Monday, May 12, 2014

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Nationalist Monks Call NGOs ‘Traitors’ for Opposing Interfaith Marriage

Posted: 12 May 2014 05:42 AM PDT

Wirathu, women's rights, Buddhism, Islam, nationalism, rascism, Myanmar, religious conflict, hate speech

Nationalist monk U Wirathu held a rally on Sunday in Rangoon's North Okkala Township to garner support for his interfaith marriage bill. (Facebook / Wirathu)

A nationalist Buddhist monk movement has called Burmese civil society groups "traitors" because they object to the interfaith marriage bill that the monks have put forth.

The group of monks, also known as the 969 movement or the Association of Protection of Race and Religion (Mabatha), issued a statement on Friday saying that "those activists objecting to the bill are traitors on national affairs."

The Mandalay-based radical movement said they "condemn those critics, who are backed by foreign groups, for raising the human rights issues and not [working for] the benefit of the public and not [being] loyal to the state.”

In recent months, the 969 movement and its public figurehead U Wirathu have hired lawyers to draft a bill that, if enacted, would require Buddhist women to get permission from parents and government officials before marrying a man from another faith. The bill also calls for non-Buddhist men to convert to Buddhism before marrying Buddhist women.

Other sections of the bill would ban polygamy and include unspecified restrictions enforcing family planning measures.

U Wirathu has repeatedly stated that Burma's Muslim minority—which represent around 5 percent of the country's approximately 55 million people—is a threat to Buddhism. He told The Irrawaddy on Monday that the bill would "protect women" from Muslim men and "is not violate the rights of women." He added that he expected the bill to be released publicly in early June.

The bill is being proposed at a time of heightened inter-religious tensions in Burma. Recurrent outburst of anti-Muslim violence in Arakan State and dozens of cities in Burma have left scores dead and tens of thousands, mostly Muslims, displaced since 2012.

The radical 969 movement stands accused of fanning hate speech against Muslims and has called for Buddhists to shun Muslim-owned shops.

The movement claims to have collected 4 million signatures in a petition campaign in support of the bill in recent months. Neither government leaders nor lawmakers have dared to oppose the political initiative of the Buddhist clergymen, who are deeply revered in Burma.

In March, the monk's draft was accepted for consideration by the Ministry of Religious Affairs and the Attorney-General's Office, which are preparing the bill for a vote in Parliament.

Burmese civil society groups have grown increasingly concerned about the interfaith marriage bill, also known as the Law on Protection Race and Religion, which would violate basic international human rights standards.

Spearheaded by women's rights activists, some 130 NGOs signed a statement last week condemning the bill and faith-based political activities and argued that these "events and ideas [are] designed to distract the public before the 2015 election."

Aung Myo Min, director of Equality Myanmar, dismissed the 969 movement's attack on civil society groups. "We are not the traitors to our race or religion," he said. "We are raising our concerns about some of the worst impacts of the Protection of Race and Religion bill."

Sein Sein Shwe Latt, a spokesperson of women's rights group Phan Tee Eain, said civil society groups would send a letter to President Thein Sein requesting a meeting in which they would share their concerns and offer recommendations regarding the interfaith marriage bill.

"The idea is to meet with the president, as well as with leading monks, the respective authorities and the legislators, and to share our suggestions," she said.

May Sabae Phyu, a coordinator of Gender Equality Network said, the bill needs to be stopped because "it hinders the public's and especially women's rights to make a decision on their marriage and [affects] their rights to religious freedom too."

May Sabae Phy condemned the government's participation in drafting a bill that would violate the most fundamental human rights if enacted. "It is a very shameful action if we look at in terms of human rights or international standards," she said.

May Sabae Phy dismissed claims by the monks that they were improving the protection of women's rights, adding, "By drafting this bill it seems Burmese society is going back to old conservative ages."

Additional reporting by Nang Sai Nom.

The post Nationalist Monks Call NGOs 'Traitors' for Opposing Interfaith Marriage appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Hundreds Welcome KIA Ahead of Peace Talks

Posted: 12 May 2014 05:12 AM PDT

Kachin State, Myanmar, Burma, Kachin Independence Army, Kachin Independence Organization, KIA, KIO, fighting, ethnic, peace talks

Supporters of the Kachin Independence Army gather in Myitkyina on Monday ahead of peace talks. (Photo: Lawi Weng / The Irrawaddy)

MYITKYINA, Kachin State — A 71-year-old ethnic Kachin woman closes her eyes and prays amid a crowd of hundreds of people, all gathered to welcome rebel leaders from the Kachin Independence Army (KIA).

"I came here just to pray for our leaders. We want them to have peace," says Karmg Mam, who traveled all the way from northern Shan State to the Kachin State capital Myitkyina, where a KIA delegation is preparing to meet with government peace negotiators, amid ongoing fighting.

"We want our people to have peace," she adds, adding that the reasons for the clashes are irrelevant—she simply wants them to end. "I don't know about the politics."

Hundreds of ethnic Kachin gathered on Monday in front of Kachin National Manau Park, shouting slogans of support for the KIA and its political wing, the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO).

"The KIA and KIO are in our hearts, they are our hearts!" the crowd cheered as KIA deputy chief Gun Maw arrived at about 3 pm, riding in a convoy of vehicles that had traveled from the KIA headquarters near Laiza.

Two days of talks will begin on Tuesday. The KIO delegation will be led by Sumlut Gam, while the government's team will be led by Minister Aung Min from the President's Office.

The meeting was requested by the Kachin rebels amid an escalation of hostilities in Kachin State and northern Shan State. Fighting in April displaced thousands of civilians and killed more than 22 government and Kachin soldiers.

The fighting continues as Burma's government says it is moving closer toward a nationwide ceasefire accord with all armed groups. The government has already signed bilateral ceasefire deals with most major ethnic armed groups—with the exception of the KIA and the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), based in northern Shan State.

"There is fighting in our Kachin State. Our people are under attack," said a 72-year-old Kachin woman who asked to remain anonymous. "We want to have peace. I came here to pray for our leaders."

Many in the crowd on Monday wore shirts decorated with the KIA flag. Some waved flags in their hands as a sign of welcome as the rebel leaders drove into town. For part of the day, a main road was blocked due to the gathering of people in front of the park, where the peace talks will be held.

"The fighting is not fair. They only attack our Kachin," said Zin War Naw, a Kachin youth leader who organized the welcome event.

