Friday, October 2, 2015

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Ma Ba Tha Spokesperson Pans Media, Says Group Are Not ‘Instigators’

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 05:35 AM PDT

Nationalist Buddhist monk U Wirathu (center) takes part in a protest against visiting United Nations Special Rapporteur on Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, in Rangoon, January 16, 2015. (Photo: Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters)

Nationalist Buddhist monk U Wirathu (center) takes part in a protest against visiting United Nations Special Rapporteur on Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, in Rangoon, January 16, 2015. (Photo: Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters)

RANGOON — A spokesperson for Buddhist nationalist group Ma Ba Tha said on Friday that foreign media did not understand Burmese culture and refuted suggestions of a tacit alliance with the country's ruling party.

Over 100 people, including media, Buddhist monks and supporters, attended the group's press conference in Rangoon's Insein Township.

The monks took questions from a throng of local and foreign reporters, with the nationalist group's depiction in the international press an issue it appeared at pains to address.

"The foreign media does not understand our culture. Why don't they report truly, not based on their emotion and not based on one point of view?" said Ashin Dhamma Piya, a Ma Ba Tha spokesperson who addressed reporters in English.

"Why do you guys only point to our Ma Ba Tha as [the source] of problems in the country? We are not instigators. We are a peaceful organization who uphold mitta, kayuna and mutida," he said, using the Pali words for loving kindness, compassion and joy at another's success.

Friday's press conference came two days before the group plans to hold a rally at Rangoon's Thuwanna Stadium on Oct. 4—the culmination of several weeks of events convened across the country to celebrate what Ashin Dhamma Piya described as the "milestone" passage of the controversial Race and Religion Protection Laws.

The rallies have drawn controversy, with several speakers urging crowds not to vote for the country's main opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), accusing it of being anti-Buddhist.

In response, the NLD filed a number of complaints with the Union Election Commission last month, accusing Ma Ba Tha, also known as the Association for the Protection of Race and Religion, of using religion to influence the electorate.

On Friday, Ashin Dhamma Piya was asked about the group's relationship with the Union Solidarity and Development Party and whether it would take action against those distributing pamphlets at Ma Ba Tha rallies attacking the NLD.

"We did not form our Ma Ba Tha for the USDP. We formed Ma Ba Tha to protect religion and work for national politics," he said, adding that the group would welcome whichever side emerged on top following the country's Nov. 8 election.

When a freelance journalist, referring to an article in The Irrawaddy, asked whether Ma Ba Tha members had violated the election law by urging voters to abandon the NLD, Ashin Dhamma Piya criticized the media.

"The Irrawaddy media website never writes good things about us. They write only bad things," he said.

The post Ma Ba Tha Spokesperson Pans Media, Says Group Are Not 'Instigators' appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Junta-Backed USDP Campaigning Through Nargis Projects

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 04:33 AM PDT

A young girl carries supplies in a bucket on her head near a cyclone shelter in the Irrawaddy delta. (Photo: Reuters)

A young girl carries supplies in a bucket on her head near a cyclone shelter in the Irrawaddy delta. (Photo: Reuters)

Five years ago, the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which now governs Burma, was vying for votes in the 2010 general election that installed the current parliament and led to the appointment of President Thein Sein. The poll was held just two years after the devastating Cyclone Nargis swept through the delta. Relief projects were often touted as achievements on the campaign trail, used by military candidates to drum up support for the party.

This article from our archives, published on Sept. 30, 2010, examines the trend of ministers and parliamentary hopefuls traveling to disaster-struck parts of the delta to glean votes from the victims.  

The junta-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) candidates are using Cyclone Nargis rehabilitation projects in the Irrawaddy delta and other state projects across the country to campaign for the election.

According to the state-run-newspaper, The New Light of Myanmar, on Thursday, Burmese Prime Minister Thein Sein who is also the USDP chairman attended the opening ceremony of a hospital and a youth training school in the cyclone-hit area of Laputta Township alongside other USDP key leaders who retired from their military posts in April including Thein Nyunt, the minister of Progress of Border Areas and National Races and Development Affairs, and Maung Maung Swe, the minister of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement.

