Monday, August 31, 2015

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Government Approves $2.80 Minimum Wage

Posted: 31 Aug 2015 04:20 AM PDT

Workers tailor and arrange clothing at a garment factory at Hlaing Tar Yar industry zone in Rangoon. (Photo: Reuters)

Workers tailor and arrange clothing at a garment factory at Hlaing Tar Yar industry zone in Rangoon. (Photo: Reuters)

RANGOON — Two years of negotiation culminated on Friday with the Burmese government's approval of a 3,600 kyat (US$2.80) minimum wage for all sectors, to be implemented in September.

The wage, which is low for the region but marks a significant increase for many workers, was welcomed by labor unions and factory owners alike with the exception of the nation's budding garment industry.

The minimum wage will be applied across industries for all but small and family-owned businesses employing less than 15 people. The final amount was established as a compromise following more than 30 sub-national meetings that pitted factory owners against labor rights advocates.

Garment factory owners came out against the proposed wage in July of this year, many of them threatening to withdraw their investments if the wage were implemented. Labor unions, on the other hand, argued that 3,600 kyats was too low for the mostly female garment manufacturing workforce, which withstands long hours and often lengthy and expensive commutes.

Myat Thin Aung, chairman of Rangoon's Hlaing Tharyar Industrial Zone, said the compromise has been accepted by most garment factory owners and he was not aware of any impending closures. Only one factory—Asia Roots—will reduce its staff as a result of the new wage, he said.

Some employers do, however, intend to reduce bonuses and rewards for attendance, according to the chairman.

While the wage was ultimately accepted by those on both sides of the debate, Aung Lin of the Myanmar Trade Union Federation told The Irrawaddy that it will likely need adjustment as inflation takes its toll on local consumers.

"When the minimum wage was proposed, the dollar was [valued] at 1,04 kyats," Aung Lin said, "but now it's about 1,270."

According to an assistant supervisor at Toyo Battery Factory, Aung Aung, rising commodity prices could soon make the new wage obsolete.

"It's likely not enough," he said. "Although there's an increase in salary, it cannot cover the rising prices."

 

 

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Rice Federation Forecasts Exports to Resume as Scheduled in Mid-September

Posted: 31 Aug 2015 04:13 AM PDT

 A rice farmer walks through a paddy field in a village near Patheingyi, Irrawaddy Division, last year. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

A rice farmer walks through a paddy field in a village near Patheingyi, Irrawaddy Division, last year. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Recently halted after severe flooding that inundated swathes of the country, Burma will resume rice exports as scheduled from mid-September, the country's rice federation said on Monday.

Members of the Myanmar Rice Federation had agreed to a temporary pause on exports and to sell domestically at regular prices to buyers in urgent need while authorities' and aid groups struggled to respond to the country's worst flooding in recent memory.

The rice federation forecasts requirements for local consumption will be met following what would be over a month-long halt in mid-September.

"New rice will come onto the market as next month is harvest season, then the market price will be stable," said Soe Tun, joint secretary of the Myanmar Rice Federation. "There is enough for local consumption now, that's why we will resume exports as scheduled."

Despite the federation's urgings, rice prices increased in some areas of the country and shortages were experienced in townships seriously impacted by flooding, including in Chin State, Arakan State and Magwe Division.

The Myanmar Rice Federation opened some 20 rice shops in flood-affected areas, including in Rangoon and Mandalay, to sell rice at the subsidized rate of around 22,000 kyat per 50 kilogram bag.

But according to reports from Sittwe, 50 kilogram bags were selling for between 60,000 to 96,000 kyat in the Arakan State capital.

The federation stated in early August that it would call on supplies of around 85,000 bags in Rangoon and 15,000 in Mandalay to meet local demand.

"Now the normal rice price is stable at 20,000 kyat per [50 kilogram] bag," Soe Tun said. "And I heard there are only a few people buying rice in our 20 rice shops [in flooded areas], that's why we won't delay rice exports."

Rice is a key export for Burma, with the majority traded overland to China, through the Muse-Ruili checkpoint.

Min Zaw, a rice trader based in Rangoon, said he expected the local price wouldn't increase when traders were able to resume rice exports to China, but consumers would have to wait and see.

"There is still enough rice on the market for local consumption and the price is still stable," he said.

More than 1.3 million acres of paddy fields have been flooded in Burma, mainly in Kale, Kanbalu and Monywa in Sagaing Division and the Myanmar Rice Federation predicted exports to be considerably down on last year.

"Though we expected to export about 2 million tons of rice this year, we won't reach that [target]. Now we expect to export less than 1.5 million tons," Soe Tun said.

Figures from the Ministry of Commerce put total rice exports at more than 1.7 million tons in the 2014-2015 fiscal year, reaping nearly US$645 million. Exports were shipped to 64 countries including China and Japan, as well as other nations of ASEAN, Europe and Africa.

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Locals Lead Response to Climate Change in Burma

Posted: 31 Aug 2015 02:38 AM PDT

Click to view slideshow.

RANGOON—Inle Lake, one of Burma's most well-known attractions, is framed in part by the lush-looking surrounds of the Shan mountain range.But on closer inspection, what appears to be the green of forest is mainly hardy bush and grass, dotted with a few small trees.

Deforestation, particularly in the Inle Lake watershed area, as contributed to the lake's receding water levels.

Kyi Kaung, who identifies as one of the Taung Yoe hill peoples, hails from the upland village of Nyaung Shwe, home to over 300 people, located close to the peak of Lat Maung Kwee mountain.

He recalls a time when the mountainwascovered withthick forest.

"When I was in my 20s, the [soil] fertility was high and the forest looked good. Now the soil has dried up with deforestation," said Kyi Kaung, now 49, adding that it was no longer possible to reap adequate crop yields in the area without using fertilizers.

Deforestation can also leave waterways more vulnerable to runoff, Saw DohWah, an analyst with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Burma, told The Irrawaddy.

"When there is a lack of vegetation cover uphill, more silt is released to dams located downstream," he said.

One reason locals cite for growing rates of deforestation is the careless cutting down of trees, for firewood or for use as building materials, without replanting.

"It is one of the traditions of Taung Yoe to cut down trees to build a new house for newlywed couples," explainedNyiNyi Lwin, technical field coordinator withthe Myanmar Institute for Integrated Development (MIID).

Locals have also noticed that weather patterns have changed, affecting their crop yields and habitual farming practices. But they are struggling to adapt.

Organizations like MIID are helping villagers to build resilience and cope with the impacts of climate change.

This includes,"improving water access, helping the communities plan and manage soil and trees [and] introducing different agriculture practices and reforestation," said David Abrahamson, Program Manager of Natural Resources, Agriculture & Rural Development with MIID.

