Saturday, August 9, 2014

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


US’s Kerry Presses Burma Leaders on Human Rights, Reforms

Posted: 09 Aug 2014 07:15 AM PDT

US Burma

Secretary of State John Kerry (L) speaks with President Thein Sein during their meeting at the Presidential hall, outside the venue of the 47th ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Naypyidaw on Saturday. (Photo: Reuters)

NAYPYIDAW — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Saturday pressed Burma’s political leaders on Washington’s human rights concerns and urged its President Thein Sein to step up constitutional reforms to ensure elections next year are fully credible.

Kerry, in Burma’s capital for the ASEAN Regional Forum, met Thein Sein and discussed plans for elections in 2015, concerns over the treatment of the minority Muslim Rohingya, as well as the jailing of journalists, a senior State Department official said.

He also discussed these issues with Shwe Mann, the speaker of parliament and leader of the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP).

While officials acknowledged there had been significant change in Burma during its political transition since 2011 from military rule, they also said there had been "some resistance and some slowdown" in tackling more difficult issues such as press freedom and constitutional reforms.

Kerry will meet with Burma opposition leader and international icon Aung San Suu Kyi in Rangoon on Sunday.

She has campaigned for a change to the constitution that bars her from the presidency and gives substantial political power to unelected military members of parliament.

The United States has promised to ease sanctions further if there are more reforms, including the withdrawal of the military from politics.

But U.S. officials said the lifting of remaining sanctions was unlikely until the process of reform and respect for human rights advances.

"Right now the focus is entirely on bearing down on these more fundamental challenges that they are now coming face to face with," the senior official said.

Rohingya in the Spotlight

Kerry got into "quite a few details" about the situation in Rakhine state and the minority Muslim Rohingya community, the official said.

In particular, he addressed the designation of the term "Bengali" which the Rohingya see as underscoring an assertion they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, even though many have lived in western Burma for generations.

"The name issue should be set aside," the official said.

"To force any community to accept a name they consider to be offensive is to invite conflict, and if the goal is to prevent conflict, then it’s better to set that aside."

Kerry also raised specific cases involving the arrest of journalists, the official added.

The senior State Department official said there was no resistance from Thein to discussing the issues.

Ye Htut, Burma’s minister of information, said on Friday the government had moved in the right direction since elections in 2011 but also recognized it needed to do more.

"We don’t deny there are some challenges that we are facing," he said, "But we are moving toward the right direction and we’re trying our best to overcome these challenges."

"People in Congress should have more understanding of our situation, and instead of blaming us, they try to find a way to help the Burma people to solve all these things," he said.

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US Call for South China Sea ‘Freeze’ Gets Cool Response From China

Posted: 09 Aug 2014 06:59 AM PDT

South China Sea

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speaks with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi during a bilateral meeting at the 47th ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Naypyidaw on Saturday. (Photo: Reuters)

NAYPYIDAW — A U.S. proposal for a freeze on provocative acts in the South China Sea got a cool response from China and some Southeast Asian nations on Saturday, an apparent setback to Washington’s efforts to rein in China’s assertive actions.

To China’s annoyance, the United States is using a regional meeting in Burma this weekend to step up its engagement in the maritime tension by calling for a moratorium on actions such as China’s planting of a giant oil rig in Vietnamese waters in May.

Its ally the Philippines has also called for a freeze as part of a three-step plan to ease tension in the resource-rich sea, through which passes $5 trillion of trade a year.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Burma’s capital, Naypyidaw, on Saturday for the ASEAN Regional Forum, joining foreign ministers and other top diplomats from China, Russia, Japan, India, Australia, the European Union and Southeast Asia among others.

"The United States and ASEAN have a common responsibility to ensure the maritime security of critical sea, lands and ports," Kerry said in opening comments.

"We need to work together to manage tensions in the South China Sea and to manage them peacefully, and also to manage them on the basis of international law."

But Le Luong Minh, secretary-general of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), said the U.S. proposal was not discussed by ASEAN ministers because there was already a mechanism in place to curtail sensitive action such as land reclamation and building on disputed islands.

China Says Situation Stable

The top ASEAN diplomat said it was up to ASEAN to work with China to reduce tension by improving compliance with a 2002 agreement, as they also work to conclude a binding Code of Conduct for maritime actions. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam and Taiwan also lay claim to parts of the sea.

"It is up to ASEAN to encourage China to achieve a serious and effective implementation of this commitment, rather than ASEAN asking whether it should support or not support the [U.S.] proposal," he said.

Most claimants have flouted the 2002 guidelines, leading to rising tension in the South China Sea between four ASEAN claimant nations and China, which claims 90 percent of the waters. The rancor has split ASEAN, with several states including some of the claimants reluctant to antagonize Asia’s economic giant.

China rejects U.S. involvement in the dispute and has already dismissed the proposal for a freeze. China accuses the United States of emboldening claimants such as the Philippines and Vietnam with its military "pivot" back to Asia.

"Currently the situation in the South China Sea is stable on the whole. There has not been any problem regarding navigation in the South China Sea," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters.

"Someone has been exaggerating or playing up the so-called tensions in the South China Sea. We don’t agree with such a practice."