Ahead of the Nov.7 elections, the state-run-media are full of reports that USDP leaders who are also sitting ministers are traveling to state projects and attending openings of completed projects. Observers said the military junta allowed state media to highlight USDP activities but limited publicity to other political parties.

Although Thein Sein seemed to be focusing USDP campaign activities through the state projects in the Irrawaddy delta this week, his election campaign last week focused on the west bank of the Irrawaddy River in the Magway Region, the location of government arms factories as well as alleged work on military missiles and nuclear projects.

Thein Sein appeared in the state media where he was shown Sept. 20 opening the Minhla-Minbu section of the railway line from Kyangin in the Irrawaddy Region to Pakokku in the Magway Region.

The New Light of Myanmar also reported on Sept. 25 that Thein Sein opened a hospital in Zabuthiri Township in Naypyidaw. According to the Naypyidaw candidate list, Thein Sein is running for the People's Assembly (Lower House) seat in Zabuthiri Township.

Along with USDP top leaders and senior military officials, the state-run newspapers on Thursday highlighted one of the richest tycoons in the country, Zaw Zaw, the head of the Max Group of Companies and the newly formed Ayeyawady Bank. Zaw Zaw appeared in a front page photo in The New Light of Myanmar along with USDP leaders and senior military officers including Maj-Gen Hla Min, the chief of the Bureau of Special Operations-3.

Zaw Zaw and other US-sanctions list tycoons including Tay Za, Htay Myint, Khin Shwe and Dagon Win Aung were awarded construction projects in the Irrawaddy delta following Cyclone Nargis in May 2008.

Khin Shwe of the Zay Gabar Company is a USDP candidate for the Nationalities Assembly (Upper House) in Twantay Township in the Rangoon region, which was hard hit by Cyclone Nargis.  He told The Monitor Journal recently that he had done campaign activities while also working on Nargis work projects.

"For me, I don't need to do election campaigning in the area. Following Nargis, I had worked there for a year doing reconstruction on pagodas and feeding people food. So people tell me, 'Please come here!' I don't need to do any extra campaigning like other candidates," Khin Shwe was quoted as saying in the journal.

The post Junta-Backed USDP Campaigning Through Nargis Projects appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

KNU’s Kwe Htoo Win: ‘The Government Nodded and We Accepted’

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 04:27 AM PDT

 General Secretary of the Karen National Union (KNU), Kwe Htoo Win. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

General Secretary of the Karen National Union (KNU), Kwe Htoo Win. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

Seven ethnic armed groups, including the powerful Karen National Union (KNU), have agreed to sign a nationwide ceasefire agreement (NCA) with the Burmese government, calling into question whether the accord is truly "nationwide." Several stakeholders in the peace process have adamantly demanded that the pact be all-inclusive, extending to a number of armed groups that are still in active conflict with the Burma Army, as well as a handful of others that are not viewed as eligible by government negotiators.

An ethnic summit held in Chiang Mai, northern Thailand, this week produced a split among ethnic stakeholders, some willing to move forward and others holding out for an inclusive pact. The Irrawaddy spoke with KNU General Secretary Kwe Htoo Win about his group's decision to accede to the pact and what it means for the future of the country's protracted peace process.

We have learned that the KNU is among the ethnic armed groups that are ready to sign a nationwide ceasefire agreement. Can you explain what it means to be ready, and the rationale behind this decision?

In our KNU policy, we regard armed conflict as a fundamentally political problem that cannot be solved militarily. Successive KNU congresses have decided to and made attempts to hold political dialogue, but it never happened. We have never signed a truce. The government has invited us to sign this ceasefire and enter a political dialogue, but signing the accord and starting the dialogue was not the original idea of the government. Ethnic armed groups cooperated with the government and demanded that the political dialogue begin after signing the ceasefire. The government nodded and we accepted this also.

We believe that political dialogue can be held smoothly and peacefully only after ending armed conflict. The KNU central committee reviewed the final NCA text and has accepted it. We decided to sign and implement it together with other ethnic armed groups. Our people, the entire Karen people, want peace. We therefore decided to sign the ceasefire and enter the political dialogue with other groups, political parties and stakeholders so that the problem—which stemmed from differing political ideologies—can be solved.

The KNU has previously accepted the principle of inclusion, though now it seems only seven groups will sign the accord. Doesn't this mean you have ignored that principle?

