Friday, January 16, 2015

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Record Foreign Direct Investment Smashes Government Forecasts

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 04:33 AM PST

Foreign direct investment in the last nine months has almost doubled inflows from the 2013-14 fiscal year. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

Foreign direct investment in the last nine months has almost doubled inflows from the 2013-14 fiscal year. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Foreign direct investment in Burma is continuing at a staggering pace, hitting more than US$6 billion in the first nine months of the current fiscal year, according to figures from the Myanmar Investment Commission.

From April to the end of December last year, 25 countries spent $6.62 billion on foreign direct investment (FDI), well above the commission's US$4-5 billion estimates for the year to April 2015 and almost doubling the US$3.5 billion total inflows of the 2013-14 fiscal year.

Singapore-listed companies comprised more than half of the investment volume with a combined total of US$3.8 billion, reflecting an apparent trend of managing local projects remotely from the investment haven, particularly for oil and gas projects. Dr Maung Maung Lay, vice chairman of the Union of Myanmar Federation of Chambers and Commerce Industry, said that many international firms had routed their FDI spend through their Singapore offices.

"As far as I know China still tops the FDI list," he said. "The Myanmar Investment Commission shows that Singapore based companies are topping the list, but this isn't a reflection only of Singaporean investments. Most international companies are based there."

Dr Maung Maung Lay disputed suggestions that the large volume of investment money channeled through Singapore was partially the result of attempts to bypass remaining economic sanctions against Burma.

"It's not because of US sanctions. The US government has eased sanctions in recent years. I expect there will be many US and European companies investing here after the general election later this year," he said.

In line with government expectations, foreign investment in Burma's telecommunications sector topped the list, accounting for 20 percent of the total, followed by manufacturing. The tourism industry placed third with a recent expansion of international hotel chains into the country.

Aung Naing Oo, director-general of the Directorate of Investment and Company Administration, said that strong growth in foreign direct investment was likely to continue on the back of several large international firms gearing up for expansion into the local market.

"Some major investors are still waiting to invest in Burma but some are coming in, for example Nestle, Coca-Cola, Unilever and Pepsi. Other multinational companies are still doing surveys," he said.

Pyi Wa Tun, chairman of the Parami Energy group of companies, cautioned that foreign direct investment in Burma needed more focus on generating local prosperity.

"The government has approved almost all proposals from foreign companies that say they will provide local jobs, but what we have to consider is how our country can generate profits from these investments," he said. "These investments should work with local small and medium enterprises, rather than just granting job opportunities on their own terms."

According to the Myanmar Investment Commission's figures, among the other significant FDI contributors were firms based in the United Kingdom ($563 million), Hong Kong (US$455 million), the Netherlands ($302 million), China ($256 mllion), India ($208 million) and South Korea ($150 million).

The post Record Foreign Direct Investment Smashes Government Forecasts appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

US Rights Envoy Warns of ‘Dangerous Intolerance’

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 04:27 AM PST

Tom Malinowski, United States Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, is visiting Burma this week. (Photo: State Department)

Tom Malinowski, United States Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, is visiting Burma this week. (Photo: State Department)

RANGOON — A high-level delegation of US officials on Thursday concluded a two-day US-Myanmar Human Rights Dialogue, the second iteration of what could become a regular affair between the US State Department and the Burmese government in efforts to smooth the edges of a once-rougher regime.

Speaking to reporters in Rangoon on Friday, US Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Tom Malinowski said that while the discussions were "extremely constructive," issues such as ethnic and religious intolerance pose an urgent threat to creating a stable democracy in Burma.

"The use of religion in particular to divide people, whether it is done for political or other purposes, is incredibly dangerous," Malinowski warned, emphasizing that religious extremism could have severe consequences particularly in an election year.

Malinowski led the senior delegation, which included Lt-Gen Anthony Crutchfield, deputy commander of the US Pacific Command, on his second visit to the country since the United States began limited military cooperation with the Burma Army. Envoys representing departments of religious and refugee affairs were also among the convoy that coursed the country meeting civil society, military and government actors.

Following a visit to the Kachin State capital Myitkyina and workshops with women, ethnic and mainstream rights activists in Rangoon, the delegation headed to Naypyidaw for closed-door talks with Union ministers about the nation's most pressing human rights concerns, including land policy, the rights of ethnic minorities and the role of the military.

The most urgent concern, he said, was ethnic and religious intolerance being used to divide communities, particularly in Arakan State, where more than 1 million Rohingya Muslims remain stateless and vulnerable. Malinowski urged the government to allow unfettered humanitarian access to internally displaced persons (IDPs),revise a plan that in its current form would either confine Rohingya to camps or risk deportation,, and ultimately create a non-discriminatory path to citizenship.

Regarding the Burmese government's handling of Rohingya statelessness, who bore the brunt of ethno-religious riots in mid-2012 and still face extreme disenfranchisement and often abuse by their Arakanese Buddhist neighbors, Malinowski said that, "I personally don't view this as a question that has been resolved."

While ethnic and religious intolerance dominated much of Friday's briefing, Malinowski detailed a list of ongoing human rights concerns that arose from discussions with activists and other stakeholders during the delegation's visit. Concerns about land policy, political detention and the right to peaceful assembly were shared across ethnic and religious boundaries, according to several activists who met with the delegation earlier this week.

Malinowski was appointed in April 2014 after 13 years as the Washington director of Human Rights Watch (HRW). His former colleague, HRW senior researcher on Burma David Mathieson, referred to him as "one of the founding fathers of US policy on Burma," remarking that under his tenure the State Department has shown a sincere commitment to rights in Burma.

The State Department's engagement with Burma has rapidly accelerated in recent years; full diplomatic relations were restored in 2012, economic sanctions were eased in 2013, and Malinowski announced during his last visit in mid-2014 that the US military was ready to begin "cautious engagement" with the Burma Army.

Engagement with Burma's notorious military has been a frequent point of criticism among civil society, according to Salai Za Uk, director of the Chin Human Rights Organization, who attended a conference with ethnic activists hosted by the State Department earlier this week. While US law places explicit parameters on military-to-military cooperation, many activists still think the move is premature.

"If it's all about teaching the Geneva Conventions, that's OK," said Za Uk, "but the mere fact that [the United States] is engaging with the Burma Army might embolden them."

This week's conference came in the wake of a recent state visit by US President Barack Obama that was both preceded and followed by dark marks on an already blackened military record. Less than two weeks before Obama's arrival, a leading Harvard-based legal clinic published research implicating Burma's home affairs minister and two other officials of war crimes linked to an offensive against the ethnic Karen minority less than a decade ago. Not a week after the president left Burma, the army fired several rounds of artillery onto a rebel training facility in Kachin State, killing 23 cadets and injuring more than a dozen more.

