Sunday, September 7, 2014

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Burma’s Sexist School Requirements Hurt Women—And Society

Posted: 06 Sep 2014 05:00 PM PDT

In this year’s matriculation exam, the 22 top-scoring students were all young womenâ€"a significant feat, especially given that the overall passing rate is usually low. Looking at these results, one may wonder whether female students in Burma are smarter than their male counterparts, or if they simply excel at taking exams. In a country where test scores are based on how well you can reproduce information from memory, it may be a matter of both. But the most important question is what these top-scoring female students will be able to achieve in the next 20 years. Will they take leading roles in various sectors?

Burma is the only country I know of where universities have different entrance requirements depending on the applicant’s gender. Here, women must score higher for admission to many of the institutions that groom students for some of the most coveted professions in the country. This is true at medical schools, engineering schools and technology schools, for example. And what’s the rational? To hinder women from reaching positions of power?

We live in a male-dominated society. The majority of government offices in Burma are headed by men, and of the 659 seats in Parliament, only 20 are held by women. In the education sector, the majority of teachers are women but there are very few women rectors. The recent appointment of a woman education minister gave a glimmer of hope that things are changing, but slowly. All other ministers in the government are men.

Ironically, even though medical schools require women applicants to score higher than their male counterparts on entrance exams, many more women become medical students. This seems to be an interesting exception to the gender bias, but the explanation is very much rooted in gender stereotypes and our expectations for what women should aspire to become.

When I was growing up, my friends and I all wanted to be doctors. Even at the tender age of 10 or 11, and without really knowing the extent of a doctor’s duties, we would state our ambitions boldly to anyone who would listen. Looking back, I think we must have been influenced by peer pressure, as well as our parents and relatives who often told us that entering the medical field was the mark of a successful life, especially for girls.

We failed to realize then that society was encouraging us to pursue roles that we might not have found personally fulfilling. We did not have an opportunity to consider other less-common professions because everyone urged us to be “obedient” daughters and to never deviate from what was deemed the “best” path. Maybe this is one reason why many girls in Burma attend medical schools but then do not go on to actually become doctors.

Another example of society’s tendency to stereotype our professional roles is in the education sector. Women are perceived to possess maternal instincts, and that has led society to think that we are better suited than men to become teachers. Many parents also consider teaching to be a respectful profession for their daughters. But again, the result is that we end up with teachers who are not truly passionate about teaching because they were thrust into the role by others. I hope more women in Burma learn to identify and pursue their own interests in life.

In other countries, women are encouraged to enroll in science and technology courses, but here, they are deterred because they need to score higher on entrance exams to study at these universities. In my opinion, it’s downright discrimination. I worry about the future of Burma’s technological development because we are missing contributions from many women who could have otherwise become great engineers.

Chie Ikeya, an assistant professor in Southeast Asian studies at the National University of Singapore, wrote about the history of Burmese women in her book, “Reconfiguring Women, Colonialism and Modernity in Burma.” She explains that women in Burma once had a reputation for being independent and equal to men, and that this was known not only by British colonial civil service officers, but also by Western writers. If women here enjoyed such rights during the old times, isn’t it a shame that we no longer do today? As a nation, doesn’t it mean that we have not progressed much in terms of being inclusive of all citizens?

According to the latest census, women outnumber men in the national population. Given that, it is about time for the people of Burmaâ€"especially government officialsâ€"to start offering opportunities for women to take up more significant roles, rather than confining us to roles traditionally perceived as suitable. Our society only needs to give women a chance, and then I am confident that we can surprise the sceptics. Indeed, women, as the bigger population, could become a driving force behind the development of Burma.

Khin Hnin Soe is the principal of Myanmar Metropolitan College in Rangoon. She can be reached at khsoesoe@gmail.com.

The post Burma’s Sexist School Requirements Hurt Womenâ€"And Society appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


By-elections cancelled

Posted: 06 Sep 2014 11:48 PM PDT

This year's by-elections have been cancelled because the period for campaigning would take place too close to that of the general elections in 2015, Burma's Union Election Commission (UEC) Chairman Tin Aye announced on Sunday.