"We are hoping that for the Myanmar government, this could be one example of how to help poor communities increase their wealth and adaptto climate change," Abrahamson said.

As part of the reforestation plan run by MIID, villagers grow up to eight acres of bamboo, edible plants such as avocado, mango, durian, djenkol bean and about 30,000Yay Ma Nay plants.

It has been two years since MIID came to the village to launch their climate change adaptation initiative financed by the European Union. Now, newly grown bamboo and trees are already evident around the top of the mountain after the replanting process.

Local Knowledge

According to well-known Burmese meteorologist Tun Lwin, one of the main contributing factors to the severity of recent floods was the impact of deforestation.

"If you don't have trees anymore, you can't control water, you can't store water anymore," he said."You can't control the run-off like that if there are no trees."

Tun Lwin said that although Burma's forest cover is said to stand at 46 percent of land area, only around 19 percent is deep forest.

A UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)assessment on global forest resources in 2010described Burma as having one of the largest annual net loss ratios of forest area from 1990 to 2010.

Tun Lwin said the country had begun to witness first-hand the effects of climate change from the 1980s, including an increase in average temperatures and more extreme weather patterns.

According to the Climate Change Vulnerability Index 2015, produced by global risk analysis firm Maplecroft, Burma ranked 19 of 32 countries deemed at "extreme risk" of food insecurity and instability due to climate change.

In order to mitigate and adapt to climate change, Tun Lwin said one of the most important factors was building "climate change knowledge," not only among the general public but also within government.

"Unless you have climate-related knowledge, you can do nothing. They need a good plan and to have a good plan, they need knowledge. That's what we are missing here," he said.

LatLat Aye, team leader inthe Environment, Climate Change, Energy and Disaster Risk Reduction program with the UNDP in Burma, said numerous examples of extreme weather in the country, including recent floods, were a warning of the impact of climate change.

"From technical experts as well as community leaders and villagers, we believe that [more extreme weather patterns] are due to climate change," she said.

Local Action

Forty-nine year old ethnic Intha man Kyaw Sein, who lives in Taung Kyarin the Inle Lake watershed area, said local villagers had slowly begun to notice changing monsoon patterns and rates of deforestation in recent years.

Farmers have difficulties planning when to plant their crops and longer periods of sweltering heat have caused underground wells—which villagers now have to dig deeper—to more frequently run dry.

But villagers have already taken action to preserve their precious local surrounds. They protect the 98 acres of forest in the area by encouraging "villagers and strangers" not to cut down trees.

They have also dug holes close to the lake to help prevent silt from running directly into the water during heavy rains.

With UNDP funding, 30,000 native trees like the Cassia have been planted.

Results of the community's environmental protection efforts have already been seen, Kyaw Sein said, with water runoff from their village visibly cleaner.

Although Inle Lake dwellers Kyi Kaung and Kyaw Sein speak different languages, they share one voice on the need to respond proactively as communities to protect the environment and effectively adapt to changing weather.

"This [MIID] project taught us about the links between deforestation and low yields, and how we could adapt to climate change using new [strategies]. With the new techniques we have been taught, the yields have increased," Kyi Kaung said.

The post Locals Lead Response to Climate Change in Burma appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Thai Police Say Bangkok Bombing Suspect is Not Cooperating

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 09:34 PM PDT

Thai Royal Police officials remove evidence from the site where a suspect of the recent Bangkok blast was arrested, in Bangkok August 29, 2015. (Photo: Chaiwat Subprasom / Reuters)

Thai Royal Police officials remove evidence from the site where a suspect of the recent Bangkok blast was arrested, in Bangkok August 29, 2015. (Photo: Chaiwat Subprasom / Reuters)

BANGKOK — Thai police said Sunday the man arrested in connection with Bangkok's deadly bombing was being uncooperative, possibly not telling the truth to interrogators and would remain in military custody for at least seven days.

The unnamed foreigner was arrested Saturday at an apartment on the outskirts of Bangkok where police seized bomb-making equipment and fake passports. It was the first possible breakthrough in the investigation into the Aug. 17 blast at the Erawan Shrine, which killed 20 people, more than half of whom were foreigners, and injured more than 120 others.

National police spokesman Prawuth Thavornsiri told The Associated Press that police found "more than 200 passports" in the man's apartment, including many that were empty, and police were exploring the theory that he was part of a network that provided fake passports to migrants. He said the passports were from one country, but wouldn't say which one.

He did not explain why a passport gang might target a religious shrine.

Much remains unknown about the suspect, including his nationality, his motive, his relationship to the alleged bombing network or if he was plotting an attack, Prawuth said, adding that another attack was "possible" because police found 10 detonators.

He said police were working with "a number of embassies" and interpreters to try to establish the man's nationality, adding that he did not speak Thai but spoke some English—and the interrogation was going slowly.

"He is not cooperating much. From our preliminary investigation, we think he isn't telling us the truth," Prawuth said, declining to elaborate. "He told us how he entered Thailand but we don't believe everything he says."

Authorities have dodged questions about whether the suspect is believed to be Turkish, saying that he was traveling on a fake passport. Images circulated online after his arrest of a fake Turkish passport with the apparent suspect's picture.

"We don't know if he is Turkish or not," Prawuth said Saturday. "The passport you have seen is fake."

The Turkish Embassy in Bangkok could not immediately be reached for comment on Sunday. A Turkish government spokesman contacted a day earlier in Istanbul said he had no information on the suspect or any possible Turkish link to the attack.

The blast at the Erawan Shrine was unprecedented in the Thai capital, where smaller bombs have been employed in domestic political violence over the past decade, but not in an effort to cause large-scale casualties.

The shrine is a popular tourist destination, particularly with Chinese visitors, who are an important segment of the lucrative tourist market. At least six of the dead were from China and Hong Kong.

No one has claimed responsibility for the blast, sparking several theories into who might be behind it.

Possible suspects include parties seeking to avenge Thailand's forced repatriation of ethnic Uighurs to China. Uighurs are related to Turks, and Turkey is home to a large Uighur community.

Other theories included Muslim separatists from southern Thailand, opponents of Thailand's military government and feuding factions within the security services.

On Sunday, Prawuth put forth another theory, that the suspect belonged to a fake passport ring—"an illegal network that sends people who don't have passports to third countries"—and was angry at officials for a crackdown on fake passport operations.

"The police chief thinks it's personal revenge, anger from a group that is not happy with the work of officials, that we have arrested some of his people," Prawuth said. "We have been very strict about getting rid of fake passports."

Prawuth said that the suspect, who faces charges of possessing unauthorized explosives, was in military custody and could be held for renewable periods of seven days.

