union and  it is imperative that minor political differences be yielded to achieve this goal.

Paul Keenan is Senior Researcher at the Burma Centre for Ethnic Studies and author of "By Force of Arms – Burma's Armed Ethnic Groups".

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect DVB’s editorial opinion.

Villagers beat, apprehend 30 policemen in Pyinmana

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 01:27 AM PDT

About 10 policemen have been hospitalised in Naypyidaw after a clash with residents in the Pyinmana suburb of Wegyi early on Thursday morning. The incident happened when police raided the house of a local National League for Democracy (NLD) member to arrest him for allegedly supporting local farmers who had defiantly begun ploughing land previously confiscated from them.

Zaw Latt, the NLD member in question, said about 30 policemen forcibly entered his house around 1:30am on Thursday and proceeded to beat him up until they themselves became prey to a large crowd of villagers who descended upon them when the man's wife started crying that bandits were raiding their house.

"The police rushed into our house – about four or five of them stamped on my neck and put handcuffs on me. They also attacked my wife and tried to tear off her clothes, and even punched my five-year-old daughter in the face," said Zaw Latt.

The villagers subsequently subdued the police and detained 27 of them until daybreak when dozens more police officers came to rescue their comrades.

"Around 200 armed policemen came at dawn, shouting warnings that they were prepared to use their guns, and dragged their fellow officers out of the village," said Zaw Latt.

An official at nearby Kyidaunggan police station confirmed the incident but declined to give further details.

Whistleblower welcomes Burma’s nuclear cooperation

Posted: 20 Sep 2013 12:52 AM PDT

Nuclear whistleblower and former military engineer in the Burmese army, Sai Thein Win, says Naypyidaw is "doing what needs to be done" by signing an agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on Tuesday.

The Additional Protocol would give UN weapons inspectors wider access to facilities that could be used to develop nuclear technology.

The Additional Protocol was signed by Burma's Foreign Affairs minister, Wunna Maung Lwin (right) and IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano (left) (Photo: D Calma/IAEA)

The Additional Protocol was signed by Burma’s Foreign Affairs minister, Wunna Maung Lwin (right) and IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano (left) (Photo: D Calma/IAEA)

In 2010 Sai Thein Win leaked sensitive documents and photographs to DVB, which amounted to evidence that Burma had a nascent nuclear weapons programme.

 Sai Thein Win says he welcomes Burma's cooperation with the UN's nuclear agency.

"Since nuclear ambition is a dangerous thing and instead of pursuing it the 'Burmese' way, the government is now openly working with international organisations," he said.

He went on to say that he thought the Burmese government was abandoning the project because they hadn't got very far with their nuclear programme.

"According to analysis by experts including Robert Kelley, it was likely going to take them about 20 years to reach fruition, and as they had not got very far with the project, it was rather expendable," said Sai Thein Win.

When asked whether the agreement was a sign that the Burmese government was becoming more transparent, Sai Thein Win expressed caution.

"The question is—are they going to allow inspections at the defence industry or will they let them inspect Thabeikkyin? [location of a supposedly secret nuclear facility, reported by DVB in 2010]," Sai Thein Win said.

"We will have to wait and see to what extent of transparency they have when dealing with the IAEA."

According to the Associated Press, the US welcomed the move saying the agreement was "the latest step by the former pariah nation toward openness."

Analysts have insisted that signing the Additional Protocol is only a first step, and that it could take years before the document is ratified and enforced under domestic law.

For more background on ex-Maj. Sai Thein Win:
http://www.dvb.no/burmas-nuclear-ambitions/burmas-nuclear-ambitions-nuclear/sai-thein-win/9291