Tuesday, February 11, 2014

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


In Maungdaw Village, Residents Fret Over Missing Family Members

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 04:58 AM PST

Muslim, Buddhist, conflict, Rohingya, Arakan State, Rakhine, inter-communal violence, religious violence, human rights, Myanmar

A woman from the Rohingya Muslim village of Du Chee Yar Tan, in Maungdaw Township, shows reporters a damaged house. (Photo: Sanay Lin / The Irrawaddy)

DU CHEE YAR TAN, Maungdaw Township — Zuu Lar Har is living in deep distress as she has been waiting more than three weeks for her 18-year-old daughter Zuu Kai to turn up.

The 60-year-old Muslim resident of Du Chee Yar Tan village in Maungdaw Township, Arakan State, said she feared for the life of Zuu Kai after she disappeared during the tumultuous events of Jan. 13, when, according to accounts of local villagers, an Arakanese Buddhist mob violently raided the village.

Zuu Lar Har said her daughter had been sick and bed-ridden when the alleged attack took place, and as the Muslim villagers fled Zuu Kai went missing. "I thought my daughter had come along with the family, but later I found she hadn't," Zuu Lar Har said.

"I do not know whether she is still alive or not. I am really worried about her security. I only trust that Allah provides for her safety," she told Irrawaddy reporters who visited Du Chee Yar Tan village early last week. "If she is still alive, she would have contacted us or came back to our family because she is 18 years old already and her mind is fine."

The village in the south of Maungdaw Township, located in northern Arakan State, is the site of the alleged killing of dozens of Rohingyas, according to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, who said that police and an Arakanese mob were involved in the supposed attack on Jan. 13. Médicine Sans Frontières (MSF) said it treated 22 wounded people from the village in days following the supposed attack.

Burma's government has, however, vehemently denied mob violence took place and has insisted that a police sergeant named Aung Kyaw Thein was attacked by Muslim villagers during a patrol on Jan. 13 and subsequently went missing. The government claims that the Rohingya Solidarity Organization (RSO), a little-known Islamic militant group, was involved in the killing of the policeman.

Officials reject allegations, made by the UN rights office, that police might have let an Arakanese Buddhist mob loose on the Muslim village in an apparent retaliation for the killing of the policeman. Inter-communal violence between Muslims and Buddhists in western Burma's Arakan State has killed scores and left more than 140,000 people displaced since 2012.

Burma's government has allowed UN staff and foreign diplomats to inspect Du Chee Yar Tan village, and encouraged journalists to visit the site in Maungdaw, a Muslim-majority region on the border with Bangladesh where access is severely restricted.

Irrawaddy reporters were allowed to travel outside of Maungdaw town last week, but were warned against entering Du Chee Yar Tan village alone.

"They do not trust other people except Muslims. So, if you are going inside the village it will be dangerous for you," police lieutenant Wai Phyo Zaw said, adding that he would send no less than 10 well-armed officers into the area for any operation.

During an unaccompanied visit to Du Chee Yar Tan village, reporters witnessed ample signs of recent violence as dozens of the wooden and thatched-roofed homes appeared destroyed, looted or abandoned. Only about 60 villagers remained of the original population of several thousand Muslims, most of who are believed to have fled to surrounding villages.

The impoverished villagers appeared anxious and an atmosphere of fear prevailed in the village. Interviews with about 20 villagers revealed that all had fled on the night of Jan. 13 when word spread of an approaching Arakanese mob from the nearby village of Na Da La, located about a kilometer away.

None of the interviewees could provide an eye witness account of the mob attack as they fled to other nearby Muslim villages, but all were adamant that the destruction in the village had been caused by the mob, while many said that they had lost touch with family members. Few disputed the report that a policeman had been attacked earlier on Jan. 13.

Har Ja Ra, a 45-year-old woman from the southern part of the village, said two of her daughters, Saw May Dar, 16, and Ah Gyi Dar, 14, had gone missing since the alleged Arakanese mob attack.

Villagers said they worried that their missing family members had been arrested or killed, but none stated that they had witnessed any dead bodies in the village. "We will only know the exact number of disappeared when all people come back to the village," said Ahmed Hussein.

Police lieutenant Wai Phyo Zaw said 16 Muslim villagers had been arrested in relation to the disappearance of the police sergeant.

Representatives of the Arakanese community flatly rejected allegations of an Arakanese mob attack on Jan. 13 and dismissed the claims that dozens of inhabitants of Du Chee Yar Tan village had since gone missing.

Khin Maung Gyi, a senior member of the recently-formed Arakan National Party, said in a phone call from Sittwe, "They [Muslims] always say their people have disappeared when they feel that they are not safe. Now [they do so] because the police is trying to make arrests among them because they killed a police officer."

Nyo Aye, an Arakanese activist who has led campaigns calling on international aid groups to stop providing care to Muslim communities, claimed the inhabitants of Du Chee Yar Tan village were receiving instructions from MSF. "They lie about how their people were killed in the village. They do what MSF told them to do. But, it is not true about the killings," she said.

Preliminary investigations by the Myanmar Human Rights Commission and an Arakan State government commission have so far found no evidence of a mob attack and only established that a police officer has gone missing.

The US government has called on Naypyidaw to set up an independent investigation team that includes at least one international expert—a suggestion that Burmese officials have rejected.

On Friday, the government announced that a new commission will investigate events in Du Chee Yar Tan village in order to establish the "root cause" of the death of a policeman. The announcement, however, failed to specify if the investigation will address allegations made by the United Nations that dozens of Muslims were killed.

The post In Maungdaw Village, Residents Fret Over Missing Family Members appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Marching Villagers Call for Burma Minister to Be Sacked Over Comments

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 04:31 AM PST

Myanmar, Burma, protest, Ohn Myint, slap, Magwe, Magway,

Minister of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development Ohn Myint, whose recent comments in Magwe Division have sparked protests. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

More than 1,000 villagers in Magwe Division demonstrated on Monday calling for the dismissal of a government minister caught on tape making offensive remarks.