Malinowski conceded that while progress on human rights in Burma has proven to be a long and still precarious process, "three years ago we could not have done this."

The post US Rights Envoy Warns of 'Dangerous Intolerance' appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Former NLD Official Apologizes to Clergy, Remains in Detention

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 04:21 AM PST

Htin Lin Oo apologizes to the Chaung-U Township Sangha on Thursday. (Photo: Facebook)

Htin Lin Oo apologizes to the Chaung-U Township Sangha on Thursday. (Photo: Facebook)

RANGOON — Facing a hefty prison term, a contrite Htin Lin Oo offered a public apology to Buddhist monks on Thursday, a gesture of reconciliation accepted by the local clergy that has nonetheless failed to halt the author's prosecution on religious offence charges.

Htin Lin Oo's meeting with monks in Sagaing Division's Chaung-U Township came immediately after the renowned columnist and former National League for Democracy (NLD) information officer had his fifth application for bail denied by the local court, according to defense lawyer Thein Than Oo.

"The case depends on the complainant as to whether it will continue or not," Thein Than Oo told The Irrawaddy. "It will prove who really wants to prosecute him, since the monks have now forgiven him."

Htin Lin Oo met with including the head of the local Sangha and around 30 other monks at the Dhamma Hall of the Chaung-U police station after his Thursday court appearance, apologizing for a speech presented during a literary event in October in which he criticized religious nationalism in Burma.

An excerpt of Htin Lin Oo's speech was widely shared over social media, leading to condemnation from nationalist monks and his dismissal from the NLD information officer position after an internal investigation. The author was denied bail at his first court appearance in Dec. 17 and has been in custody ever since.

Tun Khaing, the officer from the township immigration office who filed the initial lawsuit at the local clergy's request, said he had no intention of withdrawing the charges.

"Monks in Chaung-U accepted his apology, but I believe it is not relevant to the prosecution," he said. "According to my personal view, the case concerns all monks and all members of the public who are members of the religion he disgraced."

Saw Sandar, Htin Lin Oo's wife, said that the case was opened at the request of the Chaung-U Sangha, and she hoped the monks would ask for the charges to be withdrawn after accepting his apology, adding that the excerpt of his speech shown over social media had led to his words being taken wildly out of context.

"Those who listen to his full speech will know what he wanted to say, but those who just watched the excerpt of the video will not understand," she said.

Htin Lin Oo has been charged under the Penal Code's Article 295a, which prohibits "deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage religious feelings", and Article 298, which proscribes "uttering words [...] with deliberate intent to wound religious feelings". Both charges are punishable by fines or jail terms of up to two years for the former and one year for the latter.

The post Former NLD Official Apologizes to Clergy, Remains in Detention appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Mandalay Farmers, Monks, Students Call for Constitutional Reform, Land Rights Protection

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 04:02 AM PST

Participants at a rally in Mandalay Friday listen to speeches calling for democratic reforms and better land rights protection. (Photo: Teza Hlaing)

Participants at a rally in Mandalay Friday listen to speeches calling for democratic reforms and better land rights protection. (Photo: Teza Hlaing)

MANDALAY — About 1,000 farmers, students, labourers, Buddhist monks and community leaders gathered in Mandalay on Friday to call for better protection of land rights, democratic reforms and abolishment of Burma's military-drafted Constitution.

At a five-hour rally next to U Pwar Pagoda, senior monks, farmers' representatives and student leaders took turns to give speeches demanding broad political reforms from President Thein Sein's nominally-civilian government.

"Most of the problems [in Burma] are because of the bad government who do not want to serve its people. The bad government come up with the 2008 Constitution, which is why it is important to abolish it," said Sayardaw U Thawbita, a Mandalay-based member of the Saffron Revolution Buddhist Monks Network.

"We want to urge the government to listen to the voices of its people and take action to fulfil the needs of the country and citizens," he added.

The 2008 Constitution grants the military significant political power, including direct control over a quarter of Parliament, and prevents popular opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi from becoming president because her sons are UK nationals.

Organizations involved in the rally included Movement of Democracy Current Force, the Facilitator Network with Farmers and Labours and the Ba Ka Tha Student Union.

U Arriyawuntha, an abbot from Myawaddy Mingyi Monastery, alleged that the government had purposely failed to prevent inter-communal violence between Burma's Buddhists and the Muslim minority, which rocked parts of the country in recent years.

"Since military rule, they created such communal violence intentionally to divert the anger of the citizens and to maintain their power," he said. "We also want to tell the people that we must understand this, and we must be alert to stop such violence, which threatens the stability of the county."

In a joint statement distributed at the rally the organizations called for a new charter, better protection of land rights, labour rights and an independent education system.

The groups said they were sending their demands to Parliament, the president and foreign embassies. They also called for greater public involved in their cause and said more rallies would be held in the near future.

A particular focus of the activists' anger was the China-backed Letpadaung copper mine, where recent farmers' protests against land seizures led to a violent confrontation with the police, who shot and killed a farmer named Khin Win.

Her daughter, named Win Khin, addressed the event on Friday.

"We are only working on our land as planting crop is the only livelihood we know. My mother was shot dead because of this project, which is why we call for an end to this project. If the project is still exists we're afraid, there will be more cases like my mother's," she said.

The post Mandalay Farmers, Monks, Students Call for Constitutional Reform, Land Rights Protection appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Photo Of the Week (16.01.2015)

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 03:25 AM PST

TNLAbig TNLAsmall

The post Photo Of the Week (16.01.2015) appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Four Injured in Hpakant Police Station Bombing

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 12:16 AM PST

A sign welcomes visitors to Lone Kin village in Kachin State. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

A sign welcomes visitors to Lone Kin village in Kachin State. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

A drive-by bombing at a police station in Hpakant Township injured four civilians on Thursday in the latest violence to hit troubled Kachin State in northern Burma.

The blast, at around 6 pm on Thursday, injured four family members of a police official at the station in Lone Kin village. No police officers were hurt in the attack, according to sources at the police station.

"A [unknown] motorcyclist threw the explosive into our station from the road," Tin Ko Ko, an official at the Lone Kin station, told The Irrawaddy on Friday. "At that time, family members of a police officer were staying at the station. The bomb went off and hurt four people. They were hit in the stomachs and legs."

The victims of the attack—Nang Hseng, Ma Htet, Pon Sar and Pon Ti Aung, all between the ages of 20 and 50—were treated at a hospital in the town of Hpakant, the official said.

It was not immediately clear whether the incident is linked to recent hostilities between the rebel Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and the Burma Army. An investigation is being carried out by the local police force in Lone Kin, and all government offices and police stations in the Hpakant region have been instructed to be on alert for possible additional attacks.

"It is not good to attack us in a lawlessness way. We are trying to track down the criminal," said Tin Ko Ko.

