Thursday, June 30, 2016

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


International Developer to Return Rangoon Land to Govt

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 08:22 AM PDT

High green fencing covers the site of Marga's Landmark's commercial development, seen from Rangoon's Kabar Aye Pagoda Road on June 30. (Photo: Pyay Kyaw / The Irrawaddy)

High green fencing covers the site of Marga's Landmark's commercial development, seen from Rangoon's Kabar Aye Pagoda Road on June 30. (Photo: Pyay Kyaw / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — International developer Marga Landmark is likely to return nearly half of the land granted by the former government in compensation for the 2015 cancellation of a project near Rangoon's Shwedagon Pagoda, a senior government official told The Irrawaddy.

According to the Department of Science and Technology Permanent Secretary Kyaw Zwa Soe, the land is designated to be used to establish Burma's first research center for metrology, the scientific study of measurement.

The move comes at a time when the new National League for Democracy (NLD) government is trying to attract substantial foreign direct investment—to boost its economy and update its infrastructure—while at the same time placing the frequently opaque and controversial deals made by the previous government under review.

The latter policy has resulted in some high profile cancellations, which some worry may scare off investors in a country that has experienced a dramatic shift in executive power.

Stretching out across Rangoon's Inya Lake near the Sedona Hotel, 17.7 acres of land held by the Department of Research and Innovation under the (now defunct) Ministry of Science and Technology was granted to Marga Landmark in February.

Under the previous government of President Thein Sein, the Myanmar Investment Commission granted this land in compensation after the US$300 million multi-use Dagon City 1 commercial development was halted by the government in July last year, following a public outcry over its proximity to Shwedagon Pagoda, Burma's holiest Buddhist site.

After the NLD government assumed power in April, the Ministry of Science and Technology was transformed into the "Department of Science and Technology" under the Ministry of Education.

Kyaw Zwa Soe, the department's permanent secretary, said the ministry had complained about the compensatory land grant to the new government as well as to the Union Parliament's Legal Affairs and Special Cases Assessment Commission.

"So far we have learned that the half of the land we had released will come back to us," he told The Irrawaddy on Thursday.

They had complained, he said, because the land grant formed part of more than 33 acres deemed "historic" because it was the site of Burma's first industrial research department.

Upon receiving the department's complaint, the government said they would review the case and attempt to retrieve half of the land grant. "So, we are hopeful that this land will come back to us," he said.

Founded in 1947, the year before Burma gained independence from the British, the State Industrial Research Institute was charged with furthering industrial development in an independent Burma.

Independence hero Gen Aung San, prior to his assassination the same year, reportedly reserved more than 33 acres for the institute at the corner of Kabar Aye Pagoda Road and Thitsar Road in Yankin Township.

Burma's first atomic research department was housed in the institute from 1956, by which time it had been renamed the Union of Burma Applied Research Institute. The institute was also the forerunner to current governmental departments of Research and Innovation and of Science and Technology.

"If we get the land back, it will be the site for a sophisticated lab, depending on the budget we receive," said permanent secretary Kyaw Zwa Soe, referring to the establishment of Burma's first metrology research center, planned since 2014.

Currently, nearly half of the total land area is obscured by high green fences, which demarcate Marga Landmark's development site.

During an interview with state-run newspaper The Mirror in February, Myanmar Investment Committee Secretary Aung Naing Oo said, "The ministry shared the land [to Marga Landmark] from what they had," referring to the 33-plus acres.

But sources in the ministry told a different story.

A senior official from the Department of Research and Innovation said they had to surrender the land to the Department of Urban and Housing Development under the Ministry of Construction—in late 2015 when the late Ko Ko Oo was still minister—before the land was granted to the developer in February with the MIC's approval

The senior official added that a few developers had previously approached the late minister in pursuit of the land but "he refused them all."

"This time, he was very surprised, but he could do nothing because the order came from upstairs," said the senior official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not an official spokesman for the department.

The senior official said he had been unhappy to see the land allocated to Marga Landmark for its commercial development project.

"But it was beyond our scope. We are government employees and we have to do as we are told," he said, adding that, "The whole area should be a place for scientific research, as it was planned to be."

On Thursday, Myanmar Investment Committee Secretary Aung Naing Oo was not available for comment.

Zin Mar Aung, a lawmaker for Rangoon's Yankin Township in the Lower House of the Union Parliament, was concerned that the new government not give a bad impression to international investors—especially those who would invest with "responsibility and accountability."

"For this case, as far as I am concerned, it depends on how the government and the company [Marga Landmark] deal with it," the lawmaker said.

"The company will want to keep the project going. Also, the government doesn't want to deter international investment. They have to compromise. I think it'd be better for both sides to think longer term."

The post International Developer to Return Rangoon Land to Govt appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Burma, Thailand Agree To Boost Trade

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 07:18 AM PDT

Burmese President Htin Kyaw meets with a Thai delegation led by Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Gen Prawit Wongsuwan in Naypyidaw on Wednesday afternoon. (Photos: President's Office)

Burmese President Htin Kyaw meets with a Thai delegation led by Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Gen Prawit Wongsuwan in Naypyidaw on Wednesday afternoon. (Photos: President's Office)

RANGOON — The Burmese and Thai governments have agreed to boost bilateral trade volume to reach US$20 billion in 2017, Burma's President's Office announced on Wednesday.

The announcement was made after President Htin Kyaw met Thailand's Deputy Prime Minister Tanasak Patimapragorn and Minister of Defense Gen Prawit Wongsuwon on Wednesday in Naypyidaw.

Both governments agreed to finish construction of the new Myawaddy-Mae Sot bridge connecting the two countries, which could help boost trade along Thai-Burma border. Myawaddy in Karen State is the largest of four official border crossings for overland trade between Burma and Thailand, with some 150 to 200 trucks crossing through the border station into Burma each day.

The Thai delegates also met with State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi, where the talks focused on convening a joint committee to demarcate borders, as well as the development of southeastern Burma's Dawei Special Economic Zone, a project in which Thailand is a primary partner.

Other topics of discussion in the meeting included the resolution of labor disputes and ensuring protections for Burmese migrant workers in Thailand, as well as a national verification and resettlement plan for migrant workers interested in returning to Burma.

"We can reached the target of $20 billion in 2017 if both governments open more border trading posts and crack down on the informal trade," said Than Win, director of the Ministry of Commerce.

According to the Ministry of Commerce, Burma currently has 16 border trading posts, four of which border Thailand. Negotiations are currently under way to open another Thailand-Burma post in Mese Township of Karenni State.

"I think more Thai investment will come, but so far, the figure of bilateral trading is not that high," Than Win said.

However, some experts questioned the plausibility of the ministry's goal.

"The total trade volume between Thailand and Burma was only about US$6 billion last year [2014-2015], so it's a little hard to believe they could triple that within a year, but if both governments can control informal trading, it is possible," said Maung Aung, senior consultant with the Ministry of Commerce.

Informal trade involves large amounts of smuggling that is known to cross both borders.

According to the Ministry of Commerce, the Thai-Burma trade volume fell to $4.8 billion in the 2015-2016 fiscal year, with $1.1 billion linked to four stations along the border.

"The problem is we have different figures from each country, and data from Thailand is always higher than Burma's," Maung Aung said. "So this becomes an issue when it comes to boosting trade."

The majority of imports from Thailand are electronics, foods and beverages, agricultural equipment and other home appliances, while exports from Burma include agricultural and marine products. Thailand is second only to China as Burma's largest trading partner; both countries' leaders have expressed hope that they will be able to boost total trade in the years ahead.

The post Burma, Thailand Agree To Boost Trade appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

BURMA Arakan Network Collects Signatures in Support of Resource Sharing

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 07:10 AM PDT

A construction site in Kyaukphyu, Arakan State, the site of a planned special economic zone. (Photo: Ko Soe / The Irrawaddy)

A construction site in Kyaukphyu, Arakan State, the site of a planned special economic zone. (Photo: Ko Soe / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The People's Resource Network (PRN) is on a mission to collect 300,000 signatures in support of resource sharing in Arakan State, said Tun Kyi, secretary of the Kyaukpyu Rural Development Association, a PRN partner.

Khine Myo Htun, PRN committee member, told The Irrawaddy on Wednesday that they expect to collect 30,000 signatures from each town in Arakan State, with exceptions for Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships where Arakanese people—the target participants of the signature campaign—are the minority.

