Monday, September 22, 2014

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


Thilawa shares to go on market this year

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 04:18 AM PDT

Shares of the Thilawa Special Economic Zone in Rangoon Division will be sold through an over-the-counter stock market, according to a project official.

Win Aung, chairman of the Myanmar Thilawa SEZ Holdings Public Ltd (MTSH), said that the shares will be available later this year, pre-empting the stock exchange launch set for 2015.

Stock-selling counters will be established in locations easily accessible to the public, he said.

Priced at US$10 each, buyers will be limited to 500 shares as demand is more than double the amount of stocks available.

Eighteen foreign companies from countries including China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and the United States have already made investment proposals for phase one of the project.

The MTSH also announced a plan to provide yearly salaries of $110,000 for the chairman and two chief executives. The director of the board will earn $60,000, Win Aung said.

Board members will also each be awarded five percent of shares in the development.

Win Aung also serves as the chairman of the Union of Myanmar Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry.

 

Bullet Points: 22 September 2014

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 04:16 AM PDT

On today's edition of Bullet Points:

    • Mosque vandalised amidst communal violence in Magwe
    • Fresh round of ceasefire talks begin
    • Burma doubles up on Chinlone gold

You can watch Bullet Points every weeknight on DVB TV after the 7 o'clock news.

Myit Chae mob ransacks mosque after domestic servant’s dispute

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 04:13 AM PDT

A mosque, a home and a shop were vandalised as mob violence broke out again in central Burma on Saturday.

The incident in Myit Chay, near Pakokku in Magwe Division, was sparked by the alleged assault of a Buddhist housemaid by her Muslim employers. After hearing the rumours of the assault, a gang of around 50 local Buddhist men gathered at the house of the alleged perpetrator and ransacked it. They then set about destroying the Muslim man's shop before turning their attention to a local mosque.

A Myit Chay administrator has told DVB that the housemaid has been advised to press charges against her employer and his wife, who is also alleged to have beaten the women, and that local authorities have assured the public that action would be swift.

It is believed the employer, Moe Win, is now in hiding.

Housemaid Cho Thet Mar says she was beaten at her employer's home after going there to confront him about unpaid wages.

"I went to ask for my money, but the boss' wife told me they would not pay me," she told DVB. "I told her that the matter wasn't her business and demanded to speak to her husband."

She said that when she began raising her voice and making a scene, both the employer, his wife and a manservant dragged her by the hair into the house and beat her. Cho Thet Mar said that she screamed for help, but although some neighbours heard her and saw the incident, they did not intervene.

Later on Saturday evening, a 50-strong gang of men attacked Moe Win's home and shop. The mob then vandalised a local mosque, before finally being dispersed by police at 11pm.

Police estimate the damage to be in the region of US$400.

Myint Kyaw, a local administrator in Myit Chay, said, "I immediately informed the township administrator and he instructed me to take swift action against the couple, so I brought the police station chief along and advised the victim to press charges against them."

He said he and the police chief assured the mob that swift action would be taken and charges brought against the Muslim couple.

The mob dispersed at first, he said, but later reappeared, threatening to seek further revenge.

The incident is the latest in a string of violence between Buddhists and Muslims in Burma. Mosques, Muslim homes and businesses have frequently been the targets of rumour-fuelled anger, most recently in Mandalay in July.

 

Burmese public have ‘weak understanding’ of parliament: OMI

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 03:05 AM PDT

The Open Myanmar Initiative (OMI), a non-profit organisation that advocates the right to information and monitors parliamentary activities, said the Burmese public has a "weak knowledge and understanding of their country's legislative process".

Presenting its third Parliamentary Monitoring Report at a conference in Rangoon over the weekend, the Burmese NGO also called on lawmakers to improve the quality of debates and discussions in parliament.

One MP at the event responded by saying that one of the reasons the public are failing to hear about parliamentary motions is that the country's media do not report or have self-censored coverage of parliamentary debates.

The OMI previously issued Parliamentary Monitoring Reports in April and June this year.

Ko Ko Gyi, an advisor to the OMI, is quoted on the OMI website saying: "We want the public to know the important role of parliament in nation-building. [This] discussion brings together internationally renowned experts to exchange views and focus on the process of parliament session in respective eras. If the process of parliamentary mechanism is strengthened, the problems of the country’s federal system, economic and social sectors would be dealt effectively and successfully."

US waives sanctions after Thailand flunks human trafficking test

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 01:38 AM PDT

The United States has waived sanctions against Thailand that could have been imposed as a result of the country's insufficient efforts to combat human trafficking.

Thailand, which is home to an estimated two to three million migrant labourers, most of them from Burma, was recently downgraded in the US State Department's annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report.

Thailand was listed as a "Tier 3" country, the lowest rank, indicating that the government has not met minimum anti-trafficking standards and could face restrictions on non-humanitarian and non-trade-related assistance.

US President Barack Obama is, however, authorised "to waive the restrictions if he determines that doing so would promote the purposes of the TVPA [Trafficking Victims Protection Act] or is otherwise in the US national interest", according to a spokesperson for the US Embassy in Bangkok.

The 2014 TIP report identified Thailand as "a source, destination, and transit country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labor and sex trafficking". The report said that foreign migrants, ethnic minorities and stateless persons are most vulnerable to human trafficking, many ending up in exploitative jobs in the seafood industry or the sex trade.

Also of concern were continued reports that Thai officials abetted the smuggling of stateless Rohingya Muslims from western Burma and Bangladesh. The number of stateless Muslim asylum seekers traversing Thai waters en route to Malaysia or Indonesia has reached alarming new heights in recent years, prompting urgent warnings from the UN and rights advocates.

Malaysia, which borders southern Thailand and was also designated as a Tier 3 country, was likewise granted a presidential waiver on TIP-related restrictions.

Since 2011, Thailand has idled on the State Department's "Tier 2 Watchlist", which means that the country has a significant number of severe cases of trafficking but is making efforts to become TVPA compliant.

The TVPA requires that Tier 2 Watchlist countries demonstrate efforts to improve or be downgraded to Tier 3, which subjects them to restrictions. The act allows, however, for two consecutive waivers for downgrade.

Thailand did not show adequate improvement during 2012 and 2013 assessments, but was granted the consecutive waivers based on a written plan to achieve compliance. Failure to do so resulted in their demotion in June.

"A Tier 3 ranking indicates that serious and sustained efforts are needed, and is intended to motivate governments to implement swift action," the Embassy spokesperson told DVB on Saturday, adding that "We [the State department] look forward to working with the Thai government to implement these recommendations."