One protest leader was charged in Aung Lan Township on Tuesday under the controversial Article 18 of the Peaceful Assembly Law, since the authorities did not give permission for the protest to go ahead, making it illegal under the law.

Aung Lan residents marched along the town's main street, reportedly shouting slogans—including "We don't want the union minister who would slap the public"—and demanding that action is taken against Minister of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development Ohn Myint.

Remarks made by Ohn Myint, a former military general, to locals in Magwe town's Thityakauk village last month have caused widespread outrage. A video posted online shows him ranting and people demanding clean drinking water on Jan. 28. In the video, the minister declares that he would not hesitate to "slap" anyone who opposes government policies.

"I can go around and slap everyone's faces… If anyone insults or opposes the government, [I will] hit them and lock them up," the minister was recorded saying.

Protest leader Myat Ko told The Irrawaddy that he was called to the township police station on Tuesday morning, and will have to appear before a court for holding the protest without permission.

"The head of township police U Htay Maung told me that I am charged with Article 18 [of Peaceful Assembly Law] and I am now on bail," he said.

Scores of activists across Burma have been jailed under Article 18 in recent years, but President Thein Sein issued an amnesty on Dec. 31 freeing all those jailed for the charge and dropping all standing charges under the article. The article is still in the law, however, and Parliament is yet to discuss amending it.

The cabinet minister' remarks were widely criticized in the Burmese media, and led to a small protest in downtown Rangoon on Feb. 3 calling for Ohn Myint's dismissal. A lawmaker has also raised the incident in Parliament.

Myat Ko said that Aung Lan residents had asked for permission to demonstrate on Feb. 5, but police rejected the request on Feb. 7, saying that the protest would block the main street and market.

Myat Ko said the police's reason for not permitting for protest was "unacceptable because we were protesting peacefully and without causing any trouble."

Aye Myint, a leader of the National League for Democracy in Aung Lan, said the protesters were only exercising their rights by demonstrating.

"We expected that we would not get the permission and the township police chief responded that the protest would not be allowed, but we continued with our plan as it is our constitutional right to gather and demonstrate our desire in accordance with Article 354 of the 2008 Constitution," he said.

Article 354 states that "every citizen shall be at liberty in the exercise of the following rights – (b) to assembly peacefully without arms and holding procession – if not contrary to the laws, enacted for Union security, prevalence of law and order, community peace and tranquility of public order and morality."

The post Marching Villagers Call for Burma Minister to Be Sacked Over Comments appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Burma’s Government to Appoint a Second Woman Minister

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 03:49 AM PST

Myanmar, Burma, government, parliament, education, women, women in politics

Khin San Yi will be appointed as Burma's new education minister if Parliament approves. (Photo: Embassy of Israel)

RANGOON — Burma's president is set to appoint Khin San Yi, formerly a deputy minister of planning and economic development, as the new education minister, bringing the number of woman ministers in the government to two.

Minister for Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement Myat Myat Ohn Khin is currently the only woman holding one of the 36 union ministerial positions in the Burma government. There are just six female deputy ministers, and only 28 of the 664 lawmakers in both houses of Burma's Parliament are women—one of the lowest levels of representation in the legislature in the world.

Khin San Yi's nomination by President Thein Sein—which comes after the death of her predecessor Mya Aye in December—will go ahead as long as it is approved by Parliament during a meeting on Feb. 14.

The Union minister of National Planning and Economic Development, Kan Zaw recommended her for the position, according to the Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development.

The appointment was welcomed both for increasing the number of women in higher government positions, and because of Khin San Yi's academic expertise.

Khin San Yi was a tutor at a regional college from 1987 to 2012 and then a rector at Rangoon Economic University before in April 2012 being appointed as a deputy minister at the Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development. She holds a Bachelor's Degree in Commerce in Accounting and Auditing, a Master's of Commerce in Trade and Marketing from Rangoon's Economic University, and a Doctorate in Economics from University of Göttingen in Germany.

Mi Myint Than, a lawmaker for the All Mon Regions Democracy Party told The Irrawaddy that the appointment was welcome.

"We support her and will not object after reading her biography. Currently, the government is facing lack of academics to choose from," she said.

However, Sandar Min, a member of Parliament with the National League for Democracy, said that while she would not vote to reject the appointment, Khin San Yi's expertise on education were questionable.

"She is an expert in economics according to a brief biography I read on her, but she seems to be weak in the education field," she said.

"She is more academic, but she used to teach at the Economic University. What we want is someone who is an expert in education, education policy and the state education system, and has good experience."

Salai Issac Khen, executive director of the Gender and Development Initiative Myanmar, said the new minister was a welcome addition to a government in which the majority of posts are filled by former military officials.

"It's fine as long as it's not from the military," he said.

"I am glad and welcomed that she is not only a woman but also an academic," said Salai Issac Khen. "She is an academic so she will know how to play [in the field of education] well. How she will implement and play will be more important than her background."

The post Burma's Government to Appoint a Second Woman Minister appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Myanma Airways to Lease 10 Boeing Jets With Expansion in Mind

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 02:24 AM PST

Myanmar, Burma, The Irrawaddy, Myanma Airways, AviaSolutions, General Electric Capital Aviation Services (GECAS), Singapore Airshow

A man prepares to fuel an ageing Myanma Airways plane in the city of Myitkyina, Kachin State. (Photo: Reuters)

RANGOON — Burma's national flag carrier Myanma Airways has inked a deal with General Electric Capital Aviation Services (GECAS) to lease 10 commercial aircraft, and has enlisted GECAS's AviaSolutions consulting arm to create and implement a strategic growth plan for the airline.

The subsidiary of the US conglomerate General Electric signed a contract with Myanmar Airways to lease 10 new Boeing narrow-body aircraft, with deliveries of the planes scheduled to begin in June 2015, Myanma Airway announced on Tuesday. The US$960 million contract calls for six Boeing 737-800 models and four Boeing 737-8 MAXs, with deliveries to be made through 2020.