It's not like that. We will revisit the issue when the NCA is implemented. Before we reach a nationwide ceasefire, ethnic groups will sign it individually. Ethnic armed groups have made the same old demand for a nationwide pact and a political dialogue, and the current government has accepted it. In principle we accept all inclusiveness, but in practice, groups which should be included would play their part accordingly and finally toward an all-inclusive political dialogue.  Ethnic armed groups may have different objectives and stances, but we have the same goal: a federal union. Our policy is progressive realization, that is, to realize this goal step by step. Ethnic armed groups that are ready can sign the NCA and then work for the peace and stability of the entire country, based on the accord.

Was there any opposition to the decision to sign within the KNU? How will this affect the group's leadership?

There may be different views within the KNU. Not only in the KNU, but even some individuals may be of two minds. But the decision was made democratically by the KNU central committee based on the principles and goals of the KNU, and therefore no one will reject this decision. They may have their own wishes and views, but we have to follow the decision of the majority.

Given the circumstances, do you think an inclusive political dialogue is possible?

Not only ethnic armed groups, but political parties will also join the dialogue. If we are to enter a political dialogue, the government should remove the groups with which it is fighting from the list of unlawful associations once the NCA is signed. Then those groups will be able to officially meet the government on equal terms, and we can engage with them legally without needing to be afraid of the prospect of being charged with unlawful association. This is a pragmatic way to go, I think.

Some groups are not fighting with the government and they are not regarded as unlawful. The government has said that those groups need not sign a truce, they can join the dialogue directly, but some of them did not listen.

So it seems that not all of the armed groups will be able to participate in the dialogue together.

They can take part even if they haven't signed the NCA, but they will not have the right to make decisions or discuss the issues. They can attend as observers. As far as I understand, the President [Thein Sein] and U Aung Min have said so.

Do you think the accord can guarantee that guns will fall silent between the government and the signatories?

No matter how much a couple loves each other, there will still be times when they will quarrel. This is quite natural. We do expect that the NCA can lead to the complete silencing of guns, but it may not happen in reality due to distrust and suspicion between the two sides. We need to dispel this gradually; we need to move forward to nationwide peace step by step.

The post KNU's Kwe Htoo Win: 'The Government Nodded and We Accepted' appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Thousands of Burma Army Officers Promoted: Military Mouthpiece

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 02:50 AM PDT

 Military lawmakers sign in at the Parliament building in Naypyidaw in July 2012. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

Military lawmakers sign in at the Parliament building in Naypyidaw in July 2012. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The Burma Army has promoted the ranks of thousands of serving officers, rewarding them for their long service to the country's armed forces and their "hard work on the path to democracy for the country."

The promotions took effect on Thursday, and nationwide saw a total of 7,788 officers and rank-and-file soldiers promoted, including captains, colonels, corporals and sergeants, according to a report from Myawaddy, a military mouthpiece.

"We honored those who have patriotism for the country, having served a long time for the country, in order to be able to work hard on the path to having democracy for the country," said the report.

Burma began a transition from nearly 50 years of military rule to quasi-civilian government in 2011. The administration of President Thein Sein, himself a former general, has since enacted a series of economic and political reforms that have prompted Western nations to ease sanctions leveled against the once pariah state.

The military maintains a prominent political role, however, with generals reserved powerful cabinet positions and 25 percent of seats in Parliament. The commander-in-chief of the Burma Armed Forces, Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing, has voiced support for the country's democratic transition on multiple occasions, while also indicating that the military would maintain its political prerogatives for the foreseeable future.

The post Thousands of Burma Army Officers Promoted: Military Mouthpiece appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

US Court Summons Thein Sein Over Rohingya Rights Violations

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 02:39 AM PDT

Burma's President Thein Sein, right, is pictured alongside US President Barack Obama as they participate in a group photo at the East Asian Summit in Nusa Dua, Bali, on Nov. 19, 2011. (Photo: Reuters)

Burma's President Thein Sein, right, is pictured alongside US President Barack Obama as they participate in a group photo at the East Asian Summit in Nusa Dua, Bali, on Nov. 19, 2011. (Photo: Reuters)

WASHINGTON — A federal court in the United States has issued a summons for President Thein Sein and several Burmese ministers to respond to allegations of human rights violations committed against the stateless Rohingya Muslim minority.