On Thursday, intense fighting took place near the villages of Aung Bar Lay and Tagaung in Hpakant Township, a jade-rich region about 50 miles northwest of the Kachin State capital Myitkyina. The clashes forced about 1,000 civilians to flee the area, with the displaced sheltering at local churches.

Tensions between the Burma Army and the KIA have been mounting since KIA troops arrested three Burmese police officers and briefly detained Kaman Du Naw, the Kachin State transportation minister, on Wednesday. The minister was released later the same day, but the three police officers are still being held by the KIA.

The KIA is one of two major ethnic armed groups that lack a bilateral ceasefire with the government. Prior to this week's clashes, the latest and most deadly incident in years saw the Burma Army shell a rebel training academy outside Myitkyina in November, killing 22 cadets.

The fighting in Kachin State comes even as ethnic rebel leaders and the government negotiate to sign a nationwide ceasefire agreement next month. The plan to sign an accord on Union Day, Feb. 12, has been viewed with varying degrees of enthusiasm and credulity by Burma's ethnic armed groups.

The post Four Injured in Hpakant Police Station Bombing appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Thailand to Recognize ‘Third Gender’ in New Constitution: Panel

Posted: 15 Jan 2015 09:54 PM PST

Isabella Santiago of Venezuela (C) is kissed by runner-ups after she was crowned Miss International Queen 2014 at the transgender/transsexual beauty pageant in Pattaya, Thailand, November 7, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

Isabella Santiago of Venezuela (C) is kissed by runner-ups after she was crowned Miss International Queen 2014 at the transgender/transsexual beauty pageant in Pattaya, Thailand, November 7, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

BANGKOK— Thailand’s constitution will include the term "third gender" for the first time, a member of a panel drafting a new charter said on Thursday, in a move to empower transgender and gay communities and ensure them fairer legal treatment.

Thailand has a large gay community, but remains largely conservative, although homosexual, transgender and transsexual people play key roles in its entertainment industry.

Thai law does not recognize same-sex unions, which keeps gay couples from taking joint bank loans and medical insurance, besides barring changes to gender categories on national identity papers.

The Constitution Drafting Committee, a group hand-picked by the military to prepare a new constitution after the previous one was scrapped following a May coup, began work this week.

Panel spokesman Kamnoon Sittisamarn said the new measure would ensure all sexual identities were protected under the constitution and treated equally by the law.

"We are putting the words ‘third gender’ in the constitution because Thai society has advanced," he told Reuters.

"There are not only men and women, we need to protect all sexes. We consider all sexes to be equal."

The panel will send details of the measure to the National Reform Council by April. It will need to be formally approved by the ruling junta, also known as the National Council for Peace and Order.

In 2012, a group of lawmakers and LGBT activists formed a committee to draft legislation recognizing same-sex couples that would, among other things, enable them to marry.

But discussion of the draft law was put on ice while Thailand struggled with political protests in 2013 and 2014.

Gay rights activists welcomed the decision to include the term "third gender" in the new constitution.

"It would treat all citizens equally and help to protect from discrimination in all areas including ease of doing business and also personal life," said prominent gay activist Natee Teerarojjanapongs.

The army seized power on May 22 to restore order after months of political infighting that killed nearly 30 people. It scrapped a 2007 constitution for an interim charter giving the military sweeping powers, and protection for the coup makers.

The post Thailand to Recognize 'Third Gender' in New Constitution: Panel appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Refugees on Thai Border to Undergo Verification Process

Posted: 15 Jan 2015 09:03 PM PST

A refugee family hold numbered placards as they pose for a photo during a census conducted by Thai authorities at Mae La refugee camp in July 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

A refugee family hold numbered placards as they pose for a photo during a census conducted by Thai authorities at Mae La refugee camp in July 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

CHIANG MAI, Thailand — The UN refugee agency and Thailand's Ministry of Interior will conduct a verification exercise on the Burmese refugee population along the Thai border, with the data intended to help find "durable solutions" and better coordinate future humanitarian assistance.

The program will be carried out in all nine refugee camps on the Thai-Burma border, where some 130,000 Burmese refugees, mostly ethnic Karen, have been living for decades after fleeing their homes amid Burma's long-running civil war.

Saw Honest, chairman of the largest refugee camp at Mae La, told The Irrawaddy that his camp's program would likely begin in February.

"They will tally the refugee population," said Saw Honest, whose camp hosts more than 40,000 refugees in western Thailand's Tak province. "Then, 11-year-olds and older will be issued a card that contains family bio data."

Retinal scans, fingerprints and photographs of the refugees will reportedly be recorded in the verification process, he said.

Vivian Tan, the spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Asia, told The Irrawaddy on Thursday that the aim of the exercise was to physically verify and update existing records of Burmese refugees living in the camps to allow for better humanitarian aid planning.

"Upon verification, refugees will receive a card with their information contained on a data chip. This card, which is unique and not issued to other groups in Thailand, will be linked to durable solutions and future assistance," said Tan, adding that the card would not be a substitute for a state-issued identity document and would not entitle card holders to the right to work or travel in Thailand.

The one-time exercise is mandatory for all refugee camp residents and those who are absent will be struck from the list of registered camp residents. The verification process, which will run from late January through April, will also document non-registered refugees, but will not serve as a way for these individuals to register with the UNHCR. Registering with the UN agency comes with benefits such as eligibility for third-country resettlement.

Sources close to nongovernmental organizations on the border said the Thai government was considering issuing "hill-tribe" ID cards to the refugees so that they could travel outside the camps and work legally in Thai industries to earn a living.

Under Thai law, the 130,000 refugees on the border are prohibited from traveling outside the camps and cannot legally take jobs in Thailand.

Last year, the Thai military conducted a headcount of the refugee population on the border, raising concerns that plans were afoot for an imminent repatriation of the refugees. The UNHCR has consistently maintained that the time for refugees' return is not yet appropriate, though discussions on the matter have been taking place in light of the relative peace that has accompanied the signing of more than a dozen ceasefires between the Burmese government and ethnic armed groups over the last three years.

Since the Thai military took power in a May 22 coup, the head of the regime, a former general and current Prime Minister Prayut Chan-ocha, has pushed for the refugees' repatriation. He has also met with the head of the Burma Army, Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing, in Bangkok to discuss the issue.

Most refugees are reluctant to return home at present, feeling the potential for armed conflict lingers in Burma's ethnic border regions, a survey of refugees in mid-2013 found.