Until Saturday's arrest, police had focused on a prime suspect who was seen in a security camera video leaving a backpack at a bench near the open-air shrine and then walking away. A separate camera showed the man, wearing a yellow T-shirt, on the back of a motorcycle taxi leaving the site.

Prawuth said it was too soon to say if the suspect arrested Saturday was the man seen in the video.

"We still have to work out the details," Prawuth said. "But we are very certain he's part of the network. Definitely."

 

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Defiant Malaysian PM Rejects Calls that he Step Down

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 09:26 PM PDT

A view of the crowd of supporters of pro-democracy group

A view of the crowd of supporters of pro-democracy group "Bersih" (Clean) gathering outside the Dataran Merdeka just before midnight in the capital city of Kuala Lumpur August 30, 2015. (Photo: Edgar Su / Reuters)

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Embattled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak poured scorn on a huge two-day rally that brought together tens of thousands of yellow-shirted protesters demanding his resignation over a financial scandal.

Large crowds of protesters camped overnight on the streets of Kuala Lumpur wearing yellow shirts of the Bersih movement—a coalition for clean and fair elections—even after authorities blocked the organizer's website and banned yellow attire and the group's logo.

Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who has been spearheading calls for Najib's resignation, appeared at the rally with his wife for a second day, telling protesters that people power was needed to remove Najib and return the rule of law.

Najib has been fighting for political survival after leaked documents in July showed he received some $700 million in his private accounts from entities linked to indebted state fund 1MDB. He later said the money was a donation from the Middle East and fired his critical deputy, four other Cabinet members and the attorney general investigating him.

Police estimated the crowd size at 35,000, but Bersih says it swelled to 300,000 on Sunday from 200,000 on Saturday.

Najib has slammed the protests for tarnishing Malaysia's image and dismissed their size.

"What is 20,000? We can gather hundreds of thousands," he was quoted as saying by local media at a rural event in a northern state. "The rest of the Malaysian population is with the government."

In his National Day message late Sunday, Najib said the government rejected street protests, saying they could disrupt public order and were not the right way to show unhappiness in a democratic country.

They "reflected a shallow mind and poor national spirit," he said.

Najib vowed not to bow to pressure. "Once the sails have been set, once the anchor has been raised, the captain and his crew would never change course," he said.

The rally was peaceful Saturday and lasted until midnight Sunday to usher in Malaysia's 58th National Day.

"This is a watershed moment. Malaysians are united in their anger at the mismanagement of this country. We are saying loudly that there should be a change in the leadership," said protester Azrul Khalib, who slept on the street with his friends.

He said he was aware that the rally will not bring change overnight, but he wants to be "part of efforts to build a new Malaysia."

Some used colored chalk to scrawl their demands on the street, writing slogans such as, "We want change," and "We want clean and fair (elections)."

Scores of police barricaded roads leading to the Independence Square, a national landmark that authorities declared off-limits to protesters. Two previous Bersih rallies, in 2011 and 2012, were dispersed by police using tear gas and water cannons.

Analysts said the rally attracted a largely urban crowd with a smaller participation of ethnic Malays, which could be the reason why the Najib government allowed it to go on.

"They feel safe because it has not really affected the rural Malay segment, their bedrock support," said political analyst Ibrahim Suffian. However, he said this doesn't mean that rural Malays are happy with the government, as many are upset with the plunging currency and economic slowdown.

A nation of 30 million, Malaysia is predominantly Malay Muslim with significant Chinese and Indian minorities. Its ambitions to rise from a middle income to a developed nation this decade have been stymied by slow-paced reforms and Najib's increasing authoritarianism.

Support for Najib's National Front has eroded in the last two general elections. It won in 2013, but lost the popular vote for the first time to an opposition alliance.

Concerns over the political scandal partly contributed to the Malaysian currency plunging to a 17-year low earlier this month.

In his speech, Najib rejected fears that the economy is crumbling. "It is clearly proven that Malaysia is not a failed state, as alleged, nor is it about to become bankrupt," he said. "On the contrary, the fact is we are stable, with strong fundamentals and will continue to survive and remain competitive."

Apart from Najib's resignation, the demands being sought are institutional reforms that will make the government more transparent and accountable.

 

 

 

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‘The Storm Makers’ puts Cambodia’s Sex-Trafficking under Spotlight

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 09:19 PM PDT

Fishermen rescued from Thai fishing boats have breakfast at a building in the Chroy Changva district of Phnom Penh June 18, 2015. (Photo: Samrang Pring / Reuters)

Fishermen rescued from Thai fishing boats have breakfast at a building in the Chroy Changva district of Phnom Penh June 18, 2015. (Photo: Samrang Pring / Reuters)

Cambodians say that when human traffickers arrive in a village, they bring a storm and tears with them, an experience that Aya, sold into slavery when she was 16, will never forget.

Her story is at the centre of the "The Storm Makers," a documentary by French-Cambodian filmmaker Guillaume Suon, who spent three years filming human trafficking victims and traffickers in the impoverished Southeast Asian nation.

A chilling expose of Cambodia's human trafficking underworld, the film depicts the lives of women like Aya who have returned from a life of slavery abroad, and those preparing to leave the country in the hope of earning enough money to support their families at home.

It also portrays a trafficker who claims he has sold more than 500 Cambodian girls, some as young as 14, without ever being arrested by police.

"Aya's story is a strong example that shows all the reasons why Cambodians become victims of human trafficking," Suon, 32, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Almost 20 percent of Cambodians live below the poverty line and the country lacks a social welfare network to support poor families, its institutions still struggling to recover from the devastation caused by dictator Pol Pot's genocidal regime in the late 1970s.

Aya, now in her early 20s, recently came back to Battambang province in northwestern Cambodia after she was trafficked to Malaysia to work as a maid.

Disabled and unable to support their family, Aya's parents had been approached by a recruiter promising Aya would be able to work in Malaysia in a secure job and send home money.

Her boss was abusive, so she escaped, only to be raped the night she ran away. She became pregnant as a result of the rape.

"Sometimes, I'd like her to sell him," her mother says in the film about the baby, a tiny boy seen rocking in a hammock, whom she resents as just another mouth to feed.

"I should have died over there," Aya says. Her own relationship with her son is also fraught as a result of the violence she experienced. She says she hits the baby when she thinks of his father and what he did to her.

 Trapped in Poverty

Cambodia is a "source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labour and sex trafficking," the US State Department's 2015 "Trafficking in Persons Report" noted.

Entrenched poverty, especially in rural areas, forces tens of thousands each year to work in Thailand, Malaysia, Taiwan and increasingly the Middle East, lured by the promise of lucrative jobs.

"I target the poorest ones," trafficker Pou Houy says in the film. "These people are easy to lure and to recruit. Most can't read, they have nothing to lose. Even the factories don't want them, nobody wants them but me."