The summons was issued by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York following a lawsuit filed by the Burma Task Force USA, a coalition of 19 Muslim American organizations.

Thein Sein and several members of his cabinet will be in the United States this week to attend the 70th United Nations General Assembly in New York. Burma's Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin is scheduled to meet with US Secretary of State John Kerry on Friday.

Filed on behalf of three plaintiffs, all US resident Rohingya refugees who claim to have experienced torture, discrimination and displacement, the lawsuit seeks compensatory and punitive damages.

The case was submitted under the Alien Tort Claims Act (ACTA) and the Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA), and charges Thein Sein and his ministers with crimes against humanity, extra-judicial killing, torture, mental and physical trauma.

"Much of the media is focused on the migrants from Syria, and understandably so, but how many hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees have been fleeing persecution in Burma?" asked Shaik Ubaid of the Muslim Peace Coalition, a member of the Burma Task Force.

"UN Development Goals cannot be achieved when a segment of the population of Burma is rendered stateless," added Adem Carroll, New York Director of Burma Task Force. "A peaceful future depends on an embrace of pluralism and a rejection of the politics of fear."

This is not the first time that a head of state has been issued a summons by a US court on allegations of human rights abuses. In late 2014, Indian Prime Minister Nerendra Modi was called to respond to a lawsuit regarding religious riots in 2002. His predecessor, Manmohan Singh, was summoned in 2013 for violations during counter-insurgency operations in the 1990s.

In both cases, the US government told the courts that the accused had diplomatic immunity as heads of state. The State Department is expected to respond similarly to the charges against Thein Sein and his cabinet.

The post US Court Summons Thein Sein Over Rohingya Rights Violations appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Use Your Red Card, NLD Tells UEC as Alleged Campaign Violations Pile Up

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 12:30 AM PDT

Difficult to Buy a Gun in China, but Not Explosives

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 10:36 PM PDT

A damaged building is seen after explosions hit Liucheng, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, September 30, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

A damaged building is seen after explosions hit Liucheng, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, September 30, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

BEIJING — A series of deadly bomb blasts in China this week has shown how easy it is to acquire explosives in the country, revealing a major gap in its huge security apparatus as the economy slows and anger grows over issues like graft and poor public services.

In a country where firearms are banned for most people, the bombings in the southwestern city of Liuzhou on Wednesday, and others in recent years around the country, demonstrate lax enforcement of rules to control access to bomb-making material.

Private gun ownership is almost unheard of in China as controls are so strict, meaning gun crime is rare. Explosives, on the other hand, are widely available from the sprawling mining and fireworks industries.

The 17 coordinated blasts across Liuzhou, a relatively obscure part of China, destroyed one whole side of a low-rise residential building, overturned vehicles and sent bricks showering into the street, images carried by state media showed. At least seven people died and more than 50 were injured.

The attack has been blamed on one individual in the city, but such "sudden incidents," as China refers to them, highlight broader government worries about stability in the world's second-largest economy, with a widening gap between rich and poor and growing anger at corruption and environmental issues.

"Modern Chinese society has lots of contradictions, and if people want to send a message about their anger or make a point, they can get explosives from any mine," said Pan Zhiping, a domestic security expert at the Xinjiang Academy of Social Sciences.

"It simply isn't possible for the police to keep an eye on everybody," he added.

The ease at which explosives can be obtained in the world's second-largest economy was underscored in a court case posted online earlier this year as part of a government transparency drive.

In September last year, a court in southwestern China's Yunnan province jailed a man for three years after finding more than 20 kg of explosives, almost 100 detonators and 1.5 km of fuses at his house.

The man, whose surname was given as Ren, told the court he had been easy to buy the material by saying it was for work needs, according to the judgment.

In fact, Ren said he had been buying the explosives and storing them at home for the last decade without any problems, though he seemed to have no violent intent.

No Motive

The government says it has no motive for the attacks in Liuzhou in the southwestern region of Guangxi. It has ruled out terrorism. The suspect, a 33-year-old man surnamed Wei, used other people to send the packages, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

"It indicates a serious problem in China in terms of public security. It reflects a lack of effective control by the government to restrict access to these dangerous goods," said Jian Zhang, a lecturer in international and political studies at UNSW Australia in Canberra.