The post Refugees on Thai Border to Undergo Verification Process appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Chinese Police Net Over 60,000 People in Drug Sweep

Posted: 15 Jan 2015 08:43 PM PST

Policemen in Shanghai stand guard next to confiscated drugs on display during a campaign for the International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking. (Photo: Aly Song / Reuters)

Policemen in Shanghai stand guard next to confiscated drugs on display during a campaign for the International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking. (Photo: Aly Song / Reuters)

SHANGHAI, China — Police in China have arrested 60,500 people for drug-related crimes and seized more than 11 tonnes of narcotics in a vast, multi-city sweep, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

Police handled 52,800 drug crime cases from late September to December during a campaign dubbed "Ban drugs in hundreds of cities", it said, quoting the Ministry of Public Security. The campaign will last until April.

The ministry said earlier that around 180,000 drug users had been punished by mid-December, with 55,679 sent to compulsory rehabilitation centres.

Illegal drugs, especially synthetic substances like methamphetamine, ketamine and ecstasy, have grown in popularity in China in tandem with the rise of a new urban class with greater disposable incomes.

Authorities have stepped up efforts to combat drugs, teaming up with Laos, Myanmar and Thailand to try to stem the flow of drugs from Southeast Asia, even arresting a string of celebrities on drug charges to bring publicity to the issue.

Earlier this month a Beijing court sentenced Jaycee Chan, son of kung fu movie star Jackie Chan, to six months in prison and fined him 2,000 yuan on drug charges.

The post Chinese Police Net Over 60,000 People in Drug Sweep appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Pope Tells Philippines Leaders to End Corruption, Hear Cries of the Poor

Posted: 15 Jan 2015 08:38 PM PST

Pope Francis waves to the crowd on his way to a welcoming ceremony, for his state and pastoral visit, at the presidential palace in Manila on Jan. 16, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

Pope Francis waves to the crowd on his way to a welcoming ceremony, for his state and pastoral visit, at the presidential palace in Manila on Jan. 16, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

MANILA — Pope Francis called on the Philippine government on Friday to tackle corruption and hear the cries of the poor suffering from "scandalous social inequalities" in Asia's most Catholic country.

The pope, who arrived on Thursday night, went to the Malacanang presidential palace on Friday for an official welcoming ceremony led by President Benigno Aquino as tens of thousands of ecstatic Filipinos lined the streets.

After a private meeting with the president, Francis, a champion of the poor, pulled no punches in calling for a more just and caring society in the Philippines, which is about 80 percent Catholic.

"It is now, more than ever, necessary that political leaders be outstanding for honesty, integrity and commitment to the common good," he said.

Aquino, the only son of democracy champion and former president Corazon Aquino, took office in 2010 on the promise of transparency, good governance and battling corruption to lift the Philippines from poverty.

But he has struggled to shed the country's image as one of the most corrupt in Asia as he continues to defend his allies, while at the same time chasing down politicians, bureaucrats and generals associated with the past administration.

Francis was driven to the palace from his residence at the Vatican embassy in a small blue Volkswagen Touran, in keeping with his simple, no-frills style. Enthusiastic crowds had started gathering four hours before he arrived.

The Philippines has laid on the largest security operation in its history, with about 50,000 police and soldiers on hand. His car was flanked by police vehicles, which sometimes made it difficult for people to see him.

Francis was saluted by presidential guards at the Spanish colonial palace and greeted by hundreds of people waving Vatican and Philippine flags. Children rushed up to embrace him as he walked along a red carpet on the palace grounds.

The pope urged government officials "to reject every form of corruption, which diverts resources from the poor, and to make concerted efforts to ensure the inclusion of every man and woman and child."

Since taking office, Aquino has executed wide-ranging reforms in graft-laden agencies such as the customs and internal revenue bureaus, helping improve the Philippines' ranking in watchdog Transparency International's corruption perceptions index (CPI) to 85 last year from 94 in 2013 and 105 in 2012.

But cases of high-level officials in central and local governments misappropriating public funds for personal gain still abound. At least 25 percent of the country of about 100 million are poor, according to the Philippine statistics agency.

"The great Biblical tradition enjoins on all peoples the duty to hear the voice of the poor," Francis told Filipino leaders.

"It bids us break the bonds of injustice and oppression which give rise to glaring, and indeed scandalous, social inequalities. Reforming the social structures which perpetuate poverty and the exclusion of the poor first requires a conversion of mind and heart," he said.

Francis was due to celebrate a Mass later on Friday in Manila's colonial-style cathedral, on the same site where a first church was built with bamboo and palm leaves in 1581.

That was to be followed by a rally with Filipino families. Divided families are big issue in the Philippines, where as many as 12 million people have left to find work in other countries, making it the fourth-largest recipient of remittances worldwide.

About half of population have been affected by labor migration and the strain of decades of labor migration has come at a significant social cost.

Francis has made defense of vulnerable migrants and workers a central issue of his papacy. At an October synod on the family, he urged bishops to find solutions to the challenges faced daily by families.

The post Pope Tells Philippines Leaders to End Corruption, Hear Cries of the Poor appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Former Screen Star Talks Acting And Activism

Posted: 15 Jan 2015 04:00 PM PST

Former actress Daw Swe Zin Htike. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

Former actress Daw Swe Zin Htike. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

After more than two decades in the film industry, former Myanmar actress Daw Swe Zin Htike, also known as Grace, embarked on a new career in the nonprofit sector. She was Population Services International (PSI) Program Director from 1999 to 2013 and now devotes much of her time to educational projects, while continuing to promote Myanmar's film industry. The 61-year-old award-winning former actress spoke with The Irrawaddy about her wide-ranging work, including in health and education, and her push to encourage more female film directors.

QWhen did your acting career begin?

A: I worked in the film industry from 1971 to 1993. I acted in more than 200 films in that period and won a Myanmar Academy Award in 1977. I was also nominated on four occasions.

QWhat is your educational background?

A: My undergraduate degree was a Bachelor of Commerce. I have also studied accountancy, French and the Abhidhamma and received a media fellowship in the United States in 2002.

QWhat did you do after moving on from the film industry?

A: From 1993, I worked for the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in Myanmar as a consultant producing advocacy materials. I then moved to Population Services International (PSI) in 1999 and worked there until June 2013. After retiring, I focused on my own company, Communication Services Group (CSG), which I helped found in 2000. At CSG, we provide three kinds of services. Translation services for TV content; education services including a mobile education project [providing non-formal education via mobile classrooms to children compelled to work in teashops to support their families]; and production services [for short films and documentaries].

[In the past], the government refused to acknowledge that there were HIV/AIDS patients in Myanmar. But people were dying of AIDS. I saw it. I was especially close with many gay people in the film industry. Many of them died without knowing what they were suffering from. I felt that I needed to educate them on what was happening and how to help prevent it. I understood that I couldn't work alone on this issue. I needed to work under an umbrella. That's why I decided to work for PSI which had resources and funding. I started as a project coordinator earning US$450 per month. I could earn more than this in the film industry, so I wasn't working at PSI for the money. I could learn a great deal working there.

