Tuesday, May 31, 2016

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Photographer Barred From Shooting Controversial Construction Site in Rangoon

Posted: 31 May 2016 08:07 AM PDT

Men in helmets and safety vests take pictures of Irrawaddy photographer Myo Min Soe before he was surrounded by them on Tuesday. (Photo: Myo Min Soe / The Irrawaddy)

Men in helmets and safety vests take pictures of Irrawaddy photographer Myo Min Soe before he was surrounded by them on Tuesday. (Photo: Myo Min Soe / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — On Tuesday, a photographer from The Irrawaddy was prevented from photographing a construction site that is set to be reviewed by the Yangon City Development Committee (YCDC), after questions were raised about the project in the Rangoon divisional parliament on the previous day.

The planned 12-story building is located at the corner of Khayaypin Road and Ahlone Road, Dagon Township, near the compound where the Rangoon Divisional Government, Parliament and Chief Minister Residence are located.

The project is set to be reviewed by YCDC due to its close proximity to the government buildings, said Rangoon Mayor Maung Maung Soe during the divisional parliament session on Monday in response to a lawmaker who questioned whether the project was in accordance with YCDC regulations. The building was approved by the previous divisional government in 2013.

Myo Min Soe, an Irrawaddy photojournalist, was assigned to take pictures of the ongoing Manawhari Commercial Complex construction site, which is being developed by the Waminn Group of Companies.

The photographer said he was taking pictures from the sidewalk across the street from the site, when he was accosted by people wearing helmets and safety vests who appeared to be working at the location.

"I just took two or three frames and two guys arrived and asked me, 'Why did you take pictures without permission?'" he said.

More men from the site joined in and soon the photographer was surrounded. Men shouted, "Don't let him go."

The photographer managed to take refuge in a parliament security booth nearby while nearly 15 people from the site waited outside. They were blocked by the security guards from going inside, but they then took pictures of the photographer from outside the booth.

"Were it not for the security booth there, I don't know what would have happened to me because some of the men looked really serious," he said.

"Why should I need to ask permission when I am just taking photos from a public space? What are they afraid of? Are they doing something unlawful? Is the site concerned with state security? Are they trying to threaten the media?" he asked.

The move came a few days after another event considered to be an attack on press freedom. A reporter from a local news agency was obstructed by nationalist monks while he was trying to cover a meeting between the monks and the management of the luxury Sedona Hotel in Rangoon on Thursday.

Myint Kyaw, a Myanmar Press Council member, said taking a picture in a public space should not be considered off-limits.

"If [the construction company] wants to take action, they could make an official complaint if there is something defaming them in the story," he said. "Now there is no story yet, and preventing someone from taking pictures from a sidewalk is a threat to the media."

The Irrawaddy has submitted an official complaint about restrictions to the Dagon Township Police Station.

The post Photographer Barred From Shooting Controversial Construction Site in Rangoon appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Suu Kyi Heads New Committee for Troubled Arakan State

Posted: 31 May 2016 07:58 AM PDT

Aung San Suu Kyi convenes a May 27 meeting in Naypyidaw with Arakan State Chief Minister Nyi Pu and various Union ministers. (Photo: Myanmar State Counselor's Office)

Aung San Suu Kyi convenes a May 27 meeting in Naypyidaw with Arakan State Chief Minister Nyi Pu and various Union ministers. (Photo: Myanmar State Counselor's Office)

RANGOON — Burma's State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi is to chair a new high-level committee on Arakan State, according to an announcement from the President's Office on Monday. The initiative could represent a change in tack for the National League for Democracy (NLD) government and Suu Kyi, who at several points have played down the significance of the ongoing crisis in Arakan State, despite international pressure.

Although the precise role of the Central Committee for Arakan State Peace, Stability and Development has yet to be spelled out, its purview includes resettling internally displaced persons (IDPs) along with "social development," and coordinating the activities of UN agencies and international nongovernmental organizations (INGOs). A sub-committee will be formed for each of these two thematic areas.

Arakan State, a coastal strip along the Bay of Bengal in the west of Burma, remains one the most sensitive, conflict prone regions of the country. In 2012 and 2013, anti-Muslim violence flared across the state, leaving more than 140,000 displaced, the majority of whom were Rohingya Muslims, a stateless minority concentrated in the north of Arakan State. Only small numbers have been returned or relocated—most remain confined to IDP camps, with limited access to markets, education and health care. Outside the camps, the government has kept the Buddhist majority and Muslim minority largely segregated, purportedly for security reasons.

In the last six months, Arakan State has also suffered conflict between the Burma Army and the Arakan Army, a non-state ethnic armed group, which has displaced several thousand in the northern townships of the state. Lawmakers from the Arakan National Party (ANP), which represents the state's Buddhist Arakanese majority, have called in the national Parliament for the Arakan Army to be included in peace negotiations between the government, Burma Army and various ethnic armed groups—but the Burma Army remains determined to defeat them militarily.

Arakan State also suffers from severe underdevelopment after decades of neglect under former military-led governments, leaving a legacy of resentment and distrust toward central-level leaders from the Burman majority, which includes Suu Kyi. UN agencies and INGOs are perceived by many Buddhist Arakanese to be biased, in directing assistance chiefly toward displaced Muslims, despite general poverty in the state. Coordinating UN and INGO efforts, to achieve "fairness," could also prove sensitive for the new committee.

Earlier this year, relations deteriorated between the ANP and the ruling NLD, led by Suu Kyi, after the latter made it clear it would be selecting someone from within its own party to be chief minister of Arakan State, despite the ANP winning the largest plurality in the state legislature. The ANP has since styled itself as an opposition party. The communal conflict in Arakan State is an area of acute vulnerability for the NLD government, especially given prior nationalist rhetoric about the NLD being sympathetic to Muslims.

The new Arakan committee includes as vice chairmen the Arakan State Chief Minister Nyi Pu, an NLD appointee, and Union Border and Security Affairs Minister Lt-Gen Ye Aung, a military appointee. The other 24 committee members are drawn from various ministries and departments, paving the way for coordination across the apparatus of government. The absence of an ANP representative, however, is likely to only heighten political tensions in Arakan State and could contribute to local opposition to the initiatives of the committee.

Suu Kyi convened a meeting in Naypyidaw on Friday, with the Arakan State chief minister and the Union ministers of Home Affairs, of Security and Border Affairs, of Labor, Immigration and Population, and of Information. Participants discussed stability and development in Arakan State, and the controversial citizenship verification process, which reportedly resumed for IDPs in Arakan State this month.

The ANP's chairman, Aye Maung, in conversation with The Irrawaddy, criticized what he described as the NLD's intention to deliver stability and development in Arakan State without consulting the party with the biggest electoral mandate in the state—the ANP. He urged the NLD government to hold political dialogue with the ANP if the party wished to succeed in their aims, rather than only relying on their own ministries. He also stressed the crucial role played by "opposition" parties, such as his, in relation to any government, citing the veteran opposition role formerly played by the now ruling NLD.

However, Aye Maung remained pessimistic, saying he "dared not expect anything" of the new Arakan committee. Upbraiding the NLD on their lack of detailed policy, he said: "What is their national strategic plan?  What is their plan for the poorest states of the country [such as Arakan State]?"

Aye Maung commented on the limited powers and resources held by regional governments vis-à-vis the Union government. He stated that chief ministers of states and divisions could only request additional budgets from Naypyidaw, and that all state and divisional budgets added up to less than 10 percent of the total Union budget. These budgetary constraints, he asserted, made it "impossible" to deliver real development and stability.

Aye Maung asked whether the NLD government would outline additional special economic areas in Arakan State, with "zero commercial tax for 30 years" as a means of attracting foreign direct investment. "What can we expect of the NLD without knowing their policies?" he said.

Arakanese social activist Wai Hun Aung told The Irrawaddy that, as a first priority, the committee should address the "Bengali" (the word used by many Burmese for the Rohingya to imply they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh) issue "in line with the 1982 Citizenship Law"—a law which defines citizenship entitlement on the basis of ethnicity and condemns most Rohingya to statelessness, since they are not a "recognized" ethnic group.

Wai Hun Aung said that, secondly, the committee should invite the Arakan Army into the formal peace process between the government, Burma Army and various ethnic armed groups, in order to prevent further conflict in Arakan State. Wai Hun Aung also stressed decentralization and resource-sharing between the state and Union government as a top priority.

The announcement from the President's Office, which was circulated online, has prompted some local Arakanese to speculate that the new Arakan committee would oversee the relocation of IDPs to urban areas of Arakan State, which could heighten tensions if implemented quickly, and would require deft management.

Since the 2012 and 2013 violence, urban areas of Arakan State have remained largely empty of Muslims, where formerly these comprised a sizeable contingent—with the notable exception of Thandwe in southern Arakan State, where a longstanding community of Kaman Muslims (a group recognized under the 1982 Citizenship Law, unlike the Rohingya) continue to live alongside their Buddhist neighbors.

Sittwe, the state capital, contains a Muslim majority ward, Aung Mingalar, but the area functions effectively as an IDP camp, with heavy restrictions on movement in and out, and comprehensive segregation vis-à-vis Buddhist families. A headcount of Muslim communities carried out this month by local authorities in Aung Mingalar—which revealed no appreciable change in the population since 2012—was driven by claims by some local Arakanese Buddhists that the Muslim population had been swelled by interlopers from the countryside.

Khaing Kaung San, director of the Wunlark Development Foundation, a Sittwe-based civil society group, said that, although conditions have been peaceful in more recent years, the time was not right for IDPs, the large majority of whom are Muslim, to be relocated within Sittwe. The "two communities," referring to Buddhists and Muslims, still need more time to build trust, he contended, though, with a strict regime of segregation still in place, practical questions remain about how such trust could be built.

Khaing Kaung noted the many "Bengali and Arakanese houses" burned down during the fighting, and said more houses would have to be built if comprehensive relocation were to happen.

The ANP's Aye Maung warned the NLD government to be "cautious" and "think deeply about possible negative impacts" before handling this issue. "If they throw even a small stone into the lake, there will be ripples across the surface."

The Irrawaddy attempted on Tuesday to contact the Arakan State government's spokesman, Min Aung, but he did not answer his phone.

Additional reporting by The Irrawaddy's Su Myat Mon.

The post Suu Kyi Heads New Committee for Troubled Arakan State appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Rangoon Chief Minister Attempts to Defuse Electricity Concerns         

Posted: 31 May 2016 05:50 AM PDT

 Rangoon Chief Minister Phyo Min Thein at a press conference at the Yangon Electricity Supply Corporation, May 31, 2016. (Photo: Myo Min Soe / The Irrawaddy)

Rangoon Chief Minister Phyo Min Thein at a press conference at the Yangon Electricity Supply Corporation, May 31, 2016. (Photo: Myo Min Soe / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Rangoon Chief Minister Phyo Min Thein said on Tuesday that Burma's commercial capital will continue to face blackouts in the coming months as attempts are made to address the city's weak power cables and growing electricity demands.

"We need to think about the long-term, sustainable reconstruction of underground cables that were weak in the past due to the government's limited budget and lack of a master plan," Phyo Min Thein said at a press conference at the Yangon Electricity Supply Corporation.

He added that blackouts throughout Rangoon in recent days have been due to a combination of scorching temperatures and heavy rain, which have damaged power cables.

"We need to repair these cables, which will take some time. During this period, we could experience some additional blackouts," Phyo Min Thein explained, saying that advanced warning of power outages will be given to the public through media.

