Tuesday, April 30, 2019

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Media’s Unfair Coverage Exhausts Military’s Patience: Spokesperson 

Posted: 30 Apr 2019 06:40 AM PDT

The secretary of the military's True News Information Team, Brigadier-General Zaw Min Tun, told a news conference in Naypyitaw on Tuesday that the media had exhausted the military's patience, giving it no option but to take legal action.

"This [the military's series of recent lawsuits against media organizations and critics] is a response to our grievances. If we remained silent, they would just take advantage of that [to commit more offenses]," he said in response to reporters' questions after a "four pillars" meeting of representatives of the media and the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government.

The military recently sued The Irrawaddy News and Radio Free Asia (RFA) for defamation over their coverage of recent clashes between the Myanmar Army and the Arakan Army, an ethnic armed group, in Rakhine State.

The military said the cases were opened because the media organizations' coverage was unfair.

"We will continue with the cases as per the law," Brig-Gen. Zaw Min Tun added.

Asked why the military has resorted to taking action under controversial laws instead of the country's media law, he said the latter only requires offenders to pay a fine, adding that this was not a harsh enough penalty.

The military's ire has not been limited to the news media. Since the second week of this month, senior military officials have opened cases against several critics including an activist, a human rights film director and student activists. The activists and director were detained soon after charges were filed against them.

The post Media's Unfair Coverage Exhausts Military's Patience: Spokesperson  appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

ARSA Denies Criminal Activities in Bangladesh Camps

Posted: 30 Apr 2019 06:25 AM PDT

YANGON – The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) has rebutted the findings of the International Crisis Group (ICG) released on Thursday, which warned that Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh are being increasingly operated with impunity by ARSA militants and gangs.

Nearly 1 million Rohingya who were expelled by Myanmar military, or Tatmadaw, operations in 2017 have been in Bangladesh camps now for over 18 months. Returning to where they once lived in western Myanmar's Rakhine State is still but a vague hope for them as fighting has intensified between the Arakan Army (AA) and government troops in northern Rakhine as of this month.

The United Nations has accused the military of acting against the Rohingya with "genocidal intent" and international rights groups are calling for the military chief Sen-Gen Min Aung Hlaing to be prosecuted at the International Criminal Court (ICC) for his role in mishandling the crisis.

Amid numerous challenges for the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, threats against camp leaders, civil society groups and political figures have become a major threat. The ICG's recent report "Building a Better Future for Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh" claims ARSA militants and gangs mostly control the camps and often commit violence against the residents.

The report highlights the safety conditions of the camp's Rohingya community leaders, the likelihood of the repatriation project agreed by Myanmar and Bangladesh authorities being carried out, and encouragements for authorities to lift the ban on the provision of formal education in the camps.

The ICG mentions that groups vying for control in the camps include ARSA, which it says is seeking to "deploy deadly violence to further its aims: informal networks of religious leaders; non-violent political and civil society groups: and a random assortment of criminal gangs."

"Violent groups operate freely in the camps. As evening draws in and humanitarian workers withdraw to their bases in Cox's Bazar town, security is in the hands of untrained and unarmed night watchmen appointed from among the refugees," the report says.

ARSA announced its denial of the report findings via its Twitter account on Tuesday, stating it is based on hearsay and is baseless. It also accuses the ICG of trying "to defame and manipulatively discolor ARSA's legitimate long-running struggle" for the persecuted Rohingya community in Rakhine.

ARSA's Twitter page is used as a communication channel for the group and is where it posts strong English-language statements. It denied "any involvement in the act of intimidation and even likely extra-judicial killings as reported." The post invited credible international organizations to investigate such "perceived crimes," saying they are "ready to cooperate."

ARSA wrote that its own objective is to defend, salvage and protect the innocent Rohingya, an indigenous ethnic community of Rakhine State, and said they have rights to defend themselves under international law. They say that is why their attacks mainly target the Myanmar military.

Despite ARSA's denials, the ICG report stated that ARSA was likely responsible for the killing of Arif Ullah, a camp leader who was hacked to death in June 2018. Death threats against Arif Ullah made by ARSA had been widely circulated on Whatsapp, and accused him of being on good terms with the Bangladeshi army.