Philippine Foreign Minister Albert del Rosario also appeared to tone down his proposal for a freeze or moratorium on activities causing tension in the South China Sea, calling instead for a "cessation" in remarks to reporters on Friday.

A senior U.S. official said the change in language was not significant. "Maybe they just want to differentiate their proposal from our proposal."

ASEAN includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Burma, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

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Rohingya Children in Burma Camps Going Hungry

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 06:30 PM PDT

Twin Rohingya babies sleep inside a hut at a refugee camp outside Sittwe, the capital city of Arakan State, on June 9, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Soe Zeya Tun)

Twin Rohingya babies sleep inside a hut at a refugee camp outside Sittwe, the capital city of Arakan State, on June 9, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Soe Zeya Tun)

OHN TAW GYI CAMP, Arakan State — Born just over a year ago, Dosmeda Bibi has spent her entire short life confined to a camp for one of the world's most persecuted religious minorities. And like a growing number of other Muslim Rohingya children who are going hungry, she's showing the first signs of severe malnutrition.

Her stomach is bloated and her skin clings tightly to the bones of her tiny arms and legs. While others her age are sitting or standing, the baby girl cannot flip from her back to her stomach without a gentle nudge from her mom.

"I'm scared she won't live much longer," whispers Hameda Begum as she gazes into her daughter's dark, sunken eyes. "We barely have any food. On some days I can only scrape together a few bites of rice for her to eat."

Burma's child malnutrition rate was already among the region's highest, but it's an increasingly familiar sight in the country's westernmost state of Arakan, which is home to almost all of the country's 1.3 million Rohingya Muslims.

More than 140,000 have been trapped in crowded, dirty camps since extremist Buddhist mobs began chasing them from their homes two years ago, killing up to 280 people. The others are stuck in villages isolated by systematic discrimination, with restrictions on their movement and limited access to food, clean water, education and health care.

Even before the violence, the European Community Humanitarian Office reported parts of the country's second-poorest state had acute malnutrition rates hitting 23 percent—far beyond the 15 percent emergency level set by the World Health Organization.

With seasonal rains now beating down on the plastic tents and bamboo shacks inside Rohingya camps, the situation has become even more miserable and dangerous for kids like Dosmeda.

Naked boys and girls run barefoot on the muddy, narrow pathways, or play in pools of raw sewage, exposing them to potential waterborne diseases that kill. Some have black hair tinged with patches of red or blond, a tell-tale sign of nutrient deficiency commonly seen in places experiencing famine.

After a 10-day visit to the area last month, Yanghee Lee, the UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Burma, summed up what she saw.

"The situation is deplorable," she said.

 

Myanmar, a predominantly Buddhist nation, only recently emerged from a half-century of repressive military rule and self-imposed isolation. Despite occasional expressions of concern, the United States, Britain and others in the international community have largely stood by as conditions for the Rohingya deteriorated.

Some ambassadors and donor countries say privately that coming down too hard on the new, nominally civilian government will undermine efforts to implement sweeping reforms and note there has already been a dramatic backslide. Others don't want to jeopardize much-needed multi-billion dollar development projects in the country.

But their hesitancy to act has emboldened Buddhist extremists, now dictating the terms of aid distribution in Arakan State.

Last month, even Bertrand Bainvel, country representative for the UN's children's agency Unicef—which says the number of severe malnutrition cases has more than doubled between March and June to reach nearly 1,000 cases—apologized for the use of the word "Rohingya." It was uttered during a presentation about projects for kids in Arakan, rather than the government-insisted term "Bengali."

He promised that Unicef would not use the word again, those present at the meeting said, though he sidestepped repeated queries from The Associated Press about the incident.

The government claims ethnic Rohingya are illegal migrants from neighboring Bangladesh and denies them citizenship, even though many of their families arrived generations ago. With their dark South Asian features, they are looked upon with disdain by the vast majority of the nation's 60 million people. Even Nobel Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, whether for reasons personal or political, has remained largely silent as members of the religious minority have been chased down by knife-wielding mobs.

Conditions in the camps—and elsewhere in Arakan—went from bad to worse in February after the government expelled their main health lifeline, the Nobel-prize winning Doctors Without Borders (MSF).

A month later, other humanitarian groups were temporarily evacuated after extremist Buddhists stormed their residences and offices, saying they were giving Muslims preferential treatment. Many have since returned, but their operations have been severely restricted.

Doctors Without Borders has remained barred. In a move apparently timed to US Secretary of State John Kerry's arrival in Burma on Friday, the government said the aid group could get back to work, though it remains unclear when that will happen and what conditions will apply.

Reshma Adatia, Holland-based Doctors Without Borders operational adviser, said Kerry and other foreign ministers attending a regional meeting in Burma this weekend should pressure the government to allow all aid groups to return immediately without restrictions.

"It's important for foreign governments and international actors to really push that access to essential humanitarian assistance is required, and it's required today," she said. "We're talking about hundreds of thousands that are at risk right now."

The father of Dosmeda, the malnourished baby, died at sea while working as a fisherman just before she was born.

After Buddhist mobs attacked the family's home, her pregnant mother, Hameda Begum, moved into the Ohn Taw Gyi camp outside Sittwe.

