Thursday, January 26, 2017

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Climbing Bagan’s Temples May Soon Be Banned

Posted: 26 Jan 2017 06:59 AM PST

A ban on climbing Bagan's temples is rumored as the State Counselor denounces the activity, suggesting that viewing platforms be built instead.

The post Climbing Bagan's Temples May Soon Be Banned appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Book Plaza to Open in Rangoon’s Lanmadaw Township

Posted: 26 Jan 2017 04:30 AM PST

One of the first book plazas in Burma, run by a young publisher and author, is scheduled to open in Rangoon's China Town.

The post Book Plaza to Open in Rangoon's Lanmadaw Township appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Karen and Mon Armed Groups Strike a Deal for Peace

Posted: 26 Jan 2017 02:59 AM PST

KNU and MNSP agree to stop fighting, to allow villagers freedom of movement, and to invite the local government to mediate a dispute over territory.

The post Karen and Mon Armed Groups Strike a Deal for Peace appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Mandalay to Limit Private Thingyan Pavilions

Posted: 26 Jan 2017 02:48 AM PST

The city's development committee wants to resurrect the traditional way of celebrating Burma's water festival.

The post Mandalay to Limit Private Thingyan Pavilions appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

WFP Faces Funding Shortfall of $19 Million

Posted: 26 Jan 2017 01:20 AM PST

World Food Programme says it will not be able to continue full operations after the end of February unless they receive more funds.

The post WFP Faces Funding Shortfall of $19 Million appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Living in America, but Dreaming of a Karen Homeland

Posted: 26 Jan 2017 01:14 AM PST

After years living in southern California, ethnic Karen former refugees return to Burma on a mission to deliver humanitarian aid and show solidarity.

The post Living in America, but Dreaming of a Karen Homeland appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

USDP Slammed for Misuse of Ethnic Party’s Signature on Joint Statement

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:27 PM PST

The Ta'ang National Party disputes its signature appearing a joint statement which criticizes the government's handling of Arakan State.

The post USDP Slammed for Misuse of Ethnic Party's Signature on Joint Statement appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Book Review: Pathway to Peace

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 06:21 PM PST

Aung Naing Oo falls short of providing real insight into Burma's complicated peace process in this collection of essays, writes Bertil Lintner.

The post Book Review: Pathway to Peace appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

National News

National News


Two Mong Koe church leaders transferred to Muse police custody

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:45 PM PST

Two Kachin Baptist Church officials were transferred from military to police custody this week, with a trial expected to soon get under way, according to the Muse township police station.

State counsellor urges people to make demands of their chief ministers

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:40 PM PST

Patience, State Counsellor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi urged yesterday while speaking to residents of Pakokku township in Magwe Region.

Myanmar makes small gains in annual corruption index under NLD govt

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:38 PM PST

Despite an announced anti-corruption campaign and the termination of US trade sanctions, Myanmar continues to languish in the bottom tiers of the latest Corruption Perception Index.

Prep work begins on Yangon student union building

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:35 PM PST

More than half a century after it was dynamited by the junta, groundwork is being laid to finally resurrect the Yangon University student union building.

Statement calls for security council to convene over Rakhine rumours

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:30 PM PST

The former ruling party is again leading a charge demanding the shadowy National Defence and Security Council be convened in response to security concerns in Rakhine State. The Union Solidarity and Development Party was among 15 political parties to sign a statement yesterday pressing the government to address the "Rakhine situation" through the council.

Five murders in Pyinmana township in 2016, say cops

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:25 PM PST

Amid a crackdown on crime in the moderately delinquent Nay Pyi Taw suburb Pyinmana, police say they tallied 14 serious crimes last year, including five murders.

Garment workers trying to unionise fired

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:20 PM PST

More than 20 workers who were trying to establish a union within their Hlaing Tharyar township garment factory say their employment was forcibly terminated this month. They believe they were edged out in retaliation for collectively organising, but the factory managers said the layoffs were part of a downsizing effort.

KNU and NMSP agree to stop fighting

Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:11 PM PST

Two ethnic armed groups at odds over a territorial dispute in Tanintharyi Region reached a peaceable agreement yesterday in negotiations mediated by the regional government.

Shan Herald Agency for News

Shan Herald Agency for News


Book Review: Pathway to Peace

Posted: 26 Jan 2017 03:27 AM PST


In an endorsement on the back cover of this book, Roland Kobia, the European Union (EU) Ambassador to Burma, states that it "provides a unique insight into Myanmar's [Burma's] peace initiative for anyone who is trying to understand one of the world's most complex peace processes." The problem, though, is that Aung Naing Oo's book is a rather incoherent collection of 65 very short essays which does not provide any analysis of the so-called "peace process," the role of its different domestic and international players, and why it went wrong.

Burma's former president U Thein Sein expressed his desire to find a solution to the country's decades-long civil war between government forces and an array of ethnic resistance armies shortly after he assumed office in March 2011. In August that year, he announced that he was ready to engage in talks with the armed groups—and what has been termed a "peace process" began. The EU and others began to support this "peace process" politically and financially.

The bitter truth, however, is that after the peace plans were announced, the war in Burma's frontier areas became more intense than at any time since the 1980s. It began in June 2011 with an all-out offensive against the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) in the north—a group that actually signed a ceasefire agreement with the government in 1994. Concluding ceasefires with ethnic groups was nothing new and did not begin with U Thein Sein's presidency; about two dozen major and smaller groups entered into such agreements in the late 1980s and early 1990s, although the KIA was the only one that insisted on a signed accord—which, in the end, was not honored.