PRN is comprised of about 30 Arakanese civil society organizations (CSOs) from 17 townships throughout Arakan State. They started the signature campaign in early May and expect to finish in July.

During the collection process, PRN has used the slogan "Rakhine people own Rakhine resources" and has demanded that the government decentralize power and resources, said Tun Kyi, adding that they would deliver the signatures to Union Parliament.

In order to decentralize, articles in the military-drafted 2008 Constitution must be amended or replaced, specifically Article 37(a)—which states that the government is the owner of all lands and natural resources both above and below ground—and Article 37(b), which states that the government can enact necessary laws to supervise extraction and utilization of these state-owned resources.

Tun Kyi raised questions about whether the current National League for Democracy (NLD) government was keen to amend the law, since after assuming power in April the NLD denied the people's demands by appointing a member of their own party, rather than the local Arakan National Party (ANP), in the role of Arakan State chief minister.

"Even if our efforts are not taken seriously by the Union Parliament and the law is not amended, we will continue to campaign on the issue," he said.

Pe Than, Lower House representative for the ANP, said that resource sharing is determined by the 2008 Constitution and that without amending the law, current practices will not change. According to the Constitution, state and divisional governments lack the rights to supervise or tax natural resources, and management power is authorized only to the Union government.

"We need to amend or replace the law. Even though [CSOs] have demanded resource sharing, the government will continuing ignoring them until the law is amended," said lawmaker Pe Than.

Replacing or amending the law will not be easy because 25 percent of parliamentary seats are reserved for military appointees.

Pe Than said, "If the military opposes [an amendment] in Parliament, it will not succeed. So, it depends on the Army's opinion."

He added that the government should specify a percentage of resources for sharing—even 25 percent of the total resources. Even a small amount could become a base from which to extend the amount slowly, Pe Than explained, adding that the struggle for control over resources is linked to larger issues of conflict and unrest in the country.

"The peace process will be meaningless if the government fails to [decentralize power and resource management]," said Pe Than.

Khine Myo Htun said, "We expect success with Suu Kyi's leadership."

Pe Than urged the government to provide guarantees to ethnic armed groups regarding resource sharing, especially in changing the relevant laws. Currently all state and divisional governments are subsidiaries of the Union government, while they would prefer separate governance. Similarly, appointing the state and divisional chief ministers through a presidential order is not power sharing, he added.

The post BURMA Arakan Network Collects Signatures in Support of Resource Sharing appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Mingalar Market Vendors Stage Protest

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 07:01 AM PDT

A scene from the aftermath of a powerful fire at Mandalay's Mingalar Market. (Photo: Zaw Zaw / The Irrawaddy)

A scene from the aftermath of a powerful fire at Mandalay's Mingalar Market. (Photo: Zaw Zaw / The Irrawaddy)

MANDALAY — Vendors affected by a fire that destroyed Mandalay's Mingalar Market staged a protest on Thursday, urging the municipal department and regional government to renovate, rather than rebuild, the structure.

Dozens of vendors gathered near the burned market building, saying that the mayor and the Mandalay City Municipal Department (MCDC) are neglecting their desire to renovate the market, and instead plan to demolish it and build a high-rise building.

"If they build a high-rise, it will be done by a construction company. We will then have to buy back our own shops at a high price, which we can't afford," said Kyaw Kyaw Soe, one of the protesting vendors.

The protesters urged a speedy resolution, as they currently have nowhere to sell their goods. They also demanded an investigation into the cause of the fire and swift action against the culprit.

During a meeting between vendors and regional government authorities in May, authorities said the building was in disrepair and that rebuilding was the better option. The vendors held a vote, which fell in favor of a major renovation to the existing structure. But they say the MCDC and the mayor have ignored their vote.

The cause of the fire is still unknown, and the MCDC said the case is out of their hands and is the responsibility of the Mandalay Division Central Fire Brigade.

About 65 percent of stalls at Mingalar Market were destroyed in the blaze on March 22.

During a press conference on Wednesday, the mayor said he would listen to the vendors' input but still plans to go forward with new construction.

"We are thinking of rebuilding the ground floor in an open style, like the old structure, for the convenience of the vendors," said Ye Lwin, the mayor.

He said the building is not strong enough to be safe or sustainable, which is why MCDC has decided to demolish it and rebuild with a private construction company.

"Since the plan is to upgrade the fire and safety system, only the ground floor will remain the same as before; the others will follow a different plan. We can't build it exactly like the old building, for safety reasons. And we have to offer the tender to a construction company because we don't have a big enough budget," the mayor said.

He added that, in accordance with the vendors' request, they would not lose any space in the rebuilding of their shops.

MCDC said that a temporary market is almost finished and vendors will be able to relocate to it in July.

The post Mingalar Market Vendors Stage Protest appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Armed Forces Chief Thanks NCA Signatories for ‘Constructive Cooperation’

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 06:52 AM PDT

Representatives from NCA signatory armed groups and Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing pose for photograph after meeting in Naypyidaw on Wednesday. (Photo: Min Aung Hlaing / Facebook)

Representatives from NCA signatory armed groups and Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing pose for photograph after meeting in Naypyidaw on Wednesday. (Photo: Min Aung Hlaing / Facebook)

RANGOON — Burma Army Commander-in-Chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing thanked ethnic armed groups that signed the nationwide ceasefire agreement (NCA) last year for their "constructive cooperation," while indirectly criticizing other groups.

The armed forces chief alluded to NCA non-signatory groups "expanding their forces." He urged them to eschew "dogmatism" and adopt a "peaceful" approach through "political" means. This was suggestive of the military's ongoing distrust of certain ethnic armed groups, whose participation is key for a comprehensive and sustainable peace deal.

Min Aung Hlaing was speaking in Naypyidaw on Wednesday at a meeting with the Peace Process Steering Team (PPST), which represents the eight NCA signatory armed groups.

"Thanks to the constructive cooperation of the ethnic armed organizations […] throughout the first term of multiparty democracy, we could reach a certain road and sign the [NCA]," Min Aung Hlaing said, according to a statement that was posted on his Facebook account on Wednesday.

Min Aung Hlaing said that if all concerned parities—both NCA signatories and the majority of ethnic armed groups that did not sign the NCA—cooperate according to "the Union spirit," without upholding "dogmatism," then "victory" will come "peacefully and speedily."

"All need to believe in one another in restoring peace and stability [to] the country in line with liberty, fraternity and equality," he said.

PPST members at the meeting represented the Karen National Union (KNU), the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS), the Chin National Front (CNF), the Arakan Liberation Party (ALP), and the ethnic Burman-majority All Burma Students' Democratic Front (ABSDF).

PPST members also met with State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi in Naypyidaw on Tuesday, where it was agreed that the Union Peace Conference—now branded by Suu Kyi as the "21st Century Panglong conference"—would be held in the last week of August.

Min Aung Hlaing said on the Wednesday meeting that the military "fully wishes to achieve success" in the Union Peace Conference.

He also said that, although ethnic armed groups can make demands in accordance with their needs, there are also some "requirements" with regards to "responsibility," "accountability" and "a sense of duty."

He reiterated the military's adherence to the Three National Causes: "non-disintegration of the Union," "non-disintegration of national solidarity" and "perpetuation of sovereignty."

In the meeting, PPST chairman Saw Mutu Say Poe, who also chairs the KNU, explained the PPST’s plans of including the NCA non-signatory groups in the peace conference.

Regarding the NCA non-signatories, Min Aung Hlaing said that the military "welcomes and are waiting for their signing of the NCA."

He said that the military does not want to see fighting between "national brethren," but it has to protect the government administration, and people's lives and property.

However, he said that ethnic armed groups need to achieve their goals through "political means," since the military has opened a political platform for them to engage in national affairs.

"Place and land are not important. It is important that they receive public support and work sincerely on their political goals. They need to put national interests at the fore without partisanship, racism and regionalism," he said.

However, he said, "Some [ethnic armed] groups are reinforcing their strongholds and expanding their forces out of concern. If they have self-confidence, they need not do so, but should take a peaceful approach instead."

He stressed the importance of public support and said that the military was attempting to win the public's trust.

