Saturday, October 4, 2014

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Now Available in Burma: Coffee With a Conscience

Posted: 03 Oct 2014 05:30 PM PDT

The interior of Genius Coffee, a café in downtown Rangoon that serves up coffee from the Shan highlands. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

The interior of Genius Coffee, a café in downtown Rangoon that serves up coffee from the Shan highlands. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

Genius Coffee is producing Burma's first international-standard specialty coffee, with an eye toward ethical standards and ensuring minimal negative environmental impacts.

In a country known for its tea and dominated by powdered coffee substitutes, decent coffee is in lamentably short supply.

Enter Burma's first specialty coffee producer, Ngwe Tun. Together with his wife, Lay Lay Myint, Ngwe Tun is pioneering the production and sale of high-quality coffee grown in the Shan highlands, through his business Genius Coffee.

"Everyone can drink coffee!" he says, explaining his intention to take advantage of Burma's ideal coffee-growing climate to produce a high-quality, export-ready commodity. "We are working in the local, but we are working [to] international standards."

The family business has started a plantation in Ywar Ngan, a small hill village in Shan State, using an Arabica coffee bean imported from Costa Rica. Though the beans will only be ready for harvest in three years, Ngwe Tun is impatient to see results, and is now working with a select group of local farmers, training and supporting them to harvest beans of the highest quality.

The beans are then hand-roasted in the family's home in Rangoon's South Okkalapa Township, and sold in the commercial capital at Ngwe Tun's newly opened coffee shop. He describes the taste as mild and clean, without bitterness and evincing a sweet undertone.

Sipping a freshly made cup, the flavor is impressively robust (I like my coffee strong) and both the espresso and cappuccino pack a punch, served exactly right. The espresso is not watery, and the cappuccino not drowned in milk—both horribly common, unforgivable sins.

At just 1,000 kyats (US$1) for an espresso and 1,500 kyats for a cappuccino, prices are astonishingly cheap—Ngwe Tun explains that local production helps keep costs down—and located centrally on 31st Street, just behind the Sule Shangri-La hotel (formerly Traders). Throw in the free Wi-Fi, and this tiny café is a gem of a place.

Equally passionate about the environmental and ethical footprint of the business, Genius Coffee sells its beans in reusable bags, and customers are encouraged to refill their coffee at the shop for a discount, rather than buy a new bag.

"We care a lot about the environment," Ngwe Tun explains.

With cool mountain regions and a strong rainy season, Burma has an ideal coffee-producing climate, with both Arabica and Robusta beans growing well in different areas. Though local farmers produce coffee in many of the mountainous areas across Burma, and there is a small selection of fresh Burmese coffees for sale in the supermarket chain CityMart, there is little coffee produced for the international market. Among local palates, the popular processed "coffee mix" powders dominate.

Ngwe Tun is clearly determined to change this. Already a member of the Specialty Coffee Association of America (SCAA), Genius Coffee uses SCAA quality standards and their coffee has been awarded "specialty" certification and a "very good" scoring of 81/100 by SCAA's coffee analysis. They are in the process of seeking Fairtrade certification.

Yet Ngwe Tun's is an unlikely story. Raised in Rangoon to a family of car traders, he initially trained in web programming, and still works as the technical director of an IT company. But unsatisfied with his IT career prospects, he turned to agriculture after an opportune conversation with a coffee expert in Singapore helped him realize the potential of Burma's untapped coffee market.

Ngwe Tun taught himself the complexities of specialty coffee production through online training courses, and support from a coffee research center in Pyin Oo Lwin.

Genius Coffee is a pioneering business with a heart. Ten percent of profits go toward ethnic Danu hill tribe development projects, and Genius Coffee has provided stipends for three promising young people from the Ywar Ngan area to attend medical school.

"We are a social enterprise," Ngwe Tun explains. "For our coffee we are trying to make [added] value by [creating] local jobs or local opportunity. If we sell the green bean, we cannot create jobs for the roaster—like roasting the coffee bean, or selecting the coffee bean."

The post Now Available in Burma: Coffee With a Conscience appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

The Irrawaddy Business Roundup (Oct. 4, 2014)

Posted: 03 Oct 2014 05:00 PM PDT

Thailand Silent on UN Appeal Over Firms' Abuse of Burmese Claims

The government of Thailand has failed to respond to the UN Human Rights Council about "persisting allegations" of the abuse of Burmese migrant workers employed in the Thai food-processing industry.

A report on allegations against two Thai firms, Vita Foods and Natural Fruit, was made six months ago by the UN Working Group on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises, as well as the special rapporteur on the human rights of migrants.

It alleged that Burmese were duped by labor brokers, had documents such as passports confiscated, were physically abused, underpaid and charged exorbitant fees.