"We'll make an announcement, but these blackouts will be because of maintenance and repair of underground cables and cable towers [and not due to an insufficient electricity supply]."

Burma's former capital uses more than half of the country's total electricity consumption, some 1,150 megawatts, a demand the chief minister said is difficult to meet.

"This demand is likely to increase in Rangoon, as over 200 high-rise buildings, some 500 hotels and many other new projects are being constructed. It will continue to be a struggle to distribute a sufficient supply of electricity in the coming months," Phyo Min Thein said.

The newly sworn-in National League for Democracy (NLD)-led government has been criticized for the frequent power outages across the country. Lower House Speaker Win Myint also stressed during a parliamentary session on Tuesday that the Ministry of Electric Power and Energy solve the problem. Even local newspapers have chimed in, with cartoons mocking Rangoon's electricity situation as worse now than it was under the previous government.

"The new government is attempting to find a way to begin addressing [this problem] within 60 days," Phyo Min Thein told reporters at the press conference.

He said that Rangoon's regional government is discussing with companies and international organizations how to meet electricity demands, a goal they hope to achieve by next year.

"Currently, we need to get an additional 400 megawatts [for Rangoon]. One challenge will be the cost. It costs at least 130 kyats (US$0.11) per unit [to purchase the gas]. At present, we're only collecting 35 kyats ($0.03) per unit for under 100 units from consumers. We'll have to further discuss this price," Phyo Min Thein said.

The post Rangoon Chief Minister Attempts to Defuse Electricity Concerns          appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Door-to-Door Voter Registration To Be Launched In Late June

Posted: 31 May 2016 05:25 AM PDT

Rangoon residents check their names on a public display of voter lists in 2015. (Photo: J Paing / The Irrawaddy)

Rangoon residents check their names on a public display of voter lists in 2015. (Photo: J Paing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Burma's Lower House said that they will conduct door-to-door voter registration across the country to compile accurate voter lists for the next general election.

During a session of Parliament on Monday, Lower House lawmaker Nay Myo Htet, representing Rangoon's Kyauktada district for the National League for Democracy, questioned the Union Election Commission (UEC) on its plan for assembling voter lists, citing the inaccuracy of the lists made for last year's election.

The 2015 lists were highly controversial, with reports of the names of deceased people included and large numbers of ethnic minorities excluded.

UEC member Hla Tint said the commission will conduct a nationwide door-to-door voter registration program to guarantee the accuracy of voter lists for the next election.

He said that the project will start in Rangoon's Kyauktada Township, which will rely on the collaboration of election officials, village-tract authorities, political parties, voters and international organizations and will be based on the voter lists from the 2015 election.

"We will encourage the public to participate in this plan by doing radio advertisements, posters and flyers," Hla Tint told the Lower House on Monday.

An official from the UEC told The Irrawaddy on Tuesday that the project will be launched in late June.

The post Door-to-Door Voter Registration To Be Launched In Late June appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Bangkok Wants Wa Army Bases Withdrawn From Thai Territory

Posted: 31 May 2016 05:05 AM PDT

Thai and Burmese military delegations meet in Mae Sai, Thailand, on Monday. (Photo: Network Media Group).

Thai and Burmese military delegations meet in Mae Sai, Thailand, on Monday. (Photo: Network Media Group).

Thai military officials have asked their Burma Army counterparts to help in convincing a powerful ethnic Wa armed group, the United Wa State Army (UWSA), to withdraw its bases on the Thai-Burma border, where some are on Thai territory.

The Thai authorities made the appeal during a meeting between Thai and Burmese border security officials held in the Thai border town of Mae Sai, which sits adjacent Burma's Tachileik town, on Monday, according to sources close to both the Thai and Burmese militaries.

The request comes just a few days after the Burma Army chief, Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing, visited the Thai capital of Bangkok on Thursday, when he met with top-ranking Thai military brass including junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-Ocha, who is also the country's prime minister.

During a meeting with the Thai prime minister, Min Aung Hlaing said: "Illicit drug trafficking can affect all the countries in the region; cooperation is necessary to ensure that the armed groups relying on such drug trafficking do not exist."

Prayuth agreed to working together on this point.

Min Aung Hlaing, however, did not mention the UWSA, which reportedly relies heavily on drug trafficking and the border trade for funding. The UWSA is estimated to have up to 30,000 armed soldiers, approximately 10,000 of whom are based in southern Shan State along the border with Chiang Mai province in northern Thailand.  Formed of remnants of the defunct Communist Party of Burma (CPB), the UWSA and Burma's former junta government reached a ceasefire agreement in 1989 that has held strong since.

The Burma military representatives told the delegation from the Thai military in Mae Sai that they would report the proposal to higher officials, according to Burmese media outlet Network Media Group, quoting Thai intelligence sources in Mae Sai.

The UWSA bases that the Thai delegation wants removed are in Chiang Dao district in Chiang Mai province and in Pai district in Mae Hong Son province, both in northern Thailand, according to the Thai military sources.

More than a dozen UWSA bases are in southern Shan State near or across the Thai border. Other UWSA bases are also reportedly on Thai soil in Mae Hong Son province as well as Mae Sai and Mae Ai districts in Chiang Mai province.

However, a military source who is close to both Burmese authorities and the UWSA in Mae Sai told The Irrawaddy that he did not think the UWSA would voluntarily withdraw their bases on the Thai border, something the Burma Army has requested that they do several times in the past to no avail.

"They [UWSA] were asked [by the Burma Army] to withdraw their bases in the past. But they didn't care and nothing happened to them," said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

However, he said Burma Army units in Mongton and Mongsat regions in southern Shan State had been bolstering their military installations in the days since Min Aung Hlaing returned from his recent visit to Thailand.

"[The Burma Army] has been fortifying their bases as if they are preparing for war. They've built walls and fenced in their outposts with barbed wire. They have deployed more troops and ammunition. This started just after Min Aung Hlaing's visit [to Thailand]," said the source.

"I think they would like to cut off communications between the UWSA's northern and southern units," he added.

The Wa control two noncontiguous territories in Shan State, the other being the Wa Special Region bordering China and comprising the townships of Hopang, Mongma, Panwai, Panghsang, Narphan and Metman.

The border security meeting in Mae Sai was attended by 25 members of the Burmese military, led by Lt-Col Aung Myint Oo, and 47 members of the Thai military, led by Col. Prapat Found Suwan.

The post Bangkok Wants Wa Army Bases Withdrawn From Thai Territory appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Export, Import Licenses to Be Made Available Online

Posted: 31 May 2016 03:27 AM PDT

 A truck approaches the entrance to the Muse border trade center in Shan State. (Photo: Thit Nay Moe / The Irrawaddy)

A truck approaches the entrance to the Muse border trade center in Shan State. (Photo: Thit Nay Moe / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Export and import license applications will be available online as of June 7, according to the Ministry of Commerce, which hopes the move will help boost exports and shrink a persistent trade deficit.

Win Khaing Tun, deputy director of the Ministry of Commerce, revealed the plan at the "Fully Online Licensing System" workshop at the Union of Myanmar Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry (UMFCCI) on Monday.

Applications will be available online for about 50 of more than 4,000 approved export and import items allowed by the ministry.

"Initially, we will offer online licenses for agricultural produce and certain types of building materials and consumer goods," Win Khaing Tun said.

Applications will be available at www.myanmartradenet.com and the ministry is prepared to review and approve requests within 10 minutes, according to the deputy director.

The online licensing service will be available for both shipping and border trade, but applications will only be available for the Myawaddy and Muse border trade centers initially.

Myawaddy, on the Thai-Burma border, and Muse, bordering China's Yunnan province, are the country's busiest overland trade posts. The licenses will be offered in these towns first because of difficulties with customs clearances at other trade centers, said Win Khaing Tun.

A trial period for the online licensing service is scheduled to last three to six months, he added.

The move will help reduce corruption because it will eliminate paperwork and red tape, said Myint Soe, chairman of the Myanmar Garment Manufacturer's Association.

"Companies need to hire two different people to apply for import and export licenses. They have to go to Naypyidaw, but if something is wrong with the documents, they come back to Yangon and then return to Naypyidaw again. Online licensing will get rid of all of this," said importer Myat Thin Aung.

Minister of Commerce Than Myint said his ministry is hoping to triple exports over the next five years and plans to boost agricultural produce exports by encouraging the growth of small and medium industries.

Burma has suffered a trade deficit for years; in the past two fiscal years, the country's international trade total has been almost US$30 billion but it has carried a deficit of about $5 billion annually, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

The post Export, Import Licenses to Be Made Available Online appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Lacking Documents, Mandalay Squatters Struggle for Low-Cost Housing

Posted: 31 May 2016 03:18 AM PDT

A tenant of low-cost housing constructed to accommodate Mandalay's squatter communities carries a pot past the apartment complex. (Photo: Zaw Zaw / The Irrawaddy)

A tenant of low-cost housing constructed to accommodate Mandalay's squatter communities carries a pot past the apartment complex. (Photo: Zaw Zaw / The Irrawaddy)

MANDALAY — As the Mandalay City Development Committee (MCDC) has moved forward with its plan to relocate squatters in the city, complaints are being raised that many squatters were not properly accorded housing while some impostors were given more than one residence.

The complaints came after MCDC on Monday held a housing lottery for squatters to relocate them to a last batch of nearly 400 units in a newly built apartment complex along the Irrawaddy River.

Many squatters said they were not on the list to participate in the drawing, yet some people who did not live in the squatter camp were.

"People who were awarded the apartments rarely live in squatters' huts. Some of them even received two or three apartments because they submitted the forms with the names of every family member," said Ma Myo, one of the squatters living in Mandalay's Kyaukthabeik riverbank area.

The squatters complained that they were not allowed to submit the forms to apply for the permit to stay in an apartment because they lacked the required documents, such as a national registration card, an alternative ID card or a registered family member list.

"They [MCDC] said the housing is for the squatters, but if we do not have an ID card or family member list, we cannot apply. However, there were many people who were not squatters who were allowed to apply, and they received apartments," claimed Thein Soe, a one-time leader of a squatter community in Mandalay.

Living in small huts along the Irrawaddy River, the squatters mostly came from nearby villages in Mandalay Division. Many earn a living on Mandalay's jetties, where they mostly work as porters, carrying goods from boats to trucks.

"We've lived here for many years but we only have a national registration card. They said it is not enough and we feel very sad because the water level of the river is rising and we will soon have no place to live," said Cho Cho Oo, a squatter who works at Maychan Jetty.

The Black Market

"When the MCDC called for applications, some people did not submit forms, saying they didn't want to live in tall buildings because they were afraid of earthquakes," said Maw Maw Oo, who lives near Mandalay's Gawwain Jetty.

"But when the MCDC announced that the squatters' huts were going to be destroyed after providing the apartments, and when some people sold their apartments illegally to earn money, they rushed to apply," she added.

According to former squatters living in the apartments, some units were sold illegally, without the MCDC's knowledge, and the sellers fled far from Mandalay. The price of the apartments ranged from 1.7 million to 2.5 million kyats (US$1,400 to $2,140).

"Some even rented out their apartments and moved to another area of the town to live as squatters again or went back to their villages," said Than Win Naing, a one-time squatter who is now living in a government-provided apartment.

"We are afraid to report this to MCDC because the people [breaking the law] may harm us. We're also afraid MCDC would not believe us," he added.