He has never been arrested by the police and enjoys a life of luxury due to his trafficking activities, an industry estimated to be worth $150 billion globally.

Aya, meanwhile, now earns a meager living by washing dishes, cooking for her neighbors and hauling bricks for $1 a day on a construction site in the capital Phnom Penh.

Suon spent much of his time in Cambodia in the countryside, where most of the trafficking victims come from, to gain the trust of locals.

"Nearly everyone knows someone who has gone to work abroad," said Suon. "It was easy to find the trafficking victims and the traffickers, who operate freely and with impunity."

"The Storm Makers" will have its television premiere on Monday on the PBS channel in the United States and will be screened online throughout September.

 

 

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Antiquated Colonial ‘Loitering’ Charge Lands Hundreds in Jail

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 06:39 PM PDT

 A woman walks past the towering British colonial-era High Court located in downtown Rangoon. (Credit: HkunLat/Myanmar Now)

A woman walks past the towering British colonial-era High Court located in downtown Rangoon. (Credit: Hkun Lat / Myanmar Now)

RANGOON — In the middle of a hot April night, Arkar and two friends were sleeping in their trishaws on central Rangoon's Hledan Road when they were suddenly woken up and arrested by police.

The trishaw drivers and two other young men who happened to be on the street were also rounded up and taken to Kamayut Township police station to be questioned in relation to burglaries of two nearby mobile phone shops a week earlier.

Arkar said he and his friends had done nothing wrong and simply slept on Hledan Road to wait for customers. "Local police know that we are tricycle drivers. None of us have the tools to carry out a burglary," said the wiry 25-year-old, whose worn out shirt and faded longyi indicated a life of hardship on Rangoon's streets.

Arkar and another 17-year-old man were let go the next day. Neither he, nor the three others, including his friend Mya Oo, were charged for the burglary, but instead accused of "loitering at night," a century-old criminal charge, and held for 15 days in the notorious Insein Prison.

"Mya Oo's wife gave birth to a baby just two or three months before. He was jailed for 15 days for no reason, meanwhile his wife went hungry," Arkar said.

Mya Oo is not alone in having been nabbed off the street and held for a vaguely defined petty crime charge from the British colonial era: Rangoon Police headquarters records seen by Myanmar Now indicate that more than 1,300 people in RangoonDivision were arrested and sentenced last year under the 1899 Rangoon Police Act's Article 30. Some 400 people were held under the charge during the first five months of 2015.

Police Lt. Thi Thi Myint said, "All of them were sentenced to prison terms."

The charge sets a maximum three-month prison term for "any person found between sunset and sunrise having his face covered" or "any reputed thief found between sunset and sunrise remaining or loitering in any bazaar, street, road, yard, thoroughfare or other place, who is unable to give a satisfactory account of himself."

Nationwide, the 1945 Police Act's Article 35(b) metes out similar punishment for the same antiquated offence.

Another officer at the station, who spoke on condition of anonymity, defended the widespread use of the charge, saying, "These laws are useful to prevent the occurrence of major crimes."

As Burma emerges from decades of military rule, it has been left with many old laws that grant authorities extensive powers to not only target political activists and suspected ethnic insurgents, as is well known, but also to harass ordinary citizens and enter their homes in order to establish social control and keep tabs on the general population, say rights campaigners.

Despite the country's much-lauded democratic reforms of recent years, human rights advocates and opposition lawmakers say parliament and President Thein Sein's nominally civilian government have done little to reform criminal laws that affect the average citizen.

In addition, Burma's court system lacks independence after decades under direct army control and there has been little judicial reform since.

With a general election scheduled for Nov. 8, opposition parties hope to gain more power and influence and begin dismantling the stifling judicial legacy of junta rule.

Pe Than, a Lower House lawmaker with the Arakan National Party, said parliament would face a massive task in amending and repealing the outdated laws. "The legislature's work is never done. We need to update these laws at the right moment and more legal experts should be elected to parliament [to expedite the process]," he told Myanmar Now.

Colonial Legacy

Kyi Myint of the Myanmar Lawyers Network said most Burmese laws that remain on the books were drawn up by colonial authorities—a massive 13 volumes in total, many of which have not even been translated into the Burmese language—and had been intended to support British rule in the country.

The 1950s democratically elected government, which was trying to suppress insurgencies across the country, and the post-1962 military regime kept many authoritarian colonial laws, while both also introduced numerous other restrictive laws that remain in effect, he added.

Ko Ni, a constitutional lawyer advising Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, said Thein Sein's transitional term had seen little in the way of broad legal reform due to a lack of cooperation from the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party and military MPs. "We need to wait for an opportune time to revoke all these undemocratic laws," he said.

Elections may be only 10 weeks away but few political parties have pushed for a debate on the question of law reform.

"The absence of debate is not only unfortunate but also dangerous, because without public involvement, international organizations pushing various, competing law reform projects will persuade government executives on the need for this change or that," said Nick Cheesman, Research Fellow at the Australian National University.

Cheesman, who has written extensively on Burma's laws and legal systems, said the discussion of colonial-era laws in Burma should include their impact on ordinary citizens accused of criminal behavior, in addition to their use in repressing political dissent.

"How are provisions like the 'hiding in the dark' sections used to target particular vulnerable communities, like sexual and religious minorities? How do the penal codes and procedures undermine the basic rights of people accused of crimes like theft or loitering or damage to public property?

"These questions and others like them need to be made much more prominent in political debate," he told Myanmar Now in an email interview.

Affecting the Poor and Activists

Another law that affects the rights of the wider Burmese public and leaves it vulnerable to the whims of authorities is the 2012 Ward or Village Tract Administration Law. The Thein Sein government created it by amalgamating two 1907 laws that required households to register guests staying overnight and seek prior permission from local authorities.

Fortify Rights, a Thailand-based human rights organization, highlighted in a report in March how Burmese officials use the law to carry out nighttime inspections of communities and sometimes to demand bribes from citizens running afoul of the law.

"The guest registration requirement represents a systematic and nationwide breach of privacy, giving the government access to troves of personal data from communities," the group said.

Research by Fortify Rights found that "the law is particularly enforced against low-income communities, individuals working with civil societies and political activists."

Like the guest registration requirement, the antiquated "loitering" charge has also been used by authorities to target political activists.

"Unfortunately, it is too late to repeal or reform these laws before the November elections," said Matthew Bugher, a lawyer and researcher for Fortify Rights. "Nevertheless, the government can bolster the legitimacy of the polls by halting the use of these laws to target activists and political opponents in the coming months."

Land rights lawyer PhoePhyu recalled how in 2009, after a long day of visiting local farmers in central Burma's Magwe Division, he sought a place to stay but was turned away by local guesthouses and had to resort to sleeping rough along the banks of the Irrawaddy River.