While the State Department, which is among the most active anti-trafficking bodies in the world, has demonstrated a harsh stance towards Thailand's trafficking record, the decision not to impose sanctions revealed some flexibility in terms of policy.

"Actually it's not that surprising," said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, "since the US frequently waives TIP-related sanctions against countries, especially ones that it shares historically close relations with."

Obama also waived sanctions for Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan and Yemen, all of which share Thailand's disposition as trafficking hubs.

Robertson warned that while waiving the sanctions may strike some as a soft move, "no one should make the mistake of thinking that this diminishes the seriousness of the TIP problem in Thailand", adding that the US was and remains "strongly critical" of Thailand's as yet unconvincing efforts.

"The question is when, if ever, Thai officials are going to finally figure out that more anti-trafficking posters at the airport, and big seminars with public pronouncements of 'commitment', are not convincing anyone that Thailand is serious about systematically addressing the trafficking problem," he said.

Thailand is currently subject to some economic sanctions by the US as a result of the coup that installed a military government on 22 May. The Embassy said that US agencies still fund numerous anti-trafficking programmes in Thailand which remain unaffected.

 

Food rations the key to survival for missing climbers

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 12:56 AM PDT

Burma's two missing mountaineers, Aung Myint Myat and Wai Yan, may still be alive if they have located enough of the food rations stashed for the descent of Hkakabo Razi, said Myo Thant, the chairman of the Thabawa Khawthan (Nature's Call) Foundation, organiser of the expedition.

The two climbers went missing 23 days ago after reaching the summit of Southeast Asia's highest mountain, a feat confirmed by the GPS coordinates on their communications devices. However, either faulty satellite phones or a lack of battery power left them incommunicado from the other six members of the expedition who returned to the base camp without their colleagues.

Food rations were stationed at points along the intended route for descent in case of such an emergency, Myo Thant said.

Myo Thant was speaking at a press briefing on 21 September as a search and rescue mission involving helicopters and aircraft got underway. A team of Chinese rescuers have also set off from the Tibetan side of the mountain.

The rescue mission has been delayed and set back by inclement weather and an apparent lack of coordination between the Burmese sponsors and international rescue teams.

Meanwhile, as hopes fade for the two mountaineers, a 27 September deadline has been set to find the climbers alive.

Women lead Peace Day marches in Rangoon

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 09:33 PM PDT

Activists from the 88 Generation Peace and Open Society's women's wing and other women's rights organisations led a march through Rangoon on Sunday to mark International Peace Day.

The activists gathered early at a football pitch near the Mya Yeik Nyo Hotel. Many arrived wearing sky blue shirts, the colour of UN peacekeepers, and sported bandanas and placards reading slogans such as "No War" and "Equal Rights for Women!" Others invoked messages calling for the Burmese government to recognise ethnic rights and urging the establishment of a federal union.

The marchers, said to number several hundred persons from a range of backgrounds, made their way to Rangoon's central park at Kandawgyi Lake, all the while chanting slogans and waving banners and placards. No arrests or incidents were reported.

Another group of civil activists organised a peace march at Rangoon's Hledan overpass and another at Kyeikkasan Pagoda Road.

Peace Day marches led by women's groups were also held in other towns around the country. In Bassein [Pathein] at least 100 turned out to mark the occasion, while some 700 marchers took to the streets in Sittwe, capital of Arakan State.

International Peace Day has been observed on 21 September since 1981, when the date was marked by a resolution of the United Nations' General Assembly. The annual event is intended "to honour a cessation of hostilities during the Day, and to otherwise commemorate the Day through education and public awareness on issues related to peace," the UN says.

Thai cops get fresh evidence of Burmese suspect in tourists’ murder

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 09:23 PM PDT

Thai police have obtained fresh clues about a Thai man and a Burmese migrant worker suspected of killing two British tourists on Koh Tao early last Monday, said a police source 

Surat Thani provincial police chief Pol Maj-Gen Kiattipong Khaosam-ang yesterday held a meeting of investigators responsible for handling the murder case.  

The source said police have made considerable progress in their investigation, ruling out issues that had nothing to do with the murder and narrowing the scope of their inquiry.

The source said investigators have obtained fresh clues about two suspects — a Thai man and a Burmese migrant worker. The Thai police will link the new information with evidence which they had previously gathered.

Pol Maj-Gen Kiattipong  from the Thai police department said yesterday [21 September] that they have managed to find an Asian-looking man who was captured by a security camera not far from the crime scene.

The man, whose identity has been withheld, has now been held for questioning, Pol Maj Gen Kiattipong said, adding that the man worked at a night entertainment venue.

In the video footage, captured by a camera installed at AC Bar, where Hannah Witheridge, 23, and David Miller, 24, had been seen, the man can be seen walking back and forth near the crime scene.

The man was seen about 4am wearing a pair of shorts walking toward Jor Por Ror cape — the same route Miller and Witheridge took before they were found dead.

The same man returned about 50 minutes later, running back in a suspicious manner, said Pol Maj Gen Kiattipong in previous interviews.

A team of 10 forensic officers yesterday took a boat out to sea to collect DNA samples of fishermen as part of the probe into the murders.

More than 50 Thai marine police officers were also sent to inspect fishing boats near Koh Tao and check the records of migrant workers who are fishing crew, as well as examine ferries carrying tourists to hunt for any suspects.

Thai officials on Koh Tao were also installing more lighting in “black spots” in a bid to reduce crime.

Pol Col Chaisak Uaekrissadathikarn, deputy chief of the Office of Police Forensic Science Region 8, in Thailand, said forensic officers were stepping up efforts to collect DNA samples of as many people as possible on Koh Tao to send to the Office of the Police Forensic Science in Bangkok.

 

This article was originally published in the Bangkok Post on 22 September 2014

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Villagers, Activists Claim Innocence of Student Charged in Chinese Workers’ Kidnapping

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 05:54 AM PDT

Phyu Hnin Htwe, a 23-year-old university student from central Mandalay Division, who is being detained in Monywa Prison. (Photo: Pyae Phyo)

Phyu Hnin Htwe, a 23-year-old university student from central Mandalay Division, who is being detained in Monywa Prison. (Photo: Pyae Phyo)

Phyu Hnin Htwe, a 23-year-old university student from central Mandalay Division, was a welcome guest in the Hsete village, which she regularly visited to help the 10th grade students of poor local families with their studies.