Impostors

Cities like Rangoon and Mandalay, where there are many businesses and job opportunities, have attracted hundreds of thousands of poor from the countryside. But since they are often only able to work as day laborers, they earn just enough to feed themselves and their families and have no extra money to rent a home, leading them to settle for small huts in the squatter areas located on the outskirts of the big cities.

In Mandalay, before 2010, squatters were relocated to a newly established "new town" project area, where they were given ownership of small plots of land and houses.

However, when land prices in Mandalay rose, many sold their land to earn money and again moved back to their original squatter settlements.

According to squatters who are currently living in relocation apartments, the opportunists are working in groups and build their huts in squatter-dense areas when there is news of a relocation project.

"Even in this riverbank area, there are many squatters who just came and built their huts after hearing we received the apartments," said Thant Zin Soe, a day laborer who so far has been unable to submit the proper forms to MCDC.

"They said they were here 20 years ago and they applied for the apartment. They have the required documents and once they receive their apartments, they sell them or rent them out," he said.

"And now, they flee here with their money, and we never see them again," he added.

MCDC's Plans for Relocating Squatters

Nearly 1,600 apartments in six-story complexes are being rented to squatters at the low rate of 30,000 kyats per month.

The apartment buildings were built after a visit from the Norwegian monarch to Mandalay in December 2014. A royal tour by boat that included a stop in Mandalay prompted authorities to evict scores of squatters ahead of his arrival, a move met with criticism at the time.

Applications for living in the apartments were opened in that year and the chance to live in the complex was determined by a lottery. On Monday and Tuesday, the MCDC held a drawing for the last 393 apartments.

After receiving an apartment, the squatters must leave their huts along the river and are not allowed to stay in the area.

"The early applicants were given priority. We heard complaints about the documents but if a person cannot present both an ID and a family members list, it would be difficult for us to register them and to handle related issues," said Saw Tun Oo, an officer from MCDC's administration department.

The officer said any form of ID is important for the department as they need to register the squatters to prevent possible duplicates or impostors.

"We heard some people sold their national registration cards or family member lists, while some lent their IDs to make money. In such cases, they do not have their proof of ID, and we can't help them," he explained.

"We are also investigating the selling and renting of these apartments. Once we have more information, we will take legal action against them, kick them out of the area and will give those apartments to those who are really in need," he added.

According to MCDC's rules, selling or renting the low-cost housing is illegal, and should result in both buyers being kicked out and the sellers forfeiting the apartments.

The apartment buildings, which cost over 1 billion kyats to construct, were built in 2015 with funding from MCDC and the Mandalay divisional government under a plan by the previous mayor.

Since there are more than 3,000 squatters living along the riverbank, the MCDC said there are not enough apartments to relocate all of them. Further, plans to build more housing for the squatters have yet to be unveiled by the newly installed mayor and divisional government.

In early May, Zaw Myint Maung, the chief minister of Mandalay Division, told the media his government is collaborating with the MCDC to collect and register the squatters who live in Mandalay city. The chief minister said they will formulate a better plan to eliminate the culture of squatting and will try their best to create better living conditions for the homeless poor once enough data has been compiled.

The post Lacking Documents, Mandalay Squatters Struggle for Low-Cost Housing appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

South Korea: Attempted North Korea Missile Launch Fails

Posted: 30 May 2016 10:16 PM PDT

 A rocket is launched during a demonstration of a new large-caliber multiple rocket launching system attended by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on March 22, 2016. (Photo Korean Central News Agency / Reuters)

A rocket is launched during a demonstration of a new large-caliber multiple rocket launching system attended by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on March 22, 2016. (Photo Korean Central News Agency / Reuters)

SEOUL — North Korea attempted to fire a missile from its east coast early on Tuesday, but the launch appears to have failed, South Korean officials said, in what would be the latest in a string of unsuccessful ballistic missile tests by the isolated country.

The launch attempt took place at around 5:20 am Seoul time, said the officials, who asked not to be identified, without elaborating.

Tension in Northeast Asia has been high since North Korea conducted its fourth nuclear test in January and followed that with a satellite launch and test launches of various missiles.

Japan put its military alert on Monday for a possible North Korean ballistic missile launch.

"We have no reports of any damage in Japan. We are gathering and analyzing data. The defense ministry is prepared to respond to any situation," Japanese Minister of Defense Gen. Nakatani told a media briefing.

"North Korea shows no sign of abandoning the development of nuclear missiles and so we will continue to work closely with the US and South Korea in response and maintain a close watch on North Korea," Nakatani said.

South Korea's Yonhap News Agency said it appeared North Korea had attempted to launch an intermediate-range Musudan missile. North Korea attempted three test launches of the Musudan in April, all of which failed, US and South Korean officials have said.

Yonhap quoted a South Korean government source as saying the missile was likely to have exploded at about the time it lifted off from a mobile launcher.

The flurry of weapons technology tests this year came in the run-up to the first congress in 36 years of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party early this month, where young leader Kim Jong-un further consolidated his control.

Tuesday's attempted launch appears to have been its first missile test since then, and experts have said it was unusual to test-fire a missile so soon after a previous failure.

The South Korean military said Pyongyang's continuous missile launches could stem from Kim's order in March for further tests of nuclear warheads and ballistic missiles.

"They must've been in a rush. Maybe Kim Jong-un was very upset about the failures," said Lee Choon-geun, senior research fellow at South Korea's state-run Science and Technology Policy Institute.

Repeated Failures

North Korea has never had a successful launch of the Musudan missile, which theoretically has the range to reach any part of Japan and the US territory of Guam.

North Korea is believed to have roughly 20 to 30 Musudan missiles, according to South Korean media, which officials said were first deployed in around 2007.

"It could have cracks and something wrong with the welding," Lee said of possible causes for the latest failure. "But deployment before test-firing these to complete development seems unusual."

The attempted launch took place near the east coast city of Wonson, one of the South Korean officials said, the same area where previous Musudan tests had taken place.

Separately, Japan's Kyodo news agency reported on Tuesday that career diplomat Ri Su-yong, one of North Korea's highest-profile officials, would visit China on Tuesday.

There was no indication of any link between the latest failed missile launch and Ri's visit to China.

China is reclusive North Korea's only major ally but has been angered by Pyongyang's nuclear and missile tests and signed up to tough UN sanctions against the reclusive country.

Ri was North Korea's foreign minister until he was named a member of the politburo during the recent Workers' Party congress.

The post South Korea: Attempted North Korea Missile Launch Fails appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Big Cats Removed From Thailand’s Infamous Tiger Temple

Posted: 30 May 2016 10:10 PM PDT

A tiger yawns before the officials start moving them from Thailand's controversial Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi province, west of Bangkok, on May 30, 2016. (Photo: Reuters)

A tiger yawns before the officials start moving them from Thailand's controversial Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi province, west of Bangkok, on May 30, 2016. (Photo: Reuters)

KANCHANABURI, Thailand — Wildlife authorities in Thailand on Monday raided a Buddhist temple where tigers are kept, taking away three of the animals and vowing to confiscate scores more in response to global pressure over wildlife trafficking.

The Buddhist temple in Kanchanaburi province west of Bangkok has more than 100 tigers and has become a tourist destination where visitors take selfies with tigers and bottle-feed their cubs.

The temple promotes itself as a wildlife sanctuary, but in recent years it has been investigated for suspected links to wildlife trafficking and animal abuse.

Wildlife activists have accused the temple's monks of illegally breeding tigers, while some visitors have said the animals can appear drugged. The temple denies the accusations.

Monday's raid was the latest move by authorities in a tug-of-war since 2001 to bring the tigers under state control.

Adisorn Nuchdamrong, deputy director-general of the Department of National Parks, said the team had been able to confiscate the tigers thanks to a warrant obtained a few hours before the operation.

"We have a court warrant this time, unlike previous times, when we only asked for the temple's cooperation, which did not work," Adisorn told Reuters.

"International pressure concerning illegal wildlife trafficking is also part of why we're acting now."

Officials from the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation said they planned to confiscate and remove more tigers from the temple on Tuesday and send them to a state-owned sanctuary.

Previous attempts to inspect the tigers have largely been blocked by the temple's abbots but in January and February wildlife officials removed 10 of the tigers.

Thailand has long been a hub for the illicit trafficking of wildlife and forest products, including ivory. Exotic birds, mammals and reptiles, some of them endangered species, can often be found on sale in markets.

The government introduced new animal welfare laws in 2015 aimed at curbing animal abuse, but activists accuse authorities of not enforcing the legislation properly.

The post Big Cats Removed From Thailand's Infamous Tiger Temple appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Ten Things to Do in Rangoon This Week (May 30)

Posted: 30 May 2016 06:00 PM PDT

tenThe Irrawaddy picks 10 interesting events happening in Rangoon this week.

Sports

Football copyAYA Bank Cup 2016

Organized by Ayeyarwady Bank, Burma will host three other countries for a football tournament early next month. Participating teams are from Burma, Hong Kong, Vietnam and Singapore.  All four matches will be aired live on MRTV-4 and MRTV. Ticket prices are 1,000 kyats (US$0.84) and 3,000 kyats. On June 3, Hong Kong will play against Vietnam at 3 pm and Burma takes on Singapore at 6 pm. The third place match will be at 3 pm and the final at 6 pm on June 6.

Tickets are available at Thuwunna Stadium, Aung San Stadium, Padonma Stadium and AYA Bank branches during office hours. Tickets can also be reserved online here.

Where: Thuwanna Stadium, Wai Za Yan Tar Rd, Thingangyun Tsp

When:  Friday, June 3 and Monday, June 6


Boxing

boxingA boxing competition, "Challenges of the Lethwei Warriors," will be held at Thein Phyu Stadium.

Where: Thein Phyu Stadium, Rangoon

When: Sunday, June 5 (starts at 2 pm)


Commerce

SalesShopping Spree in Thaketa

The online marketplace shop.com.mm will organize pre-monsoon sales at Capital Hyper Market in Dawbon, Taketa Township. Laptops and computer accessories, handsets, cosmetics, clothes and fashion products will be sold at discounts and there will be a prize drawing.

Where: Capital Hyper Market, Dawbon, Thaketa Tsp.

When: Saturday and Sunday, June 4-5 (9 am to 7 pm)


LatteMyanmar Latte Championship 2016

At the Food & Hotel Myanmar 2016 Exhibition, Golden Brown Coffee Company will celebrate the Myanmar Latte Art Championship.

Coffee baristas from around Burma can attend and will have a chance to enter the worldwide Barista Championship.

Where: Myanmar Event Park (MEP), Shin Saw Pu Street, Sanchaung Tsp.

Hotline:  09260694673, 01570017

When: Wednesday, June 1 to Friday, June 3 (9 am to 6 pm)


Dance

Dance'Dance for Yourself'

"Dance for Yourself" is being organized by No Lights No Lycra, a dance community that was started in Melbourne in 2009. According to the group: "There is no light, no lycra, no teacher, no steps to learn, no technique, just free movement. NLNL is a space where you can completely let go, shake out the stresses of the week, and lose yourself in the music and the physicality of your body."  Open to all with a suggested 5,000 kyats donation.

Where: Goethe Villa Yangon, No.8, Koh Min Koh Chin Road, Bahan Tsp.

When:  Wednesday, June 1 (7:00 pm to 8:00 pm)


Art

Zaw Ye'Blending Colors in Urban'

Zwe Yan Naing will have his fifth solo exhibition, "Blending Colors in Urban," at Gallery 65. There will be a total of 25 works, whose prices range between $800 and $1,200.