As darkness fell, police officers—who had instructed guesthouses not to accept him—suddenly appeared and arrested him for loitering after sunset.

Phoe Phyu was later sentenced to five years in prison on different charges by the then-military regime, but he said the 1945 Police Act had been used to arbitrarily detain him. "As authorities wanted to prohibit me from advocating for farmers who were losing their land they just arrested me without proper grounds," he told Myanmar Now during an interview at his Rangoon office.

Looking over at his book shelf with a broad selection of Burma's laws, Phoe Phyu said he had little hope that outdated, restrictive legislation would improve as long as an army-linked elite remained in power.

"Newly amended laws are again favoring government management and administrative sectors, they are tantamount to obstructing and oppressing the civil rights of the people," he said.

This article was originally published by Myanmar Now.

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National News

National News


New minimum wage sees workers sacked and struggling

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 08:24 PM PDT

After almost two years of arguments and negotiations, Myanmar has set its first minimum wage at K3600 (US$2.80) per day.

NLD aims to establish clean government

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 08:22 PM PDT

The National League for Democracy can establish a "clean government" if its candidates are elected to parliament, the party's chair, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, told voters in Nay Pyi Taw yesterday.

Black ribbons fail to deter militarisation of health ministry

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 08:06 PM PDT

Just three weeks ago, the black ribbon movement – targeting what organisers described as the "militarisation" of the Ministry of Health – seemed to have forced an embarrassing government backdown.

Food shortages still plague flood victims

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 07:58 PM PDT

Four weeks after President U Thein Sein declared a national state of emergency, the disaster relief effort is still struggling to feed all the flood victims.

Activists call for release of human rights defenders

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 07:57 PM PDT

Two activist groups are calling on the government to end its oppression of human rights defenders amid an uptick in recent crackdowns.

Pensions provide small support for elderly

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 07:55 PM PDT

A plan to roll out monthly pensions for the elderly remains mired in a logistical tangle – and those who qualify could receive as little as K15,000 a year.

Two bus lines partially suspended

Posted: 30 Aug 2015 07:51 PM PDT

Yangon bus riders are paying the price for two deadly accidents caused by reckless drivers earlier this year.

Friday, August 28, 2015

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


‘Shwedagon’: New Paintings by Pe Nyunt Way

Posted: 28 Aug 2015 06:25 AM PDT

Click to view slideshow.

RANGOON — In the shadow of the Shwedagon, Burma's foremost religion icon and staple of the Rangoon skyline, is a temporary art exhibition that explores a refreshingly modern view of the monument.

"Shwedagon" showcases 20 paintings by renowned artist Pe Nyunt Way, breathing new life into classic views of the city. On view from Aug. 28 to Sept. 1 at the Yangon Gallery in People's Park, the show is part of monsoon Art Festival, celebrating interdisciplinary artistic genres through late October.

Pe Nyunt Way's 9th solo exhibition demonstrates the artist's unique sensitivity to faith and religious value. While Buddhism is a common theme in Burmese contemporary art, it is rare to see religious images that center so acutely on the monument itself, depicting the pagoda as a character of sorts.

Shown from near and far, between silhouetted monks in prayer, even seen lit up at night through a Bahan Township window, Pe Nyunt Way turns the Shwedagon into a fixture around which all urban narratives transpire. Buildings are torn down and built up around it, political movements build and dissipate at its feet, but the Shwedagon appears unfazed.

"I focus on events, especially contemporary ones," the 63-year-old artist told The Irrawaddy before his opening reception on Friday. "Many things have happened at the Shwedagon, but I don't dare touch the past as I have never been through it."

The site's contemporary history is rich enough, as his paintings show. In "Metta Sutta," Pe Nyunt Way depicts a massive crowd of monks and nuns reciting prayers at the foot of the monument on the eve of the Saffron Revolution in 2007. This is just one of the inimitable moments that live in his memory.

Beyond portraying pivotal political moments, the 2004 Philip Morris Asean Art Awardee also documented urban change. His wide cityscapes show just how much the urban sky has changed in recent years as buildings rise higher and higher.

"I just want to reflect on what is happening now, all that is related to people and the pagoda," he said. "So I just record them, as an artist."

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Fighting Flares in Northeast as High-Level Peace Meeting Nears

Posted: 28 Aug 2015 05:42 AM PDT

 Soldiers from the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) are pictured in northern Shan State. (Photo: Facebook / Pslf-Tnla)

Soldiers from the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) are pictured in northern Shan State. (Photo: Facebook / Pslf-Tnla)

RANGOON — As peace negotiators continue to insist that a nationwide ceasefire is within reach, clashes reportedly broke out again this week in Shan and Kachin states ahead of a planned meeting between a handful of ethnic armed groups, President Thein Sein and Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing.

The Ta'ang(Palaung) National Liberation Army (TNLA)said fighting with the Burma Army took placein anarea of the ethnic armed group'scontrol in NamhsanTownship, Shan State, with the TNLA claiming to have killed two government soldiers after coming under attackat the village of Nang Kay.

Tar Bong Kyaw,TNLA general secretary, told The Irrawaddy on Friday that clashes had occurredalmost every daythis week amid an increased deployment of Burma Army troops in the area.

"We have five brigades. They chased every one of our brigades and attacked our troops' bases. They even vowed to destroy our TNLA," said Tar Bong Kyaw, who claimed that Burma Army officers were telling ethnic Palaung community leaders in northern Shan State that they would "destroy" the TNLA in the same way that the government has largely crushed a rebellion of ethnic Kokang insurgents in the state's northeast.

Fighting also took place this week northeast of Namhsanin Manton Township, the TNLA leader said.

The military-owned Myawaddynews outlet reported that fighting broke out between the Burma Army and Kachin Independence Army(KIA) troops as well, on Wednesday in Kachin State's SumprabumTownship.

Sai Oo, a colonel from the Shan State Army-South (SSA-S), saidsouthern Shan State also saw conflict this week Tuesday between his group and government troops in Kunhing Township.

The latest clashes come as five ethnic armed groups, including leaders from the so-called "Senior Delegation" of the 15-member Nationwide Ceasefire Coordination Team (NCCT), prepare to meet Thein Sein and Min Aung Hlaing, Burma's commander-in-chief, on Sept. 9 in Naypyidaw to discuss the protracted negotiations over a nationwide ceasefire agreement.

Representatives from the Karen National Union (KNU), New Mon State Party, Karen National Progressive Party, Shan State Progressive Party and Kachin Independence Organization—the KIA's political wing—are expected to attend the meeting, including Naw Zipporah Sein, KNU vice chairman and head of the Special Delegation.