Unable to work, and without a husband to help, she had a hard time finding enough to eat in the months leading up to her due date. When the baby was born, the 18-year-old mother was unable to produce milk.

"I could only give her what adults ate—rice or ground-up fish," Hameda said of her first child. "But the food rations we got were small. Sometimes we didn't get any at all."

She knew her baby was sick, but she didn't understand malnutrition was to blame.

"She just kept getting skinnier and skinnier," she said.

The first two years of a child's life—when the brain and body are developing—are critical for physical and mental development. Without adequate nutrition, little girls like Dosmeda are prone to stunting, a condition that will shape the rest of their lives. As adults, they are weaker, prone to illnesses and have limited cognitive capacity. They are also likely to be less productive on the job, studies show, earning lower wages that keep them stuck in poverty.

Dosmeda is now getting help from France-based Action Against Hunger, one of the only foreign aid organizations that has been allowed to continue operating in the camps. But she continues to wither, looking worse by the day. The baby is the only family the young mother has in the camp, and she's desperate to save her.

"All I can think about all day is my daughter. How can I help her? How can I make her healthy, give her a longer life?" Hameda said. "If something happens, I don't know what I'll do. I don't think I can live without her."

Associated Press writers Robin McDowell and Margie Mason contributed to this report.

The post Rohingya Children in Burma Camps Going Hungry appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

The Irrawaddy Business Roundup (August 9, 2014)

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 06:00 PM PDT

Inflation Forecast to Hover Around 9% if Market Reforms Continue

Burma's rate of inflation will stabilize at about 9 percent "in the medium term," a financial assessment of the country has forecast.

Although food price pressures will ease with the secondary harvest, inflation will continue speeding up throughout this year, said Mantis, a Netherlands-based economic forecasting company specializing in frontier markets.

Inflation will be driven by consumer price increases and depreciation of the kyat, said Mantis.

Investment inflows worth about 9 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in the first quarter of 2014 "came just in time to help finance the country's highest merchandise deficit ever, which reached 7.3 percent of GDP" in the quarter.

"While imports remained elevated, exports dropped to 12.5 percent of GDP in 2014Q1, down from their peak of 21 percent in the previous quarter and somewhat below their five-year average of 15.5 percent. We expect the drop in exports to be of a temporary nature and thus the merchandise deficit to moderate soon," Mantis said.

"Myanmar's complex socio-economic transition process entails large uncertainties. If the reform momentum accelerates, investment inflows may strengthen, leading to appreciation of the currency," the assessment said.

"On the other hand, if financial markets are not liberalized or the government resorts to borrowing from the central bank, there will be faster depreciation of the kyat."

India, Burma Plan a Large Power Plant to Aid Cross-Border Trade

India and Burma are negotiating to jointly build a 400-megawatt power plant in Sagaing Division close to the border between the two countries, Indian media reports said.

Financial support and equipment would be supplied by India's Manipur State, said The Times of India, reporting on a meeting between the two sides at Tamu this week.

A site for the plant, which would be fueled by natural gas or electricity, has still to be decided, said the paper. One of the aims of the plant would be to provide electricity to improve cross-border trade via Tamu and Moreh.

"The power situation in Sagaing Division is reportedly bad and Tamu town, which plays a major role in the Indo-Myanmar border trade through Moreh, is currently lit by [diesel] generators," said Calcutta's Economic Times.

"The Indian team assured its Myanmar counterpart that once the site was selected India was ready to provide the necessary equipment. The power generated by this proposed plant will light up, among others, Tamu town."

Labor Campaigner Wins Support From 20 Countries

Leaders of Thailand's fruit canning industry have been urged by almost 100 labor and rights organizations in 20 countries to stop the criminal libel case against a British campaigner who has spotlighted the plight of Burmese workers.

The Thai Pineapple Industry Association (TPIA) has been sent a letter signed by the groups calling for the case against Andy Hall by the Natural Fruit Company to be dropped.

The letter's signatories include the International Trade Union Confederation, European Coalition for Corporate Justice and Human Rights Watch, said Finnwatch, the NGO that commissioned Hall to investigate the conditions of Burmese migrant labor in Thai factories.

Hall's report for Finnwatch alleged that Natural Fruit illegally used child labor, violated Thailand's minimum wage standards, confiscated Burmese workers' travel and work documents, and the failed to provide legally mandated paid sick days and holidays.

Frances O'Grady, General Secretary of the British Trades Union Congress, representing 6 million workers in Andy Hall's home country, said: "Vulnerable workers need people like Andy Hall—working with trade unions in Thailand and internationally—to stand up against exploitation and abuse."

Burma Faces Tourism Bottleneck as Airport Development Remains Stalled

A travel industry newspaper has warned that Burma is facing a potential logistics crisis as it rushes to increase annual tourist arrivals in the country without any firm timetable for a new international airport.

The country's biggest airport, Rangoon, is nearing its capacity while the proposed new airport at Hanthawaddy is "nowhere in sight," said Bangkok based TTR Weekly.

"The Ministry of Hotels and Tourism is targeting [to attract] more than 3 million foreign tourists this year, up from about 1.05 million in 2012, and 2.04 million last year," said the industry paper.