On Thursday morning, another blast was reported in Liuzhou, although it only caused minor damage and no casualties. It was not clear if it was linked to the previous day's blasts.

Guangxi is home to many mines, which use explosives, and like the rest of China it will have lots of firework manufacturers.

Last year, police in Liuzhou arrested a father and son who were "unhappy with society and wanted revenge" and blew up trash cans in a public square using home-made firecrackers, injuring a female bystander, according to state media.

However, explosives are not often seen in violence in the far western region of Xinjiang, where China says it is battling an Islamist insurgency, with tight security limiting access to bomb-making materials or guns. Knives are generally involved in the violence there.

State media microblogs have already begun speculating on the motive for the latest attack in Liuzhou, with some suggesting it was the result of a dispute over medical treatment, a cause of several violent incidents in recent years.

While the Chinese government has ramped up health spending, hospitals are frequently overwhelmed with patients. Doctors are also badly paid, leading to corruption and suspicions that staff are more interested in making money by prescribing unnecessary drugs and treatment than tending to the sick.

Property disputes in a country where the government legally owns all land have also led to unruly protests, fights with police, imprisonment and even suicide, and created a major headache for the stability-obsessed ruling Communist Party.

In 2011, a man apparently angry about the illegal demolition of his home set off coordinated explosions at three sites near government buildings in eastern China, killing two.

In the same month, a petrol bomb set off by a disgruntled former employee at a rural bank in a heavily Tibetan region of northwestern China's Gansu province wounded 49 people.

The worst incident of its kind happened in 2001, when a string of explosions at workers' dormitories in the northern city of Shijiazhuang killed 108 people, blamed on a man seeking vengeance for family problems, although many doubt that explanation.

The post Difficult to Buy a Gun in China, but Not Explosives appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

India Rejects Pakistan Peace Plan, Calls for Revival of Terrorism Talks

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 10:29 PM PDT

 Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif (L) shakes hands with India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during the United Nations General Assembly at the New York Palace hotel in New York September 29, 2013. (Photo: Joshua Lott / Reuters)

Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif (L) shakes hands with India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during the United Nations General Assembly at the New York Palace hotel in New York September 29, 2013. (Photo: Joshua Lott / Reuters)

WASHINGTON — India on Thursday rejected a four-point peace plan for Kashmir proposed by Pakistan but said talks among officials of both countries on terrorism that collapsed in August should be revived.

Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif announced his proposal at the annual United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday, saying the two nuclear-armed countries should formalize a cease-fire in Kashmir and take steps to demilitarize the divided region.

India issued a swift rebuttal, accusing Pakistan of claiming to be the primary victim of terrorism while "in truth, it is actually a victim of its own policy of breeding and sponsoring terrorists."

On Thursday, Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj told the General Assembly that India remained open to dialogue, "but talks and terror cannot go together."

"We don't need four points, we need just one: Give up terrorism and let us sit down and talk," she said.

Swaraj said the talks between national security advisers on all issues related to terrorism should be held, as well as an early meeting of senior military officials to address the situation on the border.

"If the response is serious and credible, India is prepared to address all outstanding issues through a bilateral dialogue," she said.

Planned talks between national security advisers from India and Pakistan were canceled in August hours before they were due to start, dashing hopes the two might tackle the violence that many fear could one day spark a nuclear showdown.

In the talks, India had wanted only to discuss terrorism-related issues. Pakistan sought a wider agenda, including the status of Kashmir.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars since becoming independent countries in 1947, two of them over the Himalayan region of Kashmir, which both claim in full but rule in part.

Sharif, elected in 2013, promised to improve relations with India. But since then domestic troubles have forced him to cede more control over foreign and security policy to Pakistan's more hawkish military.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has taken a hard line with Pakistan, insisting he is unwilling to discuss other issues unless Pakistan admits its role in terror attacks in India.

India's Ministry of External Affairs made it clear that Sharif's proposal was a non-starter. "To de-militarize Kashmir is not the answer," ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup said in a tweet. "To de-terrorize Pakistan is."