A signing ceremony was held at the Singapore Airshow 2014 in the Southeast Asian city-state on Tuesday, with Burma's Transport Minister Nyan Tun Aung, Myanma Airways Managing Director Than Tun and officials from GE in attendance, Myanma Airways said. Derek Mitchell, the US ambassador to Burma, was also on hand to witness the deal.

Than Tun said at the signing ceremony that Myanma Airways was delighted to work with GECAS to develop and upgrade the carrier's fleet and expand routes into key markets in the region.

"Our collaboration with a leading multinational US company like GE will benefit the airline and the Myanmar economy," Than Tun said.

GECAS already leases two Embraer E190 aircraft to the state-owned airline.

"We're pleased at GE to work with Myanma Airways to provide new, state-of-the-art Boeing aircraft," said Norman Liu, president and CEO of GECAS.

GECAS, the commercial aircraft leasing and financing arm of General Electric, has a fleet of over 1,670 owned and serviced aircraft, contracted to more than 230 customers worldwide. In Tuesday's announcement, GE said its AviaSolutions would work with the airline's senior management on plans that include international expansion using the airline's newly leased Boeing jets to serve the business and tourism sectors.

Myanma Airways was established in 1948, then called the Union of Burma Airways. The state airline's current incarnation serves all major domestic destinations from its main base at Rangoon International Airport, but does not offer international routes.

"We are delighted to be supporting the national airline, Myanma Airways, in this period of growth for both the country and the airline. It is an exciting project and one that will leverage our airport and airline expertise," said John Carter, managing director of AviaSolutions, in a statement on Tuesday.

The state airline has not been immune to the aviation accidents that have blighted the domestic industry's reputation over the years. In 2012, two separate landing mishaps in the space of a month involving Myanma Airways MA60 turbo-prop planes led the carrier to ground its fleet of the Chinese-made planes. The 2009 crash-landing of a Myanma Airways flight in the Arakan State capital of Sittwe injured two passengers, and in 1998, two crashes in the same year killed a combined 50 people.

In 2008, the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office issued an advisory warning its staff to avoid flying Myanma Airways, citing the airline's failure to meet international safety standards.

Myanma Airways currently relies primarily on French/Italian-made ATRs for its commercial flight services.

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Nepal Picks Koirala as New PM, but Challenges Remain

Posted: 10 Feb 2014 10:08 PM PST

Newly elected Nepalese Prime Minister Sushil Koirala waves to media personnel as he walks out from the Parliament after being elected as prime minister in Kathmandu on Feb. 10, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Navesh Chitrakar)

KATHMANDU, Nepal — Nepal's parliament picked a social democrat as its new prime minister on Monday after a last-minute power-sharing deal ended a deadlock that had lasted since an election two months ago.

Sushil Koirala, the head of the centrist Nepali Congress party, was elected with support from the communist UML party, which holds the second largest number of seats in parliament.

Koirala, who was once jailed for his involvement in a plane hijacking and belongs to a noted political family, faces the task of drafting a new constitution for the Himalayan country.

Nepal, wedged between India and China, has been plagued by conflict, instability and intractable political division for years. It has been running under an interim constitution since the 2008 abolition of a centuries-old monarchy.

Both of its giant neighbors are trying to woo the desperately poor country as a geo-political ally and fear prolonged turmoil could turn it into a haven for international criminal gangs, militants and traffickers.

Koirala, 76, is the fourth member of his family to be become prime minister. He needed to be elected by a majority in parliament and his Nepali Congress party controls 194 seats in the 601-seat assembly. He won the support of 405 lawmakers.

The UML is made up of communists with more liberal political views than the Maoist former rebels who waged a civil war until 2006. UML leaders, reluctant to support Koirala, compromised after he agreed to a presidential election next year.

Koirala replaces Khil Raj Regmi, the Supreme Court chief justice who has headed a caretaker government since March last year. He now has the job of overseeing the preparation of a new constitution, one of the conditions of a 2006 peace deal that ended the decade-long war.

The charter has remained elusive because of differences about the political course the nascent republic should adopt. A previous attempt to write it failed after the term of a constituent assembly expired in 2012.

The soft-spoken Koirala is always seen wearing a black Nepali cap and sports a silver beard. He lacks experience in public administration and never held a government position when his party was in power for most of the past 23 years.

But he is known as a clean politician and was jailed in Nepal and India during the country's fight for democracy from the 1950s.

Koirala spent three years in Indian jails for his role in the hijacking of a Royal Nepal Airlines plane to the eastern Indian state of Bihar in 1973.

The plane was carrying thousands of dollars' worth of cash from Biratnagar in east Nepal to the capital Kathmandu. Koirala was among the five people who were waiting for the money.

"The money was meant to support the fight for democracy launched by his party against the absolute monarchy," said Dinesh Bhattarai, a retired Nepali ambassador to the United Nations now living in Kathmandu.

On Monday, Koirala was elected despite failing to win the support of all political parties.

"The new constitution is possible only with the consensus and unity among all political parties. My government will strive for that," Koirala told the parliament.

The Maoist former rebels, who dominated governments since joining the mainstream, suffered a stunning defeat in the polls.

They were offered a berth in the new cabinet but refused to participate, Koirala's aides said.

The Maoists fear that the two big parties could gang up against them to water down their vision of a federal and secular republic. Analysts say Koirala's challenge is to win their confidence in making the charter.

Shifting political winds have increased the economic woes of Nepal's 27 million people, one quarter of whom live on a daily income of less than US$2. The crisis has stunted efforts to create jobs, forcing thousands of young people to seek work abroad.