"Some workers from [Burma] have been deceivingly taken to Thailand, not knowing that they would be traveling outside their country; were kept in locked rooms and forced to work at Vita Food Factory to repay labor brokers the imposed debt of 19,000 baht [US$600] for their travel," said the UN report.

"These practices are said to have resulted in the workers being in debt bondage to Vita Food Factory."

A letter from the UN group had given the Thai government two months to explain what it is doing "specifically to implement the UN's Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights in the food industry and other business sectors in Thailand."

It was made public this week to draw attention to the issue after having received no response from Bangkok since April.

A criminal libel case is in process in Thailand brought by Natural Fruit against a British human rights campaigner, Andy Hall, who has separately made similar allegations against the company. A verdict is due at the end of this month and he could face prison time.

Investment Sought for Luxury Tourist Trains as Burma Railway Rusts

Burma's state railway company is planning to introduce luxury old steam train journeys through the country just for foreign tourists.

The company is inviting tenders from foreign and domestic firms to bid to become partners to provide the special trains, Myanmar Business Today said.

Bids can be made after Oct. 15, but Burma Railways gave no other timetable for the development, nor did it mention anything about a need to upgrade dilapidated railway tracks.

Luxury train carriages will have to be imported but it may be possible to renovate old steam engines still in Burma, general manager Zaw Phay Sein was quoted saying

"We will initiate the operations after carefully scrutinizing the bidders and choosing the winner," Zaw Phay Sein said.

Burma has been attracting increasing numbers of overseas tourists, who range from backpackers to well-heeled five-star travelers.

There were two million overseas visitors in 2013, said the Ministry of Hotels and Tourism, which is aiming to raise the number to 5 million by the end of 2015.

"The main thing is to be able to provide full service to foreign tourists. Some tourists like to experience luxury train rides," the joint secretary of the Myanmar Travel Association, Tin Tun Aung, told Myanmar Business Today.

Japan Biggest Winner in Foreign Banks' Race to Obtain Burma Licenses

Japanese banks have been the most successful among foreign financial institutions winning licenses to operate in Burma.

Three of the nine licenses awarded out of 25 banks that bid have gone to banks from Japan—Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, the Sumitomo-Mitsui Banking Corporation and Mizuho Bank.

The other six licenses went to banks from Australia, Thailand, China, Malaysia and Singapore. Two Singaporean banks secured permits, an official statement said.

Japan has been one of the biggest investors in Burma since the President Thein Sein-led reforms began, observers noted.

"Japan's substantial investments in their relationship with [Burma] is now paying dividends," Macquarie University economics professor Sean Turnell told The Myanmar Times.

Ships, Cargo Growth in Rangoon Harbor 'Requires Law to Curb Pollution'

The number of ships docking in Rangoon port has more than doubled in the past 10 years, rising from 970 in 2004 to 2,334 in the last financial year, the ministry of transport said.

The volume of cargo meanwhile is now eight times greater than 10 years ago, with 610,000 containers moving through the port last year compared with 70,000 a decade ago.

The sharp growth in traffic is now posing a water pollution problem and new legislation is needed to impose tougher controls, a report in the Myanmar Times said.

"An update to the Merchant Shipping Act with clauses to tackle pollution from cargo ships has been sent to the attorney-general ahead of its formal submission to Parliament," the paper reported.

Proposed changes to the law include heavier fines for water and air pollution and a more developed maritime security framework, it said, quoting Ye Myint, a director in the transport ministry.

Economic Reforms 'Given Greater Priority' Than Political Freedom

Economic reform has taken preference over political reform in Burma, said an international human rights group campaigning for the release of what it terms political prisoners still jailed in the country.

The Burma Campaign UK is urging Britain's foreign secretary to pressure the Naypyidaw government as part of its No Political Prisoner Left Behind campaign.

"Economic reform has been given greater priority than political reforms by the Burmese government, yet still Burma is being ranked as one of the most difficult countries in the world to do business in," campaign director Mark Farmaner told The Irrawaddy.

He was referring to a recent World Bank global study that ranked Burma as one of the worst places to do business because of numerous bureaucratic and legal obstacles. For example, a company wishing to build a warehouse has to go through 16 application processes which on average takes 159 days.

"The real beneficiaries of economic reforms in Burma are the same business cronies who were dominating the economy before the reforms began. The business cronies have key sectors of the economy stitched up, making it hard for foreign businesses or small and medium size Burmese businesses to compete," said Farmaner.

Burma Campaign UK is petitioning the British government to pressure Naypyidaw to free Htin Kyaw, a leader of the Movement for Democracy Current Force that campaigns against land grabbing. He was arrested in May for protesting without permission and distributing leaflets that criticized the government, said Farmaner. Htin Kyaw is now serving a nine-year sentence in Insein prison.

The post The Irrawaddy Business Roundup (Oct. 4, 2014) appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


Making a living on Rangoon’s roads

Posted: 04 Oct 2014 12:33 AM PDT

Migrants from across Burma have long converged on Rangoon in search of work.