She told The Irrawaddy on Thursday that the ethnic leaders will stick to their insistence that any peace deal be "all-inclusive," a reference to the government's unwillingness to allow three ethnic armed groups, including the TNLA, to sign the accord. The Arakan Army and the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) are the other two groups excluded from the government's list of acceptable signatories.

"There should be a political guarantee for the three groups," she said, referring to a proposed arrangement whereby the three groups would be given the option to eventually add their names to the nationwide ceasefire."If the Burma Army and the government do not want them to participate, or if the army continues fighting them, the signing of an NCA will not have meaning."

 

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Journalists Reject UEC Order Limiting Reporters’ Scope

Posted: 28 Aug 2015 04:38 AM PDT

A man reads a newspaper in Rangoon.(Reuters)

A man reads a newspaper in Rangoon.(Reuters)

RANGOON — Burma's election oversight body has proposed overreaching restrictions for reporters covering a Nov. 8 general election, journalists told The Irrawaddy, that would limit the number and movement of credentialed correspondents on the day of the vote.

The Union Election Commission (UEC) sent a letter to the Interim Press Council earlier this month laying out guidelines for covering the polls. A copy of the letter obtained by The Irrawaddy states that registered news organizations can assign a maximum of three reporters to each township, and that those assigned must apply with the relevant sub-commission.

Once an applicant has submitted proof of dispatch from a legally recognized media outlet, the sub-commission will issue them a press identification card authorizing them to report on the polls in the township in which they applied.

Media professionals pointed out that attempts to monitor and limit the number of reporters in each locale could effectively restrict them to that area, as the location-specific credential might not be valid in a place beyond its point of issue.

"It is unclear if reporters will be able to move to another township from the one they are registered in," said Thet Zin, editor-in-chief of the New Era weekly journal. Concerned that the small paper will not have enough reporters to thoroughly cover the polls if their positions are static, Thet Zin predicted that election reporting "will be difficult."

This time it seems like the UEC is trying to control people's right to know.

Kyaw Min Swe, secretary of the Interim Press Council, said that a meeting will be held on Sunday between the UEC and concerned journalists to discuss ambiguities in the instructions. While the UEC claims that the directive is meant to ensure that all journalists covering the election will be bound to the commission's media code of conduct with some degree of accountability, members of the press view the process as inherently flawed and susceptible to abuse.

"There were no such rules limiting the number of journalists during the 2010 and 2012 elections," Kyaw Min Swe said, "but this time it seems like the UEC is trying to control people's right to know."

The secretary said the issue will be discussed at length with the commission during their meeting on Sunday, voicing firmly that the media "won't follow this rule."

When contacted by The Irrawaddy on Friday, the UEC declined to comment on the rationale behind the new rules or whether they were likely to be amended. The current regulations include an Aug. 5 deadline for reporters to register with local sub-commissions, so there is still some time to make changes.

According to the Ministry of Information, 31 daily newspaper licenses have been granted since early 2013, following decades of strict censorship under Burma's former military regime. Of those, however, only 21 papers are currently in operation, reflecting severe financial strains in the burgeoning media industry. Of those 21 newspapers, seven are state-owned. About 400 weekly journals and 300 magazines are currently in circulation.

The post Journalists Reject UEC Order Limiting Reporters' Scope appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Arakan Army Calls for Calm After Bangladesh Border Clash

Posted: 28 Aug 2015 03:38 AM PDT

 Arakan Army troops on parade in Laiza, Kachin State, in April 2014. (Photo: Moe Myint / The Irrawaddy)

Arakan Army troops on parade in Laiza, Kachin State, in April 2014. (Photo: Moe Myint / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The Arakan Army has sought to reach out to the government of Bangladesh to prevent further skirmishes after fighting erupted between Bangladeshi border guards and the ethnic Arakanese rebels on Wednesday in western Burma.

Arakan Army (AA) deputy commander-in-chief Lt-Col Nyo Tun Aung denied his group had encroached on a Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) camp, telling The Irrawaddy on Thursday they respected the latter's right to patrol the border and hoped dialogue would help avert further clashes.

According to an official AA statement, the two-hour long clash began at around 10 am on Wednesday, with both sides opening fire near the Boro Modak area of Thanci in Bandaran District, near the shared Burma-Bangladesh border.

The Arakanese rebels claimed that at least one BGB soldier was killed.

China's state-run Xinhua news agency reported on Wednesday that one injured BGB soldier had been rushed to a military hospital in Chittagong. The report also stated that Bangladesh had boosted its troop presence along the border.

"We have already explained to the Bangladeshi government that the AA is not the enemy," said Nyo Tun Aung. "All indigenous ethnic groups in Burma are fighting for self-determination, democracy and equal rights…. The Bangladeshi government should, on humanitarian grounds, [show] empathy…"

The AA has instructed its forces to avoid any fighting, except in self-defense, the group said.

"We are trying to send a letter to the Bangladesh Prime Minister and we would like to say sorry for the conflict and that we would like to prevent this happening again in the future," Nyo Tun Aung said.

The recent fighting is thought to have sparked after BGB soldiers confiscated several horses, used to carry supplies, belonging to the AA's political wing.

The Arakan Army is also based in Laiza, Kachin State, where the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) is headquartered, and has recently been engaged in fighting with government troops, along with the KIA and the Ta'ang National Liberation Army.

In March, fighting broke out between the AA and the Burma Army near Kyauktaw Township in what was believed to be the first time in a decade that ethnic Arakanese armed rebels in the region had clashed with government troops.

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Burma Army Chief Meets Thai Top Brass in Bangkok

Posted: 27 Aug 2015 11:22 PM PDT

Burma Army Commander-in-Chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing meets with Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha in Bangkok on Thursday. (Photo: Min Aung Hlaing / Facebook)

Burma Army Commander-in-Chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing meets with Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha in Bangkok on Thursday. (Photo: Min Aung Hlaing / Facebook)

Burma's army chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing paid a visit to the Thai capital Bangkok on Thursday, meeting with top officials including Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and influential nonagenarian Prem Tinsulanonda, head of the country's Privy Council.

During the commander-in-chief's meeting with former general turned prime minister Prayuth, the pair discussed relations between the two country's armed forces, recent flooding in Burma and progress on establishing special economic zones along the nations' shared border, according to state-run media.

A post on Min Aung Hlaing's Facebook page said the army chief praised Prayuth for the "progress" Thailand had made under his leadership and expressed sympathy for the victims of a recent bomb blast at a Bangkok shrine which killed 20 people.

Min Aung Hlaing's visit to Thailand came the day after Privy Council President Prem celebrated his 95th birthday on Wednesday alongside well-wishers from Thailand's top brass at his Bangkok residence. Burma's army chief met Prem on Thursday afternoon.