The activist student felt a strong sympathy for the plight of the village in Sagaing Division's Yinmabin Township, one of 26 villages that have been embroiled in a drawn-out land dispute with Wanbao, a Chinese mining company excavating copper deposits from the Letpadaung Mountain.

Her activities with the children in Hsete village on May 18 would prove fateful after authorities decided that they would charge her in connection with the alleged kidnapping that day of two Chinese workers by local villagers who oppose the mine.

On Sept 13, months after the incident, police visited her hometown of Patheingyi in Mandalay, located some 100 km to the east, and arrested her. The young student has spent the last ten nights in Monywa Prison and could face up to ten years in prison on charges of kidnapping and abduction if the court finds her guilty.

Her friends and family, and local villagers, have been left stunned by the fact that authorities would seek to arrest Phyu Hnin Htwe, and insist she has nothing to do with the May 18 incident.

"She had been helping the children from our villages for about two years. At that time of the incident in May, she was at the village helping the children," said Ma Sandar, who lives in Tone, a village neighboring Hsete. "She was not involved in the abduction case."

Phyu Hnin Htwe is scheduled to appear at Yinmabin District Court on Tuesday, according to her brother Pyae Phyo, who visited her in prison in recent days. "She asked about the villagers and the people she works with when I went to meet her at the prison, instead of asking first about her family," said Pyae Phyo, who is a National League for Democracy member in Mandalay.

He said she was passionate about helping communities affected by land-grabbing, adding, "She devoted her time to the land rights movement and has been protesting and helping the [Monywa] villagers since 2012."

Phyu Hnin Htwe has been following a long-distance studying course at Mandalay's Yadanabon University and is a member of its students' union, which is part of the All Burma Federation of Student Unions (ABFSU).

The ABFSU has called for Phyu Hnin Htwe's immediate release, saying that she is being falsely accused.

Kyaw Ko Ko, chair of the ABFSU central committee, said the group had launched a campaign calling for the release of Phyu Hnin Htwe. He said he had attempted to contact Wanbao company and local authorities in order to find out who had been the plaintiff in the case against her, but had been unable to find out.

Yinmabin Township is one several townships where communities have been affected by the copper mine. Wanbao company has been granted huge swathes of farmland by the government, but thousands of farmers claim they have not been properly compensated for the confiscation of their land.

The Letpadaung copper mine is a joint venture of Wanbao and the military-owned Union of Myanmar Economics Holding limited and has been deeply unpopular with the wider Burmese public. Activists from across Burma have come out in support of the affected communities.

On May 18, the villagers in Yinmabin Township were angered when they saw Chinese Wanbao employees carrying out survey works on recently seized lands. Villagers believed the aim of the company was to later fence in the area. They consequently brought the two men, along with a Burmese Wanbao employee, to Hsete village. The Burmese national was released the same day, but the Chinese employees were held for about 30 hours.

Ma Sandar said the villagers had never intended to harm the freedom of movement of the company workers, adding that they had has just hoped to force the company to negotiate with them. She said, "But it did not turn out as we expected."

A total of seven people were charged with abduction in May; five were arrested and later pardoned by the court.

Phyu Hnin Htwe and Win Kyaw, a local villager, were also charged but did not show up for the trial. Until recently, Monywa authorities had made no attempt to arrest the two. Win Kyaw still remains at large.

The post Villagers, Activists Claim Innocence of Student Charged in Chinese Workers' Kidnapping appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Burmese Gas Firm Official Confirms Plans for Doubling of CNG Price

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 05:40 AM PDT

Taxis fueled by compressed natural gas are parked in downtown Rangoon. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

Taxis fueled by compressed natural gas are parked in downtown Rangoon. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The price of compressed natural gas (CNG), which is used in almost all public buses and many taxis in Rangoon, will rise by 100 percent, but likely not until sometime next year, an official from the Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise says, denying local media reports that the price hike would take place effective Oct. 1.

Local media reported last week that the CNG price would be doubled from the beginning of next month, but Burma's Ministry of Energy denied those reports on Friday, posting on its Facebook page that any change in the fuel price would occur only after informing the public in advance.

"All CNG filling stations were saying that the price would increase to double on October 1. But I heard the officials denied it. We are not sure now. So, we have to wait and see on October 1," Win Shein, a taxi driver from Rangoon's Thuwanna Township, told The Irrawaddy on Monday.

An official from the Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE), which operates under the auspices of the Ministry of Energy, confirmed that MOGE had presented a proposal to the ministry early this year that would see the price of the fuel double, citing the fact that the state-run company is currently selling CNG at a loss.

"We are selling the CNG for four times cheaper than the current gasoline price. So we planned to increase up to double," said the official, who asked not to be named.

The current CNG price is about 273 kyats (US$0.27) per kilogram.

"The ministry will submit [the price hike proposal] to Parliament and we will increase the price after that. But it wouldn't be rising this year, since there is not much time left in the year and the ministry still hasn't yet submitted the price change proposal to Parliament," the MOGE official said.

Win Shein, the taxi driver, said that if the price of CNG were to double, there would be little difference between the operating costs of CNG- versus gasoline-fueled taxis. Currently, CNG-fueled taxis are significantly cheaper to operate than their gasoline-fueled counterparts.

"The gasoline-fueled taxis avoid the places of traffic jams like downtown because if they have to spend more time in traffic, that's more money on fuel. If the CNG price were to double, we would have to avoid the places with traffic jams too," he said.

He said that currently he spends 5,000 kyats to fill his CNG tank per day, and that gasoline-fueled taxis spend 10,000 to 12,000 kyats on fuel daily.

"If it is doubled, I'll have to pay 10,000 [kyats] for gas," he said, adding that buses, which spend around 16,000 kyats per day on CNG, would also be affected.

"The buses' fees will likely increase too," Win Shein said.

CNG is sold by MOGE at 45 filling stations nationwide: 40 in Rangoon and five in central Burma, in and around Mandalay. A program to convert vehicles to CNG was initiated in 1986 and was renewed in 2004, corresponding to respective spikes in the international price of oil. Thousands of buses, taxis and other vehicles were converted under the direction of the Burmese government.

The official from MOGE said that although the domestic price of CNG was likely to double, even such a hike would still compare favorably to other countries. In Singapore, the Philippines and Cambodia, CNG is sold at the equivalent to more than 1,000 kyats per kilogram.

"Since they [other countries] are importing the CNG, the price is much higher," he said.

The taxi driver, Win Shein, said the Burmese government claimed when the CNG program was launched that the country's CNG reserves would last for 90 years, allowing for its sale at a rate well below the regional market price.