After the meeting, Min Aung Hlaing presented gifts to the PPST delegates and posed for photographs.

The post Armed Forces Chief Thanks NCA Signatories for 'Constructive Cooperation' appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Women Discuss Peace Process Priorities

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 04:57 AM PDT

Panelists at the Myanmar Women's Peace Conference held in Naypyidaw this week. (Photo: AGIPP / Facebook)

Panelists at the Myanmar Women's Peace Conference held in Naypyidaw this week. (Photo: AGIPP / Facebook)

A conference on women's peace process priorities was held in Naypyidaw this week to generate recommendations for a civil society forum to be held in tandem with Burma's upcoming Union Peace Conference.

The two-day Myanmar Women's Peace Conference—titled "From the Margins to the Centre: Including Women and their Priorities in Myanmar's Peace Process"—was co-organized by the Alliance for Gender Inclusion in the Peace Process (AGIPP) and UN Women.

Nearly 90 participants discussed women, peace and security, highlighting strategies for women's meaningful participation in the peace process.

Mi Kun Chan Non, co-founder of the Mon Women's Organization and a steering committee member at the AGIPP, told The Irrawaddy that the groups gathered common recommendations based on the five main topics discussed during the Union Peace Conference in January.

Under the new peace conference model initiated by State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi, politics and security affairs will be prioritized on the peace conference agenda, while social, economic, environmental, education and refugee repatriation issues will be highlighted at a parallel civil society organization (CSO) forum.

"Of course, our collective views will be shared with the civil society forum," added Nang Phyu Phyu Lin, chair of the AGIPP.

The Union Peace Conference under the new National League for Democracy (NLD) government will convene in late August, and Suu Kyi encouraged the CSO forum to run concurrently with and provide input to the peace conference.

The women's groups have been advocating to set a minimum 30 percent gender quota system to increase women's representation in political leadership. Female parliamentarians and policymakers participated in the talks as well.

Meanwhile, some 50-60 CSOs in Burma began organizing the national forum earlier this month.

Nang Raw Zahkung, deputy director of the Nyein (Shalom) Foundation told The Irrawaddy that the CSO forum would reflect the voices of civil society groups working in different sectors.

So far, CSOs are drafting the term of references, in which they design the aims, process and number of participants.

The forum organizers are attempting to consult with local groups in all of Burma's states and regions. They plan to share the draft TOR with all of the groups in an upcoming meeting in July.

Given that the Union Peace Conference will begin no later than the last week of August, it might not be possible to cover all of the issues when the conference opens, but CSOs will be able to provide input throughout the conference, explained Nang Raw Zahkung.

The post Women Discuss Peace Process Priorities appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Nearly 200 Burmese Refugees To Be Repatriated From Thailand

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 03:15 AM PDT

 Umpiem Mai refugee camp near Mae Sot in western Thailand, accommodating a population of more than 20,000 conflict-displaced people from Burma, in August 2015. (Photo: Tin Htet Paing / The Irrawaddy)

Umpiem Mai refugee camp near Mae Sot in western Thailand, accommodating a population of more than 20,000 conflict-displaced people from Burma, in August 2015. (Photo: Tin Htet Paing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The Burmese government plans to repatriate 196 Burmese nationals displaced by conflict from refugee camps on the Thai-Burma border, according to Burma's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.  The two countries agreed to cooperate on refugee returns during the visit of Burma's State Counselor/Foreign Minister Aung San Suu Kyi to Thailand last week.

The statement released by the ministry on Wednesday said the two governments will start working on repatriation and rehabilitation for the Burmese refugees in Thailand through both short- and long-term plans—creating job and educational opportunities and providing health and social services in their places of origin.

"The government will send a delegation group [to Thailand] to work on the citizenship verification process for the 196 displaced individuals who expressed their desire to be sent back to their original homes," the statement read.

The statement did not include a timeline or start date for the process.

The ministry told The Irrawaddy on Thursday that citizenship verification would be handled by the Ministry of Labor, Immigration and Population, adding that the whole process of repatriation may take some time.

Director-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Kyaw Zeya said his ministry had received information on the 196 refugees through the United Nation's refugee agency, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), before the State Counselor's visit. He said that 75 percent of the returnees-to-be are ethnic Karen.

"We also have informed our Thai counterparts of our plan," Kyaw Zeya said. "All we need from their side is understanding and patience in dealing with this refugee repatriation issue."

According to The Border Consortium (TBC)—which provides food, shelter and other forms of support to Burmese refugees—there are roughly 120,000 refugees from Burma in nine official camps and shelters on the Thai-Burma border, some of whom have resided there for over two decades due to the armed conflicts between the Burma Army and ethnic armed groups.

Talks between Thailand and Burma on refugee issues began during the previous administration of President Thein Sein and accelerated after the nationwide ceasefire agreement (NCA) was signed by eight ethnic armed groups—including two ethnic Karen groups—in October last year.

According to a report in the Bangkok Post, Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said during Suu Kyi's three-day visit to Thailand last week that Burma should be given more time to prepare for the safe, voluntary and dignified return of its refugees.

The former head of the Royal Thai Army added that, in the meantime, Thailand would continue to take care of the refugees in accordance with humanitarian standards, even though drawing out the process would result in an increased burden on Thailand.

According to the UNHCR's report released last week, Burma had more than 450,000 displaced people as of the end of 2015, and its nationals made up the eighth largest group of refugees in the world.

The post Nearly 200 Burmese Refugees To Be Repatriated From Thailand appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Ethnic Alliance Delegation to Meet Peace Envoy

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 11:18 PM PDT

Delegates from the Burma government's peace negotiation team and leaders of the UNFC hold a meeting in Chiang Mai, Thailand on June 3. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

Delegates from the Burma government's peace negotiation team and leaders of the UNFC hold a meeting in Chiang Mai, Thailand on June 3. (Photo: Saw Yan Naing / The Irrawaddy)

CHIANG MAI, Thailand — A delegation from the ethnic armed alliance United Nationalities Federal Council will meet the government's chief peace negotiator Dr. Tin Myo Win in Rangoon on Friday.

On Thursday, six delegates led by UNFC Secretary Khu Oo Reh will travel to Rangoon to meet the preparatory committee for the Union Peace Conference, also known as the 21st Century Panglong Conference.

The UNFC members did not sign the nationwide ceasefire agreement (NCA) last year.

The peace conference was agreed to be held before the end of August during a meeting on Tuesday in Naypyidaw between the eight NCA signatories and State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi, who is also the head of the Union Peace Joint Dialogue Committee (UPDJC).

Khu Oo Reh, also the vice chair of Karenni National Progressive Party, said the meeting is “the follow up” from the informal meeting with Dr. Tin Myo Win in Chiang Mai, northern Thailand in early June.

Khu Oo Reh said they will have to discuss when to hold a meeting between the UNFC leaders and Suu Kyi.

One of the most contentious issues—the participation of the Ta'ang National Liberation Army, the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army and the Arakan Army—has not yet been included in the agenda for the meeting, but government peace negotiator Tin Myo Win met with NCA non-signatories ealier this month.

Other delegates include Gen Sai Htoo of the Shan State Progressive Party, Nai Shwe Thein of the New Mon State Party, Maj Min Htun of the Arakan National Council, Col Solomon of the Lahu Democratic Union and Maj Nyi Lu of the Wa National Organization.

The post Ethnic Alliance Delegation to Meet Peace Envoy appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

China Risks ‘Outlaw’ Status If It Rejects South China Sea Ruling: Lawyer

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 10:24 PM PDT

A fisherman repairs his boat overlooking fishing boats that fish in the disputed Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea, at Masinloc, Zambales, in the Philippines April 22, 2015. (Photo: Erik De Castro / REUTERS)

A fisherman repairs his boat overlooking fishing boats that fish in the disputed Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea, at Masinloc, Zambales, in the Philippines April 22, 2015. (Photo: Erik De Castro / REUTERS)

WASHINGTON — An international ruling next month is expected to deprive China of any legal basis for its claim to most of the South China Sea, and Beijing risks being seen as an "outlaw state" unless it respects the outcome, the Philippines’ chief lawyer in the case said on Wednesday.

In an interview with Reuters, veteran Washington attorney Paul Reichler expressed confidence that the Permanent Court of Arbitration, based in The Hague, would rule in Manila’s favor on July 12 in a highly charged case against Beijing, which rejects the tribunal’s jurisdiction and says it will ignore the ruling.