He said he wanted the government to recognize the Panglong Agreement, a deal reached in 1947 that gave ethnic minorities a considerable degree of political autonomy.

"We don't want independence for our Kachin. There is the Panglong Agreement—we want that to be followed," he said.

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Newly Displaced in Northern Burma Lack Shelter as Rainy Season Begins

Posted: 12 May 2014 04:36 AM PDT

Myanmar, Burma, ethnic, Kachin, civil war, conflict, KIA, KIO, refugee, internally displaced persons

A makeshift camp for internally displaced persons, in the grounds of a church in Muse, northern Shan State, was flooded by rains last week. (Photo: Namhkai Hka / Facebook)

RANGOON — Thousands of people displaced by recent fighting in Kachin and Shan states are facing the prospect of months of heavy rains in unsuitable tents, aid workers said.

Fighting in northern Burma broke out once again in April, with clashes sending thousands more civilians into camps for internally displaced persons (IDPs). More people fled fighting in both Kachin State and northern Shan State, where an estimated 100,000 were already living in camps after being displaced by fighting since 2011.

The newly displaced are largely staying in the temporary white tents provided by the UN's refugee agency, UNHCR, which are unsuitable for heavy rains.

"As the rain has come in the past one or two days, water comes into the tents. They have to throw the water out. They are facing difficulties," said Mary Tawn, head of the humanitarian NGO Wunpawng Ningtoi (WPN), based in Mai Ja Yang.

Phyu Ei Thein, an aid worker for White Holding Hands volunteer group, who recently visited newly displaced people in Man Win Gyi village, said they have been provided with some rations of rice and dried fish. But the IDPs' next food delivery was not guaranteed, as the rations provided by UN agencies and international NGOs like Save the Children, were only enough to properly feed those already displaced before the recent fighting, she said.

According to Karuna Myanmar Social Services, a Kachin NGO, about 3,000 newly displaced people have been added to 3,300 existing IDPs in Man Win Gyi village, an area under Burma Army control. Man Win Gyi village has a Roman Catholic (RC) camp and a Kachin Baptist Convention camp, but since no additional shelter has been arrived, many of the newly displaced are staying at a makeshift camp in a boarding school.

"Those currently living at the boarding school will have to move when school starts [at the end of May] and the shelter will be an urgent need for them," Phyu Ei Thein said. "The tents provided by UNHCR are not livable anymore when the rain comes. But there is no budget to built shelters yet."

The nearby Lagat Yang Camp on the border of Kachin and Shan states, which used to house about 800 IDPs, now stands empty. Since the recent fighting, the Burma Army has been based nearby the camp, in an area formerly controlled by the Kachin Independence Army (KIA). Burmese soldiers had reported detained and questioned people from the camp.

"They have moved over to Man Win Gyi RC camp after three [soldiers with] heavy weapons came in to the camp," Phyu Ei Thein said.

"People seem to be quite scared even to talk about what happened to them as the Burmese army is occupying the area."

Phyu Ei Thein said that according to one displaced woman now in the RC camp, her son was shot by the Burma Army because he was suspected of sending rations to the KIA. The woman reported that the bureau chief of Battalion 99 came to the camp and gave her US$100 in compensation for her son's wife and $15 each for his two children.

"The mother asked what should they do with $100—her son's life is invaluable," she said.

WPN's Mary Tawn said that it was not just the newly displaced people who will face difficulties in the wet season.

"As all refugee camps are in their third year, the plywood [of the shelters] is not fit anymore after three years of rain," Mary Tawn said. "Renovation is needed, but we face trouble in doing so as we don't have funding ready."

In Bum Tsit Pa Camp No.2, 1,000 IDPs are living in UNHCR tents, she said. Many have moved to the camp after fighting broke out near their previous place of shelter, Nam Lin Pa camp.

Khon Ja, an activist from the Kachin Peace Network, said more than 900 people were also newly displaced in Muse, on the border between northern Shan State and China, and living in tents.

The post Newly Displaced in Northern Burma Lack Shelter as Rainy Season Begins appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Singaporean PM Tours Naypyidaw

Posted: 12 May 2014 04:17 AM PDT

Singapore, Myanmar, Burma, Lee Hsien Loong, Association of Southeast Asian Nations, Naypyidaw, Asean

Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, left, talks with Burma's President Thein Sein during a break in Asean meetings over the weekend. (Photo: Lee Hsien Loong / Facebook)

RANGOON — During a weekend of tense discussions in Naypyidaw, Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong took a break from the 24th Summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) to tour some areas around the Burmese capital.

The prime minister described for his Facebook followers what he saw.

"Took a drive around, including to the older nearby town of Pyinmana, which has a population of 100,000 (about the same size as Toa Payoh)," he wrote in a post on the social media site on Sunday, referring to a Singaporean district.

Of the Burmese town, he wrote, "The streets were lined with shophouses, and thronged with people. It looked and felt like Singapore or Penang in the 1950s and 1960s, except that many of the residents were taking pictures of us with smartphones!"

Pyinmana, located about 2 kilometers from Naypyidaw, is a logging town and sugar cane refinery center which was formerly a base for the Burmese army during World War II.

Lee Hsien Loong was in Naypyidaw on Saturday and Sunday for the Asean summit, which Burma is hosting for the first time.

He was accompanied by other Singaporean senior government officials, including Trade and Industry Minister Lim Hng Kiang, and Law and Foreign Affairs Minister K Shanmugam.

During the summit, the 10-member regional bloc agreed to issue a joint statement calling for restraint over escalating disputes in the South China Sea.

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Burma’s ‘School on a Bus’ Project Gets a New Lift

Posted: 12 May 2014 04:11 AM PDT

Myanmar, Burma, Myanmar Mobile Education Network, child labor, teashops, education, schooling

Students gather in front of a bus that has been turned into a mobile classroom in Rangoon on Sunday. (Photo: MyMe / Facebook)

RANGOON — Since late last year, over 100 Burmese children who left school to work at teashops in Rangoon have been able to resume their studies in a rather unique location: inside a bus that has been converted to a mobile classroom.

The so-called "school on a bus" project—launched in December by the Myanmar Mobile Education Project (MyMe)—drives around to different teashops in Burma's biggest city, offering an opportunity after working hours for the children to pursue a non-formal education, including with classes in basic literacy, math, computer schools and critical thinking.

To expand the project, a well-wisher recently donated a second bus turned mobile classroom.