"They started selling it at around 54 kyats per kilogram. After that, they increased it five times up to 273 kyats," he added.

There were 26,848 CNG-fueled vehicles registered through 2008, according to the MOGE. The government capped the conversion of vehicles to CNG after that, allowing only for the one-off conversion of an additional 289 buses in 2013.

The post Burmese Gas Firm Official Confirms Plans for Doubling of CNG Price appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Latest Round of Nationwide Ceasefire Talks Kicks Off

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 05:02 AM PDT

Nai Hong Sar, who leads the National Ceasefire Coordination Team, speaks to reporters at the Myanmar Peace Center in Rangoon on Monday. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

Nai Hong Sar, who leads the National Ceasefire Coordination Team, speaks to reporters at the Myanmar Peace Center in Rangoon on Monday. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The government's lead peace negotiator has pledged to push ahead with talks to end decades of conflict in Burma no matter the obstacles, as officials from Naypyidaw sit down with ethnic rebel groups this week for the latest round of talks on reaching a nationwide ceasefire accord.

President's Office Minister Aung Min, who chairs the government's Union Peacemaking Work Committee (UPWC), made the vow at a meeting between the UPWC and ethnic armed groups' National Ceasefire Coordination Team (NCCT) at the government-affiliated Myanmar Peace Center on Monday in Rangoon.

"The government has agreed in its [ceasefire] draft to build a new nation, recognizing the term 'federal,' which has never been recognized in Burma's history," Aung Min said.

"We, the government, intend to solve political problems politically and hold an all-inclusive political dialogue," he added.

The latest discussions are the sixth round in a series of ceasefire talks between the UPWC and NCCT. The government has said it hopes to ink a nationwide ceasefire accord next month, though several previous self-imposed deadlines for a signing have come and gone over the last year.

This week's talks will focus on military affairs, said NCCT member Khun Okkar.

"In the previous discussions, we only agreed in principle on military affairs," he said. "We'll discuss it in detail this time."

"Ethnic groups have proposed that a leading committee [to discuss military affairs] be formed with ethnic representatives. But the government viewed the move as a counterbalancing act and we are therefore negotiating on it.

"Then, we'll negotiate military deployments and a code of conduct and rules and regulations for the armed forces. But I think it will be difficult to negotiate those rules and regulations," he said.

Nai Hong Sar, who leads the NCCT, called on the military representatives in attendance this week, including Lt-Gen Myint Soe who commands troops in conflict-torn Kachin State, to take "bold steps" to bridge the gap between the two sides' visions of what a nationwide ceasefire should look like.

"The other side [the military] needs to take bold steps now as the president has begun to see things correctly. We will be able to solve the problems if we try to find a solution peacefully, as brothers," he said.

The current ceasefire draft is made up of seven chapters. The ongoing meeting will concentrate on issues related to military deployments and establishing a code of conduct comprised of rules for troops on both sides of the conflict.

In addition to Aung Min, the government sent Minister of Immigration and Population Khin Yi to this week's talks. A parliamentary representative and several high-ranking generals from the Burma Army also attended Monday's meeting, as did senior members of the NCCT including Khun Okkar, Gen. Gun Maw and Salai Lian Hmong Sakhong.

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Burma Gives Citizenship to 209 displaced Muslims, Including Rohingya

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 04:10 AM PDT

A family sits in front of their temporary shelter at a Rohingya refugee camp in Sittwe, Arakan State, on April 2, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

A family sits in front of their temporary shelter at a Rohingya refugee camp in Sittwe, Arakan State, on April 2, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

RANGOON — Burma gave citizenship on Monday to 209 Muslims displaced by sectarian violence, after the first phase of a project aimed at determining the status of about a million Rohingya whose claims to nationality have been rejected in the past.

The Rohingya Muslim minority live under apartheid-like conditions in Arakan State in the west, needing permission to move from their villages or from camps where almost 140,000 remain after being displaced in deadly clashes with ethnic Arakanese Buddhists in 2012.

The government and many people in the predominantly Buddhist country refer to them as "Bengali", a term that implies they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, although Rohingya families have lived in the area for generations.

Officials from Burma’s immigration ministry told Reuters that 1,094 Muslims took part in the pilot verification process in displacement camps in Myebon, which is about 51 km (32 miles) from the state capital, Sittwe, and accessible only by boat.

Some of the 209 who received citizenship were members of the Kaman Muslim minority, who are recognized by the government as indigenous to Burma, but there were also Rohingya.

Officials were not immediately able to explain why this group had been given citizenship, nor how many Rohingya were included.

Aung Win, a Rohingya community leader in Sittwe, said many had refused to take part in the verification process because they did not want to list their identity as Bengali, as required by the authorities.

Rights advocates say the Rohingya should be allowed to choose how they are described, but others say the importance of the citizenship verification process trumps such concerns because it is necessary to resolve the issue of statelessness.

Many Rohingya are effectively stateless because they are not recognized as citizens by Burma or by neighboring Bangladesh.

Some United Nations agencies working in Burma have adopted a policy of avoiding the word Rohingya because it angers officials and nationalist religious leaders in Arakan State, who can block them from carrying out humanitarian work.

In June, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said it had been asked by state officials to apologize for saying "Rohingya" during a presentation outlining development plans.

Most Rohingya were excluded from an UN-backed census earlier this year because they refused to list their identities as Bengali.

David Mathieson, a senior researcher on Burma with New York-based Human Rights Watch, said agencies that cave in to the government are abdicating responsibility to defend the rights of the Rohingya.

"This isn’t some kind of practical way to ensure long-term aid and development," he said. "This is active connivance in systemic abuse against a minority."

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Burmese Migrant Among Suspects in Koh Tao Murders

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 03:30 AM PDT

Police measure footprints of a man as data is collected from people who work near the spot where bodies of two killed British tourists were found on the island of Koh Tao on Sept. 19, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Chaiwat Subprasom)

Police measure footprints of a man as data is collected from people who work near the spot where bodies of two killed British tourists were found on the island of Koh Tao on Sept. 19, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Chaiwat Subprasom)

CHIANG MAI, Thailand – The investigation into the murder of two British tourists on the southern Thai island of Koh Tao now centers on two key suspects, a Burmese migrant worker and a Thai national, according to Thai police working on the case.

A police source told the Bangkok Post on Monday that investigators had obtained new clues about a Thai man and a Burmese migrant worker suspected of killing the two young tourists Hannah Witheridge, 23, and David Miller, 24.