I was criticized by one former senior government official who asked: why are you involved in this issue [raising awareness of HIV/AIDS], you are not a doctor, just an actress. But I did my best. In 2000, [annual] condom sales were just 20,000 for the entire country. By 2004, sales reached one million nationwide. I was happy with this change.

Beyond 2011, I realized that health is not the only essential issue in Myanmar. That's why I wanted to do more in the education sector and worked for initiatives like the Myanmar Mobile Education Project (myME).

QWhat challenges did you face in transitioning from a successful acting career to the NGO field?

A: Even when I was working in the film industry, I wanted to gain new experiences. That's why I studied at the same time as I was working. I became involved in making short educational films and pamphlets for health education programs with UNICEF. During these years [working in the NGO field], I was satisfied with some programs but not with others. Working with limited human resources was sometimes difficult. I met many kinds of people, including some with different mindsets to mine. But doing something is better than nothing.

In 2002, I went to the United States and met with Myanmar communities there. I asked if they would come back to Myanmar to work for NGOs and help people. Some did come back later.

QWhat is your ongoing involvement with the film industry?

A: In 2012, I decided to help promote and develop the Myanmar movie industry by organizing the international relations department in the Myanmar Motion Picture Organization (MMPO). I then became secretary of the MMPO's international relations committee. After assuming this position, some outsiders didn't think I would be up to the task. We were not on the same page and they just worked for their own interests. I work for the people's interests.

When I was young, I wondered why the movie industry was so commercialized and why people couldn't work for each other. But later I realized that the film industry is totally dependent on the market and investment. In recent times, mainstream Myanmar movies haven't been able to impact the international market. So how can we encourage independent film makers?

MMPO has no budget for the international relations committee. So I provide the budget myself in order for some movies to be shown in international film festivals. I define my achievements by what I have done to support the film industry in this country. I would like to encourage women to become creative directors and to try their best.

QWhy do you think there are now just a few female film makers?

A: There were some female film makers in the past. In 1940, there was Daw Khin Nyunt, then Parrot Daw Mya Mya, and following them, Daw Thin Thin Yu and Daw Wah Wah Win Shwe. The number of female film directors is small due to a lack of trust. Even in today's environment, female directors are not trusted with the responsibility. Some [in the industry] don't want women to become decision makers. The majority of people working in film distribution are also men, so how can we compete with other male film makers and get our films distributed? I think some men unconsciously discriminate against their female competitors. But Myanmar women have good stamina and we prove that by working hard.

QHow is the MMPO working to support the emergence of more female film directors in the future?

A: I am encouraging women to attend script writing and directing classes which recently opened at the MMPO. I'm urging them to study seriously to become successful directors. Most actresses are just recognized as sex symbols—and the younger, the better. But if the role of women behind the camera is also recognized and promoted, we can improve [perceptions and attitudes]. We also need mutual understanding. We need to demonstrate our abilities even as people are trying to test us.

Q: Do you think the majority of actresses are discriminated against in terms of their earnings? For example, actors often receive more than actresses even when the latter are in leading roles?

A: In the 1950s, some actresses actually earned more than their male counterparts, for example, Daw Kyi Kyi Htay, Daw Wah Wah Win Shwe and Daw Moh Moh Myint Aung.

There are two things to mention. Actresses should be paid according to their abilities. They shouldn't be satisfied with smaller wages. If women were able to produce films with their own money, there would be more female lead actors.

The post Former Screen Star Talks Acting And Activism appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


“In some areas I have not observed progress since my last visit”: Yanghee Lee

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 05:27 AM PST

Concluding her second official visit to Burma on Friday evening, the UN's Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in Burma, Yanghee Lee, urged the government to redouble efforts to improve the country's still-worrisome human rights situation.

"Based on all the information I have gathered, I feel assured that in some areas the Government is continuing to progress in its reform programme," she said. "However, in some areas I have not observed progress since my last visit… In the area of freedom of expression and freedom of assembly, positive gains risk being lost. Indeed, the possible signs of backtracking I noted in my first report have gained momentum in this area."

Over the course of her ten-day trip, following up on an earlier trip to the country in July, she met with a wide cross-section of political and civil society actors, including activists, journalists, ethnic and religious leaders, and government officials. She visited Insein Prison in Rangoon, where she met with prominent activists arrested in December for protesting the Chinese-backed Latpadaung copper mine in central Burma.

She travelled to Burma's restive Arakan State, the site of resurgent communal clashes since 2012 and home to more than a million Rohingya Muslims, most of whom are denied citizenship rights and essential services, and who are subject to severe mobility restrictions. She subsequently visited Lashio, near the front lines of resurgent fighting in northern Shan State and the site of interreligious violence last year.

Her visit to Burma was met with protests from Buddhist nationalist sympathisers, who deplored her support for the rights of Burma's persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority to citizenship, mobility, and self-identification.

"Yes, I have been greeted with several protests, and I am informed that there will be another protest today, later on, waiting for me," she told journalists at Rangoon's Sedona Hotel before her departure from the country. "I would like to see this as an improvement in the ability to voice opinions and views."

Nationalists on Friday afternoon, protesting what they see as UN bias towards Rohingya people. (Photo: DVB)

Nationalists on Friday afternoon, protesting what they see as UN bias towards Rohingya people. (Photo: DVB)

On Friday morning, a group of some 500 monks and lay supporters, led by hardliners Wirathu and Parmaukkha, marched from Kyay Thon Pagoda, to the east of Shwedagon Pagoda in Rangoon, to Tamwe Township east of the city centre, holding placards reading "UN decisions cause problems in Burma – we don't want that!"

Among the marchers were members of the Arakan National Network, which has condemned the UN's call for Burma to grant citizenship to members of the Rohingya community who were born in the country.

In December, the UN General Assembly approved a non-binding resolution, drafted by the European Union, that called on Naypyidaw to extend citizenship rights to the Rohingya and remove the mobility restrictions placed on them. The resolution also urged investigation into rights abuses in Arakan State, equal access to essential services, and conciliation between Buddhist and Muslim communities in the region.

"Fundamental rights are not hierarchical – they aren't conditional upon one another. They're inalienable. You can be assured that in all my meetings with government interlocutors, I use the word 'Rohingya'. The rights of Rohingya people must be protected, promoted and upheld," Lee said.

Echoing the sentiments of other high-level UN envoys to Burma over the past year – including UN Secretary-General Ban-Ki Moon and his deputy, Haoliang Xu – Lee claimed that an undue focus on terminology has stalled progress on fundamental issues relating to humanitarian access and the acquisition of citizenship.

"There's many complexities involved in this, and I'm bringing to the public's attention that the fixation on the word has paralysed any forward movement," she said. "That does not mean negating one word or the other, because it is a fundamental right for people to self-identify."