The Philippines, a close US ally, is contesting China’s historical claim to about 90 percent of the South China Sea, one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes. Several Southeast Asian states have overlapping claims in the sea, and the dispute has sparked concerns of a military confrontation that could disrupt global trade.

Reichler, who heads Manila’s legal team in the 3-1/2-year-old case, said he was not privy to the ruling and did not expect to be informed until the last minute. But he had little doubt  that Manila would win the legal argument, matching the consensus in Washington and most major foreign capitals.

"We are confident we will have success on the merits," said Reichler, who called the case potentially one of the most far-reaching to be decided by the court. He spoke just hours after the court announced the date for its ruling.

China bases its South China Sea claim on a "Nine Dash line" stretching deep into the maritime heart of Southeast Asia and covering hundreds of disputed islands and reefs, rich fishing grounds and oil and gas deposits.

Reichler said a ruling against Beijing "would deprive China of any legal basis for making such a claim." Manila argues that China’s claim violates the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and restricts its rights to exploit resources and fishing areas within its exclusive economic zone.

On Wednesday, China said Manila’s approach flouted international law and Beijing would not accept any third-party decision on the issue.
Reichler said for China to reject the ruling meant it had "essentially declared themselves an outlaw state" that did not respect the rule of law.

Reichler is an international lawyer with a reputation for representing small countries against big powers, including a 1980s case by Nicaragua that accused the United States of funding right-wing Contra rebels against a left-wing government.

Amid rising tensions in the South China Sea, Reichler said, "nobody wants or should even contemplate the use of force."

He predicted China would face pressure to abide by the ruling from other rival claimants, including Vietnam, Indonesia and Malaysia, despite signs that some other Southeast Asian countries are wavering in response to US efforts to forge a unified regional front.

"It may be that in time … the Chinese will come to realize that they have more to lose than to gain from creating a chaotic, lawless situation," he said.

China has accused the United States of "hyping" the dispute and has warned that complaints would snap back on its critics. But it has largely avoided specific threats of how it might respond to the ruling.

US officials are worried China may declare an air defense identification zone in the South China Sea, as it did in the East China Sea in 2013, and by stepping up its building and fortification of artificial islands.

They say the US response to such moves could include accelerated “freedom-of-navigation” patrols by US warships and overflights by US aircraft as well as increased defense aid to regional countries.

The post China Risks ‘Outlaw’ Status If It Rejects South China Sea Ruling: Lawyer appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

A Song By Any Other Name

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 06:43 PM PDT

A pop concert earlier this year in Rangoon; many of Burma's biggest pop artists made their names performing cover version of Western songs. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

A pop concert earlier this year in Rangoon; many of Burma's biggest pop artists made their names performing cover version of Western songs. (Photo: The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Cover versions of popular hits are common the world over. In Burma, the art of the cover song—known as copy thachin—has been taken to new heights. Some would argue that Burma's copy thachin are not technically even cover songs, but artistically significant creations in their own right due to their unique Burmese-language lyrics and vocal arrangements.

With the emergence of a new legal framework for the protection of intellectual property rights (IPR) in Burma, the future of this "copy song" tradition is being called into question.

The Tradition of Copy Thachin

Heather MacLachlan—author of "Burma's Pop Music Industry: Creators, Distributors, Censors"—describes a copy thachin song as one which "features melodies, harmonies, and timbres copied more or less exactly from an English-language hit song; the lyrics of copy thachin are always sung in Burmese, and these lyrics are not a translation of the original English."

Copy thachin songs are musical covers, but the Burmese language lyrics are new creations and may carry a totally different meaning to the original lyrics.

In Burma, copy thachin exist purely in the pop idiom, and are considered to be essentially distinct from Burmese classical music. For the most part, people in Burma are "not interested in fusion genres" MacLachlan adds; with copy thachin "the performers' goal is to reproduce the original sounds exactly, so they won't add any local sounds."

The act of "localizing" and bringing new significance to foreign musical compositions with Burmese language lyrics is at the core of the copy thachin tradition.

In recent years Burma's music industry has witnessed a variety of changes, and the tradition of copy thachin has been on the decline. This shift away from "copy songs" is due to a number of factors, according to MacLachlan.

MacLachlan highlights three main drivers of the shift: a new generation of musicians who place a high value on producing their own "original" music, the influence of foreign music producers who dislike copy thachin on principle, and a growing awareness of musical copyright with an understanding that Burmese musicians may face legal repercussions when they sell albums containing copy thachin or play them at concerts.

Burma's Emerging IPR Legal Framework

The 1914 Copyright Act remains the law of the land governing artistic creations, including musical compositions. This Act does not include any protection for foreign copyright, although the Burmese government is party to a number of international agreements that contain elements relating to IPR, and is in theory required to provide foreign and domestic IPR holders a basic level of legal protection.

Burma acceded to the World Trade Organization (WTO) and signed the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement in 1994, joined the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) in 1997, and became a member of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) in 2001—all of which include requirements related to the legal protection of IPR.

Under the Thein Sein administration, the Ministry of Science and Technology was charged with drafting a range of new laws and regulations relating to IPR. In July last year, the Ministry issued draft IPR laws, but to date they are stalled at the draft stage.

"The draft law has already been sent to the parliament. The progress of the discussion at the parliament cannot been seen from outside," Shimpei Yamamoto, the managing director of IPR issues at the Economic Research Institute for Asean and East Asia, told The Irrawaddy late last year.

"I am optimistic about the progress. An IPR specialist from the Japan Patent Office is now stationed in the Ministry of Science and Technology, helping them to pass the IPR law and establish an IP Office [in Burma]," he said.

Jakub Ramocki, of the Asean IPR Small and Medium Enterprise Helpdesk, told The Irrawaddy that strong IPR protections are a very important consideration for businesses looking to invest in Burma.

"The last decade has witnessed a fundamental growth in the importance of the value of IP assets in business," he said. "Companies often do not realize the potential lying in intellectual property such as software, in-house databases, brands (even those not registered), reputation, goodwill, supplier lists, customer lists, recipes and/or formulas, and production secrets."

"These are all IP assets that have value, and can and should be properly managed since they build an image of a company, give competitive edge and influence the value of an enterprise," he said.

The unwillingness of some foreign companies to invest in Burma without clear IPR laws was reiterated by Eric Rose, lead director at Herzfeld Rubin Meyer & Rose Law Firm's Rangoon office.

He told The Irrawaddy, "Without [Burma] adopting its WIPO-advised draft IPR laws, including the revised copyright statute, which have continuously been revised for years in various government agencies, there is no chance that foreign investors, or their lawyers, could legally enforce nationwide the protection of their copyrights in [Burma]."

The reasons for the delay in bringing the draft IPR laws into force are not entirely clear. Although, given the wide-ranging impacts that this new legal framework will have on Burma's economy, perhaps careful consideration is warranted.

Copyright Proponents

Proponents of strong IPR enforcement claim that these laws benefit musicians, as well as others in the music business.

Peter Fowler, the regional intellectual property attaché for Southeast Asia at the US Embassy in Bangkok, told The Irrawaddy, "The enactment of a new Copyright Law will have an immediate impact in providing relatively modern legal protection for a full range of artists, composers, performers, and music industry businesses who want to establish legitimate business models."

He concluded that the new IPR Laws would provide "a stronger tool to both legitimate rights owners and law enforcement officials to go after music pirates."

Min Tayza Nyunt Tin, an IPR expert with MN Associates Law Firm, agreed that the current lack of an IPR legal framework is bad for musicians because "there is no chance to protect their creation of artistic works."

"I heard that there are a lot of great local musicians creating very original music in [Burma]," said Shimpei Yamamoto of the Economic Research Institute for Asean and East Asia, adding that they would be "happy because an IPR law of [an] international [standard] can be a good opportunity for them to expand their market outside of [Burma]."

Neil Turkewitz, from the Recording Industry Association of America, noted the potential for a strong IPR framework in the culture industries to kick-start wider economic development, saying, "Effective copyright protection promotes economic development, creates jobs and fuels cultural diversity by creating financial incentives for investing in cultural production."