Htoo Chit, executive director of the Thailand-based Foundation for Education and Development, an organization that works with migrant workers, told The Irrawaddy, "We heard that a Burmese migrant worker has become a new suspect. He has not been arrested yet. Only a DNA sample has been linked to him. Thai authorities are focusing on migrant workers and Thai residents there [on Koh Tao] as the latest DNA samples show that the killers are Asian."

Htoo Chit said that his organization was in contact with the Burmese Embassy in Bangkok in order to help Burmese migrants working on Koh Tao.

"They [Thai police] question everyone they suspect now. We heard they even beat a Burmese migrant worker called "Lin" in an interrogation. So, we plan to send a Burmese team with Thai lawyers tomorrow to assess the situation there and offer help to the migrants if needed," said Htoo Chit.

Police are stepping up their investigation, conducting DNA samples of all residents on the island, including migrant workers and tourists. Investigators had already taken DNA samples from six Burmese migrant workers last week, but none of their samples matched DNA found at the scene of the murders.

According to the Bangkok Post report, over 50 marine police officers were sent to Koh Tao to inspect fishing boats and ferries operating near the island and check the records of migrants working as part of fishing crews.

The bodies of the two British tourists were found on a beach in Koh Tao last Monday.

The post Burmese Migrant Among Suspects in Koh Tao Murders appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Photo of the week (Sep 22, 2014)

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 03:17 AM PDT

Hundreds Gather in Rangoon to Mark World Peace Day

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 02:51 AM PDT

A woman attending the Women's Peace March in Kandawgyi Lake Park claps enthusiastically during a performance. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

A woman attending the Women's Peace March in Kandawgyi Lake Park claps enthusiastically during a performance. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — At several sites in Rangoon on Sunday, hundreds of activists gathered to mark the International Day of Peace and call for an end to conflict in Burma.

A festive mood prevailed at the Women's Peace March, one of three peace rallies held in the city this weekend, where several hundred women belonging to various women's organizations showed up wearing blue shirts emblazoned with the peace symbol and a slogan 'No Women, No Peace.'

While singing songs, they walked from Kabar Aye Pagoda Road in central Rangoon to Kandawgyi Lake Park, where a stage had been prepared for several performances of female singers and poets, all of whom had a message of peace and called for an end to violence in Burma.

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Pa-O Leader Frets Over Soldiers’ Alleged Detention by Shan Rebels

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 11:09 PM PDT

Pa-O National Liberation Organization chairman Khun Myint Htun listens while attending a recent ethnic conference near Chiang Mai, Thailand, on Sept. 2. (Photo: Seamus Martov / The Irrawaddy)

Pa-O National Liberation Organization chairman Khun Myint Htun listens while attending a recent ethnic conference near Chiang Mai, Thailand, on Sept. 2. (Photo: Seamus Martov / The Irrawaddy)

The chairman of the Pa-O National Liberation Organization (PNLO) says he remains concerned about the fate of three of his soldiers, who he claims were captured by the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) about one month ago.

"I hope they are freed soon," the PNLO leader, Khun Myint Htun, told The Irrawaddy.

According to Khun Myint Htun, PNLO Sgt. Khun Mar and two of his subordinates, Khun Aung Tha and Khun Ohn Npe, were detained by RCSS troops in southern Shan State on Aug. 21 while on patrol near Naung Kaung Ki in Mauk Mae Township.

In a recent interview with The Irrawaddy, RCSS spokesperson Sai Ngin claimed that the three PNLO soldiers had switched sides and joined his group of their own free will. "These three soldiers came and joined the RCSS forces, we did not arrest them. If they want to go back home or have a desire to go back to their organization, we are ready to let them go," he said.

The RCSS, whose armed wing is known as the Shan State Army-South, is one of Burma's larger ethnic armed groups and has a strong presence in southeastern Shan State, particularly along the Thai border.

Khun Myint Htun rejected the RCSS assertion about his soldiers' alleged defection, calling the claim "completely not true." According to the PNLO chairman, the RCSS has made clear to him that his soldiers would be released once a territorial disagreement between the PNLO and RCSS is resolved. Khun Myint Htun said that neither he nor anyone else from the PNLO has been allowed to speak to the three soldiers since their capture.

Relations between the RCSS and the PNLO have been strained in recent years, and exacerbated by the PNLO's signing of a ceasefire with Burmese authorities in 2012. That ceasefire and another agreement signed in 2013 recognized PNLO claims over parts of southern Shan State that the RCSS also claims as its own. Of particular contention is a new village being constructed for PNLO soldiers and their families called Khanpake in Kadugyi.

Last month the RCSS sent the PNLO two letters ordering them to withdraw from Khanpake and much of the territory that was recognized in the Pa-O group's ceasefire with the government as being under PNLO control. Khanpake is being built with the permission of government authorities.

Another source of contention between the two groups appears to stem from the fact that many RCSS troops serving in areas near PNLO territory are in fact ethnic Pa-O. Their ethnic identity has caused the RCSS to see the PNLO as a threat, suggested an ethnic Pa-O who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Khun Myint Htun said he remained optimistic that his group, which is significantly smaller than the RCSS, can work things out with its armed neighbors. The two sides are due to meet next month to iron out their differences.

"I hope we can solve this," Khun Myint Htun said.

During their most recent meeting with the RCSS, Khun Myint Htun and his PNLO colleagues were joined earlier this month by representatives from the Karenni National Progressive Party (KNPP) and the Wa National Organization (WNO). Both groups are allied with the PNLO through the United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC), a coalition of Burma's armed ethnic groups. Unlike the PNLO, the RCSS is not a member of the UNFC.

Clashes between RCSS and PNLO forces broke out earlier this month in southern Shan State near where the PNLO soldiers were allegedly captured.

Khun Myint Htun, who won a seat in Burma's 1990 national election, has a rather unique background that sets him apart from his fellow ethnic rebel leaders. At the time of his victory, the then 26-year-old was the youngest National League for Democracy (NLD) MP-elect.

As with rest of his NLD colleagues, who won an overwhelming 80 percent of the seats in that election, Khun Myint Htun never took office due to the military regime's refusal to recognize the election results. In 1996, Khun Myint Htun was part of the NLD delegation that walked out of the National Convention tasked with drafting a Constitution, a move that led to his jailing by the military regime for seven years and three months. Shortly after being released in 2003, Khun Myint Htun fled to Thailand where he eventually linked up with the various Pa-O groups that merged to form a reconstituted PNLO in 2009.