Hanthawaddy is meant to have an annual capacity of 12 million, but failure by the Naypyidaw government to appoint developers means an opening date has slipped from 2016 to 2020, it said.

South Korea's Incheon Airport Consortium was originally named the preferred bidder in a competitive tender to build the new airport, but talks broke down over funding for the project with an estimated cost in excess of US$1 billion.

Incheon is still in the running to build the airport, alongside Singapore's Changi Airport Planners and Engineers (Cape) and two other firms, under new terms that may involve the Burmese government guaranteeing development loans for half of the project's cost.

Major Foreign Firms Show Interest in Ministry of Energy Advisory Role

Ten foreign legal and engineering companies have expressed interest in obtaining a consultancy contract to advise Burma's Ministry of Energy on oil and gas exploration and pipeline construction.

The firms showing interest include two British legal consultancies, Jones Day and Berwin Leighton Paisner, plus Germany's engineering business Fichtner GmbH and Schlumberger Business Consulting, the world's biggest oilfield services company based in Texas, said Eleven Media quoting the ministry.

The bid to appoint international advisers comes as Burmese government agencies continue to negotiate with a number of big international oil companies over the terms of contracts on 20 offshore development blocks. The contracts were provisionally awarded last March.

The post The Irrawaddy Business Roundup (August 9, 2014) appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Burmese Child Slave Puts Spotlight on Abuse of Foreign Maids in Thailand

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 05:30 PM PDT

 A Burmese labor official hands 25,000 baht ($840) to a Karen girl who escaped from a Thai couple accused of inflicting severe abuse on her for five years. (Photo: Facebook / President's Office)

A Burmese labor official hands 25,000 baht ($840) to a Karen girl who escaped from a Thai couple accused of inflicting severe abuse on her for five years. (Photo: Facebook / President's Office)

KAMPHAENG PHET, Thailand — "Air," the daughter of migrant workers from Burma, was abducted on her seventh birthday, and for the next five years forced to work as a housemaid without pay, suffering daily beatings and torture.

Air, whose real name has been withheld to protect her identity, managed to escape last year, and last month, a Thai court awarded her US$143,000 in compensation, but her kidnappers disappeared soon after posting bail in February 2013, so getting the payment could be a long, drawn-out process.

Activists say the story of Air's brutal enslavement is not uncommon in Thailand, where domestic workers, mostly from impoverished neighboring countries, are exploited, abused and even killed.

"There is very serious abuse going on, whether be it trafficking, forced labor or child labor. This is just the tip of the iceberg," said Andy Hall, a rights activist who has worked extensively with Burmese laborers in Thailand.

It is estimated that up to 90 percent of the more than 250,000 domestic workers in Thailand are from Burma, Laos and Cambodia, and experts say they are extremely vulnerable because they work in homes, hidden from public view, and have limited opportunity to reach out for help.

While statistics on underage domestic workers are hard to find, anecdotal evidence suggests they make up a significant portion.

Domestic workers have few rights in Thailand. A 2012 regulation offers them some protection, but fails to cap working hours or require overtime pay and social security protections.

Thailand also has yet to ratify the International Labor Organization's (ILO) new Domestic Workers Convention and was heavily criticized in June when it voted against an ILO treaty to end forced labor—a decision it later reversed.

When Air's case came to light after her escape in January 2013, her young age and the severe scars on her body and the entire length of her left arm shocked Thailand, but rights groups say her case is only one of many such abuses.

The Human Rights and Development Foundation (HRDF), a Thai organization that helped bring the civil lawsuit against the couple who enslaved Air, described two young teenage domestic workers who were sexually abused by their employer, the son of a local politician in southern Thailand; an underage Lao worker who was forced to eat her own feces and had bathroom cleaner poured over her; and a Burmese 18-year-old who died after her employer doused her in gasoline and set her ablaze.

Scar-Marked Body

In the late afternoon of May 20, 2008, a Thai couple that Air's family knew abducted her from her home in Kamphaeng Phet province in central Thailand.

"I started crying and kept asking them to send me back to my mum. But they said 'no' repeatedly and I became afraid," Air told Thomson Reuters Foundation in an interview.

Her family searched for her and asked the village head and police for help, but did not receive any assistance, Air's father said.

Over the next five years, the couple enslaved and tortured the girl. The first time she managed to escape went awry after police sent her back to the couple—a claim that Lieutenant Colonel Naret Poolnai of the Kamphaeng Phet police denies. Her eventual escape last year was a fluke.

"On 31 January 2013, I was feeding the cat and the cat ran away. I was scared the couple would hit me so I followed the cat by climbing through the fence and realized I was outside the house," she said.

A neighbor and teacher helped her, and she was sent to a government shelter in Phitsanulok province.

When her parents finally found her at the shelter, they were shocked. Her badly scalded left arm was no longer mobile, stuck to her tiny scar-marked frame.

"We were very happy to see she was still alive but also devastated," Air's father, who has been working in Thailand for 20 years, said outside their small home at the edge of a sugarcane field where they work as daily laborers.

"She was unblemished when she disappeared. When we saw her again, she was full of injuries," he said, tears welling up in his eyes.