Addressing a gathering of political party representatives and civic leaders at the Myanmar Peace Centre in Rangoon, Tin Aye said that the by-elections, which were due to be held before the end of December, were unnecessary for two reasons: first, with general elections slated for next year, it would be asking many parties to finance and compete across the country in back-to-back elections, something many were unable to do. Second, he said, even if one party swept all or most of the seats in the by-election, it would not affect the overall make-up of parliament.

A total of 35 seats remain vacant in upper and houses, as well as state and divisional assemblies.

In October 2013, the UEC chairman made it known that he thought the state was too busy—and the seats in question too few—to consider holding by-elections ahead of the 2015 general election.

He pointed to Burma's chairmanship of the ASEAN bloc, the country's preparations for the SEA Games in December, and the logistics involved in conducting a census in 2014.

At the time of speaking, only 15 seats were waiting to be contested.

In an exclusive interview with DVB in March, Tin Aye said the next general election will be held in November or December 2015.

Last month, UEC Director Thaung Hlaing said that political parties could be dissolved if they do not compete for at least three seats in future elections, citing a 2012 amendment to the Political Registration Law.

Miss Myanmar ‘looks like an angel, but she is the devil’, say pageant sponsors

Posted: 06 Sep 2014 10:38 PM PDT

The organisers of the Miss Asia Pacific World beauty pageant have hit back angrily at Miss Myanmar Mae Myat Noe following her press conference last week, accusing her of deceit and lies.

"She looks like an angel, but she is the devil," said Miss Asia Pacific World media director David Kim, speaking to DVB on Saturday. "She is lying, lying, lying."

Kim's comments came as the pageant organisers launched their own media campaign, defending themselves against a litany of allegations by Mae Myat Noe, who was dethroned as Miss Asia Pacific World 2014 in August. She had won the crown in Seoul three months earlier, and was mobbed by fans on her return to Burma.

On 2 September, the young Burmese beauty queen held a press conference in Rangoon, where she said that the pageant organisers had changed her age from 16 to 18 for the competition; and that, after winning the title, they had coaxed her to have plastic surgery, which she refused. She also said she was coerced into escorting rich businessmen on dates while in Korea.

On Friday, the Miss Asia Pacific World organisers hit back, circulating a detailed press release that claimed to account for all of Mae Myat Noe's expenses and time schedule. They rejected the claim that she had escorted anyone during the time they hosted her in South Korea, and also rejected accounts – reported in some media – that she had been asked to preform sexual favours for important clients.

The pageant hosts also circulated photographs which appear to show Mae Myat Noe recovering in hospital from a breast augmentation – an operation, Kim said, that she herself had requested.

With regard to the contestant's age, the media director said that she had lied, saying she was 18, but that the pageant team had discovered one month before the competition that she was, in fact, only 16. Since the scandal broke, at least one news report has claimed that Mae Myat Noe was born in October 1998, which would make her only 15.

"Lying, lying, lying," Kim said by telephone to DVB. "That's all she did.

"She looks like an angel, but she is the devil," he fumed, adding that her mother "controlled everything".

Kim said that both governments have been notified of the organisers' position as the scandal threatens to become an international incident.

"She [Mae Myat Noe] is destroying the relationship between Korea and Myanmar," he said. "Many people in Korea are now very angry."

Kim further alleged that Mae Myat Noe and her mother have damaged the Miss Asia Pacific World brand and reputation.

When asked if they would be seeking legal recourse, the pageant spokesman said that if Mae Myat Now were to apologise, "we may forgive her".

At her press conference last week, the teenage beauty queen said she would not return the pageant's tiara unless they in turn apologised to her.

DVB could not reach Mae Myat Noe and her mother for comment this weekend.

Meanwhile, Burma's national director for Miss Asia Pacific World, Hla Nu Tun, has given a tearful interview with Myanmar Celebrity website in which she backed up the sponsors' version of events, saying Mae Myat Noe had lied: about her age, about escorting men, and the breast operation, and said that the organisers had done everything to help her.

"The sponsors would not need to ask Mae Myat Noe to act in an improper way," she sobbed. "I knew that she had many weaknesses and we tried to hide them. She is not that beautiful. There are many more beautiful girls than her."

Hla Nu Tun said that the Miss Asia Pacific World directors in Korea had ordered her to give interviews supporting the organisers' conduct. She said that she was reluctant because she did not want to her country to lose face.