The pair are known to be close, with reports emerging last year that Min Aung Hlaing had asked the ageing Prem to adopt him as his godson.In June last year, Min Aung Hlaing threw his support behind the Thai ruling junta, shortly after it took power in a military coup on May 22, stating on a visit to Bangkok that it was the army's duty to safeguard national sovereignty.

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Ruling Party Purge Confirms Doubts Over Democratic Reforms

Posted: 27 Aug 2015 10:49 PM PDT

Military lawmakers attend the first day of the final parliamentary session before the November general election, August 18.( JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

Military lawmakers attend the first day of the final parliamentary session before the November general election, August 18.( JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

The sudden removal of one of Myanmar's most powerful men sent shockwaves through the diplomatic community in the old capital of Yangon, where foreign embassies are still located. It seemed more like a midnight coup than an ordinary leadership reshuffle—security forces in the new capital, Naypyidaw, entered the headquarters of the de facto ruling party, the Union Solidarity and Development Party, or USDP, late August 12.

The following day, it was announced that Shwe Mann, the speaker of the Lower House of Myanmar's bicameral parliament, a former general and anticipated by some foreign observers to be the country's next president, had been ousted.

Despite the drama, his removal reconfirmed the widely held belief that the country's military is not about to relinquish real power. The power shift in Naypyidaw is also unlikely to change the big powers' attitudes towards the military in Myanmar.

Parliamentary elections are scheduled for November 8. Early next year, an electoral college consisting of elected parliamentarians along with army officers will select the head of state of a country. After decades under solid military rule, Myanmar is supposedly edging towards a more democratic order.

For many Western pundits, Shwe Mann was the favorite for the post, regarded as a "bridge" between the junta that had ruled the country until elections were held in November 2010 and the quasi-civilian government that took over in March 2011 as well as the democratic forces headed by the main opposition leader, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

Before becoming parliamentary speaker, Shwe Mann was considered the third most powerful man in the then-ruling junta. As a nominally civilian parliamentarian, he was often seen with Aung San Suu Kyi and began speaking in favor of reforms aimed at limiting the power of the military. Myanmar's constitution was drafted under military supervision and adopted in 2008 after a referendum dismissed by most observers as fraudulent.

Under the constitution, the military holds 25 percent of all seats in the parliament and regional assemblies. Since major changes in the constitution's clauses require 75 percent approval, the military enjoys what amounts to veto power over any major changes in the country's power structure.

Precisely what had made Shwe Mann popular among foreign diplomats, academics and think tanks became, in effect, the cause for his fall. A number of political reforms and seemingly liberal initiatives were introduced after the new government took over in 2011 such as the release of political prisoners, more press freedom, and the right of political parties to operate openly.

Such steps were not taken because the military had little intention of giving up power. The strategy was to remain in power and, at the same time, improve the country's image and its strained relations with the West, which had imposed sanctions on the junta for its abysmal human-rights record. During that time, Myanmar had become heavily dependent on China. Internal military documents dated as far back as 2004 suggested that the country was losing its independence to its powerful northern neighbor.

The solution was simple: make some reforms—and the West would reciprocate by welcoming Myanmar back into the international community.

The United States in particular viewed the spread of Chinese influence in Myanmar with increasing concern. The reforms provided an opportunity for Washington to normalize relations with Naypyidaw. At the end of November 2011, then–Secretary of State Hillary Clinton traveled to the nation, the first top-level US visit in half a century. A year later, President Barack Obama traveled to Myanmar. In May 2013, Thein Sein, became the first Myanmar president to visit the United States since 1966. Relations were on track as Myanmar distanced itself from China. The US was no doubt pleased.

Before long, it became increasingly clear that Myanmar was not undergoing an organic democratic transition from military dictatorship to elected civilian rule. Newspapers and magazines were not closed, but critical journalists and editors were charged with "libel," "defamation" and even "trespassing." Student activists and people protesting against land seizures were thrown into jail. Some parliamentarians sought to change the constitution, but the military intervened to prevent that from happening.

Just before his second visit to Myanmar in November 2014, Obama said that Myanmar’s transition from military rule had not been as fast as hoped, and the government was "backsliding" on some reforms. Observers began to question whether Myanmar was really "backsliding"—or if the initiatives towards more openness were limited from the start.

Shwe Mann, evidently, stepped out of line by trying to go further. Long-time Myanmar observers see striking similarities between his ouster and a 2004 purge that saw the fall from grace of then prime minister and once powerful former intelligence chief Khin Nyunt. He was also a maverick. Like Shwe Mann, he amassed enormous political and economic power for himself and his family. Shwe Mann's two sons, Aung Thet Mann and Toe Naing Mann, are prominent businessmen involved in numerous deals that certainly will come under scrutiny.

And one cannot help but wonder if Shwe Mann is really a "closet liberal" or an opportunist who, in the end, bet on the wrong horse by fraternizing with Aung San Suu Kyi. In the late 1980s, he saw combat against Karen rebels along Myanmar's eastern border, earning the honorific title thura, or brave hero. A cable from the US embassy in Yangon dated March 15, 2007, made public by WikiLeaks, stated that he had "utilized civilian porters, including women and children, on a massive scale during operations against Karen insurgents." The cable's headline read "Shwe Mann: Burma's Dictator-in-Waiting," and outlined his military career.

He was also allegedly involved in the crushing of the 2007 so-called Saffron Revolution, a democracy movement led by Buddhist monks. In November 2008, Shwe Mann led a secret military delegation to North Korea, where he signed a memorandum of understanding on military cooperation. He visited an air base, a missile factory and other defense industries near Pyongyang.

During his time in the army, Shwe Mann was a loyal officer, showing no sign of dissent. Ironically, he led the purge against Khin Nyunt and his henchmen in 2004. Now Shwe Mann's own followers in the USDP and elsewhere may face the same fate as the former intelligence chief.

Apart from being parliamentary speaker, Shwe Mann also led the USDP, a post now held by Htay Oo, a former major general close to Thein Sein who, in turn, has the backing of the military. The party's General Secretary Maung Maung Thein and other Shwe Mann loyalists have also been removed. A "rejuvenated" USDP is poised to contest the November election.

These internal purges are unlikely to have much impact on Myanmar's foreign relations. Washington may grumble, but no one there wants to push Myanmar back into China's embrace, and China is pragmatic enough to adjust to the new realities so as not to jeopardize its fragile relations with Naypyidaw. Of special importance are gas and oil pipelines that China has built from the Bay of Bengal through Myanmar to the southern Chinese province of Yunnan. In July, Naypyidaw ratified the agreement to set up the China-led Asia Infrastructure and Investment Bank, a relationship that China won’t upset by interfering with an internal power struggle in Myanmar.