After attacks on the KIA were resumed, which led to the flight of more than 100,000 villagers living in the war zones, government forces went on to attack the Shan State Army (SSA) of the Shan State Progress Party, another group that had a ceasefire agreement—although not signed—with the government. Fighting also broke out in northern Shan State, where a new group, the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) was formed among the Palaungs. Its predecessor, the Palaung State Liberation Army, entered into a verbal ceasefire agreement with the government in 1991, but continued discontent among the Palaung led to the formation of the TNLA, which has grown into one of the strongest ethnic armies in the country. Then, in February 2015, fighting broke out between government forces and yet another armed group, the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) in Kokang, an area in northeastern Shan State dominated by ethnic Chinese. But this time, it was the ethnic armed group, not the government, which started the war.

None of this is dealt with in Aung Naing Oo's book. Instead we are treated to tales about "Angolan Tennis"—whatever that might be—and "the Spirit of the Haida Gwaii, the Jade Canoe," a statue at Vancouver airport in Canada. But the main shortcoming of this collection of essays it that it deals only in passing with the main foreign player in Burma's civil and political conflicts: China. Aung Naing Oo refers to China as "the elephant in the room," and lumps it together with India and, somewhat surprisingly, the KIA—which he says "has refused to sign the NCA." The NCA, or nationwide ceasefire agreement, was a face-saving gesture that U Thein Sein initiated towards the end of his presidency in October 2015. It attracted only three armed groups and five smaller entities which should be described as NGOs rather than resistance armies. None of the major groups in the north and the northeast signed U Thein Sein's NCA, and Aung Naing Oo ignores the fact that, until then, the KIA was the only group that actually had a signed ceasefire agreement with government.

China is the only foreign power that can wield a carrot as well as a stick in Burma's civil war—and Beijing is playing its cards very well, outmaneuvering all the Western peaceniks who have flocked to the country since 2011. The MNDAA grew out of the Communist Party of Burma (CPB), which received massive support from China during the decade 1968-1978, and at a limited extent until the party collapsed in 1989 when the hilltribe rank-and-file of the communist army rose in mutiny against its old, predominantly Burman, orthodox Maoist leadership. The main successor to the CPB, the United Wa State Army (UWSA), is the strongest ethnic armed group in the country—and heavily armed with Chinese weapons which China did not even give to the CPB: Man-portable Air Defense Systems, or MANPADS, howitzers, armored fighting vehicles and the latest models of Chinese machine-guns and other automatic weapons.

The UWSA did not sign the so-called NCA—but it did enter into a ceasefire agreement with the government as early as 1989. Today, it does not take part in the war, but supplies other groups, notably the MNDAA, the TNLA and the SSA, with weapons and ammunition. And, behind the UWSA are, of course, the Chinese—at the same time as China has sold military equipment, including jet fighters, to the Burmese government. In recent months, China has also begun to flex its muscles in the "peace process" by offering to mediate. Aung Naing Oo, who was foreign affairs spokesman for the All-Burma Students Democratic Front, based in Bangkok, and later affiliated with the Vahu Development Institute in Chiang Mai, before he returned to Burma after U Thein Sein had become the country's president, wants us to believe that "the peace process is still on track"—a remarkable conclusion given the state of affairs in Burma's frontier areas.

Ambassador Kobia also writes in his endorsement that "history will show that supporting the Myanmar peace process was the right thing to do, and that the EU tries its best, politically and financially." History is more likely to show that Western political support for Burma's so-called "peace process" was one of the most ineffectual follies of our time. As for financial support, peace making has become a lucrative industry in Burma, with numerous foreign organizations and individuals competing for funds and attention—while ordinary people in the war zones continue to suffer. If any book should be written about Burma's civil war today, it should be from their perspective, not from that of any local or foreign "peacemaker."

Bertil Lintner is a former correspondent with the Far Eastern Economic Review and author of several books on Burma.

By BERTIL LINTNER

http://www.irrawaddy.com/culture/books/book-review-pathway-to-peace.html

Commentary on " General Gun Maw: 'If the military changes its behaviour, we will change our policy right away' "

Posted: 26 Jan 2017 01:13 AM PST

If the Tatmadaw or Military is really entertaining the notion of "total annihilation" of the Kachin Independence Army and subsequently also all the other ethnic resistance armies, the county will never see peace and with it the development, poverty reduction, human security and so on won't be able to be implemented, which are badly needed and in short supply.

Like Gun Maw said, the core question to be asked is: Why all the non-Bamar ethnic nationalities are at war with the Burmese center, or better, specifically the ethnocentric Military top brass and to a lesser extend the Bamar political elite or political class?

It should be clear to the powers that be that this has only to do with political grievances and unjustified colonial-like situation imposed by the Military on the non-Bamar ethnic nationalities. In short, the ethnic groups are waging a resistance war against the Bamar occupying forces and at the same time, making their political demand heard, which are the rights of self-determination, equality, democracy and universal human rights.

If the military solution has been the answer for the present Tatmadaw leadership, it should look back into the past, when successive Bamar-dominated and Military governments had also embarked on such rhetoric and had miserably failed.

In sum, whether we like it or not, political solution through political means would be the only answer to achieve the desired political settlement.

It is time for the Tatmadaw to wake up to the reality and gather enough "political will" to strive for genuine peaceful negotiation for the sake of the people, rather than entertaining the "win-lose", zero-sum game of total annihilation, which is doomed to fail.

Link to the story :  General Gun Maw: 'If the military changes its behaviour, we will change our policy right away'