Khun Myint Htun severed his ties with the NLD following the dissolution of the exile grouping of NLD members known as the NLD Liberated Area (NLD-LA) in 2012. The former MP-elect turned rebel leader became PNLO chairman in 2013, replacing longtime Pa-O leader Khun Okkar.

The post Pa-O Leader Frets Over Soldiers' Alleged Detention by Shan Rebels appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

India, China Quietly Struggle in Indian Ocean

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 11:03 PM PDT

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, right, and China's President Xi Jinping wave before their meeting in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad on Sept. 17, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Amit Dave)

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, right, and China's President Xi Jinping wave before their meeting in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad on Sept. 17, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Amit Dave)

NEW DELHI — At first glance, it looks like a diplomatic love-fest. There was Chinese President Xi Jinping, toasting the birthday of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a quiet dinner last week in Modi's home state. There were the two leaders, deep in conversation as they walked along the Sabarmati River, Xi dressed in a Nehru jacket.

The men are full of praise for one another, and one another's countries. Xi gushes over India as "an enchanting and beautiful land." Modi declares that their pledges to work together "will open big gates for progress and development in the world." Just a few hours into Xi's three-day visit, Indian newspapers were awash with accomplishments: a joint industrial park, a sister-city pact, ramped up cultural ties, business deals and investment promises from China worth well more than US$20 billion.

Left largely unspoken, though, are the deep worries in India over Chinese maneuvering in the Indian Ocean, where New Delhi's years of dominance is being chipped away by billions of dollars in aid from Beijing and gargantuan Chinese construction projects.

And while China's recent push for dominance in the South China and East China seas get more attention, the quiet contest for influence in the Indian Ocean is being watched carefully from Tokyo to Washington. More than anything else, the worries are over energy.

The tankers that move through the Indian Ocean carry 80 percent of China's oil, 65 percent of India's and 60 percent of Japan's, making those waters crucially important to three of Asia's great powers. A significant slowdown in tanker traffic—whether from diplomatic standoff, piracy or war—could cripple those countries and send shockwaves around the world.

So for years Beijing has been working to ensure it is not left out of the regional equation, building ports and forging alliances in coastal nations from Burma to Pakistan.

"China wants to be a major player in the Indian Ocean, alongside India and the US," said Kanwal Sibal, a former Indian foreign secretary who also held a series of ambassadorships.

Xi's latest initiative is the maritime Silk Road, a series of agreements that would link China to Europe by sea. But if China heralds the Silk Road as a vision of international cooperation, many in the Indian government worry it is a Trojan horse to hide Beijing's expanding influence, said Sibal, who is well-connected in New Delhi's foreign policy circles.

"It is a precursor to eventually positioning themselves more permanently in the Indian Ocean," he said.

Xi, notably, made two stops before arriving in India, both in Indian Ocean nations. First came the Maldives, the isolated archipelago and high-end tourist destination where Beijing's influence has been growing steadily. Next was Sri Lanka, a war-battered island nation where China has become the largest investor, and where it has built a colossal port in the once-quiet town of Hambantota.

"They are building pockets of influence," Sibal said.

Beijing, for its part, firmly denies it is on a quest for Indian Ocean influence. In a signing ceremony for the Silk Road plan in Sri Lanka, Xi called it a chance to "strengthen our cooperation" in everything from port development to maritime security.

Wang Shaopu, director of the Center for Pan-Pacific Studies at Shanghai Jiaotong University, noted that competition was natural given the importance of the region. But, he added, that doesn't make conflict inevitable.

"China and India should make a high priority of cooperation and avoid letting competition become cutthroat," he said. "I think both countries already have realized this."

Publicly, that is definitely the case. The neighbors might have plenty of room for disagreement, from an immense Indian trade deficit to an Indian state that China claims as its own territory. But they have also become highly adept at avoiding the most sensitive issues, playing down disagreements to focus on economic growth.

Even in India, where China's emergence as a world power stings national pride deeply, plenty of people say that's not automatically a bad thing.

China "has the opportunity to build massive infrastructure," across the Indian Ocean as part of the Silk Road initiative, said Vijay Sakhuja, a former Indian naval officer and head of the New Delhi-based National Maritime Foundation. "They make world-class ports … So can we emulate them or partake" of what they build?

India, however, is also being careful not to put too much trust in China, forging diplomatic agreements in an attempt to balance Beijing's growing strength.

Just weeks ago, for instance, Modi returned from a highly successful trip to Japan, China's fiercest rival, bringing home pledges of billions of dollars in aid and investment along with agreements to strengthen security and economic ties. Then, just days ago, the Indian and Vietnamese presidents issued a joint statement calling for freedom of navigation in the South China and East China seas—a clear jab at Beijing's aggressiveness in the region.

And the underlying tensions between India and China never go completely away.

Indian officials said a few days ago that Chinese soldiers had again entered Indian territory in the isolated Himalayan border region of Ladakh. The soldiers were said to be building a road.

While Modi made a brief mention Thursday of border disagreements during a joint appearance with Xi—saying he had raised the issue of the "repeated incursions" with the Chinese leader—his statement was overwhelmingly positive, concluding by saying their relationship was "filled with vast opportunities."

That didn't surprise Sibal.

"We rarely speak frankly to China," said Sibal, the former diplomat said. "We have preferred to speak about areas where we have common interests."

Researcher Yu Bing in Beijing contributed to this report.

The post India, China Quietly Struggle in Indian Ocean appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Hong Kong Students to Boycott Class to Protest China Curbs on Democracy

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 11:00 PM PDT

Occupy Central protesters shout slogans during a rally after a march in Hong Kong September 14, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

Occupy Central protesters shout slogans during a rally after a march in Hong Kong September 14, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

HONG KONG — Hong Kong students are preparing for a showdown with Beijing over democratic reforms by boycotting classes on Monday, as a restive younger generation challenges the Chinese Communist Party’s tightening grip on the city.

The former British colony returned to China in 1997 with a high degree of autonomy, but Beijing’s rejection of the right to freely choose the city’s next leader has prompted threats from activists to shut down the Central financial district as part of their pro-democracy campaign.

As a prelude to the "Occupy Central" shutdown expected next month, students from 24 universities and colleges plan a week-long citywide campaign of civil disobedience, including classroom strikes, mass gatherings and downtown protests.

Leading academics in Hong Kong have voiced support for the boycott, with some offering to record lectures and post them online for students who miss school to watch later.

Managing Hong Kong is proving a challenge for Beijing, which is worried that calls for democracy in Hong Kong and the nearby former Portuguese colony of Macau could spread to cities on the mainland, threatening the Communist Party’s grip on power.