The post Nepal Picks Koirala as New PM, but Challenges Remain appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

First Key Protest Leader Arrested in Thailand

Posted: 10 Feb 2014 09:58 PM PST

Bangkok, Thailand, Suthep, Yingluck Shinawatra, shutdown, protest,

Anti-government protesters travel atop a bus near the Interior Ministry building that is being surrounded by fellow protesters in Bangkok Feb. 5, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

BANGKOK — Thai police made their first arrest of a senior leader of anti-government protests for violating the country's emergency law Monday as government officials promised to apprehend other leaders of the movement, too.

The arrest further heightens tensions in Thailand's three-month-old political conflict in which protesters seeking to overthrow Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra have shut down major intersections across Bangkok. Government officials have been threatening for weeks to arrest protest leaders.

Police arrested Sonthiyarn Cheunruethainaitham, the former managing director of news company Tnews, known for its anti-government views, said Department of Special Investigation's director-general Tharit Pengdit. He described Sonthiyarn as "a chief-of-staff" for the movement and "second most important figure" after protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban.

"We will continue arresting more protest leaders who have violated the law in the same way," Tharit said.

Arrest warrants have been issued for 19 leaders of the anti-government protests on the charges of violating the special law and authorities on Monday were seeking the court's approval for 13 other leaders on the same charges.

The arrest happened just hours after six street cleaners were injured—two seriously—by a small explosion at a protest site in downtown Bangkok. At least 10 people have been killed and scores hospitalized during the political upheaval.

The demonstrators, who mostly draw their support from the urban middle and upper class and those in the south, want Yingluck to step down to make way for an interim appointed government to implement what they say are necessary reforms to fight corruption.

She has refused to resign, arguing she was elected by a large majority and is open to reform, but that such a council would be unconstitutional and undemocratic.

Her government invoked the emergency decree last month following increasing attacks at protest sites prior to the Feb. 2 general election, allowing authorities to ban public gatherings, impose curfews and censor local news reports. The emergency decree, in effect for 60 days, also gives police expanded powers to make arrests, conduct searches and seize suspicious materials.

Sonthiyarn was apprehended at a hotel in northern Bangkok and is being held for questioning at a border patrol police base in the capital's northern outskirts. Under the state of emergency, a suspect can be held for 30 days without being charged, but police must seek request for detention every seven days.

The post First Key Protest Leader Arrested in Thailand appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Planemakers Look to Ink Asia Deals Despite Economic Worries

Posted: 10 Feb 2014 09:50 PM PST

Singapore, aerospace industry, aviation industry, arms trade, Asia, conflict, business, economics

South Korea Air Force’s Black Eagles perform a maneuver during an aerial display ahead of the Singapore Airshow February 9, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

SINGAPORE — Aerospace firms will finalize billions of dollars of deals at next week’s Singapore Airshow, hoping to ride out a storm in emerging markets whose prosperity is vital to their plans to keep producing record numbers of jets.

Asia’s largest aerospace gathering is usually a "show and tell" event where executives come to mingle with some of the world’s biggest long-haul carriers and Asia’s ambitious new travel tycoons, as well as the region’s busy military buyers.

After a record $200 billion of deals at last November’s Dubai Airshow, few expect Asian buyers to be ordering in similar quantities – yet the Feb. 11-16 event will test the appetite of one of aviation’s fastest growing regions.

"Asia is a huge market but has been somewhat eclipsed by the Gulf which has the same idea about how to pursue traffic and got to the orders race a few months before Singapore," said aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia, vice president at Virgina-based Teal Group.

Vietnamese, Indian and Thai carriers will place orders for over 100 Airbus or Boeing passenger jets worth $12 billion at list prices, industry officials say. Malaysian Airlines could also place an order for Airbus long-haul and medium-haul jets.

Both Airbus and Boeing have committed to record production rates for their most popular models and have longer-term plans to produce more than 100 narrowbody jets a month between them – churning out a $100 million jet every few working hours.

But executives will be looking out for any signs that financial turmoil in key aviation markets like Indonesia and Thailand will threaten economic growth, which directly determines the level of air traffic demand.

"The manufacturers might be getting ahead of themselves given the troubles in emerging markets," said Aboulafia.

"Many of these markets are in some form of currency crisis or economic downturn and the focus will be coming back to the Middle East and a hoped-for North American resurgence."

The world’s no. 1 planemaker Boeing does not see its commercial jet business affected by weakness in emerging markets, Chief Executive Jim McNerney said this week. But he noted more divergence among such countries, and China and the Middle East remained strong.

"Some perspective is very important. We have a short term blip in growth and the orders that are being placed are for the long term, for the requirements eight, nine or 10 years out," said Peter Harbison, chairman of the aviation analysts CAPA.

Airbus and Boeing will face off for the first time with their latest lightweight long-haul jets, the 787 Dreamliner and the Airbus A350. The A350 will make its first full air show appearance.

Arms Fair

As well as being a magnet for commercial aviators, next week’s event in Singapore is a weapons bazaar which has grown in importance as China’s increased military assertiveness has raised concerns.

U.S. arms makers are counting on increased foreign sales to offset slower demand from U.S. and European governments, whose military budgets are under increasing pressure.

While global military spending has been on the decline over the past few years, reflected in the Pentagon’s own budget cuts, Asian spending is on the up.

"Asia Pacific is the only region where from 2009 onwards we have seen a steady rise in defense expenditure," said Craig Caffrey, senior analyst, IHS Jane’s Aerospace, Defence & Security, in a recent report.

"Based on IHS Jane’s Defence Budgets projections, Asia Pacific’s share of global budget spend will grow to 28 percent from its current 24 percent by the end of the decade, reaching $474 billion."

China looms large in Asia, where it has overlapping territorial claims with several Southeast Asia countries in the South China Sea. At the same, China-Japan tensions have risen over their rival claims to a set of tiny uninhabited islands in the East China Sea.

North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons adds another serious dimension to what is shaping up as an arms race in Asia.

In Singapore, shoppers can choose from fighter jets, trainers, cargo planes, maritime patrol aircraft, drones, defense radar systems, missiles, and missile defenses.