As Burma's IPR legal framework slowly emerges, Fowler said musicians and the music industry face two main challenges: "getting paid for their work so that they can be financially rewarded for their creative intellectual property, and educating the public and consumers—who in [Burma] are accustomed to not paying very much, if anything, for music—as to why stronger copyright protection and enforcement is good for [Burma], both culturally and economically."

Fowler added, "The best way to approach public awareness and education is to conduct extensive public campaigns that reach average consumers and users of music and, if needed, to take legal action by filing civil infringement actions against larger scale commercial pirates/infringers who do not comply with the new law voluntarily."

Balancing IPR Protection With 'Fair Use'

On the other side are those urging caution, pointing to potentially negative impacts on creative expression with the development of wide-reaching IPR laws.

Peter Jaszi, a law professor at the Washington College of Law at American University, told the The Irrawaddy that "musicians and composers can also suffer from too much IPR.  Because everything new incorporates elements that have gone before, too much copyright can burden, inhibit, or distort new creativity."

IPR and copyright operate within the wider economy, and often reflect structural power imbalances and inequalities present in the socio-economic arena. Sometimes, laws that are framed as protecting the rights of musicians actually work more to benefit the record companies producing and distributing the music.

"It's worth noting that, in practice, the real benefits of IPR protection for music tend to be unevenly distributed in most places in the world—that is, the lion's share usually go to the producers who have contractual deals with other members of the music-making community," said Jaszi.

"If justice for musical-composers were a real goal, it would be good to include some language in the statute that limits or regulates the terms of such contracts," he said.

Jaszi recommends "countries that are writing new, strong copyright laws balance the additional protections provided with enhanced 'limitations and exceptions,' like the fair use doctrine in the US [which] interestingly and significantly is a topic on which the TRIPS agreement is entirely silent. But that doesn't mean that it shouldn't be part of the legislative deliberation."

"Two Sides of the Same Coin"

As seen with the prevalence of copy thachin, Burma could be considered a net importer of copyrighted music, but with local "value-added." It is very possible that new strong IPR laws will mean an end this unique form of artistic expression.

Finding the correct balance between protecting the ability of musicians to get paid for their musical production and encouraging creativity and innovation through the creative commons is crucial.

"A well-functioning copyright system fuels both production and access, which are not competing forces but two sides of the same coin. It is a tool of economic emancipation, and an engine of free expression," said Turkewitz of the Recording Industry Association of America.

"The biggest challenge not only for musicians but also for all the people in [Burma] after passing IPR law is awareness of IPR," said Yamamoto of the Economic Research Institute for Asean and East Asia.

He added, "If they do not learn what IPR is they cannot utilize it or, in the worst case, they may infringe IPR without recognizing it and get into legal trouble."

In the past, musicians from Burma have run against the limits of copy thachin when they travelled abroad to perform for Burmese diaspora audiences, as Heather MacLachlan has documented in numerous interviews with musicians.

"When they are in the US, they try not to play any of their copy thachin, because they're worried that they might get in legal trouble if Americans were to hear them. No problems so far, but they worry about it," she said.

Soon they may need to worry about it at home as well.

Sam Stubblefield has been living in Southeast Asia for nearly a decade and is a keen watcher of political economy and culture in Burma.

The post A Song By Any Other Name appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

National News

National News


Health officials want better contraception supply chain

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 12:17 AM PDT

Myanmar women would like to have more access to reproductive health resources, according to surveys conducted by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Public Health Department under the Ministry of Health and Sports.

Thailand, Myanmar seek to double trade

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

In the latest move to strengthen ties with its neighbouring country, the government announced yesterday that trade with Thailand will double.

No arrests to be made after Bago mob violence, chief minister says

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Amid growing demands that the government take action against perpetrators of a mob attack that destroyed a mosque, officials announced yesterday that no legal recourse will be pursued.

Nearly 200 refugees to be repatriated from Thailand

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

The government is planning to repatriate nearly 200 refugees from camps in Thailand after they were displaced by clashes, according to a statement released by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday evening.

Managerial reshuffle ordered at Mon State’s Kyaikhtiyo Pagoda

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Amid allegations of corruption, overcharging, allowing unsanitary conditions and managerial weakness, the government has called for the establishment of a new board of trustees at Kyaikhtiyo Pagoda in Mon State, one of the country's most iconic religious sites.

Tatmadaw chief stresses NCA as bedrock for peace

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

With the so-called nationwide ceasefire agreement as its "foundation," the new government's peace process will have the Tatmadaw's full support as a cohesive actor ensuring the accord's terms are honoured, the military chief said yesterday.

HRW urges reform of laws suppressing free speech

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

The new government must "dismantle the infrastructure of repression", a new report from Human Rights Watch says.

Union government takes control of Shwedagon Pagoda board of trustees

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Religious Affairs Minister Thura U Aung Ko has already announced changes to the board of trustees at the famed Kyaikhtiyo Pagoda in Mon State and has now turned his attention to the most famous site of all: Shwedagon Pagoda.

106 unofficial hotel rooms on Mt Kyaikhtiyo to close

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

A hotel serving one of the country's most iconic religious and tourism sites has been ordered to close nearly half its rooms. Thura U Aung Ko, Union minister for religious affairs and culture, said the seven-storey Yo Yo Lay Hotel had to knock down 106 unauthorised rooms on its Mount Kyaikhtiyo property within the next month.

U Gambira hit with extra charges over 2012 incident

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 02:30 PM PDT

Ahead of his slated July 1 release date, former monk and Saffron Revolution leader U Gambira will face criminal hearings in two Yangon townships.

Shan Herald Agency for News

Shan Herald Agency for News


Five Lashio villagers found dead near Burma Army camp

Posted: 30 Jun 2016 07:31 AM PDT

Five villagers from Mong Yaw in Shan State's Lashio Township were found buried in shallow graves close to a Burma Army camp in the area, according to local eyewitnesses.

Photo by: Citizen Journalist- Bodies of Mong Yaw villagers found on June 29, 2016. 
Sai Moe, one of the villager elders in Mong Yaw, said the five men were identified as those who were arrested by a government battalion on Saturday after an incident in the village of Long Mon.

He said the murders had been reported to the relevant authorities in Mong Yaw.
"We found their bodies yesterday [June 29]," he said. "We have reported it to the police, but do not know what to do next."

On June 25, a Tatmadaw[Burma Army] unit with insignia identifying soldiers as from Division 33 were accused of arresting five villagers: Aik Hseng, 23; Aik Lod, 39; Aik Maung, 27; Sai Mon Awn, 17; and Sai Aik Maung, 23. The arrest followed an incident whereby the soldiers had fired for no known reason at workers in a field.

S.H.A.N. reported that at least one villager was killed, while three were injured, in addition to the five men who were detained by the government troops.

S.H.A.N. has now learned that one of those injured has since died, making a total of seven persons apparently killed in cold blood.

The five bodies uncovered on Wednesday were buried in two shallow graves: three bodies in one hole, two in another, according to Sai Leng, a relative of the victims.
"They were just civilians who were working legally and doing their jobs," he said. "But when we uncovered their bodies, they were wearing soldiers' uniforms."

Photo by: Citizen Journalist- Villagers dig out the dead bodies of five victims on June 29, 2016.
Sai Wan Leng Kham, an Upper House representative from the Shan National League for Democracy (SNLD) who recently visited the scene, said he had received a report about the killings. He said that his team is investigating, and that the case will proceed to the next step.

According to an official from the Northeast Region Command in Lashio Township, Burmese government forces have been beefed up in the Mong Yaw area as they were intent on pushing out the various independent militias.

However, he declined to comment on the case of the five bodies uncovered yesterday.
A source closed to Lashio-based Infantry Battalion 68 told Shan Herald that the government units did not want to move to the areas of Pang Keng Long, Pang Keng Awn and Wan Mak, so he speculated that they created a 'false flag' incident. He said they were afraid that if they were relocated to those areas they would be in life-threatening danger of attack by ethnic armed groups.

In and around Mong Yaw town, only the Manpang Peoples Militia, led by Bo Mon, is active. But about 30 miles out of the town, other ethnic armed groups are actively operating, including: the Kachin Defense Army (KDA) People's Militia, led by Matu Naw; the Kachin Independence Army (KIA); the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA); and the Shan State Progress Party/Shan State Army (SSPP/SSA).