China said in the Basic Law mini-constitution for post-1997 Hong Kong that universal suffrage was an eventual aim. Late last month, it said it would permit a vote for Hong Kong’s next chief executive, but only for a handful of pre-screened candidates.

"The new generation is totally dissatisfied," said Alex Chow, leader of the Hong Kong Federation of Students which said in a statement that Beijing had "murdered" Hong Kong’s hopes and three-decade-long struggle to realize full democracy.

It’s not clear how many students will take part in the strike, though recent protests have drawn thousands, including an overnight sit-in in Central on July 2 that was cleared by police with over 500 arrests.

Official Chinese media has vilified Hong Kong student leaders and warned them not to stir up trouble. The Hong Kong government department responsible for education has said repeatedly that it does not support the boycott, but also that it will not interfere.

'We May Have to Join Them'

The students plan to hold a mass assembly at a university campus on Monday before "relocating" to other public areas, including a site near government headquarters that some say could snowball into something bigger.

Benny Tai, one of the organizers of the Occupy Central movement, said it may launch its sit-in early if the students gain momentum.

"We have to prepare for that. After the public meeting, if they march to Central, then we may have to join them," Tai said.

The strike reflects a growing trend of civil disobedience among students in greater China, including Macau and self-ruled Taiwan, where a large group occupied the island’s legislature for three weeks in March and April to oppose a controversial trade pact with China.

It was one of the largest protests in years in Taiwan, which China regards as a breakaway province, and the pact was shelved for review.

"Among young people in Hong Kong, there is a growing sentiment of mistrust towards the Chinese government," said Agnes Chow of the student group Scholarism that has urged high school pupils to join the strike at the end of next week.

"It’s not because we feel we aren’t Chinese and it’s not because we dislike China as a country," she said. "We feel we cannot trust the government in power."

Some of the Hong Kong students’ more radical tactics have yielded results before and angered Beijing.

In 2012, Hong Kong was forced to shelve plans for a compulsory pro-China "national education" curriculum plan in schools after students led week-long protests drawing thousands, saying the plan was tantamount to brainwashing.

A well-placed source with ties to senior Hong Kong and Chinese officials said China was furious with the Hong Kong government’s capitulation at the time in front of what it considered to be no more than a bunch of "rebellious kids".

"The students see themselves as Hong Kongers above all else and I think that’s the key thing," said Matthew Torne, a British filmmaker who made a documentary about the Hong Kong student activists.

"When your home is under attack – which is how they see it – then you are willing to stand up and fight."

The post Hong Kong Students to Boycott Class to Protest China Curbs on Democracy appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Fiji Election Results Confirm Big Win for Ruler 

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:55 PM PDT

An election poster for Voreqe

An election poster for Voreqe "Frank" Bainimarama can be seen in the rear window of a taxi as a man gestures from the doorway of a local gymnasium in the Fiji capital of Suva August 26, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

SUVA — Official results Monday from a landmark Fiji election confirm a big win for the nation’s military ruler.

Voreqe Bainimarama and his Fiji First party won an outright majority in the Parliament by taking 32 of 50 seats, according to results released by the Fijian Elections Office.

Last Wednesday’s election marked the first time people in the South Pacific nation have gone to the polls since Bainimarama seized control in a 2006 coup.

The opposition Social Democratic Liberal Party (Sodelpa) won 15 seats and the National Federation Party won three.

Bainimarama is due to be sworn in as prime minister-elect during a ceremony on Monday.

But he did not wait for the official results to claim victory.

"I am greatly honored and humbled that the Fijian people put their trust in me to lead them into our new and true democracy," he said at a church service in Suva on Sunday. "My absolute promise is that we will govern for the wellbeing of all Fijians."

During his speech, Bainimarama defended the coup and thanked the military.

"I publicly acknowledge and thank them for their camaraderie, vision, perseverance and their sacrifice," he said. "It is because of their legacy that today we have a democratically elected parliamentary government."

The Fijian Elections Office said voter turnout was 84 percent with almost 500,000 ballots cast. Bainimarama alone won just over 200,000 votes, and, when other candidates from his party were added, Fiji First won 294,000 votes, or 59 percent of the total. Sodelpa candidates won 140,000 votes, or 28 percent of the total.

Parliamentary seats are allocated under a proportional system.

Five opposition parties that contested the election say they don’t accept the result due to voting irregularities.

The leaders from Sodelpa, the National Federation Party and three other parties told journalists they were concerned that multiple ballot boxes had been tampered with. They said some boxes had been removed without the ballots being counted while others had been stuffed with envelopes.

But a group of 92 international observers said the election was credible and they saw no evidence of fraud. It said the result broadly reflects the will of voters.

The election was "enthusiastically embraced by the voters of Fiji who were keen to participate in the democratic process," the Multinational Observer Group wrote in its preliminary findings. "The election was conducted in an atmosphere of calm, with an absence of electoral misconduct or evident intimidation."

The group said in a statement Monday it was ending its formal observation work now that the result had been declared.

The group’s endorsement paves the way for international sanctions to be dropped, including Fiji’s likely return this month to full status among the Commonwealth group of nations.

The post Fiji Election Results Confirm Big Win for Ruler  appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

In Search of the Deep South

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 05:00 PM PDT

A bridge outside of Thanantyari. (Photo: Mark Inkey)

A bridge outside of Thanantyari. (Photo: Mark Inkey)

MAWLAMYINE, Mon State — Generally speaking, I'm a firm believer in making plans for the road. But sometimes when you are on your way and opportunity and desire present themselves, it's tempting to see just how far you can get by just going with your instincts.

That's what happened a few months ago when I was visiting Mawlamyine, capital of Mon State. Having come 190 miles (310 km) from Yangon, it occurred to me that it might be interesting to continue heading south. That's how, nearly a week and 700 miles (1,100 km) later, I found myself in Kawthaung, Myanmar's southernmost city and a grueling motorcycle journey away.

I blame the motorcycle. Strictly speaking, perhaps I shouldn't have had it in the first place, as apparently there may be rules against foreigners renting motorcycles in Myanmar. But many local guesthouses seem happy enough to let you putter around town on one of their bikes for a small price, and the police don't seem to mind. And, having had a taste of biking exploration in Mawlamyine, I felt somehow compelled to push my adventure onwards. And so I set off from the Mon capital for Dawei, a city some 230 miles (370 km) to the south.