Now, one local philanthropist is helping new arrivals to saddle up onto the trishaw, as a simple and popular job.

PR, FPTP or five other electoral systems: Shwe Mann

Posted: 04 Oct 2014 12:28 AM PDT

Lower House Speaker Shwe Mann has instructed his parliamentary commission to submit at least seven options for electoral systems that could be suitable to Burma.

His instructions to the 24-member commission came this week after the upper house of Burma's parliament passed a proposal in June recommending that a system of proportional representation (PR) be adopted for future elections.

Debate was held in July in the House of Representatives, or lower house of parliament, over whether Burma should change from the present first-past-the-post (FPTP) electoral system to PR.

On 31 July, Shwe Mann formed a 24-member parliamentary commission to study the proposed change ahead of landmark elections in 2015.

The ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party is known to support the move to a PR system, while the opposition National League for Democracy is vehemently against any change.

Speaking to DVB on Friday, Commission Chairman Tin Maung Oo said, "There are more than 100 different election systems in the world. PR is just one of them. Older people generally support FTPT, while the young prefer a PR system. So, we the Commission have submitted a third option, which is half FPTP and half-PR."

Tin Maung Oo called on Burma's media to help explain the different election systems to the public.

"Our first priority is to inform the public about the various electoral systems," he said. "Answer people's questions: What is FTPT? What does it mean? Which countries use this system and why? What is proportional representation? What is its benefit?"

MP Khine Maung Yee said that everyone needs to make an informed choice on this matter.

"People don’t know much about this issue," he said. "We need to conduct an educational campaign, supported by the government, NGOs and the international community."

Michaungkan protestors stand fast as deadline passes

Posted: 03 Oct 2014 11:15 PM PDT

As Saturday dawned, dozens of protestors from the Rangoon suburb of Michaungkan, who have been conducting a vigil outside Maha Bandula Park in the city centre to protest land grabs, were still occupying the public street despite a 3 October deadline ordered by local police to dismantle their camp and leave.

As Friday's deadline struck, police did not appear at the protest site where many feared that force might once again be used to disperse the villagers.

Many of the protestors were in a defiant mood as they spoke to DVB reporters from their protest camp on Maha Bandula Road, just 400m west of Sule Pagoda and Rangoon City Hall.

"We are staying until our demands are met!" shouted one Michaungkan resident, pumping her fist to the sky.

Another protestor, Saw Sandar, said that the municipal authorities had earlier approached and asked them to take down their shelters because they were blocking a footpath. "We told them we could not do that as we have several elderly people here who need protection from the weather," she said.

Asked what the protestors would do if police were called in to remove them, she replied, "We don’t have any weapons and we will not fight back."

Nay Nwe, a villager who said she has been involved in the protest from the beginning, said the authorities have handled the situation all wrong.

"We are peaceful demonstrators waiting for a response [from the local government], and a resolution to the matter," she said. "I think they will come and use force to remove us in one or two days. But this is not the way it should be handled. We will not accept this as a solution."

More than 100 residents of Thingyangun's Mighaungkan village have participated in a series of sit-ins and other demonstrations demanding the return of land they say was confiscated by the Burmese military in 1990.

A group of about 200 had initially set up camp at Thingyangun's Myasaryan Pagoda in late November 2013. About one week after the demonstrations began, on 2 December, approximately 400 villagers showed up at the site to receive funeral rites from local monks, proclaiming that they were "ready to die" for their land.

Shortly after, demonstrators reported that they were attacked by a group of thugs who claimed to be military cleaning personnel. Within days of the incident, which reportedly left at least eight people injured, police issued an eviction order demanding that the site be cleared by 9 December.

Protest leaders and the Land Investigation Commission negotiated a three-month hiatus of the occupation after the commission promised to deliver results within that time.

Parliamentarian and Commission member Aung Thein Linn told DVB in December that the government was committed to solving the dispute. "Otherwise," he said, "it will be damaging to our country's image, especially while the SEA Games are being held."

The country was at that time hurrying to prepare for a major regional sporting event, the Southeast Asian Games, which drew international attention and visitors.

Three months later and still unsatisfied, about 100 protestors resumed the sit-in, this time bringing their grievances to Maha Bandula Park in downtown Rangoon, across the street from City Hall.

One week later, on 30 March, they were forcibly dispersed in an early morning raid by city officials and dozens of plain-clothed men.

The demonstrators vowed to keep fighting and have maintained a presence at the park ever since.

In August, a 72-year-old protestor died at the encampment after 138 days of her sit-in. At that time, her fellow activists reiterated that nothing would make them accept the loss of their land, even death.

During the military regime, land was routinely confiscated by the government for state use. Since the reforms began in 2011, protests have been increasingly common all across Burma as villagers have attempted to reclaim lost assets.