"We will use this bus for high school students, and we will teach computer literacy to other students at monastic schools who have no access to technology," said Tim Aye Hardy, director of the project, during a launching ceremony on Sunday for the second bus, which was donated by the family of Myoma U Ba Lwin, a national education leader who founded a high school in Rangoon.

MyMe currently has 11 teachers and volunteers who reach out to nearly 150 students through their mobile classroom project.

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Burma Benefits From Asean Chairmanship: Official

Posted: 12 May 2014 03:35 AM PDT

Myanmar, Burma, Naypyidaw, NPT, Asean, Association of Southeast Asian Nations, East Timor, South China Sea, chair

Aung Htoo, deputy director general of the Asean affairs department in Burma's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, talks to reporters at the Asean Summit in Naypyidaw. (Photo: Kyaw Hsu Mon / The Irrawaddy)

NAYPYIDAW — During this weekend's 24th Asean Summit the hot topic was the South China Sea, where tensions have been raised in regional states' territorial disputes with China.

Also on the agenda for the leaders of the 10 Asean countries was the plan for regional economic integration, an ambitious project known as the Asean Economic Community, which will come into force next year.

The Irrawaddy's Kyaw Hsu Mon met with Aung Htoo, deputy director general of the Asean affairs department in Burma's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to discuss the challenges posed by Burma's first chairmanship of Asean.

Question: What difficulties and challenges have the South China Sea disputes created for Burma as Asean chair?

Answer: As Asean chairman, we are standing with the member countries. But the issue is we have to consider both parties—China and the two Asean countries, Vietnam and the Philippines. At the same time, we're following the Asean rules, so we're standing in between these two parties. It's difficult.

Q: Some foreign leaders did not appear to be paying close attention, perhaps being disrespectful to Burma as Asean chair. Do you agree?

A: It's not like that. There is very good involvement from member countries. Even though we had a tough situation to negotiate with them for the Naypyidaw Declaration, they agreed despite those difficulties. The leaders always said that they support Burma.

Q: Although the president talks a lot about integration, and Asean presents itself as harmonious, many believe there is discord between the members. Is that the case?

A: The president wants more integration between Asean members in the future, and expects the upcoming 2015 Asean Economic Community to be stronger. Also, beyond 2015, there should be more unity between member countries, that's why he frequently talks about that. You can see in the joint statement on the South China Sea disputes, we brought all the foreign ministers' desires together and came up with an agreement.

Q: What benefits, politically and economically, has Burma got from being the chair of Asean?

A: Burma has received more confidence from among the Asean countries during this chairmanship period. Mutual trust is quite important. Beyond building trust, a lot of foreign direct investment will flow into the country.

A very significant benefit is that after the country has reformed, the number of international visitors has been significantly increasing. There were no more than 300,000 visitors per year before 2011, now it will reach more than 2 million this year.

Foreign direct investment in other sectors is also increasing annually. Early this year, when Asean foreign ministers met in Bagan, they all learned that Burma has a very long history and a developed culture. We are getting all the benefits from hosting Asean here.

Q: Will Timor-Leste [East Timor] become a member of Asean soon?

A: There is a negotiation committee to accept the Timor-Leste to become a member state. There are officials from the political, economic and social sectors who are now doing comprehensive studies on the country's acceptance. Leaders agreed last January to accept Timor-Leste as a member state at the end of this year. They will invite officials from Timor-Leste to attend Asean process meetings.

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Wa Official Dispels Claim of Wa State ‘Crimea Style’ Secession

Posted: 12 May 2014 02:01 AM PDT

United Wa State Army, ethnic rebel, ethnic conflict, China, Myanmar, Tatmadaw, secession, international relations, armed conflict

Wa soldiers stand at ease in this undated photo. (Photo: Facebook / Wa State UWSP)

A leader of the United Wa State Party (UWSP) has said the Wa-controlled areas in Shan State will under no circumstances seek a 'Crimea-style' secession from Burma with the support of China.

"Some wonder if something bad happens between China and Burma, Wa State will become a problem like Crimea. [But] they are just speculating as they wish," said Aung Myint, secretary of the UWSP, the political wing of the powerful United Wa State Army (UWSA).

The Crimea region broke away from Ukraine and its predominantly Russian population joined Russia after a referendum in April that was condemned as flawed by Western nations.

"Those who understand history know there is no problem. Those who don't would try to instigate problems and people might protests against [secession] because they don't know the history," he told The Irrawaddy by phone.

"Since we left the Communist Party of Burma 25 years ago, we released statements saying that the Wa people will never secede from Burma. We still maintain this position," Aung Myint said. "We are asking for autonomy as Wa region is our land. It has nothing to do with secession."

Since the collapse of a China-backed communist insurgency in northern Burma in 1989, leaders of the ethnic Wa, who comprised most of the foot soldiers, took over from the Burmese community party leaders.

Shortly afterward, the then military junta in Burma signed an agreement with the Wa granting them autonomy in Special Region 2 in northern Shan State on the border with China.

The group formed the UWSA and maintained their close links with China, while their border region became culturally and economically interlocked with Yunnan Province. These days, the Wa state region uses Chinese currency, Chinese mobile phone network and Chinese goods, and many inhabitants speak Chinese. Some UWSA leaders are believed to be ethnic Chinese.

Burma's government only recognizes six townships in Special Region 2 as autonomous Wa area. The UWSA wants to create a separate Wa State in Burma and wants government recognition of nearly 20 townships under its control.

Since President Thein Sein's reformist government came to power Burma's relations with China have cooled significantly. Some observers have said China has supplied weapons to the Wa in order to maintain pressure on Naypyidaw.

When Crimea's secession was making international headlines, some Burmese outlets wrote that is was not unlikely for Wa State to join China in a similar fashion.

Some observers have argued recently that the Burma Army could be preparing for an assault on the UWSA, to be carried out before the 2015 elections.

The UWSA has grown into a heavily-armed insurgent force funded by first by opium drug trade and later methamphetamine production, mostly trafficked to Thailand and China.

The UWSA signed a new ceasefire with Naypyidaw in 2011, but the group are not participating in the ongoing nationwide ceasefire talks between the government and 16 ethnic armed groups.

Wa fighters are believed to number between 20,000 and 30,000, and have reportedly received Chinese heavy weaponry such as armored personnel carriers, surface-to-air missiles and even helicopters—a claim the Wa have denied.