Despite Thailand's reliance on migrant workers, rights groups say many officials are reluctant to protect them, extort money from them, and are simply insensitive.

After Air escaped, police were criticized for presenting her half-naked to a room full of largely male journalists and photographers to show the extent of her injuries.

To prevent cases like Air's, police now work closely with the One Stop Crisis Center—which was set up six years ago by the government to help victims of domestic abuse and whose staff ultimately rescued Air, said Naret of the Kamphaeng Phet police.

The court victory and compensation have set up more hurdles for Air's family, who would have to find out what assets the fugitive couple own so the government can seize and sell them, said Orawan Wimonrangkharat, the lawyer who represented Air.

It has been a year and a half since Air escaped her captors, and she remains stuck in the shelter because, staff say, she needs medical treatment and her parents would not be able to look after her because they are poor.

Her parents—who never left the sugarcane farm in hope that Air would one day make her way home—are biding their time in Thailand for her.

"We're still here only because we're waiting for Air to come back to us," said Air's mother.

"The day Air comes back home is the day we go back to Myanmar, no matter happens with the money," her father added.

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PNG Woman Leads Relocation of Island Community Hit by Climate Change

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 05:00 PM PDT

 Inhabitants of the islet of Han sit along its shores. (Photo: Caterests.info)

Inhabitants of the islet of Han sit along its shores. (Photo: Caterests.info)

BALI — Ursula Rakova was born in a tropical paradise.

The tiny, low-lying islet of Han is part of the Carteret Atoll in the southwest Pacific, with clear blue waters lapping at its palm-fringed shores. Fish was plentiful and so was taro, the staple food.

The atoll community is matrilineal, and Rakova's mother passed ownership of Han islet to her – but the island paradise is disappearing, one of the first places to fulfil scientists' predictions that climate change will submerge many coastal communities.

The rising sea level split Han islet in two while Rakova was in high school. The atoll, made up of six islets, then suffered saltwater intrusion, contaminating freshwater wells and making it impossible for the islanders to farm taro.

Shorelines were eroded. King tides – unusually high tides – which used to come every five or 10 years, started appearing every year. Low tides are retreating further, leading to bleaching of the offshore coral.

Today, the gap between the two parts of what used to be Han islet is big enough for canoes to pass through and is growing wider, Rakova said.

"The sea that we love to swim in is now turning against us," she told participants in the first "Summit on Women and Climate" in Bali, Indonesia this week.

"Our shorelines are eroding so fast. The food that we normally eat has disappeared. Year in, year out, every day, it is a struggle for my people," she said.

"It's frightening. It gives you a feeling of anxiety – what's going to happen next?"

Fish and other seafood is getting harder to find. The islanders now have to rely on the Papua New Guinea (PNG) government for food, but they are given rice, which is not their staple food, Rakova said.

The Carterets' Council of Elders, tired of waiting for the government to act and aware of the need for change, asked Rakova in 2006 to help plan their future.

Rakova, a 50-year-old social studies graduate born and bred on the atoll, had worked on human rights and environmental issues with numerous organizations including Oxfam New Zealand.

Her first move was to set up an action plan dubbed Tulele Peisa, meaning "sailing in the wind on our own" in the local language. It is an apt description of the program, which has made tremendous progress under her leadership despite continuous challenges.

Her struggles also highlight the obstacles facing many women grassroots leaders looking after their communities and their environment.

Rakova's plan was far-reaching: she is leading the permanent resettlement of some 2,000 climate refugees from the atoll to mainland Bougainville, a three-hour ride on a wooden boat on a good day.

She is also making sure the islanders will be self-reliant in their new homeland.

On Their Own

"The islands are isolated so the culture has been intact. We also more or less know everyone and it's very peaceful," Rakova said in an interview with Thomson Reuters Foundation. "We are a very loving people and the island provided everything we needed."

The atoll is becoming increasingly uninhabitable, but resettling some 2,000 people – the total population is around 2,700 but the elderly do not want to move to the mainland – requires more than just dumping them in a strange place.

"We had to look at the education of the younger people, health facilities, economic opportunities for the islanders, and trauma counselling for the families that we're moving as well as the host community," she said.

All of this requires money, which was not forthcoming, from the government or anywhere else. The big donors wanted them to be registered, have their books audited, see the cash flow—when they didn't even have a few thousand dollars to their name, Rakova said.

The local administration, far from helping, was creating more obstacles.

Funding "has been a very very hard struggle and to some extent, a lone struggle," Rakova said, her friendly, generous face looking sad for once.

Small amounts of seed money from the New Zealand High Commission in PNG and the Global Green Grants Fund helped them work out an 18-step process which included community profiling and community assessment, and resulted in the islanders owning land, a home and a sustainable way of living in their new location.

Continuous Struggle

Thankfully, the local community on Bougainville hails from the same clan as the islanders and was welcoming – largely thanks to the exchange of chiefs and elders of the two groups that Rakova's organization set up before any relocation started. This gave the mainlanders an understanding of the islanders' situation.

The Catholic Church, which owns vast swathes of land in Bougainville, provided the islanders with four parcels of land. The first group of families – 86 people in total – have moved into their new homes and started farming again.