Of course, I did this with the blessing of the motorcycle's owner, who said he'd never heard of a tourist attempting this trip before (perhaps because until August 2013, this stretch of highway was off limits to foreigners). He didn't seem to mind letting me give it a shot with his bike; maybe he would have been more concerned if the vehicle in question wasn't a poorly maintained 100 cc Honda Wave that was at least 15 years old.

Equipped with nothing more than this woefully inadequate means of transport and a crash helmet that could have been a child's toy, I bounced along without incident until I reached a checkpoint on the border between Mon State and Tanintharyi Region, a little more than halfway to my destination. There I was stopped and ordered to provide my details, which were meticulously noted in a large ledger. To my relief, I wasn't asked to show any papers for the bike. It seemed that as long as my name was logged, no other questions needed to be asked. On I could go.

Beyond this point, however, the road steadily deteriorated and the bike beneath me slowly shook itself to pieces. Luckily, I was far from alone in facing the perils of punctures and mechanical failure, and even the smallest village along the way had at least one makeshift shop that could be counted on to keep my bike roadworthy.

With the help of more than one enterprising local mechanic and fueled by petrol poured out of whisky bottles, the motorbike reached Dawei in one piece. I, however, was much the worse for wear.

Dawei Break

A few well-earned days of rest and relaxation on Dawei's untouched beaches did me a world of good. But what they didn't do was rid me of the urge to see just how far I could go on this foolhardy journey of mine. And so, as my aches and pains slowly faded, I began to contemplate the possibility of going all the way to Kawthaung.

I knew that it was theoretically possible; but I also knew I had not heard of other foreigners traveling overland beyond Myeik, about 150 miles (240 km) to the south of Dawei. Bus companies cannot sell tickets to foreigners wanting to travel farther south than that, I had heard, but as far as I knew, no other measures were taken to prevent tourists making the trip. So, after a quick call to the owner of my bike to tell him I needed it for a few more days, I got back in the saddle and headed south.

Apart from the deplorable driving conditions on the bumpy roads, all went well until I reached Myeik, where I spent a night in an overpriced, moldy room at one of the few hotels in town. Then, in the town of Tanintharyi, I had another encounter with local officialdom, in the form of a smartly dressed man in a white shirt and well-pressed longyi.

Magically appearing at my elbow, he asked to see my passport and inquired as to where I was going. I said Bokpyin, the next major town on my route. It turned out that his main concern seemed to be that I moved along and, after grudgingly agreeing to let me stop for something to eat before leaving Tanintharyi, he sent me on my way.

It was already past midday, and Bokpyin was 100 miles (160 km) away. As I rode on through the country landscape, it became obvious that I wouldn't be able to reach it before nightfall. As darkness fell, I resigned myself to spending the night without shelter and stopped at a small roadside restaurant so that my misery wouldn't be compounded by hunger. Realizing that I had nowhere to go, one of the staff said I could stay there. I gratefully accepted the offer of a sun lounger under a noisy television in a corner of what turned out to be an all-night truck stop.

End of the Road

It wasn't a very restful night's sleep, but the next morning I was ready for the final stretch.

After a night of rain, the road was muddy and slippery, and until about 75 miles (120 km) outside of Kawthaung, it was tough going.

Then, oil palm plantations began to take over the landscape, spreading out as far as the eye could see, and the rickety road turned into a sealed three-lane highway. Clearly, commercial needs push road building a lot more than the needs of the people.

Finally, after having pushed myself and the motorbike to the limit for a total of five days, I arrived in Kawthaung. Now all I had to do was make my way back.

My plan was to return to Dawei by ferry and from there ride back to Mawlamyine. But that turned out to be more complicated than I had expected. Suddenly, after days of driving without ever being asked to show the motorcycle's registration papers, I was told that it couldn't be transported by ferry without full documentation. It was beginning to look like I might have to go back the way I came.

I was a broken man. My initial exhilaration at completing a journey that to my knowledge no other foreigner had attempted quickly drained away, as I faced the daunting thought of having to do the whole thing over again.

In the end, however, I was spared this nightmare scenario. With some trepidation, I entrusted the bike to a local bus company and boarded the ferry back to Dawei. There, after an anxious day's waiting, I was reunited with the motorbike and ready to bring it back to its owner.

It's not a trip I would want to attempt again anytime soon, though there were many moments when I felt lucky to see a sometimes stunning and still relatively unspoiled corner of Myanmar.

The post In Search of the Deep South appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

National News

National News


Lack of climbing, communications equipment hampered search: Hkakabo Razi team

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 04:00 AM PDT

Six surviving members of the Hkakabo Razi expedition said they were unable to search for two missing colleagues above 4938 metres (16,200 feet) because of a lack of mountaineering equipment.

Climbers were not prepared, says Htoo

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:56 PM PDT

Recriminations are beginning to fly over the attempt to climb Myanmar's tallest mountain, with Htoo Foundation accusing organisers of not providing enough equipment for the climbers.

‘Yoma’ beer to hit shelves by December

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:56 PM PDT

Danish brewer Carlsberg will begin production at its Myanmar factory next month as the company looks to become the first foreign producer approved by President U Thein Sein's government to tap the country's promising beer market.

Constitution committee wraps up debate on draft changes

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:52 PM PDT

Revisions to be proposed to the country's constitution could be considerable, an official leading the amendment process hinted last week.

Govt backtracks on sending domestic workers to Singapore

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:47 PM PDT

Citing concerns about exploitation, the government has ceased granting permits for domestic servants to work in Singapore for the foreseeable future.

MPs to vote on education bill

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:42 PM PDT

The Joint Bill Committee has recommended MPs reject a proposal from President U Thein Sein to extend the transition period for education reform by eight years when they vote on it in the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw.

Concerns raised over poorly built school buildings

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:27 PM PDT

Private developers who flout safety rules and build substandard schools could face prosecution if MPs manage to bring a proposed crackdown into effect.

Mandalay to get street lights in bid to cut crime

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:24 PM PDT

Lights powered by 80-watt LED bulbs are to be installed on some of Mandalay's major streets in a bid to cut crime – but residents have been told to pay for some of the installation.

New religious group set up to support Ma Ba Tha

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:23 PM PDT

A new grouping has been formed to support the conservative Buddhist Ma Ba Tha movement, with the stated aim of ending conflict and getting "nationalist youth" more involved in religious affairs.

Concerns raised as employment agencies take over training

Posted: 21 Sep 2014 10:05 PM PDT

Employment agencies could be facing a conflict of interest in taking over the training of Myanmar citizens preparing to work overseas, a migrant workers' advocate has warned.