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Burmese Govt Reviews Citizenship Applications for Former Exiles

Posted: 12 May 2014 01:30 AM PDT

Myanmar, Burma, The Irrawaddy, immigration, population, exile, politics, activists, reforms, citizenship, 1982 Citizenship Law

Khin Yi, the minister of immigration and population, speaks at a press conference in Rangoon last Wednesday. (Photo: May Kha / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The Burmese government is now reviewing citizenship applications for people who left the country for various reasons under the former military regime, according to the minister of immigration and population.

Khin Yi said three ministries were involved in the screening process and were forwarding applications to the President's Office, which would make a decision for each applicant.

"But the whole process does not end there. There are still more steps to be done," he said at a press conference in Rangoon last Wednesday.

Dual citizenship is not allowed in Burma, according to the 1982 Citizenship Law, so applicants will be required to give up their foreign citizenship, the minister said. He added that anyone who committed a crime before leaving Burma would not be eligible.

The process of verifying this information will take some time, ministry officials told The Irrawaddy.

In the years after the failed 1988 uprising, tens of thousands of Burmese people fled the country. Many were dissidents, while others went abroad for social reasons or to pursue an education.

After President Thein Sein came to office in 2011, ushering in a series of political reforms, many exiled elites, including technocrats and journalists, returned home. In 2012, some famous political activists returned after the quasi-civilian government removed their names from a blacklist.

A large number of the former exiles had applied for foreign citizenship while living abroad, effectively losing their Burmese citizenship. When they moved back to Burma under Thein Sein's government, they were required to apply for visas, like foreign visitors.

Maung Maung Than, director-general of Burma's Immigration Department, said 138 citizenship applications have been received thus far. Of these, the President's Office has endorsed 43 applications and is continuing to review another 22. The ministries of immigration and population, foreign affairs and home affairs are reviewing the remaining cases.

One applicant, Moe Thee Zun, criticized some of the application requirements.

"They demand in the application that we stay clear of political activities—not only us, but also our parents. I don't understand this," he told The Irrawaddy.

"I joined political activities just because of their oppression," he said, referring to his activism against the former junta.

However, Maung Maung Than from the Ministry of Immigration and Population said the government would not discriminate against applicants with a history of political involvement.

"There are some misunderstandings," he said. "We are not asking the applicants about their political background. But we ask whether or not they have a criminal record. We do not discriminate based on political background."

Khin Ohnmar, chairwoman of the Network for Democracy and Development, a Burmese political organization based on the Thai-Burma border, said it would be important for the government to be as receptive to citizenship applications as possible.

"There are many learned professionals among Burmese people living abroad," she said. "The government must be transparent in its policy for reaccepting the exiles and allowing them to return decently."

'They need to declare a general amnesty,' she added. "It is hard for us to return because they have not done so."

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Burmese Translation of Vaclav Havel’s Children Book to Launch This Week

Posted: 11 May 2014 10:25 PM PDT

Myanmar Translation of Vaclav Havel's Children Book to Launch This Week

Václav Havel photographed in Prague in 2009 at a ceremony to mark the 20th anniversary of the Velvet Revolution. (Photo: The Associated Press)

RANGOON — A Burmese translation of a children's book written by former Czech president and playwright Václav Havel will be launched in Rangoon this week.

The translation of "The Pizh'duks," which is the only children's book ever written by Havel, will include illustrations by Burmese dissident leader Min Ko Naing, according to the Embassy of the Czech Republic in Rangoon, which has organized the launching ceremony.

Min Ko Naing will read passages from the book at the ceremony, to be held at Gallery 65 on Wednesday from 5-7 pm.

Havel, a supporter of the Burmese pro-democracy movement, was the last president of Czechoslovakia and the first president of the Czech Republic from 1993-2003. He wrote more than 20 plays and numerous works of non-fiction, but only one children's book.

"The The Pizh'duks," written in 1975, is a fairy tale through which he attempts to show the absurdities of the then-ruling communist regime.

"Dear children, I don't usually write for children, and that is why I don't know if this tale of mine about the Pizh'duks is going to make sense to you, and if you are going to like it," wrote the former Czech president, who died in 2011. "If not, don't throw it away—wait and see how it is when you are older!"

The children's book is the second piece of work by Havel to be translated to Burmese, after "The Power of the Powerless," a political essay written in 1978, according to the Embassy of the Czech Republic.

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China Acting Dangerously in Sea Dispute Vietnam Tells ASEAN Summit

Posted: 11 May 2014 10:15 PM PDT

Asean, Vietnam, China, South China Sea, Myanmar, Naypyidaw

President Thein Sein during his opening address at the Asean meeting in Naypyidaw on Saturday evening. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Vietnam’s prime minister told Southeast Asian leaders on Sunday that China was slandering his country and committing dangerous violations in disputed waters, but the 10-nation Asean group refrained from criticizing Beijing in a summit communique.

Tensions rose in the resource-rich South China Sea last week after China positioned a giant oil rig in an area also claimed by Vietnam. Each country accused the other of ramming its ships near the disputed Paracel Islands.

Hundreds of Vietnamese rallied in the country’s biggest cities on Sunday to denounce China, in rare protests that looked likely to prolong the tense stand-off.

Speaking to fellow leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) at a summit in Burma, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said Vietnam had acted with "utmost restraint" and used all means of dialogue to request China remove the rig.

"But until now, China not only hasn’t responded to Vietnam’s rightful request but also slandered and blamed Vietnam while increasing their violations, which are becoming more dangerous and serious," he said, in his strongest comments yet on the crisis.

China has accused Vietnam of intentionally colliding with its ships in the South China Sea, after Vietnam asserted that Chinese vessels used water cannon and rammed eight of its vessels at the weekend near an oil rig.

Asean, a loose grouping that relies on unanimous consensus to reach decisions, faced a test of unity at the summit as some members expressed alarm over China’s growing assertiveness and pushed for a strong statement.

The group’s foreign ministers voiced "serious concerns" on Saturday over the naval clashes between Vietnam and China and its top official urged Beijing to step up efforts to advance talks on maritime security.

Asean, however, appeared unwilling to risk antagonizing China, which exerts huge political and economic influence over much of the region. Neither Burma's President Thein Sein’s opening speech nor the final statement of the summit on Sunday touched on the China-Vietnam dispute.

Dung urged Asean and other nations to "support the legal and legitimate requirements of Vietnam."

China’s foreign ministry, in a statement late on Saturday, said the issue was not "a problem between China and Asean" and that it opposed certain member states trying to use it to sow discord. That was an apparent reference to Vietnam and the Philippines, two of the most vocal countries on the South China Sea dispute.