Rakova remains concerned about the impact on the islanders of Bougainville's social problems, including that posed by marijuana, which is grown on the mainland but not on the island.

"It's not a case of 'living happily ever after,' it's a continuous struggle," she added.

Building the first set of homes brought more funding problems. Donors wanted cheaper houses and Rakova told them to keep their money, arguing that cheaper buildings would not last.

The bureaucracy was frustrating, that of both international donors and her own government, which has tens of thousands of dollars earmarked for the climate adaptation of islands and atolls but says funds could not be used for house building.

So Rakova set up Bougainville Cocoa Net Limited – to enable the settlers to grow and export organic cocoa. The cash earned from this will help to accelerate the relocation.

The settlers are already starting to export to Hamburg in north Germany, after receiving funding from a German organisation. The next step is to obtain fair trade certification and grow the market, she said.

Drive for Sustainability

Though carrying the burden of the community's future, Rakova is a gentle, loving soul who is always ready for a joke and has an uproarious laugh.

Despite winning the 2008 Pride of PNG award for her contribution to the environment and the 2014 Equator Prize, she remains humble and helpful.

She was amused by how long it took her to get to Bali from her islet – five days, involving a boat trip, a car ride, and two flight changes. She missed one connection and had to stay inside Sydney airport for 24 hours as she had no Australian visa.

Her sense of humor remains intact, which she attributes to being a woman and an islander.

"We want the world to know that we also want to make a living. We want to move to this new location so we are growing our own cash crops to sustain our own family income but we need support," she said.

"We want to have markets in the United States. This will sustain our program so that we won't have to beg for relocation funds all the time," she added. "We've had enough of chasing donors and funders. We want to do it ourselves."

The one thing the islanders can't do is hold back the sea. "The sea has to play its part. It's displacing us," Rakova said stoically.

The post PNG Woman Leads Relocation of Island Community Hit by Climate Change appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


Thailand’s PTTEP to explore gas in Burma

Posted: 09 Aug 2014 01:12 AM PDT

PTT Exploration and Production Plc (PTTEP), Thailand’s sole listed upstream firm, and its investment partners have signed a production-sharing agreement with Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) for onshore exploration and production rights for the MOGE 3 block. 

Four exploration wells are planned for MOGE 3 at an initial cost of US$72 million for the first three years, president and chief executive Tevin Vongvanich said in a filing submitted to the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) yesterday.

Wholly owned PTTEP South Asia Ltd (PTTEP SA) is the operator, with an 85 percent share in the block, while Palang Sophon Offshore Pte Ltd holds ten percent and Win Precious Resources Pte Ltd five percent.

PTTEP and its partners won exploration rights in the second round of onshore bidding last year.

Located in central Burma to the west of the Irrawaddy River, the MOGE 3 block covers 1,217 square kilometres in the Padaukpin-Natmi area. 

“This investment is significant operational progress in line with PTTEP’s long-term growth direction to explore high-potential areas,” Tevin said. 

He said if the exploration was successful, it would secure energy supply for both Thailand and Burma. 

PTTEP has also invested in six petroleum exploration blocks. Two are onshore blocks PSC G and EP 2, while four offshore blocks are M3, M11, MD7 and MD8. 

They are part of the Yadana, Yetagun and Zawtika projects contributing 75,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. 

On Tuesday, Zawtika began delivering natural gas to PTT Plc for use in Thailand after the project started supplying gas for use in Burma in March. 

Meanwhile, PTTEP yesterday insisted it shut down subsidiaries in the Cayman Islands because they were not commercially viable, not to avoid tax payments as claimed on social media. 

PTTEP shares closed yesterday on the SET at $5.21, in trade worth 11.8 million. 

This article was originally published by the Bangkok Post on 9 August 2014.

Mae La Refugees, On The Edge

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 10:15 PM PDT

Two weeks ago, Kyi Htay sneaked back into Mae La refugee camp in the dead of night. Working as a medic in southeastern Burma's Karen State — and registered as a refugee in the camp for more than 20 years – the 45-year-old has made this journey dozens of times.

But this trip was different. With multiple checkpoints manned by the Thai military on the roads and the threat of deportation looming if he was caught, Kyi Htay found it more challenging than ever to covertly ferry his family of five back into the camp.

"It was very difficult to sneak in this time compared to before the coup," said Kyi Htay, who had been absent from the camp for almost a year. "But if one of my family members misses the population census, the Thai authorities will cut all our rations."

Kyi Htay's fears are shared by many who go beyond the camp's boundaries to seek supplemental income. When Thai authorities announced in July that Mae La's residents were prohibited from leaving, residents began speculating that this latest enforcement could serve as yet another burden on their already uncertain living situations.

Some of the refugees have lived in Mae La for nearly as long as the three decades the camp has been operating, and thus have tried to carve out a better life for themselves within the confines imposed upon them. With the majority of the residents being ethnic Karen who fled from conflict in their home state, these refugees want to be afforded the same privileges as anyone starting a new life. They want to be able to move freely to make more money; they want ample food to stave off hunger; and they want a sense of security — however nebulous such a concept may be for someone displaced by fighting.