 

The post India Rejects Pakistan Peace Plan, Calls for Revival of Terrorism Talks appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Sri Lanka Says it Will Cooperate with UN on War Crimes Inquiry

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 10:21 PM PDT

 Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera speaks during a news conference on a United Nations report about war crimes committed during Sri Lanka's 26-year civil conflict, in Colombo September 17, 2015. (Photo: Dinuka Liyanawatte / Reuters)

Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera speaks during a news conference on a United Nations report about war crimes committed during Sri Lanka's 26-year civil conflict, in Colombo September 17, 2015. (Photo: Dinuka Liyanawatte / Reuters)

GENEVA — Sri Lanka signaled on Thursday it aims to establish a credible judicial process involving foreign judges and prosecutors to investigate alleged war crimes during its long conflict with Tamil rebels, in line with UN recommendations.

Activists and international experts said that the domestic mechanism must win the trust of victims and survivors and provide robust witness protection for those who testify, especially against the Sri Lankan military.

The United Nations Human Rights Council, composed of 47 member states, adopted by consensus a resolution led by the United States and Britain. Sri Lanka co-sponsored the text.

"This resolution seeks to support Sri Lanka's path to a lasting peace built on a foundation of justice and accountability," US Ambassador Keith Harper told the forum.

The UN human rights office said it was an "historic opportunity for Sri Lanka to address the grave human rights violations and abuses that its people suffered, at the hands of both the LTTE (Liberation Tamil Tigers of Eelam) and the government, during the conflict and in its immediate aftermath.

"It is now time for action."

Both sides "most likely" committed war crimes including mass killings of civilians during a 26-year war that ended in 2009, and these should be prosecuted by a special court with international judges, the United Nations said in a landmark report last month.

The report said that despite pledges by the new government of President Maithripala Sirisena to pursue perpetrators, the South Asian state's criminal justice system was not up to the formidable task alone.

Sri Lanka to Cooperate

Sri Lankan Ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha said that his government would cooperate in implementing the resolution.

"Sri Lanka is pleased to join as a co-sponsor of this resolution as a further manifestation of (our) commitment to implement the provisions … in a manner that our objectives are shared by the people and all stakeholders in the country," he said.

The text also calls for reforming Sri Lankan security organs and vetting the military to ensure that no personnel linked to serious crimes are retained or recruited into its ranks.

"This resolution could lead to a very strong process or a very, very weak process. It will all depend on how it is implemented," said Fred Carver, head of the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice lobby group.

International involvement must be "sufficiently independent to win over the trust of survivors—many of whom wanted an international mechanism," he said.

The UN report cited a pattern of atrocities against civilians in the war, with years of denials and cover-ups, and said that tens of thousands may have been killed in the war's final stages.

Sri Lanka's Office for National Unity and Reconciliation, set up after Sirisena took office, said on Thursday it would issue "certificates of absence" to families who have reported relatives missing in the conflict to help them access entitlements granted by the state.

The post Sri Lanka Says it Will Cooperate with UN on War Crimes Inquiry appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

National News

National News


Guardians of ‘race and religion’ target NLD

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 12:19 AM PDT

The National League for Democracy is facing electoral challenges due to campaigning by nationalist Buddhist groups, but prominent monk U Wirathu insists there is no coordinated campaign against the party.

Commission blamed for migrants missing vote

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 12:17 AM PDT

Migrant rights activists are blaming the election commission for not doing enough to ensure that Myanmar citizens living and working abroad were able to vote.

Dictatorship will die if NLD wins election: patron

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 12:16 AM PDT

An overwhelming National League for Democracy win in the election that enables it to form government will kill off dictatorship, the party's patron told supporters in Mandalay.

Soft opening for Sedona’s new wing

Posted: 02 Oct 2015 12:08 AM PDT

Sedona Hotel Yangon held a soft opening on October 1 for its new 29-storey Inya Wing, which was developed by Singapore-based Keppel Land International Myanmar.

‘After the 2010 elections, I don’t blame people for being apathetic’: Q&A: Trevor Wilson, Former Australian Ambassador

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 11:30 PM PDT

Former Australian ambassador Trevor Wilson talks about how Myanmar has changed since the end of military rule and what further changes the elections could bring.