The host country, although one of the smallest in the region, has the deepest pockets and is eyeing new jets.

Its immediate priority is a billion dollar upgrade of its F-16s, but it is also looking at buying the stealthy F-35, which is built by Lockheed Martin Corp.

Japan has already placed an order for the F-35 – a so-called "fifth-generation" warplane designed to be nearly invisible to enemy radar – and South Korea is expected to finalize an order for the jet this month.

Malaysia is assessing the Boeing F/A-18, Dassault Rafale, Eurofighter Typhoon and Saab Gripen to replace its ageing MiG-29 fighters, while Indonesia is also seen as a potentially big customer for fighter jets.

Singapore and Japan are also eyeing the V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor plans built by Boeing and Bell Helicopter, a unit of Textron Inc. The U.S. Marine Corps is sending two of the planes, which take off and land like helicopters but fly like planes, to the air show.

U.S. officials are expecting questions and interest in missile defense systems built by Lockheed and Raytheon Co, Boeing’s maritime P-8 surveillance plane, and the KC-46A refueling plane, also built by Boeing. South Korea is expected to kick off a tanker competition this spring.

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Bell Tolls for Legendary Thai Boxing Stadium

Posted: 10 Feb 2014 09:44 PM PST

Thailand, sports, Thai boxing, Muay Thai, Bangkok

Spectators follow a fight at the legendary Lumpinee stadium, one of Bangkok’s oldest boxing venues, which is being demolished after 57 years. (Photo: Reuters)

BANGKOK — Every muscle of Sattan Muanglek’s body glistened as he was rubbed down by his trainer with liniment, its herbal odor permeating the dank corridors of Bangkok’s legendary Lumpinee Boxing Stadium before a historic fight.

For once the Thai fighter was not focused on the prize. Friday’s match was his last in one of Bangkok’s oldest boxing venues, which will be demolished after 57 years to make way for high-rise urban development.

"Lumpinee closing has left me speechless. I could barely concentrate the first time I boxed here I was so excited. This is where every young boy dreams of fighting," said Sattan.

Like many men who choose the rigorous life of a Thai boxer, 21-year-old Sattan came from a poor background and saw the national sport as a means to support his extended family.

"Muay Thai", a violent sport that can make western boxing look tame, is said to be 2,000 years old.

Known as "The Art of Eight Limbs" for its extensive use of hands, elbows, feet and knees, it also mixes religious beliefs with traditional cultural practices.

Lumpinee’s circular structure, with an ageing tin roof that lets in rain and sunlight, is a stone’s throw from the central oasis of Lumpini Park and had avoided Bangkok’s frenetic building boom. The stadium harks back to the capital’s golden days before the invasion of skyscrapers that now soar above it.

But it stands on prime real estate and its lease was not renewed by the Crown Property Bureau, one of Bangkok’s biggest landlords and the fund that supports Thailand’s monarchy.

That is forcing the stadium to move to a new venue on the outer fringes of the sprawling city – a logistical hassle for tourists and Thais who have flocked to Lumpinee for decades.

Crowd Hooked

The fund plans to build condominiums near the old stadium.

"Nothing will be left in this spot. The stadium will be completely dismantled. But change is necessary," said Surakai Chuttumart, director of Lumpinee Boxing Stadium.

He reminisced about a particularly memorable match between "Rambo" Ponsiri and Paluhadlek Sitchungtong that brought more than 10,000 fans to the stadium, pushing its capacity of 9,000 to bursting point.

"They had the crowd hooked every minute," said Surakai. "This stadium will be gone but the memory of legends that have fought here will remain."

For the fans, it’s the crowd at Lumpinee that makes the stadium a cut above grander venues.

"Even if the boxing is outstanding, if the crowd isn’t good it means nothing – and the crowd here is one of a kind," said Thotspol Kunapermsiri, who postponed a business trip to Vietnam to be at Lumpinee for the last big fight on Friday.

"This is the mothership of Thai boxing. The atmosphere is electric," said Thotspol, who would like to see the stadium preserved as a "national treasure".

Proving his point, the transfixed crowd screamed with every blow Sattan dealt his opponent. On one side of the ring, gamblers made animated hand-signals and shouted into mobile phones in a scene reminiscent of a stock trading floor.

The stadium was one of the few places in Thailand where gambling was permitted, adding to the raucous mood.

"Round five! Final round!" the master of ceremonies announced. The crowd rose from creaky wooden benches and craned towards the ring as Sattan came out of his corner to the sound of rhythmic drums and wood instruments.

His fans were to be disappointed, though, with Sattan losing the fight.

Veteran trainers who came to watch the final bouts bemoaned the end of the "authentic experience" of Muay Thai, a sport with roots in rudimentary boxing rings in the rural heartlands.

"When I brought young talent to Bangkok I wanted to bring them to Lumpinee first," said Chart Phonchai, 73, a former Muay Thai trainer, letting out a hearty laugh. "It is intimate and makes them feel less nervous when they get knocked out."

The post Bell Tolls for Legendary Thai Boxing Stadium appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


Forced evictions to continue in Dagon

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 04:53 AM PST

Up to 80,000 shantytown-dwellers in Rangoon's Dagon Port Township — one of the poorest neighbourhoods in the former capital — have been declared illegal squatters and face eviction.

Those living in four major wards within the township have been given until Wednesday, 12 February to leave their homes, authorities announced.

A notice issued by the township directive said residents who failed to leave their homes face legal action and a potential month-long prison sentence as per the Lower Burma Town and Village Lands Act of 1898.

If the villagers are forced to leave, it will be the largest displacement by forced eviction in Burma's history.

Last week 1,000 families were also displaced in Rangoon's Hlegu Township when bulldozers razed homes on what the government has declared an illegal settlement.

 

Latpadaung activist Thaw Zin detained

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 04:35 AM PST

Activist Thaw Zin was arrested on Tuesday morning in Salingyi Township, one of the many towns impacted by the Latpadaung copper mine project.