"The Chinese side is always opposed to certain countries’ attempts to use the South Sea issue to harm the overall friendship and cooperation between China and the Asean," it said.

China was ready to work with Asean to continue implementing the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, a statement that was agreed in 2002 to try to manage tensions in the seas, the ministry added.

China has begun official talks with Asean to establish maritime conduct rules for the South China Sea, but argues that territorial disputes should be discussed on a bilateral basis. It claims the entire South China Sea, putting it in conflict with Taiwan, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Brunei. The last four are Asean members.

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Thailand Warns People to Stay Away From Protests

Posted: 11 May 2014 10:10 PM PDT

Thailand, protests, Democrat Party, Yingluck Shinawatra, Thaksin, Suthep Thaugsuban

An anti-government protester jumps and kicks a metal barrier blocking the entrance of a police compound housing a government security group as protesters gather outside demanding an apology from the police for firing teargas on demonstrators on Friday, in the north of Bangkok May 10, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

BANGKOK — Thailand's caretaker government said Sunday that it would tighten security to prevent clashes that could arise between the two sides in an escalating political crisis, and warned people to stay away from protest sites for their own safety.

The announcement was broadcast on television as pro-government and anti-government protesters held competing rallies in Bangkok over the weekend. The two groups were several kilometers apart, but concerns of violence have risen following a court's ouster of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra last week.

Senior security official Tharit Pengdit warned that if the anti-government movement carries out an attempt to appoint an unelected prime minister, it would ignite anger from government supporters that "could definitely spread to clashes and could eventually lead to a civil war." The comment echoed one made a day earlier by the head of the pro-government Red Shirt movement.

"It is therefore necessary for CAPO to escalate law enforcement to a stricter level, to solve problems that will arise in the near future," said Tharit, an executive for the government's security Center of Administration for Peace and Order. "We are asking people to stay away from the protesters and … to avoid the protest sites for their own safety."

He did not specify how or where security would be tightened.

Two people were injured late Saturday when unknown assailants fired two grenades at Government House, the prime minister's office compound, where anti-government protesters were camped, said police Col. Kamthorn Auicharoen. Officials vacated the compound months ago due to the protests launched against Yingluck in November.

It was the latest in a series of grenade attacks and drive-by shootings that have left hundreds of people injured since Thailand's political crisis escalated in November. Both sides accuse the other of orchestrating the violence.

Anti-government protesters were emboldened by the Constitutional Court's ruling Wednesday to dismiss Yingluck for nepotism, accomplishing what months of anti-government protests supported by the urban elite and royalists have failed to achieve. On Friday, the protesters ramped up their efforts to bring down what remains of Yingluck's administration by laying siege to television stations, surrounding state offices and demanding lawmakers help them install a non-elected prime minister to rule the country.

Yingluck's Cabinet has named deputy premier Niwattumrong Boonsongpaisan as acting prime minister, but the leader of the anti-government protest movement, Suthep Thaugsuban, said Saturday that Niwattumrong "doesn't hold the authority and status to be the head of the government."

Suthep has asked the Senate to "quickly consult the presidents of the Supreme Court, the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Administrative Court and the Election Commission to work to appoint the new prime minister immediately."

The Senate said it would hold an informal meeting Monday to discuss the crisis.

The anti-government protesters called Friday for a "final push" to oust the entire Cabinet and set up an unelected "people's council" that they say would implement still-undefined reforms to combat corruption and fight money politics. They oppose elections scheduled for July, which the current ruling party would likely win.

Thailand's long-running political crisis began in 2006 when Yingluck's brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was toppled by a military coup after being accused of corruption, abuse of power and disrespect for King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

Thaksin, a former telecommunications billionaire, remains highly popular among the rural poor in Thailand's north and northeast, and parties controlled by him have won every national election since 2001. The anti-government protesters, aligned with the opposition Democrat Party, say they want to remove all traces of his political machine from politics.

Associated Press writer Jocelyn Gecker contributed to this report.

The post Thailand Warns People to Stay Away From Protests appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Chinese Elite Push for Release of Jailed Nobel Laureate

Posted: 11 May 2014 10:06 PM PDT

China, Tiananmen, June 4, politics, activist, Nobel

A quite campaign is urging the Communist Party leadership to release Liu Xiaobo on parole to improve the country's international image. (Photo: Reuters)

BEIJING — A group of "princelings," children of China's political elite, has quietly urged the Communist Party leadership to release jailed Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo on parole to improve the country's international image, two sources said.

Liu's release is not high on the agenda of the party, which is trying to push through painful economic, judicial and military reforms amid the most extensive crackdown on corruption in over six decades, the sources with ties to the leadership said, requesting anonymity.

But the back channel push for Liu's parole shows that a debate is taking place among leaders about damage to China's reputation caused by his jailing. It also suggests the ruling elite are not monolithic when it comes to views on dissent.

Liu, 58, a veteran dissident involved in the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests crushed by the army, was jailed for 11 years in 2009 on subversion charges for organizing a petition urging an end to one-party rule. He won the Nobel Peace Prize the following year.

"For many princelings, the pros of freeing Liu Xiaobo outweigh the cons," one of the sources said. "Liu Xiaobo will definitely be freed early. The question is when."

He is eligible for parole after serving half his term.

The sources declined to say how big the group of princelings was, but said most were second- or third-generation born in the 1960s or 1970s and some were close to President Xi Jinping.

"The biggest worry is hostile forces using Liu Xiaobo once he is freed," the second source told Reuters.

Asked how the message was relayed to the leadership, the source said: "We have our channels … the topic has come up many times during our gatherings."

The sources declined to identify the princelings or say if they had written or spoken to Xi or went through his aides or family members.

The Foreign Ministry, Ministry of Justice and State Council Information Office did not respond to faxed requests for comment.

Liu's wife, Liu Xia, has been put under effective house arrest since shortly after her husband won the Nobel prize, ostensibly to prevent her from talking to the media, and could not be reached.

Liu Xia was admitted to hospital in February after police refused to let her seek medical help abroad.

Liu Xiaobo is considered a moderate dissident, but the Communist Party is obsessed by anyone or anything it perceives as a threat to social stability.

Critics say Chinese leaders are insecure about what they feel are Western efforts to undermine one-party rule by pushing democratization.

President Xi, despite being the son of a reform-minded former vice premier, has shown no sign of wanting to loosen the political system. He said in Belgium last month that China had experimented with multi-party democracy and that it did not work.