Where: Gallery 65, Yaw Min Gyi Street, Dagon Tsp.

When: Saturday, June 4 to Tuesday, June 7 (10:00 am to 6:00 pm)


Desk'Dark Side'

Ko Ko Naing and Letje Preel will hold an arts exhibition entitled "Dark Side." A total of 18 works will be showcased at the show and the prices range between $500 and $1,100.

Where: Nawaday Tharlar Art Gallery at Room No. 304, 20/B, Yaw Min Gyi Road, Dagon Tsp. Tel: 09-43097918

When: Friday, May 27 to Thursday, June 2


hunting'Hunting'

Ohn Khine Zine (OKZ) will have his second solo exhibit at Ahla Thit Gallery. The exhibition, "Hunting," will showcase 50 paintings whose prices range between $150 and $1,000.

Where: Ahla Thit Gallery, No. 17, University Avenue Road, Bahan Tsp. Tel: 09-5161173

When: Saturday, June 4 to Sunday, June 12


Thar Maw'Tharmaw Wai Si Ngwe Taung Pyi'

An art exhibition titled "Tharmaw Wai Si Ngwe Taung Pyi" (literally, "the pleasant development of Karenni State) will be held at Hninzi Myaing Art Gallery. A total of 88 works from nine artists will be showcased, and prices range between $100 and $3,000.

Where: Hninzi Myaing Art Gallery, Hninzigone Home for the Aged, Bahan Tsp.

When: Sunday, May 29 to Thursday, June 2 (9:00 am to 5:00 pm)


Khin Maung Yin'Kin Maung Yin's Kin Maung Yin'

To commemorate the two year anniversary of the death of artist Khin Maung Yin, a memorial art exhibition titled "Kin Maung Yin's Kin Maung Yin" will be held at Peace Gallery. More than 20 works of one of three second-line leaders of modern arts in Burma will be exhibited at the show and some works will be on sale.

Where: Peace Gallery, No. 352/366, Room 10, 2nd Floor, Mahabandoola Park Street, Upper Block, Kyauktada Tsp. Tel: 09-5050641 

When: Saturday June 4 to Friday June 10

 

The post Ten Things to Do in Rangoon This Week (May 30) appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

National News

National News


As USDP preps for comeback, expelled members threaten action

Posted: 31 May 2016 12:30 AM PDT

Ousted senior officials from the Union Solidarity and Development Party are threatening to take their feud to the election commission if their request for a party conference is not heeded.

Toxic waste debated in Ayeyarwady Hluttaw

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:30 PM PDT

River pollution was discussed in the Ayeyarwady Region parliament yesterday, with one MP alleging that industrial waste from nearby factories is contaminating the water.

Collapsed drainage canal wall to be rebuilt

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Yangon City Development Committee is repairing a retaining wall in Sanchaung township that collapsed due to heavy rainfall on May 22 and put nearby residential buildings at risk.

Vendors support rebuilding market

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:30 PM PDT

In a narrow victory, vendors thrown out of work by the blaze that destroyed Mandalay's Mingalar Market have voted to replace the damaged building rather than try to repair it. The vote between the two options took place following a sometimes fractious debate over the best way to proceed after last March's disastrous fire.

UEC starts voter list corrections in Kyauktada

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Kyauktada township in Yangon will be used as a testing ground for correcting the 2015 voter list, the Union Election Commission said.

Hsipaw IDPs protest fighting

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Over 100 refugees displaced by ongoing fighting gathered in Thibaw/Hsipaw township yesterday to protest the clashes that have kept them from returning to their homes.

New record drug bust in Mandalay

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Two drug kingpins suspected of masterminding major smuggling operations via Muse border gate are still on the run, police said yesterday. On May 28, Muse and Kutkai police seized US$42 million-worth of methamphetamine (yaba) on the Kutkai-Kaung Khar road in Muse, according to state-owned media.

Mandalay to build emergency road sites

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Emergency treatment centres are urgently needed on car-accident-prone roadways, a charity group told Mandalay Region Chief Minister U Zaw Myint Maung.

Agriculture ministry pledges to bring 24-hour water supply to villages

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:30 PM PDT

The government has launched a project to bring water to every village in the country through a 24-hour supply system. Rural development department director general U Khant Zaw told the media on May 26 that the agriculture ministry was already spending K25-30 billion every year on water purification for drought-stricken villages.

Shan Herald Agency for News

Shan Herald Agency for News


Govt peace mission coming to Chiangmai

Posted: 30 May 2016 11:18 PM PDT

A 4 men team to hold peace talks with ethnic armed organizations (EAOs) yet to sign the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) will be arriving in Chiangmai on a 3-day mission, 2-4 June, according to government and rebel sources.
Aung San Suu Kyi and U Thin Myo Win
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and Dr Tin Myo Win (Source: globalnewlightofmyanmar.com)
The team will be headed by Dr Tin Myo Win, the new chief negotiator appointed by State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi. Members will include U Hla Maung Shwe, Secretary of the newly formed 21st Century Panglong Conference Preparatory Committee and former special advisor to the now defunct Myanmar Peace Center (MPC), Lt-Gen (ret) Khin Zaw Oo, and an unnamed member of the Preparatory Committee.
The 12 person Delegation for Political Negotiations (DPN) formed by the 11-member EAO alliance, United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC) will be holding an ad hoc meeting on 1-2 June in preparation for the negotiations, said a UNFC member.
"Some of us are suspicious of the latest move and are demanding official credentials from the mission," he added. U Hla Maung Shwe, interviewed by SHAN, confirmed the matter, saying, "For the sake of peace, we are accommodating their wishes, although we had never done this during the previous government's tenure," he said.
Hkun Okker, Patron of the PaO National Liberation Organization (PNLO), a signatory to the NCA, yesterday urged the DPN not to spurn this latest offer from the government headed by Aung San Suu Kyi. "The question is not about who are coming," he said. "It's about who's sending them."
To which the UNFC source retorted, "We are only trying to make sure about that."
Hkun Okker told SHAN the rejection by three EAOs (AA, MNDAA and TNLA) of the overtures made by a government delegation to hold informal talks earlier this month, was an ill-advised one. "This should not be repeated," he said.
The purpose of the visit, according to sources, is to invite the non-EAOs to participate in the Framework for Political Dialogue (FPD) revision meeting to be held sometime in June. "Following their agreement with the revised FPD, they will be invited to sign the NCA, prior to participation in the upcoming 21st Century Panglong," said Hla Maung Shwe." As most of them had taken part in the NCA negotiations, we hope the NCA would not prove a serious obstacle."
The UNFC meeting in March reportedly discussed amendment proposal to the NCA, which was ratified by the Parliament on 8 December 2015. It remains a question whether the government would agree to new changes in the text. "The amendments proposed by them, however, may become part of the meeting decisions, which collectively constitute an integral part of the NCA," explained Hla Maung Shwe.
Article 30 of the NCA reads:
We agree that, in consultation with each other, decisions contained in the agreed meeting minutes during negotiations for the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement shall be referred to (and part and parcel of, according to the text in Burmese) in the implementation of the Agreement.

To Hopeland and Back: The 20th trip

Posted: 30 May 2016 09:32 PM PDT

Day Two. Tuesday, 24 May 2016
When no credit is taken
Accomplishment endures.
Tao Te Ching (Book of The Way and its Derivative), Chapter Two
I don't have much to say about today. We have 3 meetings, all about pure academic and technical matters
karl-marx-political-cartoonEven so, information on current political situation keeps turning up, and here are some of them:
  • Already, there are signs of fallout between those who want to follow the NCA "to the latter" and those who are more for its "spirit" than the letter among the peacemakers on both sides. Some of the former are said to be even against the "21st Century Panglong Conference," not because they are against the Panglong Spirit (the term adopted by the NCA), but because the NCA mentions only "Union Peace Conference," nothing about the 21st Panglong Conference.
(I thought later that maybe we're just being human beings to have different and opposing interpretations of a dogma all have agreed upon. Just take a look at Communism's "dogmatists" and "revisionists," Islam's "Sunni" and "Shia," Buddhism's "Theravada" and "Mahayana," Christianity's "Roman Catholic" and "Protestant," and so on. Examples seem to be endless.)
  • One of the results is the increasing distrust among the three main stakeholders: the military suspects the EAOs might join hands together with the NLD against it, while the EAOs suspect the military, being Burmans, may ally itself with the NLD against them
  • Still there are others who say the object of forming a 21st Century Panglong Conference Preparatory Committee is only to invite the non-signatories of the NCA to attend its meetings and have a say in revising the Framework for Political Dialogue (FPD). After they have agreed on the FPD, then they will be invited to sign the NCA before they are allowed to participate in 21st Century Panglong.
  • As for the 3 other non-signatories, the military's demand is two told:
  1. Issue a statement that they have abandoned the armed struggle
  2. Have their arms locked stock and barrel on the border under supervision of border authorities concerned
Well, I hope both sides come to a mutually acceptable agreement when they meet next month.

Monday, May 30, 2016

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


News Agency Denounces Nationalist Monks For Obstructing Reporter

Posted: 30 May 2016 07:38 AM PDT

One of the photographs of a Rangoon hotel porter in the dress of Bagan-era royalty, which has stirred nationalist outrage online. (Photo: Facebook)

One of the photographs of a Rangoon hotel porter in the dress of Bagan-era royalty, which has stirred nationalist outrage online. (Photo: Facebook)

RANGOON — In what it has called an assault on press freedom, Burmese news agency Myanmar Cable News has publicly condemned the Myanmar Patriotic Monks Union, one of several hardline Buddhist nationalist groups in Burma, for allegedly obstructing and intimidating one of its junior reporters.

The reporter was covering a meeting between the monk's union and the management of the luxury Sedona Hotel in Rangoon. According to the news agency's statement issued on Monday, members of the monk's union stopped the reporter from filming the meeting, and attempted to delete the footage taken, even though the news agency had obtained permission from the hotel to film the meeting.

The meeting was held in response to a recent controversy, after photographs were circulated on social media last week of a porter at the hotel receiving guests, and carrying their baggage, while dressed in a supposed royal costume from the Bagan era.

The Bagan Kingdom was founded by King Anawratha in Burma's central dry zone and flourished between the 11th and 13th centuries.

The photographs prompted outrage from some Burmese Buddhist conservatives, which has been channeled by the Myanmar Patriotic Monk's Union, who complained directly to the hotel.

Burma's most prominent Buddhist nationalist group, the Association for the Protection of Race and Religion (known popularly by the Burmese-language acronym "Ma Ba Tha"), which is led by monks, issued a statement on Friday. The statement denounced it as an insult to the "dignity of the country" that a hotel porter, who occupies one of the most menial positions within the hierarchy of a luxury hotel, should be dressed in the costume of Burma's "ancient heroes."

The news agency's statement was also addressed to the office of State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi, the President's Office, the Ministry of Culture and Religious Affairs, the State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee (which regulates Burma's monkhood), and the Press Council. The statement condemned the behavior of the Patriotic Monks Union as an assault on press freedom, and demanded that action be taken against them.

Sensitivities over Burmese Buddhist identity have sharpened in recent years, alongside a rapid expansion of both conventional and social media—the latter aided by a dramatic rollout of internet connectivity, linked primarily to the mobile phone network, across the previously isolated country. Much of the Buddhist nationalist rhetoric since 2012 has focused on stigmatizing Muslims as an existential threat to Buddhism in Burma.