The party that came in from the cold

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 02:30 PM PDT

Outlawed for 24 years, exiles of the Democratic Party for a New Society have been allowed to return to Myanmar where the party has re-registered with the Union Election Commission and is set to take part in next month's elections.

KIO accuses Tatmadaw of trying to force a ceasefire

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 02:30 PM PDT

The Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO), one of the most powerful ethnic armed groups, has accused the Tatmadaw of stepping up its offensives to put pressure on the group to join a proposed nationwide ceasefire agreement with the government.

NLD patron meets prominent monks

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 02:30 PM PDT

U Tin  Oo, veteran patron of the National League for Democracy and head of its campaign committee, has met two prominent Ma Ba Tha monks in an apparent effort to defuse tensions with the nationalist association, which the party accuses of political interference.

HIV support group to mark 10th anniversary

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 02:30 PM PDT

Phoenix, a local non-government organisation that focuses on HIV issues and community development, will celebrate its 10th anniversary today.

Factories told to pay up

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 02:30 PM PDT

Factories have been given until October 5 to divvy out the first month's salary since the new minimum wage went into effect before the government intervenes. Workers have been filing complaints after recalcitrant employers withheld paycheques, according to Yangon Region labour officials.

Shan Herald Agency for News

Shan Herald Agency for News


Mong Ngaw: A Year in the Land of Rice and Tea

Posted: 01 Oct 2015 08:42 AM PDT

Until he was 18, the photographer and writer, Jai Jai Lao Mong, now 22, lived his entire childhood in the village of Da Lone in northern Shan State's Mong Ngaw Township. Seeing no opportunity for work or education in his hometown, he, like many Shan youth, migrated to Thailand, where he worked as a gardener and a security guard. Later, he also attended a social justice education program on the Thai-Burma border. While there, he participated in a video and photography training led by the community-based Shan Youth Power (SYP) media team. He returned to his home determined to use these skills to document both the need for political change in Shan State and to create a historic visual record of his ancestral home through the seasons; Jai Jai Lao Mong remains the only resident of the village with a camera.



Located within the "Black Zone," Mong Ngaw Township is not accessible to outsiders. To date, these are the only known published images of this quiet corner of Shan State known for its hillside tea plantations surrounding a valley of rice paddies.



Mong Ngaw Township is formed by 99 small villages, one of which is Da Lone. Most people make their living by farming: paddy fields take up one third of the township's total area. In August, the height rainy season, the whole region becomes covered with green paddy fields. Two-thirds of Mong Ngaw is paddy land, known as Nar Nam Fa, meaning "the paddy waiting for rain water"; the land is irrigated by a combination of water diverted from the Nam Sim stream and from the annual rains, which last four months.
Karng Dong Pagoda—the "pagoda in the middle of the fields"—is a sanctuary for residents throughout the Mong Ngaw area, who are mostly Buddhist, with a small population of Christian and Muslim families.



At over 100 feet long and over 100 years old, Hang Hawm Bridge marks the edge of the township is an essential link across the Nam Sim stream and the only connection between the villages of Mong Ngaw and the larger town of Kyaukme in northern Shan State. Built by the British, it is the only structure remaining in the area from Burma's colonial era. It is also one of the only existing bridges; there is little to no government-initiated infrastructure in the township.



Nam Sim stream starts in Nam Hsan Township, 45 miles from Mong Ngaw, before flowing into the Nam Du River in Hsipaw Township. Decades ago, the stream was the habitat of many fish species and was vital to the irrigation of half of Mong Ngaw's farms. Now, villagers lament the lack of fish in the stream's waters. Locals speculate that the disappearing life may be due to decreasing water levels and rising levels of sediment, which are linked to increasingly erratic flooding patterns.
The presence of sediment can be attributed to deforestation along the stream, as well as mining projects. The Nam Sim has attracted a number of gold mining companies who use heavy machinery to dig up hundreds of grams of gold each day, both upstream and downstream from Mong Ngaw.



This Buddha statue in Mong Ngaw Township has been constructed from bamboo. In Shan language it is called "Phra Inn Sarn," meaning, "the bamboo Buddha made by an Angel."  The art of making Buddha statues from woven bamboo is a traditional Shan custom.