BY: Shan Herald Agency for News (SHAN)

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Burma Army Chief Backs Panglong Conference: Source

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 07:38 AM PDT

 Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing meets with a delegation of ethnic armed groups, the Peace Process Steering Team, in Naypyidaw on Wednesday.

Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing meets with a delegation of ethnic armed groups, the Peace Process Steering Team, in Naypyidaw on Wednesday.

RANGOON — The Burma Army commander-in-chief, has reportedly told a delegation of ethnic armed organizations that he hopes the country's Union Peace Conference, also known as the "21st Century Panglong Conference," will be successful.

Khun Myint Tun, chairman of the Pa-O National Liberation Organization (PNLO), attended a meeting in Naypyidaw on Wednesday with Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing. He told The Irrawaddy that, during this time, the army chief spent about two hours with the Peace Process Steering Team (PPST), a delegation made up of representatives from the eight armed groups which acted as signatories to the 2015 nationwide ceasefire agreement (NCA).

"[Min Aung Hlaing] said he wanted the 21st Century Panglong Conference to be successful. His desire is to move forward [with the peace process] in accordance with the NCA. He said the Panglong Conference must be successful so that there will be peace and stability in the country. Then the country will be able to develop," said Khun Myint Tun.

According to Khun Myint Tun, Min Aung Hlaing also said he is open to talks with the ethnic armed organizations who have not signed the NCA.

The PPST that met the Snr-Gen was made up of members of the Karen National Union (KNU), the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS), the Chin National Front (CNF), the Arakan Liberation Party (ALP) as well as the armed Burmese dissident organization, the All Burma Students' Democratic Front (ABSDF).

Min Aung Hlaing did not specifically address the inclusion of the Arakan Army, the Ta'ang National Liberation Army or the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army—three groups that have drawn the ire of the Burma Army recently—but Khun Myint Tun said the Snr-Gen claimed he would welcome all NCA non-signatories.

The army chief also said he was not opposed to the upcoming summit of ethnic armed organizations which is planned to be held in Mai Ja Yang, a conflict-torn region in Kachin State in mid-July. All ethnic armed groups will reportedly be invited to attend the pre-Panglong summit.

Burmese army representatives including Vice Snr-Gen Soe Win and Lt-Gen Myat Htun Oo and top-ranked military officials also attended the meeting with the PPST.

The PPST delegation submitted a plan on the Kachin State summit to State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi when they met her in Naypyidaw on Tuesday. Suu Kyi also said she did not oppose the summit, but asked the ethnic delegation to submit details of the agenda for the meeting.

During the meeting with Suu Kyi on Tuesday, the NCA signatories' delegation also agreed to hold the 21st Century Panglong Conference by the last week in August.

The post Burma Army Chief Backs Panglong Conference: Source appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Rights Group Pushes for Freedom of Speech in Burma

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 07:11 AM PDT

Police beat a student protester who had attempted to turn himself in during a crackdown on activists in Letpadan, Pegu Division on March 10, 2015. (Photo: Sai Zaw / The Irrawaddy)

Police beat a student protester who had attempted to turn himself in during a crackdown on activists in Letpadan, Pegu Division on March 10, 2015. (Photo: Sai Zaw / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Burma has undergone political reforms, but the government still needs to provide for more freedom of expression in order to bring true democracy and to protect human rights, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW), which held a press conference on Wednesday in Rangoon.

HRW recommended that the National League for Democracy (NLD) government amend, repeal and abolish laws restricting freedom of expression.

The rights group issued a report on Wednesday entitled "They Can Arrest You at Any Time: The Criminalization of Peaceful Expression in Burma," referring to the country's laws that are still used to punish activists or journalists who try to exercise their freedom of speech.

Those laws need be further amended in order to meet international standards, said Linda Lakhdhir, a legal advisor at the Asia Division of HRW and a co-author of the new report.

The report revealed that 150 people have been detained under Article 505(b) of Burma's penal code—which allows for the arrest of those who cause or intend to cause "fear or alarm" to the public—since the country's new elected lawmakers first took their oaths in Parliament in February of this year.

Lakhdhir emphasized that while some charges have since been dropped and the government has granted amnesty to certain political prisoners, the oppressive laws still remain on the books.

She added that since 505(b) has been used against students calling for the amendment of a controversial national education law, as well as to punish activists and journalists, HRW was recommending its repeal.

The report also documented the use and abuse of other vaguely worded laws that criminalize peaceful expression, and includes debates on matters of public interest, as well as specific recommendations to revoke or amend the laws in question. HRW draws on interviews with individuals prosecuted under these laws, as well as journalists, civil society activists and lawyers.

"We must recognize the previous government of U Thein Sein, and he did make some improvements in human rights conditions, like the open space for this meeting today," said David Mathieson, HRW's senior researcher on Burma. "The new government led by President U Htin Kyaw and Daw Aung San Suu Kyi has further opened space for the promotion of human rights and has discussed freedom of expression in Myanmar. But, major problems and challenges remain throughout Myanmar. There are very serious human rights challenges."

HRW called on the government to listen to the people of Burma and recommended that the authorities maintain transparency during the process of changing legal mechanisms.

"Freedom of speech is important in a democracy because it leads to the protection of other rights," said Linda Lakhdhir. "We advise the government to protect the rights of people to speak freely, and criticize the government where that criticism is warranted, and do these things without fear of punishment."

The post Rights Group Pushes for Freedom of Speech in Burma appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Seizure of Large Quantities of Illegal Timber Continues

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 07:07 AM PDT

An elephant labors at a teak logging camp in Pinlebu Township, Sagaing Division. (Photo: Reuters)

An elephant labors at a teak logging camp in Pinlebu Township, Sagaing Division. (Photo: Reuters)

RANGOON — With a crackdown announced on the illegal timber trade—and a proposed nationwide logging ban by the end of the fiscal year in March 2017—seizures of illegally cut logs have exceeded 10,000 tons in the first quarter from April to June.

Myo Min, director of the Forestry Department in the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation, maintains, however, that trends are continuing to move in a positive direction. Based on the current figures, he expects seizure quantities for this fiscal year to be lower than the 46,153 tons seized during the 2015-16 fiscal year.

From the beginning of April until June 23, 12,844 tons of timber were seized, according to the ministry's figures. The most commonly seized log varieties were teak, followed by other hardwoods. The largest hauls were in Sagaing Division, at nearly 3,450 tons, followed by over 2,178 tons in Karenni State and 1,406 tons in Pegu Division.

"Along the Irrawaddy River, we have inspection teams checking for illegally cut logs and detaining culprits, and we are conducting ambushes in different states and divisions in cooperation with the forestry police. We're providing more security for every forest in the country," Myo Min said.

The ministry said it has filed 614 criminal cases related to 2,545 interventions during this three-month period. During the entire 2015-16 fiscal year, 2,246 cases were filed out of 13,003 interventions.

Burma lost an average of 1.7 percent of its forests annually from 2010-15, leaving total forest cover at 45 percent (around 29 million hectares), according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. Fifteen years before, this stood at 65 percent, the agency said.

Government data for the fiscal year ending in March 2013, reported by Reuters, put Burma's total timber exports past 1.24 million cubic tons, generating more than US$1 billion, of which teak comprised $359 million. However, it is generally thought that this was far below the actual quantity of timber traded—and money made—on the black market.

Since 2014, the legal logging sector—whose methods, under the state-owned Myanmar Timber Enterprise, have received a large part of the blame for Burma's deforestation—has been restricted according to an annual quota. Log exports were then suspended from April the same year.

After the formation of the new government in April, Minister of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation Ohn Win declared that a nationwide ban on logging would be imposed by the end of the current fiscal year in March 2017.

This followed initial media reports in April that the ban would be be imposed immediately, due largely to a statement from Saw John Shwe Ba, managing director at the ministry, that the government had "decided to stop logging completely."

Environmental groups blamed the uncertainty this caused for spurring a temporary flurry of logging activity in different parts of the country.

Baba Cho, a consultant to the Myanmar Timber Merchants Association, said the government needed to enhance law enforcement to prevent illegal logging, which continues at significant rates across the country.

"Last year, some forest police were murdered in this country. If law enforcement remains weak in certain areas, mafia-type logging networks will only go stronger," he said.