However, this is the first time that Buddhist nationalist outrage has been directed at a seemingly secular subject: the attire of medieval Burmese royalty.

In 2014, New Zealand national Philip Blackwood was arrested and later imprisoned for his alleged role in posting an image of the Buddha wearing headphones on a Facebook page promoting a cheap drinks night at the Rangoon bar he was managing. He was released as part of an amnesty for 102 prisoners announced by outgoing President Thein Sein in January, after a year spent in Rangoon's Insein prison.

In June 2015, National League for Democracy (NLD) information officer Htin Lin Oo was handed a prison sentence for "outraging" and "wounding" religious feelings (in accordance with provisions of Burma's colonial-era Penal Code) after delivering a public speech criticizing Buddhist ultra-nationalist groups in October 2014.

The post News Agency Denounces Nationalist Monks For Obstructing Reporter appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

USDP Domestic Squabble Heats Up as Shwe Mann Wins Support

Posted: 30 May 2016 06:11 AM PDT

Former USDP central executive committee member Zaw Myint Pe talks to the media on Monday in Naypyidaw. (Photo: Thiha / The Irrawaddy)

Former USDP central executive committee member Zaw Myint Pe talks to the media on Monday in Naypyidaw. (Photo: Thiha / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — While Burma's former ruling party chairman has vowed to achieve success in the next election, current and former senior members of the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) have sent an open letter to the party chief to review actions that they claim were not in accordance with internal rules.

On Monday, 12 current and former USDP members, including five sitting and six previous central executive committee members, sent an open letter addressed to the party chairman, ex-President Thein Sein, all other USDP members and the public, stating: "This issue is related to the state and to justice, the rule of law, the flourishing of democracy and the people's safety, despite the fact it seems to be a matter of the party's internal affairs."

All 12 members who signed the open letter are now members of the Union Parliament's Legal Affairs and Special Cases Assessment Commission, led by former USDP chairman Shwe Mann.

Among the signatories, five senior members were kicked out of the USDP in April along with Shwe Mann and current Religious Affairs and Culture Minister Aung Ko.

After the purge, Shwe Mann also questioned the legality of the ouster.

Monday's letter also asserts that a midnight raid on the party's headquarters in Naypyidaw in August last year followed by the replacement of some central executive committee members were actions that were not in accordance with the party's existing by-laws.

"Despite the party's rules that state that any member has the right to defend himself or herself with a representative when accused, the purges on August 13 last year and April 22 this year were carried out without any knowledge of those affected. Further, they had no chance to defend themselves," the letter said.

Zaw Myint Pe, an ex-central committee member and now a member of the Legal Affairs and Special Cases Assessment Commission, told The Irrawaddy on Monday that the signatories sent the letter because they wanted people to know that "the USDP needs to address these problems."

"Now they are talking about achieving success in the next election. But we are afraid that the party will be in disarray," he said.

The USDP was trounced by the National League for Democracy (NLD) in last November's general election.

When asked about Shwe Mann's public attempts to raise the matter of his and his colleagues' ouster, Zaw Myint Pe said the ousted party chairman was in solidarity with them.

"We are all of the same opinion."

He added that he still hadn't received any official explanation about his expulsion from the party and speculated that he might be regarded as a "traitor" because he joined Shwe Mann's commission.

"I was kicked out because I am close to U Shwe Mann. But the [Legal Affairs and Special Cases] Commission was not formed by the National League for Democracy but rather by the Union Parliament."

The post USDP Domestic Squabble Heats Up as Shwe Mann Wins Support appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Peace Negotiator to Meet NCA Non-Signatories

Posted: 30 May 2016 06:08 AM PDT

UPDJC meeting in Naypyidaw last week. (Photo: Thiha Lwin / The Irrawaddy)

UPDJC meeting in Naypyidaw last week. (Photo: Thiha Lwin / The Irrawaddy)

Government peace negotiator Dr. Tin Myo Win will meet with leaders of the ethnic armed organizations that did not sign 2015's so-called nationwide ceasefire agreement (NCA) later this week in an effort to include them in the peace dialogue process.

A "Panglong-style" peace conference is scheduled to convene in July and the current National League for Democracy (NLD)-led government has been unclear as to which groups will be invited. Modeled after a 1947 summit convened in Panglong, Shan State by independence leader Aung San, the subsequent agreement signed between representatives of three of Burma's ethnic minorities and the Burman majority has come to be seen by many as a rare symbol of inclusivity and interethnic cooperation in a country since plagued by civil war.

"We'd like to meet with every group, to include them in the process, if possible," said Hla Maung Shwe, a member of the conference preparation committee and senior advisor to the Myanmar Peace Center, which oversaw the NCA. He added that Tin Myo Win wanted to meet with non-signatories as soon as possible, with whom Hla Maung Shwe and other representatives have been tasked with negotiating.

Continued active fighting throughout Burma has made it unclear whether groups that are currently clashing with the Burma Army will be included in the dialogue process. The Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) and Arakan Army (AA) had all been excluded from talks by the previous government.

The NLD government has formed two sub-committees, one led by Tin Myo Win—personal physician to State Counselor and NLD party leader Aung San Suu Kyi—to negotiate with NCA non-signatories, and another led by Lt-Gen Yar Pyae of the Burma Army to take care of preparations for the conference.

These committees are part of the overarching Union Peace Dialogue Joint Commission (UPDJC), whose 48 members from Parliament, the Burma Army and the eight non-state NCA signatories are tasked with drafting the framework for political dialogue.

UPDJC chairwoman Suu Kyi said the peace conference would follow the foundation laid out by the former administration and be based on the current NCA, even though she has restricted some political parties from the process.

Burma has over 90 political parties and under the former government, UPDJC representatives could be selected from all of them. Suu Kyi has said that new representatives will only come from parties that hold elected seats in Parliament, while other parties will be able to voice their concerns through civil society forums.

"Some countries allow civil society groups to sit at the peace table, but others allow them to play a parallel role and express their concerns through forums. We will use the latter approach," she said, adding that involving hundreds of civil society groups in peace negotiations would affect implementation of the process.

The post Peace Negotiator to Meet NCA Non-Signatories appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Parallels Drawn Between Ranong Murder, Koh Tao Case        

Posted: 30 May 2016 05:21 AM PDT

Burmese migrant workers suspected of murder during a crime re-enactment in the southern Thai border town of Ranong on Oct. 27. (Photo: Foundation for Education and Development)

Burmese migrant workers suspected of murder during a crime re-enactment in the southern Thai border town of Ranong on Oct. 27. (Photo: Foundation for Education and Development)

RANGOON — Htoo Chit, executive director of the Foundation for Education and Development (FED), argued at a press conference on Monday that four Burmese migrant workers are being scapegoated in a case he says smacks of the high-profile Koh Tao double murder that saw two Burmese men controversially convicted and sentenced to death.

Orawee Sampaotong, a 17-year-old Thai high school student, was killed on Sept. 28 in Thailand's Ranong province, which borders Burma. Police allegedly found no leads in the case after investigating for nearly a month, but on Oct. 20, four Burmese migrant workers—Kyaw Soe Win, Moe Zin Aung, Sein Ka Tone and Wai Lin—were arrested near Kuraburi seaport, located more than 60 miles from Ranong province, Htoo Chit said.

A year before, in September 2014, two British backpackers were murdered on the Thai island of Koh Tao. A pair of Burmese migrant workers were eventually arrested by police and, on Dec. 24 of last year, sentenced to death by a court in Koh Samui, despite vocal claims of malfeasance in investigators' handling of the evidence and police conduct in their interrogations of the suspects.

Htoo Chit said he believed this most recent murder investigation was meant to "trap" the migrant workers as some say was done in the Koh Tao case, citing holes in the investigation.

For instance, although police say they found several scars on Moe Zin Aung's face allegedly made by scratches from the victim, Htoo Chit said that, according to the suspect's family, the scars were the result of injuries from a bicycle accident a week prior to his detention.

The suspects' employer has also sought to prove his workers' innocence, saying the victim was killed around 9 pm on Sept. 28, but that his employees were still working at his fish factory close to the time of the murder, at 8 pm. However, after examining CCTV footage, Ranong police said there was no evidence that the men were at work at that time.

According to a report released by FED at the press conference in Rangoon, the employer said that he was "surprised" that his employees had "disappeared from the CCTV footage" after police took it from him because, he claims, he had seen the four migrants on the footage "with [his] own eyes."

The four suspects are currently being held in different prisons. FED intends to deliver documents and reports to Thai authorities and to the Myanmar Human Rights Commission, the Ministry of Labor, Immigration and Population, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the latter headed by Aung San Suu Kyi.

According to Htoo Chit, who estimates that there are more than 1,000 Burmese migrant workers in Thai prisons, 29 people are willing to testify on behalf of the four suspects.

The post Parallels Drawn Between Ranong Murder, Koh Tao Case         appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Police Pursue Drug Traffickers After Big Bust in Shan State

Posted: 30 May 2016 05:13 AM PDT

Record drug seizure in Kutkai Township on May 28. (Photo: Thant Zin Hlaing / Facebook)

Record drug seizure in Kutkai Township on May 28. (Photo: Thant Zin Hlaing / Facebook)

Two suspected criminals associated with a record seizure of 42.1 billion kyats (US$35.5 million) worth of drugs in a village in Shan State's Kutkai Township are still at large, said the Kutkai Township Police Force.

A local drug enforcement squad seized over 21 million yaba pills, or methamphetamine,  worth 42.1 billion kyats from a 12-wheel semi-truck on May 28 en route from Kaung Kha, in Muse Township, to Kutkai. Aung Aung, the driver, was arrested.

One of the criminals, Liu Zhi Xiao, is a fugitive and is wanted by police for over 36 billion kyats (US$30.2 million) worth drugs seized on May 5 in Mandalay, according to the Burma Police Force.

"We're still interrogating the driver," police officer Ye Myint Thu of the Kutkai Township Police Force told The Irrawaddy.

The police believe this bust was part of the same drug trafficking ring that was caught with 600,000 yaba pills on March 3 in Rangoon.

"Drugs are readily available in some places here. Previously, drug deals were done in the countryside. But now, they're done out in the open on some city streets," said a Kutkai local who did not want to be named.

Rangoon police made the country's largest ever seizure of narcotics in July last year, seizing 2.67 tonnes of methamphetamine tablets worth 133 billion kyats (nearly US$111.6 million) from a truck in Mingaladon Township in the outskirts of the former capital.

Translated from Burmese by Thet Ko Ko.

The post Police Pursue Drug Traffickers After Big Bust in Shan State appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Sweden Lends Women of Burma Its Support

Posted: 30 May 2016 04:52 AM PDT

 Women and children take shelter as they flee fighting in Burma's Kachin State. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

Women and children take shelter as they flee fighting in Burma's Kachin State. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

STOCKHOLM, Sweden — The Swedish government says women in Burma can count on its support in furthering gender equality and protecting them from violence over the next four years.

Under Sweden's recently adopted National Action Plan for 2016-20, Burma has been identified as one of 12 specially prioritized conflict or post-conflict countries struggling to implement UN Security Council Resolution 1325 and subsequent resolutions on Women, Peace and Security.

With Burma home to the world's longest-running ongoing armed conflict, Burmese women have suffered sexual violence and other forms of abuse in conflict-affected areas for decades. In the country's ongoing peace process, women have largely been excluded from participation, and women's rights advocates say the few women who are officially involved in negotiations are not accorded the same voice as their male counterparts.