Thaw Zin was arrested by plain-clothed police, according to Pol. Superintendent My Nyunt Oo, who told DVB that plain-clothed officers are patrolling the area because "locals tend to get hostile when they see uniforms".

My Nyunt Oo confirmed that Thaw Zin's charge related to two separate past incidents involving confrontations between locals and staff of the Wanbao Company, which is the Chinese firm involved in a joint venture at the mine.

The activist had previously been detained on charges under Article 18 (the Peaceful Assembly and Peaceful Procession Law), for organising protests without official permission. The charge was dropped under a presidential amnesty announced at the end of last year.

"We have two criminal charges outstanding against Thaw Zin, on top of the annulled Article-18 charge. He has been arrested this morning," said the police official, who could not confirm where he was being detained.

Local villagers in Salingyi have vowed to stage a protest in front of the township's police station to demand the activist be released.

"Activist Thaw Zin was arrested this morning when he went out of the village. We are now gathering people in front of the police station to demand his release," said Amar Cho, a resident from Tonywa village.

She said residents from around 10 villages in Salingyi were gathering for a protest on Tuesday afternoon.

Last week police briefly detained several people from nearby Wet Hmay village after they had blocked the path of Wanbao company staff laying barbwire fences across farmland.

Yawd Serk bows out urging peace, compromise

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 04:22 AM PST

The retirement of Lt Gen Yawd Serk adds some uncertainty to the path towards nationwide peace, as a draft multilateral peace agreement garners support among most of Burma's armed ethnic groups.

Yawd Serk is the founder of the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) and armed wing (SSA-S), one of only two armed ethnic organisations that have yet to sign onto the plan (the other being the United Wa State Army).

In 2011 Yawd Serk led the SSA-S to sign a unilateral ceasefire with the Burmese government. While ongoing skirmishes between the Burma Army and SSA troops have reiterated the need for a multilateral agreement inclusive of all armed groups, the RCSS/SSA-S have continued private discussions with Naypyidaw, citing the United Nationalities Federal Council's inclusion of rival Shan organisations as a stumbling block for participation.

Speaking to DVB at RCSS/SSA-S headquarters at Loi Tai Leng, Yawd Serk affirmed the positive steps his organisation has made in its relations with the government since President Thein Sein came to office in 2011.

"We believe that President Thein Sein is an honest person," said Yawd Serk. "We trust him, and we also want peace, so we are continuing to work on an agreement with him."

Yet according to Yawd Serk, striking a deal with the Burmese government is only half the challenge. A permanent agreement with the government, he said, may not guarantee an end to the fighting. While trust has been built between Thein Sein and ethnic leaders, a perceived discrepancy between Presidential edicts and military operations has made parties watchful.

"When the Burmese military was fighting the KIO," he said, "President Thein Sein himself issued an order for the fighting to stop, yet it continued.

"The ceasefire was signed between the RCSS and the government, but the clashes are between our troops and the Burmese military. So we think that there might be some problems between the Burmese government and military."

Such a split has made it difficult to negotiate and has the potential to sully the reputation Thein Sein has established for himself among ethnic leaders:

"Either there is a genuine split between the government and military, or such a perceived split is actually a strategic effort designed to confuse us," Yawd Serk continued.

However, such confusion has not dented the conciliatory approach that the Lt. Gen has brought to the bargaining table.

The RCSS has played an large role in Burma's reconciliation, notably by pushing for the government's recognition of the 1947 Panglong agreement that guaranteed autonomous internal administration for the Frontier Areas and the right to secede from the Union of Burma after a period of ten years.

The Panglong Agreement was shelved under Gen Ne Win's leadership but has remained an important goal of many armed groups.

When asked if the RCSS/SSA is still pushing for recognition of the Panglong Agreement, Yawd Serk said, "If we stood firmly on such a position, the government would not be able to accept our conditions. So, if we want peace, we must compromise. We are now asking for self-determination – that is, we would like to join a general union."

With that goal the RCSS/SSA is looking towards the 2015 general elections — but not without constitutional amendments — they say.

"We want it [the Constitution] to be in accordance with democratic principles," he said, "and we want it to express that all ethnic nationalities have equal rights".

The schism between politicians and army generals suggests that until such constitutional change is achieved, political dialogue between the RCSS and the Burmese government may well be coloured by the path that the SSA-S and the Burmese military have tread.

 

 

Quintana plans Arakan visit in midst of anti-UN protests

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 03:33 AM PST

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Burma, Tomás Ojea Quintana, will undertake his final official visit to the country from 14 to 19 February, a UN statement said on Tuesday.

The UN said that the envoy's trip will include a visit to Arakan State, where a series of protests have been staged recently by local Arakanese Buddhists demanding that the UN and other international agencies are expelled from the region due to what they say is "bias" in favour of Rohingya Muslims in the distribution of aid.

It was reported that some 500 Arakanese protestors had taken to the streets again on Monday demanding that the UN, along with Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and other international relief agencies, withdraw their operations from the region.

According to local Arakanese media, protestors carried placards reading: "UN Get Out! AZG (MSF) Get Out! INGOs Get Out!" No injuries or damage were reported.

Also on Monday, at a public meeting of Arakanese youths and Buddhist monks in Arakan State capital Sittwe, speakers reportedly called for Burmese President Thein Sein to cancel a governmental MoU with MSF, and advocated that local landlords evict MSF and other INGOs from their offices in the town.

Similar demonstrations have also been staged recently in Buthidaung, which like Maungdaw has a majority Rohingya population. Arakanese protest leader Nyo Aye told DVB last week that they plan to hold more rallies in Maungdaw, as well as Mrauk-U, Kyauktaw and Minbya.

Speaking to DVB on Tuesday, Pierre Péron, the Public Information and Advocacy Officer for the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Burma, said, "In the past months, community resistance against international organisations working in Rakhine [Arakan] State has increased and this is reflected in the protests which we have seen over the past week.