While she praised some recent developments in Arakan, including the resumption of front-line health care by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in December, she claimed the situation in the troubled state "remains at crisis stage," and that humanitarian access is "still minimal and high risk."

She also noted that, while some of the inhabitants of Myebon Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp were granted citizenship through the government's pilot "citizenship verification" programme, their living standards have not improved as they remain subject to onerous mobility restrictions.

"They remain inside the camp with minimum food rations, limited access to health care and to other essential services," she said. "The despair that I saw in the eyes of the people in the Myebon IDP camp was heartbreaking."

Although she was promised access to the latest draft of the government's "action plan" for Arakan – a leaked earlier draft of which stirred outrage, as it called for the deportation en masse of those failing to acquire citizenship through the verification process – she claims it "has not yet been delivered" to her.

"I stress that international human rights norms must be at the centre of a solution in the Rakhine [Arakan] State," she said. "Collective punishment of the entire Muslim population of the Rakhine State for the deeds of a limited number of perpetrators from the violence in 2012 is not the answer."

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DVB Bulletin: 16 January 2015

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 04:28 AM PST

On tonight's bulletin:

  • Over 1000 displaced as Kachin fighting continues
  • US rights delegation offers findings
  • Yanghee Lee’s visit to Burma ends with protest
  • Mandalay purists fight to save traditional martial art form

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

The post DVB Bulletin: 16 January 2015 appeared first on DVB Multimedia Group.

Will a ceasefire be signed on Union Day?

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 03:56 AM PST

It's not easy to point to any one particular meeting or issue which could be identified as the "breakthrough" during the series of talks, meetings and negotiations that have taken place over the past year. Progress has been sluggish, characterised by mistrust between the government and the ethnic groups on either side of the table. In the meantime, hostilities on the ground only intensified in Kachin and northern Shan states.

Proposals for a framework to implement political dialogue have been labourious, with ethnic leaders insistent that dialogue be agreed ahead of a nationwide ceasefire accord and the government keen to put pens to paper first – then worry about the nuts and bolts later.

Simmering at the bottom of this cauldron was the age-old rallying cry for a federal union, a recognition of semi-autonomy that the Karens, Shans, Kachins and other ethnic groups felt they had been cheated out of back in 1948.

But on 1 December, in his monthly radio address to the nation, Burma's President Thein Sein announced that a firm political agreement had been reached with ethnic armed groups to establish a federal union in the country.

Then on 5 January, following Independence Day talks between representatives of 12 ethnic armed groups and President Thein Sein and Commander-in-Chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing in Naypyidaw, word emerged that Thein Sein had assured the delegation of his intention to facilitate a nationwide ceasefire agreement before the end of his term and expressed a wish to sign one by 12 February, the country's Union Day, commemorating the founding of the Union of Burma in 1947.

But how close are both sides to an agreement? Several crucial issues are yet to be resolved. In addition, the Kachin Independence Organisation and its allies appear further than ever from a truce.

DVB asked several political players their opinions on the prospect for a Union Day ceasefire. We asked them how probable they believed a peace deal would be.

Here are the answers from some of the respondents.

But DVB also wants to hear from you, the readers. What do you think of the likelihood of an imminent nationwide ceasefire? VOTE in our online poll below.

 

Khun Okkar, Nationwide Ceasefire Coordination Team (NCCT)

"The military commander-in-chief has told us that the army follows the command of the president. However, it is necessary to stop fighting ahead of the nationwide ceasefire signing rather than after, to show a genuine commitment to ending the hostility. Only then there will be an environment that will allow a ceasefire. No matter how much we agree on the ceasefire text, it will be challenging to implement it without the right circumstances. We cannot foretell whether it will actually happen on the Union Day or not but, if we can agree on two basic conditions, there is a possibility."

Manam Tuja, Kachin State Democracy Party

"There is a slim chance that the ceasefire agreement will be signed on Union Day. We have said that it would be ideal to include all ethnic armed groups in the nationwide ceasefire accord – leaving just one behind would mean the problems are not completely resolved. Whether the signing happens will also depend on the success of the upcoming talks between the Union Peace-Making Work Committee (UPWC) and ethnic armed groups. But I see that [the ceasefire agreement] is not likely not happen on Union Day, but not only just because of clashes. There are other issues at play."

Hla Maung Shwe, Myanmar Peace Centre

"After an announcement that the NCCT and the UPWC, led by Aung Min, would hold a meeting in January 2015, we are anticipating an NCCT meeting, currently set for the 19 and 20 of this month – this is fairly close to Union Day. We have also received reports about fighting in Kachin State's Hpakant. We hope that the hostility will end without escalation, but we need to wait and how it will play out in real life."

Khin Maung Swe, National Democratic Force

"In my opinion, the conflict may continue as the ceasefire cannot yet be signed. There will be demarcation disputes and territorial expansion, as well as competition to control lucrative business routes, while illegal logging operations by the Chinese continue too. I think clashes will be inevitable until the nationwide ceasefire agreement is signed, so I believe the government will try to make the ceasefire happen."

Mya Aye, 88 Generation Peace and Open Society

"Honestly, I feel discouraged when the news of the fighting broke. Previously, I thought there was about 75 percent chance of the ceasefire signing taking place on Union Day but now I would say its 50-50. One thing to consider is that, although there is fighting on the ground, there is a chance that fighting will be reduced if leaders from both sides can grow stronger on policy issues. If there are positive outcomes in the seventh round of talks between the NCCT and the UPWC planned ahead of the union day, it's possible that the ceasefire could be signed on Union Day."

But DVB also wants to hear from you, the readers. What do you think of the likelihood of an imminent nationwide ceasefire?

Have your say in our poll and discuss the issue in the comments section below.

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Using religion to divide people is ‘playing with fire’: US official

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 02:35 AM PST

A delegation led by US Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Tom Malinowski concluded a six-day trip to Burma on Friday, urging Naypyidaw to address concerns about the depth and pace of political reforms.

"At the forefront of this dialogue is whether the [Burmese] government can maintain trust that the reform process is moving forward," Malinowski said at a press conference in the US Embassy in Rangoon. "How can it earn the trust of its own people, first and foremost?"

The delegation – which included Ambassador Derek Mitchell and senior officials from the Departments of Defense, State, and USAID – met with civil society groups in Rangoon and Myitkyina, the capital of Kachin State, before taking part in a "bilateral human rights dialogue" with governmental officials in Naypyidaw, the first such meeting to be held since 2012.

Although Malinowski deemed the delegation's interactions with its Burmese counterparts to be "extremely constructive and productive", his assessment of the country's overall human rights situation and reform process was decidedly less rosy.