The action plan adopted earlier this month is mainly focused on strengthening women's participation in the country's peace process and state-building, and protecting them from harm. Efforts will be underpinned by the crux of the UN Security Council Resolution 1325: Passed in 2000, it highlights "the important role of women in the prevention and resolution of conflicts, peace negotiations, peace-building, peacekeeping, humanitarian response and in post-conflict reconstruction and stresses the importance of their equal participation and full involvement in all efforts for the maintenance and promotion of peace and security."

The structure of the action plan emphasizes approaching issues of Women, Peace and Security from a gendered perspective.

"We have decided to prioritize the works in focused countries," Disa Kammars Larsson from Kvinna till Kvinna, a Swedish foundation focused on peace and gender equality that was involved in drawing up and implementing the action plan, told The Irrawaddy.

She said that unlike Sweden's previous two National Action Plans, the 2016-20 iteration has much stronger "political ownership," with the inclusion of the Swedish Foreign Ministry in implementation of the plan allowing it the opportunity to better wield influence with Burma and the other targeted countries with respect to women's rights.

"It clearly included political dialogue; that if Swedish diplomats and ministers visit to the focus countries, he or she has a responsibility to raise this issue and the Swedish Embassy in the country has the responsibility to report back to Sweden annually on the situation."

The National Action Plan would require regular consultation with women's rights defenders on the ground in Burma, she added.

Thandar Oo, a women's rights and peace activist from Shan State, urged the international community to support women's advocates working at the grassroots level to enhance these activists' capacity to increase women's participation in all realms of society.

Under the action plan, Burma is joined by Afghanistan in Asia; Iraq, Palestine and Syria in the Middle East; Colombia in Latin America; the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Mali and Somalia in Africa; and Bosnia-Herzegovina and Ukraine in Europe, as priority nations.

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Depayin, 13 Years Later: ‘To Kill and Mutilate Was Their Purpose’

Posted: 30 May 2016 02:38 AM PDT

Victims of the Depayin massacre and other activists gather in the village of Kyi, site of the killings in Sagaing Division, on May 30, 2013, to mark the 10-year anniversary of the attack. (Photo: Kyaw Soe)

Victims of the Depayin massacre and other activists gather in the village of Kyi, site of the killings in Sagaing Division, on May 30, 2013, to mark the 10-year anniversary of the attack. (Photo: Kyaw Soe)

Monday marks the 13th anniversary of the notorious Depayin Massacre. On May 30, 2003, at least 70 people were killed after a mob directed by elements of Burma's former military regime attacked a National League for Democracy (NLD) convoy, which included pro-democracy leader and current State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi, traveling through Sagaing Division in northwest Burma.

No action has been taken against the perpetrators to date. The Union Solidarity and Development Association (USDA)—the military-backed mass organization that would later transform into the Union Solidary and Development Party (USDP)—is said to have been implicated in the massacre.

In this interview published June 13, 2003, Zaw Zaw Aung—a survivor of the massacre who was head of the NLD's youth wing for Mandalay Division at the time, and was part of the NLD convoy—describes the incident.

How many people greeted the NLD motorcade at Kyi village? Did you hear any opposition voices in the crowd that came to welcome you?

I estimate about 3,000. It could have been 4,000 or 5,000. People were on the road, and we spoke to them. I did not hear any opposition voices.

So Suu Kyu addressed the people, for how long?

About 10 minutes.

Where did you go after Kyi village?

We did not go very far. About 200 feet from the villagers. The cars behind had not caught up with us yet. We could see the villagers and they had not dispersed. Then, two monks and three laymen stood in front of Suu Kyi's car, stopping it from proceeding. They asked Suu Kyi to speak to the people.

They were not where the other people had assembled?

They could have joined them if they wanted. Instead, they stood and waited at a distance.

Stood and waited, then asked for a speech?

Yes, they asked her to step out and speak. It was late. We had to go on to Depayin also. So, the NLD member who was in Suu Kyi's car said 'Honorable monk, it is very late and there is no time. Please excuse your disciples.' But the monks did not leave.

They were looking back and said, 'The people in our gang are useless.' We got out of the car and stood around to protect Suu Kyi. Then the monk said 'My people will be following up. Listen to a monk's words. Try your best to preach to them.' We requested them to let us pass but they insisted that we stay. Then, the place was lit up by car headlights and we saw about seven cars.

What sort of cars?

All sorts. Trucks that carry goods and earth, Dina cars. People descended from those cars and without saying anything they beat up the villagers. Because the headlights were on we could see all that was happening. There were a lot of monks who did the beating up. A lot of [lay] men too.

So monks came out of those cars?

When people were being beaten up some of the villagers screamed and fled. They were chased by some of the monks. Others came around to our side, surrounded us and without saying anything just thrashed at us. We noticed that these monks had pieces of white cloth tied around their right hands.

Can we accept them as genuine monks?

How can that be? When they beat up the villagers and our party who were acting peacefully? We heard and we saw for ourselves how they continued thrashing even those who were dead on the ground. Innocent people were beaten to death. Genuine monks will not do that.

So, they beat up the villagers first, then went between the villagers and the NLD party and proceeded to beat them up?

Yes, they beat up NLD members. The villagers fled and some could have fallen in with the NLD members. Our numbers were small. But whether our numbers were small or large, no one had any weapons. Our leaders gave strict instructions that even if attacked we were not to respond with violence.

So they continued to brutally beat up all the NLD members who were in the motorcade?

To kill and mutilate was their purpose. So much so that if they saw a body moving they went for it saying, 'There is still sign of life—beat, beat.' Not with just one stick. They went through the crowd with two or three sticks in hand and thrashed at fallen bodies.

They responded to groans or pleas for mercy with more severe thrashings. At that time we were very afraid for our lives. So we lay very still and did not move. At that time these were the words they uttered: 'We have built roads, we have built bridges. You do not talk about these things. What has your Aung San Suu Kyi done for the country? You want to be under the authority of the Kala's [foreigner's] wife.'

What about Suu Kyi's car?

Very soon after all this started, five cars—including Suu Kyi's and U Tin Oo's vehicle—drove off to the front. The Youth Wing security car and our Mandalay Division car did too.

So they escaped from Kyi village and you were left behind? And the beatings took place for how long after they had driven off?

More than two hours.

We have heard that women also accompanied Suu Kyi. What happened to them?

Yes, the women wore pinni [home spun material associated with Burma's independence struggle and later the NLD]. The men also wore pinni. They [the thugs] announced that they did not want to see any pinni and ordered all to remove their pinni clothing. They snatched and pulled off the pinni clothing from the fallen bodies and those within their reach.

The girls asked not to have their clothes pulled off but they forced them and grabbed and tugged and removed their clothes. Some of them had their gold chains snatched. I saw this with my own eyes. Not satisfied with this, they grabbed and took away their handbags also.

So Suu Kyi's car got away. Then again at Depayin the same thing happened?

Yes. The young people from Depayin fled and I met them. They were beaten up with spears, wooden, bamboo and iron rods. They saw students with hands tied being led away and having their cycles confiscated.

Our information is that gunshots were heard at Depayin.

Yes. We heard the gunshots. It was between midnight and 1 am. We were deeply worried for our Aunty Suu Kyi and Uncle U Tin Oo. Without any shooting here [in Kyi village] about 20 or so died and sustained injuries. With shooting it could have been worse. More could have died.

How did you escape? After you escaped what did the USDA do?

I was lucky. I escaped without any injury. I fled and crossed the paddy fields to Monywa. Though I was not hurt, I was shaken and very distressed. It was about 10:30 pm [when I returned]. I saw a person on a cycle. Looked like he came to see the spectacle.

He stood and looked at the dead and after some time he departed. Then about 12:45, three Hino buses arrived without any passengers. They saw the injured and fallen, some dead and the line of cars. They turned back and left.

So those injured and the dead were left lying there?

Yes, I saw some being taken away in cars.

In the end what happened?

We were not steady on our feet. I looked on. At about 12:45 am—I had my watch on so I knew the time—members of the police force, the fire brigade, and local authorities put the injured and dead bodies into motor vehicles.

Then what astonished me most was that our car, which was heading west for Depayin, was pushed so that it appeared to be heading south and shoved down the ditch. Another car was pushed into the ditch. This was a deliberate act to fabricate a different scenario. I witnessed this with my own eyes.

To make it look like two cars collided? These were the cars in which NLD members traveled?

Yes, to appear that way. I couldn't believe my eyes. I remember this very clearly. Then some of the cars with injured people drove off towards Depayin. Some cars went in the other direction. About 30 people remained. I cannot say definitely if they were the police or the USDA members because they all were in the same uniform.

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‘Twilight Over Burma’ Tells Tragic Tale of Austrian Shan Princess

Posted: 30 May 2016 01:23 AM PDT

 German actress Maria Ehsich, center, stars in the film

German actress Maria Ehrich, center, stars in the film "Twilight Over Burma." (Photo: Nyein Nyein / The Irrawaddy)

CHIANG MAI, Thailand — The real-life tale of an Austrian woman who became royalty in Shan State has made it to the big screen in Southeast Asia, with a showing held in Chiang Mai, Thailand, on Saturday.

It took nine years to make "Twilight Over Burma," a film about the former Hsipaw Saopha Sao Kya Seng and his wife, Inge Sargent, which is based on her autobiography, "Twilight Over Burma: My Life as a Shan Princess."

It was released late last year in German and was screened privately with English and Thai subtitles in Thailand twice this month.

Special screenings were held in Chiang Mai, home to a large Shan community, on Saturday night and in Bangkok last Thursday.

Charm Tong, a Shan human rights activist, said: "For me it [the movie] shows the atrocities. This was a very horrible life. [The film] shows the lives of the people in Shan State at that time."

"Chao Inge Sargent, the former Mahadevi of Hsipaw, is still alive, so you can imagine how hard it has been for her whole life," she added, using the Shan word for "princess." "Not only this is her story, it is the story of Shan. This is just one example of what happened in Shan state."

The movie begins in 1948 and covers the early years of Burma's independence up to a few years after the 1962 military coup, revealing not just the conditions of Shan State, but the situation in Burma as a whole.

Sargent's husband, Sao Kya Seng, was a US-educated mining engineer who returned to his home of Hsipaw to assume the role of saopha, a Shan royal title. In her book, Sargent describes her arrival in Rangoon by ship in 1953 and the revelation that her husband was a Shan prince—a fact only revealed when she saw on the docks "hundreds of well-wishers displaying banners, playing homemade musical instruments, carrying bouquets of flowers."

Sao Kya Seng instituted land reforms and promoted democracy, but was arrested by the army during Gen. Ne Win's coup and later killed in prison under mysterious circumstances.

Charm Tong said ethnic minorities in Burma still lack equal rights, and there is no genuine peace or democracy yet in the country, highlighting the Burma Army's recent air strikes and major offensives in northern Shan State.

"In Burma and Shan State, we can still see atrocities and injustice, and also human rights violations [are] still taking place inside Burma," she added.

The Chiang Mai showing was attended by about 100 viewers, including the female lead Maria Ehrich, the Austrian Ambassador to Thailand Enno Drofenik and Kaung San Lwin, the Burmese consul-general in Chiang Mai.

Kaung San Lwin told The Irrawaddy: "Generally speaking, as a movie, it is a good one, which portrayed the tragedy of a Shan prince and his family."

"I hear it will be shown in Burma next month and Burmese audiences are also excited to see it," he added.