“I would like to apologise to Mae Myat Noe in order to convince her to give back the tiara," she said through tears. "I apologise not because I was wrong. I apologise for the sake of the country and I am asking her to give back the crown.”

Picking on the little guys: Phuketwan

Posted: 06 Sep 2014 08:49 PM PDT

The tragic story of Burma's boatpeople is now known the world over; countless Rohingya Muslims pay brokers to transport them by boat to neighbouring countries, in a desperate attempt to escape poverty and violence. Many die on harsh seas, others fall into the hands of human traffickers. The United Nations estimates that tens of thousands of people in the region — many of them stateless Rohingya Muslims — risked their lives to flee by boat since just the start of this year.

But this story goes back much, much further. Before Burma's reforms began and steered the world's attention to the once-isolated Southeast Asian nation, and before a rash of riots beginning in June 2012 caused a sudden, mass exodus of Rohingyas, people were already fleeing and someone was paying attention.

Alan Morison and Chutima Sidasathian (known by her nickname, Oi) run a small, online news website based in Phuket, Thailand. As editor and reporter, respectively, they are currently the entire staff of Phuketwan. Morison and Chutima were among the first journalists to report on Rohingya asylum seekers crossing the Andaman Sea en route to Malaysia. They became known as a consistent and trustworthy source of information on the obscure topic, and hence were often contracted by international media to assist with reporting.

Their years of reporting and assisting other journalists were relatively unhindered until July 2013, when they published an article quoting excerpts from a Reuters investigative report about the smuggling of Rohingyas. The Royal Thai Navy brought defamation charges against the pair, who now face up to seven years in jail. Their trial will begin in March 2015, and Morison, an Australian, is bound to remain in-country on a criminal visa until a verdict is reached. His visa status could cause the publication to shut down.

Reuters, a London-based news agency, is not facing charges over the disputed content and has been silent about the case against Phuketwan. To make matters more awkward, news soon emerged that Chutima was hired by Reuters to facilitate parts of their investigation, which was recently awarded one of journalism's highest honours: a Pulitzer Prize.

Some speculate that the pair is being singled out and punished for their work, which ultimately helped to bring this horrendous story of abuse and neglect into the global conscience. DVB spoke with Morison and Chutima about their work, their charges, and the responsibilities of a free and professional press.

 

Q: Before Reuters reached out to you, Phuketwan was already well known for breaking the story of Thailand's ‘push back’ policy, a short-lived directive to send asylum seekers back to sea with no assistance. How did this story come about?

CS: We were doing an interview with a commander in 2008. We asked if there were any concerns about security in the Andaman Sea, and he mentioned the Rohingya. After that, we decided to come back. I tried to ask for permission from the Thai navy to get on the patrol boats, because I wanted to know more about the Rohingya. But they wouldn't give me permission.

Some months later, the Navy, after I pushed them very hard, they sent me a picture. They said, ‘Ok, here's a picture of the Rohingyas that we arrested yesterday at Surin Island.’ It was a picture of them laid out on the beach. And I thought, ‘Jeez, this is a very good story!’

I went to my university, one of my friends — he is an officer — he also knew about the Rohingya. He's the one I started the investigation with. He said he saw that they have a new policy to deal with the Rohingya by the Internal Security Operations Command [ISOC, a unit of the Thai military]. So any police station that had any Rohingyas in their custody had to transfer them all to the ISOC in Ranong province. So we just went to Ranong and we scanned every area. This side, that side, the top of that mountain, whatever.

Several days later, we found a kitty boat, a Rohingya boat, in a village. The people there told us, ‘This is from the Rohingya’, so we checked it out. We found that the boat had stopped at Red Sand Island.

 

Q: Before that time, were you aware that there was a problem of Rohingya smuggling?

CS: No, no, we weren't aware of smuggling, but I had read some information on the Internet about violence in Burma, and that they [Rohingyas] weren't citizens.

At the time, we wanted to send a message back to their families because nobody was covering this, and many people were drowning on these boats. You know, the high sea, the monsoon, many people ended up dead.

 

Q: So those that do make it to Thailand, what happens to them?