China's human rights record has been a thorn in its side since the army crackdown on student-led demonstrations for democracy centered on Beijing's Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989, which attracts endless opprobrium abroad.

Suppression of Expression

The government has stepped up pressure on the rights community ahead of the 25th anniversary of the crackdown, detaining several leading dissidents and activists, including lawyer Pu Zhiqiang and journalist Gao Yu.

Xi's administration has also clamped down on Internet critics and tightened curbs on journalists in what rights groups call the worst suppression of free expression in recent years.

Yet the purge of retired domestic security tsar Zhou Yongkang could be conducive to Liu's release, the sources said.

Zhou is under virtual house arrest and under investigation for corruption. He had little sympathy for dissidents and during his five-year watch government spending on domestic security eclipsed the defense budget.

"Zhou Yongkang had recommended imprisoning Liu Xiaobo," the second source said, adding that this could be an opportunity to undo Zhou's deeds.

"But even if Liu Xiaobo is freed, the government will not [politically] rehabilitate June 4 soon," the source said, referring to the Tiananmen crackdown.

Liu's lawyer, Mo Shaoping, said that any decision on releasing Liu would be political, not legal.

Maya Wang, Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch, said there have been sustained efforts from within China to get Liu released, but that she was not optimistic.

"According to Chinese law he would have to admit guilt first. Since he didn't, the likelihood of that happening is rather low," Wang said.

Despite Beijing's crackdown on dissent, there have been nuanced changes to China's policy towards the 1989 protests.

Taiwanese song writer Hou Dejian, who defected to China in 1983 and was deported seven years later for staging a hunger strike with Liu and two others in support of student protesters on the eve of the Tiananmen crackdown, set foot in China in 2006 for the first time in 16 years.

Hou's return and the recent release from detention of two outspoken bloggers—Xue Manzi and Wang Gongquan—have raised hopes the government may show leniency towards Liu.

In another sign of possible tolerance, President Xi approved publication in China last year of the Chinese version of "Deng Xiaoping and the Transformation of China" by Harvard academic Erza Vogel, multiple sources said.

The book was the first unofficial account of the crackdown by a foreign academic to be published in China.

In yet another sign, "democracy movement" was dropped last year from a government blacklist of "hostile forces," three independent sources said. But the security apparatus continues to put dissidents and bereaved families of victims under house arrest ahead of politically sensitive dates.

In a rare move, Chen Ziming, who was sentenced to 13 years in prison as one of two "black hands" behind the 1989 protests, was allowed to go to the United States in January for medical treatment and to receive a human rights award.

The 1989 protests had initially been labeled "counter-revolutionary," or subversive, but have since been watered down to a "political disturbance."

The post Chinese Elite Push for Release of Jailed Nobel Laureate appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Steering ASEAN Through Treacherous Waters

Posted: 11 May 2014 09:57 PM PDT

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


Experts urge transparency in Burma’s businesses

Posted: 12 May 2014 05:36 AM PDT

Most companies operating in Burma and Southeast Asia fail to meet international standards for transparency, according to a survey by the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre (BHRRC).

The London-based organisation, with offices and research fellows in 180 countries, deals with about 5,000 companies with both positive and negative images on human rights. One of its main goals is to obtain responses about misconduct allegations made by civil-society groups.

The BHRRC noted that when it sought public responses from companies about specific allegations of human rights violations in Burma, the response rate was 47 percent, compared with a global average of more than 70 percent. The sectors approached most frequently in Burma are oil, gas and coal (almost half or 47 percent of all approaches), along with finance, banking and insurance (19 percent). The high number for the latter illustrates their potential exposure as financiers or insurers of projects linked to human rights abuses. Other problem areas included tourism (10 percent) and dam-building and hydropower projects (8 percent).

Telecommunications and internet providers are also likely to come under increased scrutiny – including calls to ensure affordable access and to protect privacy and freedom of expression, the group said. The centre called on companies doing business in Burma and in Southeast Asia to make vital information about their policies and operations publicly available, especially those related to their human rights practices.

The organisation emphasised that investment in Burma must be accompanied by responsible practices and respect for human rights: for example, some areas of greatest concern include people displaced for hydropower, mining and agribusiness projects who should be adequately consulted and given fair compensation; and workers who should be guaranteed a living wage and the right to organise.

It referred to the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights as a source of guidance on how companies should communicate externally. The goal is to provide a measure of transparency and accountability to individuals or groups, including investors, who may be affected by their business activities.

"Transparency is an essential first step to underpin economic reforms, fight corruption and improve companies' respect for human rights," said Phil Bloomer, the BHRRC executive director. "It is vital to companies' social licence to operate, especially in contexts that pose risks of severe human rights impacts."

BHRRC sees the corporate response process as one of the most effective tools to combat abuses by companies. When the organisation receives allegations that a company has abused human rights, its researchers contact the company immediately and invite a public response, before making both the allegations and response available on its website.

Over the past 10 years that it has been covering Southeast Asia, the organisation has observed that seeking responses from local and regional companies has been more challenging, due to the lack of publicly available information about the companies themselves, as well as their failure or neglect to recognise the importance of responding publicly to human rights concerns.

Mr Bloomer said that with the dramatic increase in investment in Burma, communities and workers could benefit enormously, but there was an equal danger of substantial abuse, such as forced displacement of people from their homes and land, poverty wages, and dangerous conditions at work.

"The first action all companies must take is to communicate with affected communities and other stakeholders by providing public information about their plans and human rights policies," he said. "Only with this basic first step can there be hope that growing investment will bring shared prosperity and shared security to the people of Burma."

One very large foriegn-invested project— the Thilawa Special Economic Zone (SEZ) — is now being watched with concern by the civil society because of displacement of local communities surrounding the port.

According to an NGO called Burma Partnership, the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), which is financing the SEZ, is "treating the communities currently living on the site area with undisguised disdain, drawing ire from local and international organisations, including on their home turf."

Covering around 2,400 hectares of land, the Thilawa SEZ is located outside Rangoon and will include factories, a deep-sea port, housing developments and other infrastructure for transport and communications.

The project is a joint effort between Japan and Burma, with the Burmese government and domestic businesses holding a 51 percent stake and the Japanese government and businesses owning a 49 percent stake with funding being channelled through JICA as part of Japan's overseas development assistance.