"Some have blamed cronies [for deforestation] but, as can be easily seen, villagers around [logging] areas also participate because of poverty. We have to consider such things when trying to enforce a stop," he said.

Baba Cho added that, for logging to be successfully curbed, the government cannot work alone but must also collaborate with locals and stakeholder organizations.

The post Seizure of Large Quantities of Illegal Timber Continues appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Premier Coffee Sued for Breaking Labor Laws

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 05:42 AM PDT

Premier Coffee was sued by Myanmar's Ministry of Labor for breaking labor laws. (Photo: Hein Htet / The Irrawaddy)

Premier Coffee was sued by Myanmar's Ministry of Labor for breaking labor laws. (Photo: Hein Htet / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — The Ministry of Labor, Immigration and Population filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against Premier Coffee for breaking labor laws and regulations.

Nyunt Win, one of ministry's spokespersons and deputy director of the Factories and General Labor Laws Inspection Department under the ministry, told The Irrawaddy that they received complaints from about 300 workers from the Premier Coffee factory in Rangoon's Hlaing Tharyar Industrial Zone who claimed that the company failed to give days off or provide full payment for overtime hours worked.

He said that under Burma's 1951 Leave and Holiday Act, employers must allow for at least one day off each week without cutting salaries. But, the company failed to provide time off or full payment for overtime in accordance with the law, which also states that overtime is to be paid at twice the standard rate.

"As we found the complaints to be true, we filed the case against the company owner and HR manager of the factory at Hlaing Tharyar Township Court on Tuesday and the court accepted the case," the deputy director said.

The popular local coffee is a brand of the Capital Diamond Star Group, a conglomerate owned by Burmese businessman Ko Ko Gyi. The firm runs many businesses including Grab and Go convenience stores, Capital Hypermarket and import and export businesses.

Nyunt Win said that the Factories and General Labor Laws Inspection Department filed the suit because the company violated labor laws directly related to the department.

He said that they receive the most complaints against garment factories; this is the first time they have heard complaints about Premier coffee.

If the company is found guilty, the minimum punishment is three months imprisonment and a 2 million kyat fine (over US$1,600) under the 1951 Factories Act.

The post Premier Coffee Sued for Breaking Labor Laws appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Thailand and Burma Restart Border Demarcation Talks

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 03:25 AM PDT

State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi and Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha meet at the Thai Foreign Ministry in Bangkok during her state visit on June 24, 2016. (Photo: Burma State Counselor's Office / Facebook)

State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi and Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha meet at the Thai Foreign Ministry in Bangkok during her state visit on June 24, 2016. (Photo: Burma State Counselor's Office / Facebook)

RANGOON — Thailand and Burma have agreed to renew negotiations over disputed border demarcations, which had stalled under Burma's previous government.

The agreement was reached during State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi's recent visit to Thailand, according to Burma’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

A statement by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Tuesday stated that Burma would host a joint boundary committee to negotiate the renewal of the demarcation process.

Burma shares its eastern and southeastern borders with Thailand, some of which territory is under the control of Burma's ethnic armed organizations. Ethnic Wa, Shan, Karen, Karenni and Mon each control land to which the Thai government has also staked its claims.

Observers say that Thailand wants to solve the border disputes for business interests and security concerns.

In early June, Thai authorities had proposed building a trading post and upgrading the border gate at Three Pagodas Pass in Thailand’s Sangkhlaburi Province to stimulate trade and development. However, the Burmese government rejected the proposal, according to the state-owned Global New Light of Myanmar.

Non-state armed organizations—the Karen National Union (KNU) and the New Mon State Party (NMSP)—previously controlled areas around Three Pagodas Pass, but it is now partially controlled by the Burma Army. However, Thailand had already constructed buildings and a highway in what the Burmese government firmly considers its own territory.

In late May, during a bilateral meeting on border security, Thai military officials asked their Burma Army counterparts to help convince the powerful ethnic Wa armed group, the United Wa State Army (UWSA), to withdraw its military bases on the Thai-Burma border in Thailand's northern provinces of Chiang Mai and Mae Hong Song, according to Thai military officials. More than a dozen UWSA bases are in southern Shan State, on or over the Thai border.

According to the Ministry of Commerce, Burma currently has 16 border trading posts, four of which border Thailand.

The post Thailand and Burma Restart Border Demarcation Talks appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Suu Kyi and Public Patience

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 03:16 AM PDT

 A woman of many jobs: Aung San Suu Kyi (center) is Burma's State Counselor, Foreign Minister and President's Office Minister. (Photo: Htet Naing Zaw)

A woman of many jobs: Aung San Suu Kyi (center) is Burma's State Counselor, Foreign Minister and President's Office Minister. (Photo: Htet Naing Zaw/The Irrawaddy)

"We need to stay patient and tolerant, and let her get on with it, since she is new and inexperienced."

Such are the words uttered by many in Burma who were happy to see the veteran pro-democracy campaigner Aung San Suu Kyi assume de facto leadership of the new government at the end of March.

This is the first properly civilian government—baring the military's continued control of three key ministries and a 25 per cent chunk of all parliaments—for over 50 years. Weaknesses have emerged, and the challenges are great after so many decades of misrule.

Right after the transfer of power, the new government enacted a 5 percent tax on mobile phone usage. Many in the country, including myself, were unhappy with this move, but most stood by the prevailing sentiment of tolerance because they wanted to see a strong civilian government.

The previous government of President Thein Sein had tried to impose such a tax in June last year, but a public outcry prompted them to postpone implementation till after the end of the fiscal year on March 31—precisely coinciding with the entry of the new government.

That the Burmese people have now accepted the tax with few audible complaints seems attributable to the vastly greater popularity of Aung San Suu Kyi—with whom the new government is so closely associated—compared to Thein Sein and his colleagues from the military.

lawei

Lawi Weng is a Senior Reporter for The Irrawaddy English edition.

Also notable was the rather muted response of the public to extended power cuts in Rangoon and elsewhere during this year's hot season (March-May). Less frequent outages had caused uproar during Thein Sein's tenure.

How fair are such reactions?

Thein Sein, whatever his baggage as a former regime loyalist, laid out a path for peace with Burma's various ethnic armed groups that Suu Kyi and the new government has largely chosen to follow, for better or worse.

The new government inherited the assets of the Myanmar Peace Center, formed under the government of Thein Sein to facilitate peace negotiations, and has effectively rebranded it as the "National Reconciliation and Peace Center," hiring several of the same advisors used by the previous government.

The structure for negotiations with ethnic armed groups laid out in the nationwide ceasefire accord (NCA), signed in October last year, has also been adopted by Suu Kyi.

The Union Peace Conference envisaged in the NCA has been smartly re-labeled the "21st Century Panglong Conference," to echo the Panglong Agreement reached between her father, independence hero Aung San, and the leaders of some of Burma's ethnic minority groups in 1947.

"Political dialogue"—one of the keystones of the NCA, in which a settlement on federalism and ethnic rights would be discussed—has not yet undergone re-branding.

In all this, the approach of Suu Kyi and her colleagues owes much to the military-backed government of Thein Sein.

Ethnic armed group leaders have largely adopted a wait-and-see approach to the peace process in recent months, yet many of them have been willing to support the new government's initiative—verbally at least—out of concern for a future resurfacing of military power.

However, Suu Kyi has yet to gain full support from Burma's military on the peace talks, with the military insisting that armed groups such as the Arakan Army, the Ta'ang National Liberation Army and the Myanmar Nationalities Democratic Alliance Army fully disarm before taking part. Suu Kyi has been pushing a more inclusive line, inviting all groups to the table.

In her reform efforts, Suu Kyi has to be constantly mindful of the military. She would not make any dramatic moves without their consent.

But she should also be mindful of the international community, which may not maintain its current overall tolerance regarding the failure to address ongoing human rights abuses by the military and branches of the government.

Discrimination towards, and the denial of citizenship to, the Rohingya in particular will continue to perpetuate a bad image of the country and the government to the outside world.

In other news, the US State Department has decided to downgrade Burma in its annual Trafficking in Persons report, placing it among the worst offenders in human trafficking—due largely to its failure to curb forced labor practices and the recruitment of child soldiers.

Many in Burma may downplay these issues—particularly the Rohingya—citing the peace process with ethnic armed groups as far more urgent.