New land legislation introduced in early 2012 has met major criticism, with some claiming that the new laws legitimise government and corporate acquisition while offering little protection for individuals. A government commission established in 2012 has begun fielding Burma's thousands of land-grab claims but has yet to provide satisfactory recourse.

 

Burma, US pledge to fight hate speech

Posted: 03 Oct 2014 10:23 PM PDT

The Burmese government will cooperate with the United States to fight against hate speech.

Burma's Information Minister Ye Htut said he had made an agreement to fight against the use of hate speech on the internet at a meeting on Friday morning with US Ambassador Derek Mitchell.

Ye Htut told DVB he and the US ambassador had discussed matters relating to media management at the upcoming ASEAN summit in Naypyidaw, media development, and the prevention of hate speech on the internet.

Ye Htut said the Ministry of Information had previously worked with the US's Rangoon embassy in hosting a workshop aimed at deterring young people in Burma from posting provocative or racially abusive comments on the internet.

"Last year, we organised a workshop with the US embassy, and we have also supported civil society groups such as the Panzagar Campaign," he said.

Launched in April this year, the Panzagar (meaning "flower speech") Campaign was the creation of well-known blogger and former political prisoner Nay Phone Latt.

Ye Htut said the government was now planning similar workshops for later this year to educate young internet users on "how to follow and understand information on the internet and in the media".

The opening of the internet in Burma has seen rampant abuse by extremist groups spreading misinformation, inciting violence and circulating false reports and pictures. In Mandalay in July, a false claim of rape levelled at two Muslims that was circulated on Facebook by nationalist monk Wirathu and his followers led to mob violence and riots in which two people were killed and 20 injured. The government shut down the Facebook social media site for several hours to quell the spread of the false report after thousands of comments circulated online urging revenge against the two brothers, who were named and their address and telephone numbers published.

The number of internet users in Burma has jumped from 66,000 in 2011-12 to 2.5 million in 2013-14, a 38-fold increase. State-owned provider Myanmar Posts and Telecommunications (MPT) says it plans to increase bandwidth by 700 percent to meet the ever-growing demand. According to MPT, there are currently around two million internet users in Burma, a number that is expected to increase to three million in the next year. In addition, the roll-out of services by international telecommunications firms Ooredoo and Telenor could see that figure multiplied exponentially as the two foreign telecoms compete to offer telephone and internet services to even the most remote parts of Burma.

Information Minister Ye Htut also told DVB that during his talks with Ambassador Mitchell, they also "discussed possibilities of cooperating on media management during the upcoming ASEAN summit."

US President Barack Obama is scheduled to attend the East Asia Summit, which will be hosted in Naypyidaw on 11-12 November, while Bagan hosts an ASEAN Defence Ministers Meeting on 12-13 November.

Rangoon police force short on manpower

Posted: 03 Oct 2014 08:16 PM PDT

Rangoon's police force has just over 5,000 officers, enforcing the law and dealing with the crime in a city of more than seven million people.

The ratio of population to police indicates that for every one police officer there are 1,365 persons, much higher than international standards

Rangoon Division Deputy Police Chief Myint Htwe pointed out the shortage of police officers during the 50th anniversary celebration of the Myanmar Police Force.

"Currently there are 5,538 police officers in Rangoon, each of whom is responsible for 1,365 people," said the deputy police chief. He further highlighted the shortage of manpower in Rangoon police force by comparing the ratio to an international standard, which is ideally 400-to-one.

However, despite Rangoon's shortcomings, it still fairs better than other cities and regions in Burma. In fact, Rangoon has 62 percent of the entire Burmese police force, leaving the remainder of the country with less than 3,400 officers to patrol more than 40 million people in an area – at 676,578 km2, a little larger than France – a country not densely populated compared to its neighbours.

Myint Htwe pointed out that he believes there has been an increase in public cooperation and acceptance of the police force, ever since the EU imparted training to the police force in Burma earlier in February.

The deputy chief said that, "We have found more acceptance from the people." He added that, "More often than not, when people need help, they are now calling 199 or their local police station."

In stating how the Burmese police force has incorporated the training into their system, the deputy chief noted that the number of patrols has increased across the city. Furthermore, he said, police are implementing preventive measures and undertaking more thorough investigations before a case is presented in court.

As of September 2014, police logs recorded 340 serious criminal cases along with 1,468 other cases of crime in Rangoon Division. It also listed 1,800 preventive cases of arrest.

Earlier in September, the Asia Human Rights Commission notified the United Nations about the widespread use of torture by the Burmese police. The police force has, in the past, received flak for arresting and torturing innocent civilians and framing them with crimes.

The Burmese Police Force was formed 50 years ago on 1 October 1964. On Wednesday, "Golden Jubilee" events were held in Naypyidaw and Rangoon to mark the occasion.