"The rising anti-aid worker sentiment has created a difficult operating environment and in some areas it is affecting the ability of international actors to provide assistance to Rakhine and Muslim IDPs and vulnerable communities. In some cases, humanitarian assistance has had to be temporarily suspended. The situation is particularly difficult in Sittwe, Kyauktaw and Myebon, with incidents also occurring in Minbya, Mrauk-U and Maungdaw. Incidents include harassment and intimidation of aid workers, and blocking of access to camps by members of the community."

By way of asserting that international relief operations are essential for all nationalities of the region, Péron also noted that "Muslim IDPs are not the only ones who need help in Rakhine State – many ethnic Rakhine people are also extremely poor and suffer from the chronic under-development."

Tuesday's UN statement also said that Quintana will visit conflict-torn Kachin State, the controversial Latpadaung copper mine in Sagaing Division, and the Thilawa Deep Sea Port during his final mission, which ends his six-year mandate as Special Rapporteur to the country.

DVB Debate: Burma’s business innovators

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 02:57 AM PST

As the country's economy opens up following the lifting of sanctions and a new FDI law, foreign investment is pouring into Burma's untapped market and local entrepreneurs are hoping to benefit from emerging opportunities.

On the panel this week: Dr. Sai Sam Htun, Chairman of Beverage manufacturer Loi Hein; U Myat Oo, CEO of Baby Vita Medical Products; Vicky Bowman, Director of Myanmar Centre for Responsible Business; and economic expert, Aung Chain Bwa.

Panellists disagreed about the benefit of foreign companies entering the Burmese market.

"I welcome multinationals, but the reason my company will not cooperate with multinationals at this time is because if we do then our trademarks will all disappear" said Dr. Sai Sam Htun.

Cartoon: DVB Debate

Cartoon: DVB Debate

However, Aung Chain Bwa disagrees, insisting Burmese companies can survive foreign competition, "Burmese companies know the most about Burma," he said. "Let [foreign companies] come in as much as they want. Only in theory will we be defeated, but in practice there are lots of examples where we are not defeated".

U Myat Oo sees the benefit of foreign companies producing their products in Burma. He does not think that the country is ready for innovation in medicine as 90% of medical products are still imported from outside the country. 

"For pharmaceuticals, it would be good to have foreign companies producing medicine here so we can benefit from the technology," he said.

 Some foreign companies are bringing with them new equipment and new opportunities for local business innovators.

But Aung Chain Bwa points out that there are still obstacles.

"What is difficult for the young people is they have the innovation but they don’t have the capital" he said. "Finding the capital investment is very difficult."

Business developers are finding company survival depends more on their bank balance than their ideas.

"It is not easy to get a loan by showing a business proposal in this country" says Htoo Myint Naung, the CEO of Technomation, a computer software business.

Information Matrix CEO, Thaung Su Nyein agrees.

"I would like an environment where a business’ survival does not depend on how much money they have but how innovative they are," said the media and technology entrepreneur.

Panellists raised concerns about transparency in businesses and policy making. High standards set by international companies may cause problems in Burma where businesses often have to deal with bribery and corruption.

"The problem is there is only one law but there is no standard. So it is very difficult for foreign companies," said Vicky Bowman.

"If they want to meet foreign standards there is no clear law," she added.

The panellists said local business owners had lost faith in the policy makers and that more transparency was needed.

"We can trust each other only when we have mutual transparency," said U Myat Oo.

Burma is located in the heart of the world's fastest-growing region, close to a huge and expanding market. Panelists agree that despite the challenges, the liberalisation of Burma's economy will bring with it many opportunities.

You can join the debate and watch the full programme in Burmese at dvbdebate.com

Or share your views with us by commenting on our website at dvb.no

Magwe demands ‘Slapper’ Ohn Myint step down

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 01:04 AM PST

Nearly 1,000 residents of Aunglan, Magwe Division, protested on Monday to demand the resignation of Ohn Myint, Burma's Minister of Livestock Breeding, Fisheries and Rural Development.

The minister is currently the subject of a Parliamentary investigative proposal after making threats to "slap" and imprison citizens who inquired about the government's water access initiatives in Thityargauk, Magwe, during a 28 January visit.

A video of the minister's rant soon went viral, in which he tells villagers that, "if you oppose the government, you go to jail and only come out when we're out of office," and that he would "dare to slap anyone in the face". The comments sparked a protest on 3 February in Rangoon where demonstrators gathered on the steps of City Hall demanding that the minister slap them as promised.

Ohn Myint declared on DVB Burmese, however, that he did not employ offensive language to the villagers.

"I didn't utter a single curse word – I was only talking energetically just like now… You can ask people who were there if I ever said a curse word – I did not at all. I never cursed," he said, though the original video features comments ranging from, "I don't give a f–k about anyone" to "Let those bastards write whatever they want and I'll flip my longyi at them!”

Aye Myint, who organised Monday's demonstration, said the rally was carried out despite the denial of a public assembly permit by the town's local police.

Attendees chanted slogans calling for the minister's resignation and abolishment of Article 18 of the Peaceful Assembly and Peaceful Procession Law, a controversial provision that requires government approval for any public gathering of five or more people, which has landed many activists in jail in recent years.

While the demonstration was held without a permit, at time of writing no arrests have been made in relation to the event.

An emergency proposal was submitted to the Parliament's lower house on 4 February, urging the government to take immediate action against the minister for his remarks to villagers in Thityargauk as well as a similar incident in Tenasserim Division on 25 October 2013.

Information Minister Aung Kyi has expressed commitment to investigate the incident to determine whether Ohn Myint's comments were made in "good faith or in bad".

Ohn Myint is a former military general and a member of the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party. The minister is no stranger to scandal; he has been accused of similar tactless behaviour in Tenasserim, and was implicated by Kachin activist Bauk Ja for his role in leveling what she called "bogus charges" against her last year.