Phase one of the project, which has already started, has involved the relocation of 300 villagers. However, the new site consists of inadequate housing, no alternative farmland, lacks a clean water supply and has very few livelihood opportunities, leaving people in debt just a few months after moving, the Chiang Mai-based Burma Partnership said.

The group said it had made repeated requests for meetings with the JICA, and sent letters to outline its concerns over local residents' new living conditions, but that the Japanese agency had evaded responsibility, claiming it was the Burmese government's job.

"Yet this is the same government which, in August 2013, forced villagers to sign relocation agreements with the threat of destroying their homes, while the villagers were not provided a copy of this agreement," the NGO said last week. The Japanese NGO, Mekong Watch, pointed out that such behavior violates the JICA's own social and environmental safeguards.

"JICA incorporates stakeholder opinions into decision-making processes regarding environmental and social considerations by ensuring the meaningful participation of stakeholders in order to have consideration for environmental and social factors and to reach a consensus accordingly," Mekong Watch said.

Thilawa is not the only megaproject in which JICA is involved with in Burma. In October 2013, the agency published a study it conducted in eastern Burma of a framework for development, including industrial estates and free trade zones, development of towns, and resettlement sites and economic opportunity for returning refugees and internally displaced persons.

What the study assumes is that peace in this area, which has been suffering from effects of armed conflict for decades, will be achieved through development, the NGO said.

The worrying part of this framework is that eastern Burma is still a very fragile place, with ceasefires only tentative and long-standing issues yet to be addressed, it said.

"If JICA plans to bulldoze ahead with projects such as industrial estates and infrastructure, all the while ignoring concerns of local stakeholders just as it has done with Thilawa SEZ, the consequences are potentially hugely destructive and the outbreak of active conflict a very real possibility," warned Burma Partnership.

Without genuine and transparent dialogue with local communities, as well as ensuring local communities are part of making decisions that will permanently affect their future livelihood, Japan's reputation in Burma will be sullied permanently, the NGOs say.

Thilawa SEZ, rather than being a showcase of sustainable development and prosperity, will be a symbol of disregard for the rights of local people, they concluded.

 

‘Band aid’ for displaced Kachin

Posted: 12 May 2014 04:53 AM PDT

Musicians and activists united in Rangoon on Sunday for a series of concerts benefitting Kachin war refugees.

Much-loved musical group Shwe Thanzin teamed up with Pan Ye Lan and the Action Times Foundation for the three-day event from 11-13 May.

Pan Ye Lan is a charity founded by musicians in 2012, known for performing in teashops and on the street, to raise relief funds for internally displaced persons (IDPs). The Action Times Foundation specialises in disaster and conflict relief, and has operated in Kachin State and in Meikhtila in the wake of violence.

Thar Htwe, a singer for Pan Ye Lan, said the team plans to expand the campaign to other parts of Burma. They hope to perform in Mandalay, Maymyo [Pwin Oo Lwin] and Muse before donating the funds to six IDP camps in Man Waing Gyi, Kachin State. They expect to wrap up the campaign and deliver funds in June.

He said that while past fundraisers have brought in about 3-400,000 kyat (US$3-400), awareness of recent events in Kachin State has perhaps made people more supportive.

"Now we're getting, like, 5-600,000 kyat," he said.

The group is scheduled for performances at several of Rangoon's well-known teashops, including Seik Tin Kya and Thone Pan Hla.

Aid workers have estimated that more than 3,000 people have been displaced by recent fighting in Kachin State, though many more were already displaced. Since the June 2011 breakdown of a 17-year ceasefire between the Kachin Independence Army and the Burmese military, more than 100,000 people have fled their homes in northern Burma.

Many IDP camps are located in remote, isolated areas that receive little or no humanitarian aid and are highly susceptible to disaster caused by extreme weather and lack of medical supplies.

Activists plant seeds of Flower Speech campaign in Pyapon

Posted: 12 May 2014 01:16 AM PDT

Activists representing a new anti-hate speech campaign travelled to Irrawaddy Division's Pyapon on Saturday to promote religious tolerance, following an invitation from local youth groups.

The Flower Speech campaign, or Panzagar as it is known in Burmese, is the brainchild of Nay Phone Latt, a well-known blogger who was imprisoned for four years for his anti-government writings.

Speaking to DVB, he said, "We explained the message of our campaign to local youths, then we all walked around Pyapon, distributing leaflets, posters and stickers.

"We also performed a song we wrote, titled 'We are all just humans'," he said, "which we played on guitars at intersections in the town. Many local residents were supportive."

He said the Flower Speech campaign was promoting its slogan: "Let's moderate our speech to prevent hatred between human beings."

Nay Phone Latt said that, if possible, he would like to take the campaign nationwide. To date, the fledgling campaign, which was founded in early April, has only toured in Rangoon, Mandalay and now Pyapon.

"We would like to export the campaign far and wide across Burma, but we don't yet have the manpower for that," Nay Phone Latt said. "Also, we have to cover our own travel expenses."

He said that, in the meantime, the Panzagar group will work to raise awareness with people from all faiths, and try to convince people to embrace Burma's multicultural diversity.

 

Controversial campaign guidelines drafted

Posted: 11 May 2014 11:27 PM PDT

Burma's Union Election Commission (UEC) last week announced that new campaign guidelines have been drafted.

The UEC is scheduled to meet with party leaders next week to discuss the draft, which has already received criticism from several political figures.

In the past few months the commission has signalled plans to curb campaign periods, restrict campaigning to a candidate's constituency, and limit representative campaigning.

Khin Maung Swe, chairman of the National Democratic Force, said that the draft manual severely "restricts our manoeuvrability with election campaigning," by requiring party representatives to register with the District Election Commission before campaigning on behalf of a candidate.

The guidelines require parties to give prior notice to authorities about campaign details, such as location, route, time and full event schedule, conditions that Khin Maung Swe said are reminiscent of military rule.

"There are too many restrictions," he concluded.

The new guidelines also cut the election campaign period down to one month before the vote.

The UEC is chaired by Tin Aye, a retired lieutenant-general in the Burmese military and former leader for the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party.

Burma's 2010 elections are almost universally dismissed as flawed and invalid. Tin Aye notably criticised the last round of by-elections, held in 2012, for being too free, claiming that they resembled the demonstrations of the 1988 uprising and gave unfair advantage to opposition candidates.

DVB Debate: Freedom to report

Posted: 11 May 2014 11:21 PM PDT

In the past few years, many restrictions on Burma's media have been relaxed, censorship has been lifted, and dozens of new independent media originations have emerged.