In Wan Lone, one of Mong Ngaw's bigger villages, locals walk to the temple on a cold season mid-afternoon to make merit by donating household goods to monks during the Khao Wa period. During these three months, the monks do not leave the monastery in order to practice Dhamma, or the teachings of Buddha. The Khao Wa period ends with Og Wa, which falls on a full moon day, in October or November, and signifies the time when Buddha came down from heaven.



Starting work before sunrise, tea pickers end the day at sunset, and walk over five kilometres through mountainous terrain to bring their harvest to market, where it is weighed with traditional scales. They earn 1,000 kyats or one U.S. dollar per kilogram. On an average day, they can collect up to 15 kilograms of tea leaves. Usually, they can only keep half of these earnings, splitting the rest with the owner of the tea plantation.
The tea from northern Shan State is heavily consumed by people throughout Myanmar and is exported to neighboring countries, especially to India.



People call March, or the tea season, "Shwe Byi," meaning "the golden season," because it is a time of economic prosperity for the villagers. This added income allows them to buy goods which they would normally be unable to afford, such as motorbikes. Motorbikes have become extremely popular among the youth in the region, as they provide convenient transportation across Shan State. Many of the bikes were imported from the Chinese border, a 200-mile drive from Mong Ngaw.



In April, villagers pool funds so that their children can be educated in Shan culture, language and literature while the government schools—which only teach Burmese language—are on break. After two months of studying, the top three students from each village are selected to participate in the township level examination. As is the practice in other villages, this class in Mong Ngaw Township is taught by one of the local villagers, who is a volunteer, and it is held in one of the locals' storage rooms. The schools are community-sourced and funded, bringing students and villages together and helping to keep ethnic traditions alive.



The Shan people play traditional instruments at times of celebration and in this photograph the villagers are celebrating the graduation of Shan students who studied lessons in Shan language and literature over two months—March and April—across 30 different villages. These instruments are believed to have a 2,000-year history and dating back to when the Shan people would play them to celebrate. 


In Mong Ngaw, the year is divided by planting and by harvest times. Many local people do not follow a Western calendar, but a traditional Shan system, which is based on the phases of the moon. In November or December, before the celebration of the Shan New Year, the rice crop is cut, dried, and the grains of rice collected.
One obstacle farmers in Mong Ngaw face following the harvest is the redistribution of land. There are no clear boundaries in their land and some overlaps others. This is because the boundaries were originally cut in the shape of spider's web. In the cultivating season, the boundaries are eliminated to maximize land use. Once the farmers have finished cultivating they re-divide the boundaries, meaning the shape of their land is always changing.
A stream runs through the middle of the field and is used for irrigation. In the past, many of the farmers took little notice of it, but in recent years, large dams have been constructed as government projects upstream which have caused the land to erode further downstream.



Huts like this one are used during the harvest season and are made entirely of bamboo. It has become a tradition for children to pass the night with their parents in the open-air structure before the harvested crops are delivered to their home. It is also the place where farmers' families have their lunch together—sticky rice, pickled vegetables, and tamarind juice or lao, traditional Shan alcohol made from sticky rice and sugar cane.


In the hot and dry months of February through April, in the new year, some families take advantage of ownerless land and set up houses and hillside farms in the most isolated areas of Mong Ngaw and Kyaukme townships. This practice is not without risk: at this time, the surrounding forest is burned, either by people, or through natural phenomena, putting such homes in a precarious position. It is thought that burning the land makes it more fertile, and rice is then cultivated on the mountainsides. It is irrigated only through rainwater. The farmers do not earn any profits from their crops because before the harvest time they must take out debts from merchants in order to afford basic supplies. After the crops have been harvested, they pay off these debts. It is a cycle that does not end.


Despite the ongoing civil war in Shan State, the town of Mong Ngaw has been free from disturbances for three decades. But due to general political instability and fear of government authorities, villagers did not dare to display signs of Shan identity or nationalism. Instead they have relied on local monasteries to keep Shan culture and literature alive.
Today, in northern Shan State, symbols of Shan culture are becoming more visible. The entrance to this village in Mong Ngaw Township is signposted with a painted Shan flag with writing in Shan language.


By Jai Jai Lao Mong / Special Contributor to Shan Herald Agency for News (S.H.A.N.)