If anyone had doubts, it's clear that the military still calls the shots in Myanmar.

This article originally appeared here on YaleGlobal Online on August 18, 2015.

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In Talks, Muslim Rebels Seek Independence in South Thailand

Posted: 27 Aug 2015 09:19 PM PDT

Thai soldiers carry children out of an area where suspected Muslim separatists shot dead three Muslim men in the troubled southern province of Pattani, March 2011. (Photo: Surapan Boonthanom / Reuters)

Thai soldiers carry children out of an area where suspected Muslim separatists shot dead three Muslim men in the troubled southern province of Pattani, March 2011. (Photo: Surapan Boonthanom / Reuters)

KUALA LUMPUR — Muslim militant leaders in talks with Thai authorities to end a deadly insurgency said Thursday they are seeking an independent state and are ready to negotiate a solution.

Six insurgent groups, united in a coalition called the Pattani Consultative Council, participated in three days of informal peace talks ending Thursday in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

“We want to stress that we did not drop our demand for independence. That will be the final aim for the Pattani struggle, but we are ready to sit at the negotiation table to find a solution that will give Muslims the right to determine their own future” in the predominantly Buddhist country, council representative Abu Hafez Al-Hakim told a news conference.

He said the Pattani people will ultimately decide whether the solution will be an independent state or autonomy under the Thai government for the three southernmost provinces. More than 5,000 people have been killed in the insurgency since 2004.

Malaysia, whose northern states border Thailand’s south, facilitated bringing the insurgents to the talks.

Former Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra’s government agreed in 2013 to launch formal peace talks with one militant group, but they never happened following a military coup.

Pattani council chief Awang Jabat said the coalition wants the peace talks to be put on the national agenda to ensure continuity if a new government comes into power.

During the talks in Kuala Lumpur, the coalition sought immunity for the negotiating team to ensure their freedom of travel in the provinces, he said. Meanwhile, the Thai government raised the issues of creating a safety zone and economic development among others.

The government negotiators did not attend the news conference.

It is unclear how much support the coalition has on the ground. It comprises of the National Revolutionary Front, the Pattani Islamic Mujahiddeen Movement, the Islamic Liberation Front of Pattani and three factions from the Pattani United Liberation Organization.

Awang Jabat said the coalition invited all stakeholders into the process to unify their efforts for self-determination. They want to ensure Islamic laws and regulations are enforced and that the Muslim identity is preserved, in terms of language and Jawi writing. Jawi is the Arabic alphabet for writing the Malay language.

He warned that there will be more violence until the right of self-determination for Muslims is guaranteed.

The date for the next round of talks has not been decided.

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Thailand Issues Arrest Warrant for Suspect in Second Blast

Posted: 27 Aug 2015 09:06 PM PDT

People hold a giant Thai national flag for victims of the deadly blast near the Erawan shrine in Bangkok. (Photo: Chaiwat Subprasom / Reuters)

People hold a giant Thai national flag for victims of the deadly blast near the Erawan shrine in Bangkok. (Photo: Chaiwat Subprasom / Reuters)

BANGKOK — An arrest warrant has been issued for an unnamed suspect in a bomb blast at a Bangkok pier that took place a day after Thailand’s worst ever-bombing killed 20 people at a popular shrine, Thai police said on Friday.

Police spokesman Prawut Thawornsiri said a court issued the warrant based on grainy video footage of a man in a blue shirt kicking a bag into the water near the pier on the night of Aug. 17, soon after the blast at Bangkok’s Hindu Erawan Shrine.

“We issued an arrest warrant for the suspect in the Sathorn pier incident,” police spokesman Prawut Thawornsiri told Reuters, referring to a pier near Bangkok’s Chao Phraya river.

The suspect faces charges of unauthorized possession of explosives, exploding a bomb that could cause harm and attempted murder, according to the warrant.

The pier explosion caused no casualties.

Police have not definitively linked the two blasts and have offered few answers as to who could be behind the attacks.

In the shrine bombing investigation, police are focusing on a man seen in blurry security camera footage.

The footage shows a man in a yellow shirt and dark hair removing a backpack after entering the packed shrine and calmly walking away from the scene before the explosion.

Last week police issued an arrest warrant for an “unidentified foreign man” seen in the video footage along with an image of the suspected bomber.

Prawut said police were unlikely to issue a picture of the suspected pier bomber. “We’re unlikely to make a sketch of the suspect as his face is not clear,” he said.

The Erawan shrine bombing has taken a toll on tourism and caused a 17 percent fall in tourist arrivals, Thailand’s tourism ministry said on Wednesday.

Fourteen foreigners were among the 20 people killed in the attack at the famous Hindu shrine in Bangkok’s bustling commercial heart.

The post Thailand Issues Arrest Warrant for Suspect in Second Blast appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Hong Kong Teen Protest Leader Joshua Wong Faces New Charges

Posted: 27 Aug 2015 08:51 PM PDT

Student leaders Joshua Wong, right, and Lester Shum arrive at the High Court in Hong Kong last December. (Photo: Tyrone Siu / Reuters) CATEGORIES: Asia

Student leaders Joshua Wong, right, and Lester Shum arrive at the High Court in Hong Kong last December. (Photo: Tyrone Siu / Reuters) CATEGORIES: Asia

HONG KONG — Hong Kong police charged teenage student leader Joshua Wong on Thursday for his role last year in storming government headquarters, which helped trigger 79 days of pro-democracy street occupations that gripped the Asian financial center.

Wong, whose Scholarism group played a key role in the protests, reported to a police station where he was charged with inciting and participating in an illegal assembly.

The charges came nearly a year after Wong and dozens of student activists stormed a fenced-off courtyard outside government headquarters during an evening rally to protest Beijing’s plan to restrict elections in the semiautonomous Chinese region.

Police arrested Wong and other key leaders, which drove more people into the streets. Two days later, on Sept. 28, police fired volleys of tear gas in an attempt to disperse the crowds, which only enraged the protesters further and kick-started what came to be known both as the Umbrella Movement and Occupy Central.

Wong posted photos of his police charge sheets on his Facebook account. He is scheduled to appear in a magistrate’s court on Sept. 2.

Two other student leaders, Alex Chow and Nathan Law, also face charges relating to illegal assembly over the same incident, according to local media reports. Chow is the former secretary general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students, which also played a major role in the protests. Law is the current leader.

Wong, 18, is also expected to appear in court on Friday to face two other charges of obstructing police at a separate, earlier protest in which he and others burned a cardboard copy of a Beijing policy document that asserted full authority over Hong Kong, a former British colony promised a high degree of control over its own affairs until 2047.

 

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