While it is true that they are now facing stricter security since Thailand's military coup in May of this year, the fear that Thai authorities will reduce their rations is a misconception as The Border Consortium (TBC) – which provides food rations to the camps – have no plans to reduce rations after the census is conducted. Yet this hasn't dispelled concerns as many people have complained that they are not being fully informed on their future, and funding cuts along the border have already caused a noticeable decrease in supplies.

Home to more than 40,000 refugees, Mae La is the country's largest refugee camp, extending roughly 184 hectares against the mountain ranges of western Thailand. An estimated 100,000 more refugees from Burma are spread out among the other eight camps.

The recent clampdown has stirred new fears. The refugees worry about earning enough for basic necessities if their rations are not sufficient, about losing their refugee status, and about being deported back to Burma. This omnipresent sense of uncertainty and insecurity is part and parcel of the indeterminate nature of being a displaced person.

 

Kyi Htay, a Karen medic, with his wife. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

Kyi Htay, a Karen medic, with his wife. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

Kyi Htay, the Karen medic, confesses that he is rarely in the camp because he values his role in a clinic in Karen State's Hpa-an district treating cases of malaria. Yet he refuses to give up his refugee status for the sake of his wife and four children, all of whom wish to eventually resettle in the US.

"My wife and children want to go to the US, so I will go too," Kyi Htay said. "I don't really want to be resettled though. I feel great pity for my people and I want to stay with them to help them."

On the other side of this spectrum stands Ma Aye Htoo, 44, who said she wishes never to return to Burma. Along with her husband and four children, she lived in the dense forests of Karen State for four years before coming to Mae La. Though food was scarce, the bigger problem was the lack of medicine, and when two of her children got sick, they passed away that same day. Her remaining two children died later that year.

"Even though there are many people who want to return to Burma, I don't ever want to return there," she said. "I've lived through a lot of misery there. I lost four of my children there, and I will never go back."

While she is not directly affected by a moratorium on camp departures as she does not plan an attempt to leave, the implication of a virtual house arrest weighs deeply upon her.

"It feels like we are stuck in here, like this camp could be a trap," she said. "The other thing is that staying here could be like an addiction, because it seems easier than in Burma."

Saw Wah, a 34-year-old Karen refugee who has lived in Mae La for 15 years, is angered by the lack of transparency, not least because he was never approached to take part in the census.

Saw Wah, a refugee at Ma La, with his daughter. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

Saw Wah, a refugee at Ma La, with his daughter in his small grocery store. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

"The Thai authorities should explain things to us; there is no transparency between them and the camp people. This issue confuses everyone – the entire camp feels this way," Saw Wah said. "It decays my hope and my purpose."

As the proprietor of a small grocery store within the camp that sells mostly bottled drinks and snacks, Saw Wah added that the camp restrictions have directly affected his business as his usual customers now have less expendable income.

Duncan McArthur, partnership director for TBC – which assists with distributing rations to the nine border camps — told DVB in an email that his organisation is not expecting the census to affect the distribution of rations to the refugees.

"The population counts are being conducted in an ad hoc manner and vary from camp to camp," McArthur said. "The actual purpose remains unclear, but there haven't been any punitive out comes to date."

He added that any restrictions on the refugees' comings and goings will reduce their access to forest products and labour opportunities.

"This is likely to mean that refugees will not be able to supplement food and shelter assistance at a time when some foreign donors have reduced humanitarian support," McArthur said.

Spectators wait for the start of a football game at Mae La refugee camp. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

Spectators wait for the start of a football game at Mae La refugee camp. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

The UNHCR is also not involved in the headcount, nor were they consulted or invited to take part in the process, said Iain Hall, the refugee agency's senior coordinator in Mae Sot. District authorities informed UNHCR that the headcount was "to ascertain the actual number of refugees and asylum seekers presently residing in the camps," he said.

While UNHCR advocates for a comprehensive verification process by the Thai authorities, Hall said that the agency's concerns about the census "such as the inconsistent approach, lack of prior information to the refugees, and some inconsistent 'messaging' by some district-level authorities" were shared with the Thai government.

He also said that while laws governing migrant workers are different from those concerning refugees – current policy bans displaced people from seeking employment outside the camps – Thai authorities have not always enforced these distinctions.

"Over the many years of this protracted situation for the refugees from Myanmar [Burma], the application of that specific regulation may have been inconsistently applied and refugees were able to secure an income outside of the camps, while running the risk of an illegal action," Hall said, adding that while the Thai government has been "sympathetic" to assisting the needs of the refugees and have allowed the development of their skills and income-generation capacities, the Thai government "is also obliged to manage the issue within the confines of their current policy and legislation".

"[The Thai government] has not shared any plan with UNHCR as to the possible actions that it may take concerning refugees that are found working outside the camps," he said.

"There is no timeframe on the repatriation of those refugees that desire to return home to Myanmar [Burma]," Hall said, adding that Thai authorities have issued public statements that "any repatriation will be in accordance with the international standards and in respect of human rights and the associated humanitarian principles related to voluntary repatriation."

“There is no transparency between them and the camp people. This issue confuses everyone – the entire camp feels this way. It decays my hope and my purpose.”