But the new government must take comprehensive action against all human rights violations in Burma, if the tolerance of both the public and the international community are to be truly earned.

Otherwise, tolerance may go to the wind, and the country may be vulnerable to new forms of authoritarianism.

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Burmese Court Lays New Charges Against Saffron Revolution Leader

Posted: 29 Jun 2016 12:12 AM PDT

 Former Buddhist monk Gambira was recently moved to Yangon's Insein prison to face additional criminal charges. (Photo: Reuters)

Former Buddhist monk Gambira was recently moved to Yangon's Insein prison to face additional criminal charges. (Photo: Reuters)

RANGOON — A Burmese court laid additional charges against a former monk and leader of the 2007 "Saffron Revolution" anti-junta uprising on Tuesday, accusing him of trespass and "mischief" committed four years ago.

Nyi Nyi Lwin, better known as Gambira, was arrested in January for illegally entering Burma from neighboring Thailand.

The new charges relate to the reopening of monasteries that were sealed off after the monk-led protests. The alleged violations took place in 2012, after Gambira’s release from prison where he had served time for his involvement in the demonstrations.

"Gambira force-opened the gates of three monasteries in Rangoon, which were sealed off by the military in the crackdown on the protests, since the activist monks couldn’t find anywhere to live after their release in the amnesty in 2012," said Gambira’s lawyer, Robert San Aung.

The charges were laid days before he was about to be released from prison, where he has been serving time for allegedly crossing the Thai-Burma border without an official visa.

He has now been moved to Rangoon's notorious Insein Prison from Mandalay to face the new charges.

The fact that a high-profile political prisoner is moved around the country and charged for seemingly minor offences committed years ago shows democratic reforms in Burma under Aung San Suu Kyi’s leadership are still in their early stages, as many junta-era institutions, mechanisms and laws remain unchanged.

"He was due to be freed on July 1, but the authorities seem afraid of him and don’t want to let him out," said Robert San Aung.

The government cracked down harshly on the 2007 demonstrations, opening fire on protesters and sweeping up those who took part. At least 31 people were killed by security forces and thousands arrested, according to the United Nations.

Gambira was freed from prison during a 2012 general amnesty, a year after the junta handed power to a semi-civilian government, following 49 years of direct rule of the Southeast Asian nation.

Since his release, he has divided his time between Burma and Thailand, but Burmese authorities have re-arrested him several times in what rights groups have described as continued harassment for his criticism of the previous military-backed government.

"It just shows things still remain as bad as they were under the former regime," political analyst Yan Myo Thein told Reuters. "They always find some pretext whenever they don’t want to free a prominent politician or an activist."

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Sluggish Economy Casts Shadow Over Mongolian Elections

Posted: 28 Jun 2016 10:48 PM PDT

Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj walks towards the media after casting his vote for the parliamentary elections at a polling station in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, June 29, 2016. (Photo: Jason Lee / Reuters)

Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj walks towards the media after casting his vote for the parliamentary elections at a polling station in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, June 29, 2016. (Photo: Jason Lee / Reuters)

ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia — Mongolians vote in parliamentary elections Wednesday with sentiment weighed by a sharp downturn in the landlocked Asian nation’s crucial mining sector, rising unemployment and political disillusionment.

The Democratic Party could lose its majority in parliament, known as the State Great Khural, to the opposition Mongolian People’s Party a year ahead of the 2017 presidential election. But with no major policy offerings on the table and an economy pummeled by the global slump in commodity prices, it’s unclear what options Mongolia has for reviving its fortunes.

The parliamentary elections are the seventh since the country made a peaceful transition to democracy in 1990. Yet disillusionment with the political process in the country — recently dubbed "an oasis of democracy" by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry — is growing among younger voters, whose turnout has steadily declined in recent years.

Amgalan Sukh-Ochir, 30, who works in marketing, said he plans to boycott the elections.

"In the last elections when the DP made all these great promises for prospering, I decided to support them, but look where we are now. I don’t think they’ve achieved much," he said.

Mongolia’s mining- and animal herding-dependent economy has been dragged down by weak domestic demand and a sharp decline in exports, impoverishing thousands of former herders who had moved to its few cities looking for jobs. Economic growth has slipped from 17.5 percent in 2011 to just 2.3 percent last year in the resource-rich nation of 3 million people, one-fifth of whom live in poverty.

Both the ruling Democratic Party and its main rival have campaigned on the promise of more jobs.

"The main issue is, No. 1, to revive the economy," said Bulgantuya Khurelbaatar, secretary of the opposition Mongolian People’s Party. She said the party aims to build 100 factories in 21 provinces that would create about 40,000 new jobs, though she didn’t say how.

It’s unclear what measures or resources are available to stimulate the flagging economy.

Coal, copper and other mineral resources make up 94 percent of Mongolia’s exports. But with demand in China weakening as its economy cools, Mongolia’s own growth is forecast to fall below 1 percent this year.

Foreign investment in the country has slowed to a trickle, though mining giant Rio Tinto announced in May the launch of the next stage of a multibillion-dollar gold and copper mine.

Still, critics of government agreements with mining companies complain that too little of Mongolia’s mineral wealth benefits the general public.

Some observers see recent changes to the electoral process as handicapping smaller parties and female candidates.

"They have closed some space for smaller political parties, as majoritarian systems do tend to benefit two main political parties," said Ashleigh Whelan, country director for the International Republican Institute, a U.S.-based group with the stated aim of promoting democracy globally.

"This can reduce the opportunity for lesser-known candidates, new candidates, youth, women and those candidates who may not be a guarantee in terms of winning," Whelan said. Her organization does not expect either party to secure an overwhelming majority.

In its latest National Human Development Report, the United Nations Development Program found that only about 45 percent of Mongolians aged 18-34 have voted in recent elections, compared to an overall turnout of 65 percent in 2012.

Skepticism has grown after the ruling party recently offered citizens 300,000 tugriks ($155) to sell 30 percent of their promised shares in the state-owned coal mine, Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi. So far 1.2 million of 1.65 million shareholders have applied to sell their shares to the government.

"I think it’s illegal to tell you the truth," said Khurelbaatar of the opposition party. "This is right before elections. It seems to all political parties that they’re actually trying to buy off votes."

The Democratic Party did not respond to requests for comment.

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Smiles and Selfies as Cambodia PM Tells Foreign Powers to Stop Interfering

Posted: 28 Jun 2016 09:45 PM PDT

A Cambodian Muslim supporter takes a selfie with President of the ruling Cambodian People's Party and Prime Minister Hun Sen (C), after a ceremony in Phnom Penh on June 28, 2016. (Photo: Samrang Pring / Reuters)

A Cambodian Muslim supporter takes a selfie with President of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party and Prime Minister Hun Sen (C), after a ceremony in Phnom Penh on June 28, 2016. (Photo: Samrang Pring / Reuters)

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — International powers should keep out of Cambodian domestic politics, Prime Minister Hun Sen warned on Tuesday, as he posed for selfies with supporters and played down tension between his ruling party and the opposition.

An opposition win in an election due in 2018 could tip the country back into civil war, the quixotic Cambodian strongman has warned. Foreign governments have accused him of intimidating his political opponents ahead of the vote.

Those who portrayed the country as experiencing a political crisis were guilty of a "dishonest trick to deceive public opinion," Hun Sen said in the capital, Phnom Penh.

"They must not misconstrue individual mistakes as political issues and put pressure on the courts," he added, in a reference to foreign governments and international institutions.

"That is an insult to people, state institutions and a dangerous adventure for the nation."

Last month, the European parliament threatened to review nearly half a billion dollars of aid to Cambodia if Hun Sen’s government continued to harass political opponents. The United Nations and the United States have called for dialogue between the two sides.

Tension has risen in Cambodia as opposition leaders Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha face legal charges they say have been trumped up by a judiciary in thrall to Hun Sen.

The Cambodian prime minister says if they have committed crimes, they must face the legal consequences.

The opposition says the prime minister has started a campaign against it early, to weaken its campaigning ahead of the election.

At the last vote in 2013, a strong performance by the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) nearly cost Hun Sen the premiership.

Sokha has spent one month in hiding inside the CNRP headquarters as he seeks to evade arrest, while Rainsy is in self-imposed exile to avoid arrest on charges for which he had previously received a royal pardon.

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