Malinowski expressed particularly strong concern about the religious demagoguery that has engulfed Burma over the past few years, claiming that the use of religion to "divide people" was "extremely dangerous", particularly in the run-up to nationwide polls scheduled to occur later this year.

"This is really playing with fire, and is exposing the country to dangers that it is not prepared to handle," he said.

The delegation discussed a package of four controversial laws pending approval by parliament that would place limits on religious conversion and interfaith marriage with the government and civil society leaders. The delegation also urged the government to end indefinite detention of stateless people – primarily Rohingyas – in Arakan State and quickly establish "non-discriminatory” pathways that would allow them to obtain citizenship.

"The question, we suggested, in assessing citizenship, should not be, 'What is your race?' it should not be 'What is your color?' [or] 'What is your religion?' It should be, 'What are you prepared to do to help build this country?'" he said. "That is the way to build what everybody in Myanmar says is their goal: national unity and national peace."

On Thursday, two days after the delegation's departure from Kachin State, fighting erupted in the jade-mining centre of Hpakant, displacing more than 1,000 civilians. To Malinowski, this latest round of hostilities exemplifies the mistrust that has stalled Burma's peace process. "It reinforces the imperative of bringing this conflict to an end through a ceasefire and political dialogue, something we have been encouraging for some time," he said.

High on the delegation's agenda was addressing Naypyidaw's limitation of humanitarian access in conflict-affected regions of the country, particularly in areas of Kachin and northern Shan States controlled by ethnic armed groups. He claimed the government explicitly committed to fulfilling its obligations to protect civilians under the Geneva Conventions, but maintained that it "need[s] to ensure that that principle is reflected in practice," also calling on the military to submit to civilian oversight.

"Whoever you blame for this conflict, whatever your interpretation for why this is happening, IDPs [internal refugees] should not be punished," he said.

He also urged the government to speed up the release of prisoners of conscience and address pervasive land issues affecting vast swathes of the country. He singled out repressive laws that place limits on public protest, noting that they are not in line with international standards. "In our view, it is not in Myanmar's interest – it is not in any country's interest – to be known as a country that imprisons people solely for engaging in peaceful protest," he said.

Malinowski assumed his current position in April 2014, after 13 years as the Washington director of Human Rights Watch. In June last year, he led another delegation of senior US Treasury, Defense and State Department officials to Burma, which focused on peace and reconciliation in southern Burma and the sanctions regime on targeted individuals maintained by the United States.

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Business weekly 16 January 2015

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 01:42 AM PST

Ups and downs

The Burmese kyat exchange rate on Friday was at 1,029 kyat to US$1. It was 1,198 kyat to 1 Euro, and 32 kyat to 1 Thai baht. The price of gold rose slightly over the past week to 677,000 kyat per tical.

Gearing up for Burma's new stock exchange

Applications for licenses to practice on the Yangon [Rangoon] Stock Exchange (YEX), set to open in October 2015, have been given the go-ahead by the Burmese Securities and Exchange Commission (SECM) by Maung Maung Thein, Deputy Minister for Finance and Revenue and SECM Chairman. Underwriting, dealing, brokerage and consultancy businesses will be able to apply for the licenses, with certification costs ranging from 7 billion kyat (US$ 7 million) to 30 billion kyat, depending on the type of business.

Read the DVB story here.

Animal parts seized

Illegal wildlife parts – including animal horns, claws, teeth, bones, and the skins of leopards and tigers – were seized by the Burmese police force in Muse on Saturday.

Authorities searched the house of a 53-year old man in the town on the China-Burma border after receiving a tip off, according to Global New Light of Myanmar. The action was taken by police officers and officials from the Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry. The trade in wildlife parts has risen significantly in recent years.

Government plans retirement benefits

Retirees from government and private companies will be able to benefit from free education, health care services and insurance, social security and legal assistance under the Myanmar Provident Fund, according to President's Office Minister Hla Tun. Ministers and officials from groups including the Central Bank of Myanmar, the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Construction took part in discussions, where the need to care for service personnel and private companies' staff was highlighted, state media reported

Timber exports cut at the roots

 The export of raw timber products from Burma has dropped by nearly US$500 million since a ban came into force last April. The Ministry of Commerce says that figure accounts for 92 percent of the trade. Under the timber ban, the export of unprocessed timber is banned, but processed wooden products are still allowed. However the black market trade appears to continue. Burma's military announced last week that nearly 150 suspected timber smugglers had been arrested on the Chinese border.

Source: Myanmar Business Today

OECD issue report on Burma

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), a forum of 34 countries which aims to address globalisation issues, released a new report on Burma on Wednesday, part of the group's ongoing Multi-dimensional Review of Myanmar [Myanmar] project. Of the latest economic investigation, it says that "overall, the report finds that the need for reform is immense." A number of recommendations for essential progress were made. There were calls to make a structural transformation towards a more manufacturing and service-based economy, filling the skills gap and financing development.

Read the DVB story here.

Price of beans and pulses set to rise

Official sources have said that an increase in the price of Burmese beans and pulses is likely, attributing the rise to the ascending value of the US dollar. Citing the annual production of 1.2 million tons of beans and pulses, an article in the Global Light of Myanmar quotes a bean exporter as saying that the higher demand for the products in foreign markets where harvests have been affected by floods and heavy rains is also pushing up the price.

India imports 5,000 tonnes of Burmese rice

Five thousand tonnes of rice will be exported from Burma to the state of Manipur, India, next month, chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh has been quoted in Indian state media as saying. Indian Railways works in Assam have affected the availability of rice in the region, he added.

Business books in Indiana-Rangoon partnership

Almost 2,000 books, focusing on business and economics and including teaching manuals, are being donated from Indiana University's Kelley School of Business to Rangoon University, AP has reported. The donations will include many books donated from faculty members’ extensive personal libraries, programme manager Jonathan Crum has said. The partnership is part of a three-year Global Development Alliance project between the universities.

The post Business weekly 16 January 2015 appeared first on DVB Multimedia Group.

Four injured in Hpakant grenade attack

Posted: 16 Jan 2015 12:53 AM PST

Four people were injured in a grenade attack on the police station in the village of Lawng Hkang in Kachin State's Hpakant Township on Thursday evening.

Lawng Hkang police station chief Tin Ko Ko told DVB that four people, all family members of police officers, were injured when unknown assailants on a motorbike hurled a hand grenade into the station's compound.

"The incident took place around 6pm. The grenade landed right in front of the police station and four family members of policemen – two male and two female –sustained shrapnel injuries on their head, stomach and groin," said the police station chief.

"One of the female victims suffered serious injuries and was taken to the hospital in Hpakant."

He said the assailants could not be identified due to the busy traffic on the road at the time of the attack. "Police have now stepped up security in the village," he added.

The police station in Lawng Hkang [also spelt Lonkhin] is relatively small, with only three police officers and 20 privates.