Arakanese summit to address conflict resolutions

Posted: 10 Feb 2014 11:22 PM PST

Representatives from various Arakanese organisations have announced they will hold the 4th Arakan National Convention in the Arakan State town of Kyaukphyu from 27 April to 1 May as they strive to find answers to the ongoing conflict in the region.

Speaking at a press conference at the end of the meeting in Chiang Mai on Monday, Thar Ban, the chairman of the Arakan League for Democracy (ALD), said that the upcoming summit would focus on three objectives.

"We aim to finalise discussions from our previous talks regarding three objectives: to promote solidarity among the Arakanese people; to bring about ethnic equality and justice; and build a secure, peaceful and progressive Arakanese society," said Thar Ban.

The secretary of the Rakhine Nationalities Development Party (RNDP), Oo Hla Saw, said: "Our people are facing challenges like no other region in the country, and we won't be able to solve these issues through one party or an individual. That's why we have decided to hold a conference, together with resistance groups, democratic parties, intellectuals and historians. In that way, we can work out a strategy."

He said the ongoing communal violence between Arakanese Buddhists and the Muslim Rohingya community would not prevent the convention from going ahead, and neither would the recent incident where two Arakanese political leaders – RNDP's Aye Maung and ALD's Aye Thar Aung – were targeted in a failed assassination attempt in Malaysia last week.

Meanwhile, the question remains whether armed Arakanese groups that are yet to sign a ceasefire agreement with the government will be invited to the conference.

Speaking to DVB, Lt-Col Kyaw Han of the Arakan Army said, "The meeting aims to resolve issues on how Arakanese people can cooperate and live together. If we, the Arakan Army, and other armed organisations are not allowed to join in the discussions, then the conference will be meaningless."

A committee has been formed to organise the 4th Arakanese National Convention. It will comprise: ALD Chairman Thar Ban; RNDP President and Rangoon Division Arakanese Affairs Minister Zaw Aye Maung; Arakan Liberation Party Secretary Khine Thukha; and Arakan Army's Kyaw Han.

The committee is scheduled to meet in the near future with a Burmese government delegation headed by Minister Aung Min at the Myanmar Peace Centre in Rangoon to discuss details for the April convention.

Burma’s debt to Germany halved

Posted: 10 Feb 2014 10:12 PM PST

Burma's debt to Germany has been halved in a deal presided over by German President Joachim Gauk and his Burmese counterpart Thein Sein in Naypyidaw on Monday. It was agreed that the remaining debt will stand at 542 million euros (US$740 million) and will be repaid at a rate of 3 percent interest over the next 15 years.

Thein Sein thanked Germany for its continued support for Burma over 60 years of continuous bilateral relations. Gauk stated that Burma could continue to rely on Germany as long as their path to democracy was maintained.

The German President did raise concerns with Thein Sein over Burma's democratic transition — noting that the legal status of the stateless Rohingya was worrying.  The need for the Burmese government to build on ceasefire agreements towards a more lasting peace was also raised.

Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi described Gauk's visit as "encouraging", as the German President — known for his anti-totalitarian activity in the former East Germany — had "lived for many years under a dictatorship".

Gauk moved on Monday night to Rangoon, where he will address Rangoon University on Tuesday and officially open the Burma chapter of the German cultural association Goethe-Intistut.

Shan Herald Agency for News

Shan Herald Agency for News


Re: Shan State Day or Shan National Day?

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 04:43 AM PST

First, the original name is "Shan National Day" and thus should be used without altering it, until a new consensus is found among all the stakeholders concerned.

Second, Federated Shan States, forerunner of the present Shan State, was a Federal Union in nature and had been ruled by respective Sao Hpa of each principality corresponding to its ethnic group. For example, the Palaung area was ruled by Palaung prince or Sao Hpa, the Pa O by the Pa O, the Kokang by the Kokang, the Danu by the Danu and so on.

Thus the "Shan Nation" should be seen as a collective national identity of all people residing within Shan State and not just belonging to the Tai ethnic group, the majority within Shan State.

But this is not to say that "Shan State Day" is not acceptable. We only need to find a consensus among us for a new name, if this is what we all want. For example, "Shan State National Day" could be one of the inputs or the way out of this deadlock.

Mai Soong Kha
Sai Wansai

Yawdserk ‘looking for a Yingluck’

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 04:41 AM PST

Some Thai friends who have been informed of the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army (RCSS/SSA)'s upcoming election of a new president have commented that the incumbent leader Lt-Gen Yawdserk may be looking for a proxy.

"Sounds like he may want his successor to continue doing what he's been doing," said a long-time friend in Chiangmai, "like Thaksin (Shinawatra, exiled former Thai Prime Minister) getting his currently embattled sister Yingluck to become his alternate."
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra (Photo: www.bangkokscoop.com)

Yawdserk however has denied the assertion. "I made it clear (at the conclusion of the RCSS/SSA annual meeting on 13 January) that I did not mean I would retire from the national cause and the movement," he told SHAN. "But I would like to be sure that the cause will be able to move forward without me at the helm. For this purpose, I would be happy to serve as a counsel to the new leader."

A 5 men election commission led by Maj Awng Moeng, a 40 year veteran, has been formed to hold the election at a two-day meeting which will begin on Friday, 14 February.
Lt-Gen Yawdserk (Photo: SHAN)

According to Awng Moeng, the commission has selected 5 nominees:
  • Maj Gen Sai Yi, incumbent Vice President #1
  • Col Kherh Ngeun, incumbent Vice President #2
  • Lt-Col Siri, incumbent General Secretary
  • Brig Gen Pawng Kherh, incumbent chief of Civil Administration and chief of peace delegation
  • Lt-Col Gawn Zeun, Commander of Military Sector #1, Shan State East
So far, none of the 5 has expressed any desire to fill up the vacancy. Several supporters, both military and civilian, both at home and abroad, have also expressed concern at the prospect that Yawdserk might fade out. "Whoever is elected, I will be working with him," he has assured them.