The movie is scheduled to have its Burma premier at the annual Human Rights Human Dignity International Film Festival, which will be held from June 14-19 in Naypyidaw and Rangoon.

"Burmese people should watch it to learn more about history, and also those who lived at that time could reflect on the film's historical accuracy," the consul-general said.

Drofenik said his government hopes to have the film shown more widely in Burma and they have been talking to the Burmese Ministry of Culture about it.

Drofenik said supporting a societal consensus and respecting minority rights were "preconditions for a functioning democracy in which all groups in the society are part of the decision making process."

"It is always very interesting for me to hear about the changes in Burma," said Ehrich, the German actress who played the role of Sargent.

She told The Irrawaddy: "For people who do not really know the story, it may seem like … a great, fantastic movie. But I hope [the Burmese people] enjoy the film and I hope things will change."

The post 'Twilight Over Burma' Tells Tragic Tale of Austrian Shan Princess appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Suu Kyi to Visit Thailand in June

Posted: 29 May 2016 10:55 PM PDT

Burma's then opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi smiles at people gathered to meet her at the Mae La refugee camp, near Mae Sot at the Thailand-Burma border, on June 2, 2012. (Photo: Reuters)

Burma's then opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi smiles at people gathered to meet her at the Mae La refugee camp, near Mae Sot at the Thailand-Burma border, on June 2, 2012. (Photo: Reuters)

RANGOON — Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma's state counselor and foreign minister, will visit Thailand in June, according to the President's Office.

Zaw Htay, the office's spokesperson, confirmed that the trip would take place next month but said the exact dates of travel are still being negotiated.

Zaw Htay declined to comment on whether Htin Kyaw, Burma's president, would join Suu Kyi on the trip.

However, inside sources said the trip would be between June 23-25, and that Htin Kyaw would be joining.

In their first trip abroad since the Suu Kyi-led National League for Democracy (NLD) formed a government at the end of March, Htin Kyaw and Suu Kyi flew to Laos in early May. On May 19, Htin Kyaw went to Russia for the 20-year anniversary of the Asean-Russia relationship.

On May 9, Thai Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai visited Burma and met with Suu Kyi and Htin Kyaw, a confidant of the NLD leader who effectively serves as her proxy due to constitutional restrictions barring her from the presidency.

Last week, Burma Army chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing visited Thailand for three days at the invitation of the chief of the Royal Thai Army, Sommai Kaotira. During his visit, Min Aung Hlaing also met with Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and Defense Minister Prawit Wongsuwan.

The neighboring Southeast Asian nations and their citizens have experienced an interesting reversal of political circumstances in recent years. Burma's government has moved haltingly toward more openness and democracy since 2011, brought into stark relief with last year's NLD triumph in an election that swept Suu Kyi to power. Thailand, on the other hand, remains under military rule two years after a military coup saw Prayuth seize the levers of power. Freedoms of press and assembly, as well as other forms of dissent, have been sharply curbed by the Thai junta.

Millions of Burmese have sought work in Thailand over the years, while tens of thousands remain in refugee camps along the countries' shared border, where they fled, some decades ago, from conflict between the Burma Army and ethnic rebel groups, or otherwise sought an escape from oppression under Burma's former military regime.

The post Suu Kyi to Visit Thailand in June appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

After Decades of Fighting, a Onetime No Man’s Land Transforms

Posted: 29 May 2016 10:32 PM PDT

A villager and his child commute by cart in Thaton Township. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

A villager and his child commute by cart in Thaton Township. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

THATON, Mon State — The town of Thaton is located on the highway linking Burma's commercial capital, Rangoon, with the Mon State capital city of Moulmein. When we arrive in a taxi, we are greeted by a muscular man with tattooed arms, who takes us into a liaison office of an ethnic Karen rebel group, the Karen National Union (KNU).

He politely introduces himself, saying he will give us a ride to a base of the KNU's military wing, the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA). The base is home to the KNLA's Brigade 1.

Driving from the KNU office through thick jungle, I see and hear both the good and bad that has resulted from the bilateral ceasefire agreement between the KNU and the previous government in 2012.

The trip to the KNLA base lasts about three or four hours, and we pass small streams, villages, paddy fields, small wooden and concrete bridges, hills, and Burma Army bases, riding on a dusty, bumpy half-finished road.

I see villagers bathing in streams, carrying water, farming, gardening, commuting on foot or by cart, building wooden and bamboo houses, selling snacks and liter-bottles of gasoline.

A newly built road leads to the Karen National Liberation Army Brigade 1 base in Thaton Township, Mon State. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

A newly built road leads to the Karen National Liberation Army Brigade 1 base in Thaton Township, Mon State. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

Surprisingly, some of the villagers are using cell phones, a sign that the telecommunications infrastructure has penetrated deeper into the countryside than I had thought. Some villagers have replaced their carts with motorbikes, and I pass by roads both new and under construction. Some would-be-streets remain dusty and incomplete.

Traveling in an old Toyota truck without air conditioning, we keep the windows open. But clouds of dust occasionally blow in with the fresh air. Sometimes as dust gets inside the truck, we have to cover our noses or close the windows. The bumpy road makes it impossible to nap, and we stay awake the whole trip.

A Burma Army truck comes into sight. The soldiers in the truck are fully armed but some, with their shaved heads, look like teenagers. It is April, and we guess these soldiers are probably returning to duty after shaving their heads and spending time in monasteries during the Burmese New Year, a not uncommon traditional among civilians and, it would seem, soldiers alike.

The soldiers look at us we pass and chatter out of earshot. Some soldiers smile, and I realize that they can clearly see a poster in front of the seat I was in with the words "KNU Thaton Liaison Office."

Min Lwin Mountain where Phyu Min Tun company conducts testing is seen from behind. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

Min Lwin Mountain where Phyu Min Tun company conducts testing is seen from behind. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

Our driver Win Aung tells us that it was not possible to travel in these areas openly before the KNU reached its ceasefire with the Burma Army.

He speeds up and passes the Burma Army truck. He says that driving side by side with a Burma Army truck on this road was unimaginable before the ceasefire between the KNU and previous military-backed government in 2012.

The area was once a no man's land. Frequent clashing between the Burma Army and the KNLA forced more than 3,000 villagers to flee their homes and seek refuge in Thailand. Many claim that at that time the Burma Army engaged in forced labor, forced portering, extortion and other human rights abuses.

Further down the road, a brand new, white heavy-duty Toyota Hilux pickup drives by, and I see the letters UNHCR written on the windshield: the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

I'm curious how a UN refugee agency vehicle could be traveling that deep into KNU territory. Our driver Win Aung says that there are some projects in the area set up by a few nongovernmental organizations, including the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the UNHCR.

A purveyor of petrol fills canisters at a small station in Bilin Township, Mon State. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

A purveyor of petrol fills canisters at a small station in Bilin Township, Mon State. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

He says that a few NGOs built clinics and gave livestock to local villagers. However, the paltry assistance does not meet needs of local villagers, he says, and it is more like a show.

He claims, for instance, the clinics were nicely built, but they are not actively operating. They are closed most of the time, leading the villagers to make a pun in Burmese calling them "closed clinics" rather than "medical delivery center." As you might expect, it's more amusing in the original Burmese.

Win Aung says that another American NGO also promised to provide livestock like goats to villagers who want to raise them. But, later they asked the villagers to participate in a drawing to see who would receive the livestock.

As we travel and chat about life in the one-time no man's land, a beautiful sunset comes into sight and begins to fade. It is dark by the time we finally reach the KNLA base.

In a wooden house running solar-powered lights, soldiers and officials at the KNLA base talk about the old and new days in their territory. On the government's map, the KNLA Brigade 1 territory is in Thaton and Bilin townships in Mon State, a region the KNU recognizes as Doo Tha Htoo District.

Whatever its name, the area is rich in farmland and rubber plantations. Most of the land is flat and has huge potential for business opportunities now that it is just a few hours's drive from big cities like Rangoon, Moulmein, Hpa-an, the capital of Karen State, and the commercial border towns of Myawaddy and Thailand's Mae Sot.

A vendor drives his motorbike village by village to sell vegetables, snacks and ice cream in Thaton Township. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

A vendor drives his motorbike village by village to sell vegetables, snacks and ice cream in Thaton Township. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

After the 2012 ceasefire agreement was signed, the KNLA Brigade 1 units returned here and established its military bases. They only had temporary bases in the old days before the ceasefire was signed. These bases coexist with Burma Army bases in the region.

"We didn't build camps or live in this area in the past because it was a conflict zone. These houses are all newly built," says Saw Min Thein, an official at the KNLA Brigade 1.

A gathering of several wooden houses forms the headquarters of KNLA Brigade 1 and two armed soldiers guard the entrance gate. Soldiers at the base say this region was a shoot-on-sight zone and villagers did not dare to move around.

Nowadays, villagers can freely travel and farm. Telephone networks are operational in some villages and there is even internet access at the Brigade 1 headquarters. More people use motorbikes, cars and trucks than carts. And land prices are going up. Large Burmese conglomerates like Max Myanmar Group and Phyu Min Tun Company are developing rubber plantations and cement factories.

A rubber plantation of 5,000 acres resulted in heated land disputes between locals and Max Myanmar.

Beginning in April 2015, with permission from the KNU, the Phyu Min Tun Company has also conducted tests for mineral extraction at one of the twin picturesque mountains on the main road leading to the KNLA headquarters.

Local villagers are not happy with the tests run on Min Lwin Mountain as it is a sacred symbol for the ethnic Karen inhabitants. They worry the mountain will be destroyed because the company set off explosions during its testing.

Villagers, including some children, hunt for fish and frogs in Thaton Township, Mon State. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

Villagers, including some children, hunt for fish and frogs in Thaton Township, Mon State. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

A KNLA official says gold mining is being carried out in the KNLA Brigade 5 region, near their own territory. Some Chinese companies have gotten involved with KNLA Brigade 5 officials and they are making good money, he says. Businessmen have rushed in to buy farmland while rank-and-file KNU officials and small-scale landholders have divvied up properties to sell.

Pointing to a plot of farmland, Saw Kaw Tha Blay, the KNU's administration officer for Thaton Township, says, "All this land now has owners. Before [the ceasefire] no one dared to live here because there was fighting."

He also said that small-scale landholders tidied up uncultivated lands and demarcated boundaries with others' fields. Businessmen are visiting the region looking for chances to make money.

In short, the no man's land is turning into a land of opportunity.

The post After Decades of Fighting, a Onetime No Man's Land Transforms appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Chinese Detergent Maker Apologizes for ‘Racist’ TV Ad

Posted: 29 May 2016 10:32 PM PDT

  A still from the controversial Qiaobi laundry detergent ad. (Photo: YouTube)

A still from the controversial Qiaobi laundry detergent ad. (Photo: YouTube)

BEIJING — A Chinese detergent maker has apologized for a television advertisement that many in China and around the world called racist, but also blamed the media for causing the public outcry.

In the ad for Qiaobi laundry detergent, a black man wolf-whistles at an attractive Chinese woman, who beckons him over. She then stuffs a packet of detergent in his mouth and shoves him head-first into a washing machine.

A moment later, the woman opens the lid and a fair-skinned Asian man pops out.

State media reported the ad had first appeared in April but went viral after being posted on YouTube last week, where it racked up millions of views within a few days. Some Chinese and foreign internet users condemned it as racist.

"We express our sincere apologies and sincerely hope that the many internet users and the media will not read too much into this," the company said in a statement at the weekend.