The attack took place amid fierce fighting in the area between Burmese government forces and the Kachin Independence Army.

Gunfire broke out around the Uru Creek, about 10 miles southeast of Lawng Hkang, on Thursday morning and fighting was continuing as of Friday morning, said Tin Soe, a National League for Democracy member in Hpakant.

Residents from nearby villages, including Lawng Hkang, Aungbarlay, Kansee, Bawsadee and Tagaung, as well as workers in the Hpakant jade mines, have fled their homes to shelter in a Buddhist monastery and a Catholic church outside the range of hostilities.

Sargi, a member of the Kachin Social Development Network civil society group, said that around 700 villagers, including more than 200 students and 20 teachers, are trapped inside the village of Tangun.

"Charity groups and religious leaders in Hpakant on Thursday tried to go to Tangun village to provide necessary help to the stranded villagers but the roads were blocked – the army has blocked access between the village and the town," said Sargi.

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Karenni State Day held amid controversy

Posted: 15 Jan 2015 10:22 PM PST

The 63rd Karenni State Day, also known as Kayah Day, is being celebrated in the regional capital Loikaw.

Karenni State Day falls annually on 15 January. This year's celebrations began on 10 January at Loikaw's Kantarawaddy Park and are expected to last until the 16th, with festivities including displays of traditional dress, dance performances, rice pounding, sports and tournaments of lethwei, a traditional martial art.

A journalist from the area told DVB that many shops selling the traditional rice liquor khao yae are crowded with revellers.

On Thursday, regional government leaders, parliamentarians and representatives from ethnic armed groups and political parties attended an event for the celebrations. The eastern Burmese state is one of the least developed regions in the country and has seen much armed conflict.

In a message marking the occasion, President Thein Sein said, "There are rays of peace in the Kayah State nowadays, and prospective opportunities for development. Moreover, foundations for tranquillity and regional progress have been laid."

However, Dr Khin Sithu, a community leader in Loikaw, said that peace is yet to prevail in the region, and that it is dependent on the amendment of the 2008 Constitution.

"Even though there is some electricity here, we only receive a tiny fraction of the output from the Lawpita hydropower dam. We cannot call this development," he said.

The Karenni State formerly fell within Karen State under the 1947 Constitution but was renamed as Kayah State under a charter amendment in 1951.

The Karenni State Day was first celebrated on 15 January, 1952.

Khu Oo Reh, deputy-chairperson of the armed group Karenni National Progressive Party (KNPP), said the Karenni people did not consent to the renaming of the state.

"We consider that there may be a political motive behind the name change, so we do not officially recognise the observation of Karenni State Day on 15 January, the date when the amendment was made," he said.

There are also criticisms that the term "Kayah" is representative of only one of many ethnic groups in the region.

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Questioning this year’s Manau Festival

Posted: 15 Jan 2015 08:06 PM PST

The controversy over the Manau, or traditional communal dancing, featuring at this year's Kachin State Day celebrations had been brewing ever since the State government announced in August last year that it was bringing back the Manau after an absence of three war-torn years.

The Kachin public opposed the plan as they felt it was inappropriate to dance the celebratory Manau in the midst of an ongoing war, while thousands of IDPs continue to languish in camps in deplorable conditions, with no end in sight for their return home and resumption of normal lives.

Given prevailing conditions, Kachins question the validity of the Kachin State Day Manau as it does not fall into any of the major categories of a Manau. The "Sut" celebrates wealth and success, with Manau-goers enjoying the largesse of a rich sponsor. The "Ninghtan" is danced in preparation for war, and the "Padang" to celebrate victory in war. The "Kumran" is to bid farewell to friends and family who are leaving for greener pastures, the "Ju" held at the funeral of a chieftain or family patriarch/matriarch, is to say prayers for the health and well-being of the remaining family of the departed, and the "Htingram" or reconciliation Manau, aims at healing rifts between clans or family members.

Things came to a head when the state chief minister, evidently with prodding from the Central, chose to forge ahead with plans for the State Day Manau, ignoring public opinion, specifically a petition with 10,000 signatures to reconsider the Manau issue.

The Kachin public was in uproar with calls to boycott the Manau. The Kachin Culture and Literature Central Committee, which traditionally heads Manau celebrations, closed its office in the Manau grounds in protest.

A new state-backed Manau committee was formed, and government officials took over the reins of managing all other aspects of the celebration. This led many to label it a "government sponsored" Manau. Many a Kachin lamented: "It is not the kind of Manau that we knew and used to participate with joy".

When the Manau opened on 5 January, despite attempts to fill the grounds through coercion and bribes (as high as 10,000 kyat (US$10) a day for those who came in full costume), there was only a smattering of Manau-goers – mostly civil servants and government supporters, greedy Kachin tycoons looking to snag more business concessions, faint-hearted Kachins who fear government reprisals, and empty-stomached Kachins who could do with the promised reward.

This was in stark contrast to previous Manaus when throngs of Kachins dressed to the nines in colorful tribal costumes filled the grounds to capacity. They would snake around the decorated Manau poles in dance, swaying to the beat of gongs and drums, the men brandishing silver swords and the women waving fans or kerchiefs. The dancing and revelry would go on for several days.

The real reason for holding this year's State Day Manau became mightily clear when President Thein Sein made a "surprise" visit to the Manau Compound on 10 January, accompanied by Minister Soe Thein, Parliament Member Thein Zaw, the Northern Regional Commander, and other high-ranking government officials.

The President in his State Day speech, made much of "progress" made towards the signing of a nationwide ceasefire accord, ignoring facts on the ground that even as he spoke, Burmese army troops were attacking Kachin Independence Army (KIA) positions in Kachin, as well as those of the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) and the Shan State Army-North (SSA-N) in northern Shan State.

Clearly, the Manau had been staged at the insistence of the central government. This left most Kachins with the bitter feeling that the most sacred of their cultural traditions had been usurped, appropriated, by a government dominated by the majority Bamar ethnic group, who had shown little understanding or appreciation of Kachin history and culture. An unwilling minority people had once again been made to dance to the tune of a dominant ethnic majority group.

The President, decked out in Kachin costume, was perhaps hoping to use the Manau as an auspicious backdrop to launch his political campaign in this election year. But one cannot help but wonder how he would react if some unknowing person, possibly a foreigner, seeing him in costume asked if he were Kachin. Would he react in the same way as the ethnic Bamar girl (one among an all-Bamar cast of young women dressed in ethnic minority costumes to welcome delegates to the 25th ASEAN summit in Naypyidaw in November 2014), dressed in a long brass neck coil distinctive to the Kayan Padaung ethnic group, appeared quite miffed at being mistaken for a real Kayan Padaung.

 

This article was originally published in Kachinland News on 15 January 2015.

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