But journalists are still facing ongoing risks and restrictions, and they continue to demand genuine media freedom.

On DVB Debate's panel this week: Zaw Thet Htwe from Myanmar Press Council; Myat Khine from Snap Shot weekly journal; Thiha Saw from the Myanmar Journalist Association; and Thiri Zaw from The Voice weekly journal.

Thiri Zaw warned that with one hand the government is giving the press greater freedom, but with the other they are trying to remain in control.

"Now we can see a degree of freedom in the media industry compared to the past, but if the current freedom is going to be controlled, then it won't work. It would mean that, in one way, the government is allowing freedom, but at the same time it is trying to take back control," she said.

Myat Khine discussed the fact that several journalists have been arrested and charged for just doing their job.

Cartoon: DVB Debate

Cartoon: DVB Debate

"Even though there is no official censorship at the moment, many media outlets are facing court cases," he said.

Last month DVB journalist Zaw Pe was sentenced to a year in prison under charges of "trespassing" and "disturbing a civil servant on duty" as he attempted to interview an education official for a story. Audience member Myint Zaw said the government is attempting to control the media by invoking these laws against journalists.

"These are not just guidelines for the media industry, these laws act as threats. [The government] are attempting to influence the media by using these existing laws," he said.

Maung Maung Win, lawyer for the Zaw Pe case, stressed the importance of having an independent judiciary.

"The judicial system is vital for a functioning society. It needs to be free and fair in order to see real freedom in the press industry," he said.

Even government officials acknowledge there are still limitations for journalists.

"There is no absolute freedom in the press. Due to demands from society, restrictions exist in many forms," said presidential spokesperson, Ye Htut, in a separate interview with DVB.

Panellists debated the importance of journalists being reliable, as well as free. The audience raised concerns about the influence of wealthy backers and newspaper owners over content in a newspaper, but others insisted that reliability is already a priority.

"Concerns over ownership are not a problem when we have editorial freedom. And if we have braver and more competent editors who are faithful to the industry, then ownership will not be a problem at all," said Aung Thura from 7 Day News.

The studio then discussed unreliable news sources, and questioned who should assume responsibility for one-sided and subjective reports on issues such as the religious clashes in Arakan State.

"There are 'spies' that exist within the media who want to diminish people's trust, so they create fake news. This can be seen in today's print and online media. The government uses this situation as a reason to legitimise retaking control of the media," said Nay Phone Latt from PEN Myanmar.

In January, Associated Press (AP) broke the story of a massacre in Duchira Dan village, in northern Arakan State's Maungdaw, but a government-backed investigation to look into the massacre found no evidence that it ever took place. Esther Htusan from AP said local media have a responsibility to question government statements.

"In the case of Duchira Dan, did the local media investigate this? As soon as the government issued a statement the local media just started to criticise certain groups based on that. How much do people really know about what is really happening inside this country?" she asked.

Several voices on the panel agreed that Burma had a long way to go before it will achieve true media freedom. As current media laws actually prevent journalists from doing their job, reporters continue to risk being arrested on spurious charges at the whim of a government official.

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

 

 

 

Mandalay villages’ river water polluted with toxic waste

Posted: 11 May 2014 10:46 PM PDT

Fifteen villages in Amarapura, Mandalay Division, have no alternative but to bathe in and drink polluted water due to the release of industrial toxins by factories in the city of Mandalay into the Dokhtawaddy River, also known as the Myitnge River.

"Mandalay industrial zone has been releasing waste into the river for between five and 10 years. The pollution means water from the river is unsafe to use," said Kyaw Kyaw Oo, a resident of Kankyae village.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has recently provided US$ 2 million for community development projects in Mandalay, which include the upgrade of drinking water infrastructure. Research undertaken by the Mandalay City Development Project in connection to the ADB's funding scheme revealed that 97 local factories discharge 400,000 gallons of untreated wastewater every day.

That pollution is having a devastating effect on the health and economy on villagers downstream.

Speaking to DVB last week, Satoe Village administrator Aung Kyi said, "The industrial water is now flowing into the Dokhtawaddy River, east of Satoe village. The water comes to the river through Ta-Bouk stream.

"The waste from industrial zone goes into [Mandalay's] South Lake and North Lake, before reaching the Dokhtawaddy. In the past, people bred fish in the lakes. Now due to the polluting waste water from industrial zone, people cannot breed fish."

Those who can afford to dig deep wells have been able to access drinking water. However the majority of villagers are forced to rely on river water, which Aung Kyi says is giving their children skin problems.

Despite the dire situation that the Mandalay villagers are facing, they say they have not yet received any donations of water.

The Dokhtawaddy River has its source in China's Yunnan Province and is one of the main tributaries of the Irrawaddy, officially spelled the Ayeyarwady, which is Burma's second largest waterway, providing water and livelihoods for millions of people.

‘Trespassers will be shot!’ says fishery firm

Posted: 11 May 2014 08:57 PM PDT

Farmers in the central Burmese town of Madaya are in hot water after protesting at the site of a fishery company whose land, they claim, is rightfully theirs.

Twenty residents from four villages in the town marched onto the land, ignoring signs that read, "Trespassers will be shot", and began to plant rice paddy. They also tore down the barriers of one of the fishponds to allow the water to irrigate their fields.

Armed police intervened, and now the Sanpya Fishery Company, who occupies the land, is suing the villagers for the damage.

"There are around 100 police deployed and they have been harassing us by various means – raiding our villages and such to make our lives difficult. The so-called "People's Police Force", said Sandar Oo, one of the original owners of the land who is now facing charges.

Sanpya Fisheries leased 300 acres of land from the Burmese army in the early 1990's. But the army had allegedly confiscated that land from the Madaya villagers.

The residents feel they were not compensated adequately, and have tried to reach out to the company and local authorities four times to discuss their ownership claims – but have been repeatedly ignored.

"The company built a fishery pond in the area and did nothing to compensate us. Therefore, we want our land back," said Mya Hnin from Thabyaythar village.

Farming confiscated land has become a popular form of protest in Burma as farmers feel it shows that they have rightful ownership of the land.

This isn't the first time the Madaya villagers have run afoul of the authorities. In March, 19 farmers were charged with sedition and trespassing after staging a plough protest on the contested land.

The farmers were pressed with various charges of Burma's Penal Code, including criminal intimidation, (Article 506), abetting a crime, (Article 114) vandalism, (Article 427) and trespassing (Article 447).