The company deleted an online version of the ad in response to the outcry, the state-backed Global Times reported, citing an interview with the firm. However, versions of it could still be seen on Chinese and foreign video platforms, including YouTube, on Monday.

Public discussions of racial discrimination are unusual in China, which is dominated by the ethnic Han majority but is also home to dozens of minority groups as well as a growing influx of foreign residents, including from African countries.

"Even though the people who shot the ad may not have realized it, it really is racist," wrote one user of the popular microblogging platform Weibo. "Those who planned the ad strategy should really have read up first."

The Global Times, a popular tabloid known for its nationalistic op-ed section, said in an editorial on Monday that Western media coverage was "too extreme" and that China had no problems with ethnic discrimination.

"There have been many evils during the development of the West in this era, and racism is one of them," the paper said. "China's social process hasn't been the same experience, so using the same yardstick to measure China's performance will lead to results that are inevitably absurd."

The company that owns the Qiaobi brand, Shanghai Leishang Cosmetics, could not be reached for further comment on Monday.

The post Chinese Detergent Maker Apologizes for 'Racist' TV Ad appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

In Asia Pacific, a Tense Game of Political Brinksmanship 

Posted: 29 May 2016 10:27 PM PDT

Chinese dredging vessels are purportedly seen in the waters around Mischief Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea on May 21, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

Chinese dredging vessels are purportedly seen in the waters around Mischief Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea on May 21, 2015. (Photo: Reuters)

WASHINGTON — American ships and fighter jets maneuvering across the South China Sea and the Sea of Japan represent the "new normal" in US-Pacific relations despite rising tensions with China and Moscow.

US moves in recent months have led to angry protests from China and Russia, which contend the Obama administration is fueling unrest in the Asia Pacific and conducting illegal and unsafe transit in the region. US military leaders defend the operations and say they will continue to exercise freedom of navigation, and may do so more frequently as time goes on.

The escalating rhetoric reflects efforts by China and Russia to show military superiority in an increasingly crowded and competitive part of the world. And it sets up a tense game of political brinksmanship as leaders from the two countries and the United States thrust and parry across the military and diplomatic fields of play.

The military maneuvers have shadowed President Barack Obama's "pivot to Asia," a decision early in his tenure to try to focus the relationship with Pacific partners on economics and trade.

"We're at a moment when China, Iran and Russia are all testing us, engaging in reckless behavior and forcing policy makers with the question of how far we push and when," said Derek Chollet, a former assistant defense secretary for international affairs and now a senior adviser at the German Marshall Fund.

"We're for freedom of navigation and following the rules, and to an extent we are pushing back against changing the rules."

Admiral John Richardson, chief of naval operations, said that for the first time in 25 years, the United States is facing competition for maritime superiority as China and Russia build up their navies.

China's island development in the South China Sea has inflamed regional tensions, including with nations that have competing claims to the land formations. Most fear that Beijing, which has built airfields and placed weapons systems on the man-made islands, will use the construction to extend its military reach and perhaps try to restrict navigation.

Three times in the past seven months, US warships deliberately have sailed close to one of those islands to exercise freedom of navigation and challenge the claims.

In response, China has deployed fighter jets and ships to track and warn off the American ships, and accused the United States of provocative action.

Twice this year, Defense Secretary Ash Carter has flown to US aircraft carriers in the South China Sea with reporters, sending a message that the United States will not cede navigational rights. He plans to return to the area next week for an annual Asian national security conference.

"China has taken some expansive and unprecedented actions in the South China Sea, pressing excessive maritime claims contrary to international law," Carter said Friday during a speech to graduates at the US Naval Academy.

"The result is that China's actions could erect a Great Wall of self-isolation, as countries across the region—allies, partners, and the unaligned—are voicing concerns publicly and privately, at the highest levels."

Similarly, Russian attack planes buzzed a US Navy warship in international waters in the Baltic Sea last month, and last week Moscow lodged a formal protest about a US reconnaissance flight over the Sea of Japan.

The United States says its missions are meant to underscore the rights of the United States and others to traverse the region freely and to block efforts by any nation to unlawfully extend their boundaries or territorial rights.

"To the degree that we could advocate more strongly, we need to do enough of these things so that advocacy is well understood," Richardson said in an Associated Press interview.

"Certainly if you wanted to dial those up in frequency, well I think that we can support that." The United States is establishing "a new normal level of activity or interaction" that comes with Russia's and China's "return to great power competition."

Richardson noted that freedom of navigation operations happen hundreds of times a year in the backyards of friends and foes.

"Even though there's a tremendous amount of visibility on the South China Sea right now, it is important to keep those in context," he said. "We do these around the world against a lot of these excessive claims."

Under the Law of the Sea, a country can claim up to 12 nautical miles beyond its coastline. In some cases countries try to claim more than that.

In other cases, countries try to restrict what others can do within the 200-mile exclusive economic zone that's allowed under international law. For example, they may require advance notice of a flight or ship passage within that zone or prohibit certain military activities there.

The Pentagon releases an annual report that lists the countries where the United States has conducted freedom of navigation operations, but includes no details.

US military officials said that at least 80 percent are done by ships, but US aircraft also conduct flights to challenge excessive airspace claims.

The most frequent US operations are in the narrow Strait of Hormuz, where hundreds of times a year ships pass through territorial waters claimed by Iran and Oman. Both countries try to restrict movement through the strait, but international law allows innocent passage.

The Iranian military often hails US ships and tells them to leave. The two sides essentially follow a script, as the US ship continues on its way.

In other places around the globe, including portions of India or large swaths of the South American coast, US ships routinely sail within claimed territorial waters or refuse to provide advance requests for transit. Often the operations go unnoticed or trigger no reaction or protest.

In some cases, US officials said, countries are only aware of the operation after the Pentagon releases the annual report.

According to the 2015 report, the United States formally conducted freedom of navigation operations as a way of challenging excessive claims made by 13 countries during the budget year ending Sept. 30.

The post In Asia Pacific, a Tense Game of Political Brinksmanship  appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Though Largely Unknown, Trump Finds Fans in China

Posted: 29 May 2016 09:31 PM PDT

A worker checks masks of US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump at Jinhua Partytime Latex Art and Crafts Factory in Zhejiang Province, China, on May 25, 2016. (Photo: Reuters)

A worker checks masks of US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump at Jinhua Partytime Latex Art and Crafts Factory in Zhejiang Province, China, on May 25, 2016. (Photo: Reuters)

BEIJING — China features prominently in the rhetoric of presumed Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, who accuses the country of stealing American jobs and cheating at global trade. In China itself, though, he's only now emerging as a public figure, despite notoriety elsewhere for his voluble utterances, high-profile businesses and reality TV show.

And although Chinese officials and state media have denounced Trump's threats of economic retaliation, many Chinese observers see a silver lining in his focus on economic issues to the near-total exclusion of human rights and political freedoms. That appears to make him an attractive alternative to his likely rival, Democrat Hillary Clinton, who is regarded as far more critical of China's communist system.

Trump "could in fact be the best president for China," Hong Kong Phoenix Television political commentator Wu Jun said during a recent on-air discussion.

"That's because the Republican Party is more practical and Trump is a businessman who puts his commercial interests above everything else," Wu said. Clinton, on the other hand, "might be the least friendly president toward China."

Despite his frequent evocations of China, it's not clear how familiar Trump actually is with the country. While he's claimed to have made "billions of dollars dealing with China," he has no known investments in the nation, and it isn't clear what influential figures he knows in the Chinese political and business realms. Chinese are, however, customers for Trump's hotel, golf course and real estate ventures, while Trump-branded clothing and accessories have been made in China.

Trump mentions the country so often that a popular YouTube compilation video exists in which he says the word China more than 200 times in just over 3 minutes. His various statements on China range from the blunt ("We can't continue to allow China to rape our country") to the anodyne ("I like China very much").

Still, Trump was largely unknown in China until his campaign for the Republican nomination began gathering momentum last year.

Though China's government rarely comments on American political campaigns, Trump's advocacy of a 45 percent tariff on imports that would hit China hard has been lambasted by Finance Minister Lou Jiwei, who called Trump "one of those irrational types" and said enacting such a tariff would cost the United States its global leadership.

"Don't even think of being the big boss anymore," Lou said in April.

Trump's comments might've sparked a stronger response if Chinese hadn't already grown accustomed to American candidates making strong comments about their country during elections, only to moderate their positions once in office, said Nanjing University foreign relations expert Zhu Feng.

"The most important thing is that he or she be solid in their knowledge about China and know how to strike the right balance," Zhu said.

Many Chinese may also be relieved that Trump is focused so relentlessly on China's role in the US economy, rather on the country's authoritarian political system, human rights record or policies toward Tibet and the northwestern region of Xinjiang.

Trump's questioning of US foreign military commitments is also sweet music to the ears of Chinese nationalists who want China to dominate in Asia and challenge US dominance in the rest of the world. His opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal, which excludes China and seeks to offset Chinese influence, also goes down well in Beijing, though he has also criticized China's construction of man-made islands in the South China Sea.

The Chinese public, meanwhile, seems unfazed by Trump's anti-immigration stance, with its overwhelming focus on Mexico, and the candidate's vow to bar Muslims from entering the United States. That could reflect anti-Islamic sentiments that have grown in China following a series of deadly attacks by radicals from the Muslim Uighur minority, even while the government promotes ties with the Islamic world.

In contrast, many Chinese have qualms about Clinton that date from a speech she gave at a UN conference in Beijing in 1995 that focused heavily on human rights, to the displeasure of the hosts.

As a former secretary of state under Barack Obama, Clinton is also closely associated with Washington's "pivot" to Asia that includes an increase in the US military presence in the region. Beijing has been strongly critical of the policy shift, which was largely seen as prompted by China's robust assertions of its South China Sea maritime claims.

Interest in Trump here is rising. Why? Because Chinese have long regarded American elections as a particularly dramatic type of spectator sport. The process of working for a candidate and taking part in rallies and political campaigns doesn't exist within China's staid, authoritarian political system.

U.S. politics is also a topic on which the tightly leashed state media is relatively free to report, so discussion of Trump, Clinton and Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders rages on social media platforms and podcasts. Many have also noted that Trump's personality-driven, publicity-fed style is also a familiar archetype for Chinese known for their love of high-profile business moguls such as Alibaba's Jack Ma.

Although no polls have been taken, Chinese public sentiment toward Trump appears mixed. Comparing him to a figure from folklore known for sowing chaos, the official Global Times newspaper proclaimed him a symptom of an "American disease."

"I don't think many people knew him as a businessman before the campaign," said Shanghai IT engineer Kong Kong, who is unimpressed with Trump's vaunted political outsider status.

"Politics is not entertainment and simply being fresh may not be a good thing," Kong said. "A lack of political experience and an excess of personality may lead to an imbalance among interest groups and an abuse of authority, which are not good things for America."

Zhong Heng, a Shanghai paralegal, says she regards much of what Trump says as bluster. "He's like an artificial performance-enhancing drug being fed to the American people," Zhong said.

Trump, though, does seem to have won some Chinese supporters, particularly online. There, chat groups such as "Donald Trump Super Fans Club" and "God Emperor Trump" have popped up in recent months. One posting in a Weibo messaging service chat group was unrestrained in its enthusiasm.

"The more I know about Donald Trump," it said, "the more I feel that he's not only saving the US, but also the entire world."

The post Though Largely Unknown, Trump Finds Fans in China appeared first on The Irrawaddy.