A young boy smokes a cigarette in Mae La refugee camp. With the camp in operation for 30 years, many children have lived their entire lives there. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

A young boy smokes a cigarette in Mae La. With the camp in operation for 30 years, many children have lived their entire lives there. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

Col. Werachon Sukondhadpatipak, a spokesman for the Thai Army, reiterated that the military government has no intention of immediately repatriating the refugees as it would be a lengthy process. Meanwhile, the census will be used to tally up the actual number of refugees against the figures held by the UNHCR, and this would go into a database, he explained.

"They need to be able to control the movement of the refugees living in the camp, for those moving out and moving in, because some were moving out and trying to seek employment," Sukondhadpatipak said.

As for issues of transparency, Sukondhadpatipak agreed that there should be more on-the-ground communication between the Thai authorities and the camp residents.

A lack of information and a lack of faith are issues that many people in the camp struggle with. Last October, Law Ba Htoo, a refugee in Mae La for 25 years, was informed that he and his family are now eligible for resettlement in the US. Since then, they have been eagerly preparing for their final departure from the camps, and even attended cultural orientation training sessions in March to acclimate them to traveling and living in a new country, he said.

Law Ba Htoo, a refugee at Mae La who has been waiting to be resettled since October 2013. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

Law Ba Htoo, a refugee at Mae La, has been waiting to be resettled since October 2013. (PHOTO: Dene-Hern Chen)

But after March, there has been no news. Since Law Ba Htoo was previously warned that he should be ready to leave at a moment's notice, the 39-year-old Karen man has been cooped up in his home, afraid to leave for the past three months. With his wife and children residing in a different camp about 30 km from Mae La, he misses them very much and they speak daily on the phone.

"Some of my friends… have gone to the US, and some are still here. I am confused about this and no one tells me anything," Law Ba Htoo said. Queries to the UNHCR were unsuccessful, as the staff could not provide him and his family with a firm departure date.

Despite this long wait, Law Ba Htoo believes that he is blessed to have been chosen, as being resettled in a third country is the majority of camp residents' desire. Forced to flee from his home when he was just 14 after the Burmese military burned down his village, Law Ba Htoo considers himself a lucky man. After all, he met his future wife while holding a job at a refugee clinic in Mae Sot, has two daughters, and is now looking forward to a new life in Dallas, Texas. He has no desire to look back.

"Even if I go back to Burma now, it would still be the same situation. It would not be better for us," he said. "We already know the ending to that story."

 

 

Two activists and an advocacy group receive international awards

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 09:15 PM PDT

A Rohingya activist, a Mon activist and a women's rights advocacy group were the recipients of awards from N-Peace Network, an international advocacy group that supports women's leadership in conflict resolution.

Wai Wai Nu, a former political prisoner and the director of Women Peace Network Arakan, was awarded N-Peace Network's "Peace Generation – Young Women and Men Building Peace" award; while Mi Khin Khin Kyu, an ethnic Mon who advocates for women's rights in Mon State and other parts of Burma, was recognised in the category of "Women Transforming their Communities".

In addition, Democracy and Peace Women Network was recognised for "Thinking Outside the Box", an award for bringing new solutions to persistent problems.

Naw Ohn Hla, leader of the Democracy and Peace Women Network, said that her work involves educating farmers and workers about their rights when it comes to land issues – a problem stemming from the extensive land grabbing by Burma's former military regime. Her organisation also provides assistance to women.

"We also provide as much assistance as we can for women in the workplace," Naw Ohn Hla said. "Today, farmers and workers in Burma have no peace in life and we will continue to strive to bring about peace in the country."

Sentenced to prison with her family when she was 18 for pro-democracy activities, Wai Wai Nu was released in 2012 after seven years. Since then, she has been working to build more understanding among Burma's different ethnicities and has campaigned to end persecution of Rohingyas in Burma.

She said that she is honoured to receive the award and hopes that such recognition would bring more attention to Rohingya issues and the anti-Muslim sentiments they face.

"I think this is a starting point and I could be a more effective voice to the wider community," Wai Wai Nu told DVB. "I hope that the issues will get more attention from the general public."

The winners were announced on 31 July, and the awarding ceremony will take place in Bangkok in October.

National News

National News


Second survey of Ayeyarwady to be conducted

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 01:47 PM PDT

Environmentalists are to build a detailed picture of the state of the Ayeyarwady River in a three-month survey covering 14 points along its course. The survey is the second of its kind, an official from environmental group Sein Yaung So said last week.

Mandalay journalists to form union

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 01:44 PM PDT

Citing government "oppression", journalists in Mandalay are banding together to form a union, organisers said last week. Organising committee member U Min Din, editor-in-chief of Mandalay Khit, said a conference will be convened in mid-August.

Parliament should listen to petition supporters, says 88 leader

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 01:43 PM PDT

Five million voters cannot be wrong, says 88 Generation leader U Ko Ko Gyi. The democracy activist, whose group has been working with the National League for Democracy to collect signatures for a change in the constitution, wants parliament to pay attention.

Muslim IDP killed by police in Sittwe

Posted: 08 Aug 2014 01:30 PM PDT

The President's Office has confirmed that police forces in Rakhine State's Sittwe township shot and killed a Muslim IDP on August 6 following a confrontation.