AM: There were about 2,000 Rohingyas in detention here for quite some time. After the discovery of women and children on the boats [in January 2013], Thailand changed its policy and, for a time, took Rohingya into detention centres. About six months later they found that they couldn't find a solution. They had to somehow get rid of these people quietly, without too much attention.

That's when they started the practice of ‘soft deportation’.

All of Thailand's intentions to do right by those people just fell by the wayside; they couldn't find a third country, in the end they didn't know what to do with them so they developed the policy of soft deportation, and they all just disappeared.

Oi and I spent a night up in Ranong because we had been told by somebody that a convoy [of detained Rohingyas about to be deported via land crossing] was coming. We were waiting for these buses to turn up, I think there were three buses, and sure enough it was Rohingya who had been captured down south and trucked up to the Ranong immigration detention centre.

We were there when the buses arrived in the middle of the night, around 2am. They had to be fingerprinted and go through all the normal checks, and treated as Burmese would be who are being deported. But with the Rohingya it's a little bit different, they don't actually go back to Burma, they drop them off on the beach.

 

Q: Is there no documentation of these deportations?

AM: There would be, in Ranong. There would be a record that they'd all been sent back to Burma, but they're just left on a beach.

A ‘soft deportation’, I would say, is dropping people off at a beach in Burma and either letting human traffickers pick them up or leaving them to their own devices, rather than handing them back to officials.

Q: Subsequent investigations have concluded that some asylum seekers are intercepted by human traffickers, who keep them captive in jungle camps and demand ransom for their passage to Malaysia. Have you been to any of these camps?

AM: Oi has. She's raided some of the camps, but I think they seldom find any people in them because the word gets around and the locations are shifted. What we've heard lately is that the camps are now becoming less accessible to everybody and guarded by more people. They have the guards further out so no one can get in. It's more difficult these days for the authorities to get at them, as well.

 

Q: You've clearly been very active on these issues. Phuketwan reported consistently on the arrival of the boats in January 2013, which you mentioned a moment ago. Has the lawsuit affected your ability to carry out your work?

CS: It has burned a lot of energy; it takes up a lot of our time.

But also, the military is involved in every issue in Thailand. It [the lawsuit] makes things difficult, because I still have to report what happens, what's going on. I can't avoid them, because they are in charge of the country. There are some officers that just intimidate us. It's not that all of them are bad, but just some.

 

Q: In April, a Reuters spokesperson told DVB that your role in the agency's investigation was ‘very limited’. How, exactly, were you involved in the Reuters investigation?

CS: They emailed Alan because they were looking for someone who was working on the Rohingya issue. I was working for them as a fixer, and they used all my material, all my contacts. I accompanied them for parts of the investigation.

 

Q: What do you think about how Reuters has reacted to your case?

CS: They ignored me [laughs]. I'm very disappointed. Very disappointed. They should stand for the principle of support for the press and for free media in Thailand.

AM: The way Khun Oi’s role as fixer was dismissed by Reuters was a disgrace, unbecoming behaviour from Pulitzer Prize-winners. Oi worked with Jason [Szep] twice, I believe. All the other international teams she has worked with haven’t been so reluctant to recognise that Khun Oi’s contacts on the Rohingya saga in Thailand, built up over the years, allowed them to quickly get to the people involved.

Reuters have let the little guys take the rap. It’s their 41 words, not ours. But they are nowhere to be seen. We have enormous amounts of support from every rights group and media body with even the vaguest interest in the case, except for Reuters.

 

 

 

 

National News

National News


Germany offers support in return for minority rights

Posted: 05 Sep 2014 09:00 PM PDT

Chancellor Angela Merkel last week pledged further economic support for Myanmar if it holds fair elections next year and does more to protect ethnic minorities.

Guns, drugs seized in raid on business figure's home

Posted: 05 Sep 2014 05:14 AM PDT

Police arrest and charge U Ye Tun Kyaw, managing director of Natural Force Co, Ltd, an energy sector services provider that has worked with MOGE, Daewoo, PTTEP and more since being established in 2007.

Yangon bomb accused tells court he faced death threats

Posted: 05 Sep 2014 03:21 AM PDT

A man charged with allegedly carrying out bombings in Yangon in October 2013 has told a court he was told he would be killed if he didn't plant the devices.