The ICG says refugees have expressed "serious concerns about their personal security" as the militants and gangs are "intimidating, kidnapping and killing with impunity." It criticized homicides and other forms of deadly violence that commonly happen at night, saying that the police rarely investigate the cases and the perpetrators have almost never been brought to justice.

The ICG report says, "A determined and often violent struggle is currently underway for de facto control of the camps." It quoted the expression of a prominent refugee leader that he was "unable to sleep at night" for fear of attack by militants and gangs.

The ICG suggested that the Bangladesh government ease restrictions on formal education in the camps, saying that local and international organizations are ready to provide such education. The report recommends the improvement of law and order in the camps by providing a regular and effective Bangladesh police service, investigating crimes and bringing perpetrators to justice.

Currently, Rohingya children largely rely on informal private "tuitions" in dwellings and networks of madrassas that purely teach the "Koran [and] do not adequately fill the formal education gap."

The ICG said that banning education in the camp creates a risk of transnational jihadists groups gaining "a foothold in the camps."

It claims the Chittagong-based Islamist movement Hefazat-e-Islam—which has publicly called for jihad against Myanmar—has considerable influence over the madrassa network in the camps, through the funding and religious scholars that it provides.

This is the second time ARSA has denied a report on the refugee camps following another publication titled "ARSA: End Abductions, Torture, Threats against Rohingya Refugees and Women Aid Employees" launched by Fortify Rights in March.

ARSA carried out a third ambush this year in Myanmar when they targeted a police van transporting officers in northern Maungdaw in Rakhine State last week. Myanmar's state-owned newspapers reported a police officer was wounded during the attack. Footage of the incident, which later went viral on Facebook, was believed to show men wearing ARSA uniforms.

In January, six police officers including a police colonel were wounded in the first ARSA attack of the year near Wat Kyein Village in Maungdaw. The second attack five days later saw three officers wounded in an artillery assault on police outposts near Wai Lar Taung Village.

The post ARSA Denies Criminal Activities in Bangladesh Camps appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Large Corporations Dominate ‘TiME’ Transparency Ranking

Posted: 30 Apr 2019 06:15 AM PDT

The private sector is leading the way in terms of corporate transparency and disclosure, according to the latest Transparency in Myanmar Enterprises (TiME) report by the Myanmar Center for Responsible Business (MCRB).

In the 2019 report, known in Burmese as "Pwint Thit Sa", seven of the country's leading companies, including its largest retailer City Mart Holdings Co. Ltd (CMHL), First Myanmar Investment (FMI), Max Myanmar Group and Shwe Taung Group, maintained their status from last year's report among the top 10, and all continue to improve their disclosure.

In its fifth report to date, MCRB said the owners of some Myanmar companies clearly understand the business case for corporate governance and transparency and that maintaining an up-to-date website contributes to Myanmar's reform process.

The report assessed the websites of 248 large companies, including listed, public, privately owned and state-owned economic enterprises. The number of companies making information available increased from the 2018 and 2016 transparency surveys in which 182 companies and 100 companies were assessed respectively.

MCRB scored companies based on their online disclosure of information on their corporate profiles, corporate governance, sustainability management and reporting. In its assessment, it used criteria from the ASEAN Corporate Governance Scorecard (ACGS) as well as those linked to the globally respected Integrated Reporting Framework.

The report notes that while the overall disclosure of information by the companies, particularly those in the top 20, is up, the average score of all companies assessed dropped from 7 percent in 2018 to 5 percent this year.

Regarding the private conglomerates' continued dominance of the transparency survey list, MCRB director Vicky Bowman said, "This shows that what motivates their owners and top executives is not regulatory requirements but the business case for transparency, corporate governance and sustainability."

She added, "They see it as a means to attract investors and business partners, and build their social license to operate. But they also see a focus on performance—for example on energy efficiency—as a means of making savings for their bottom line."

Nicolas Delange, managing partner at Yever, a consultancy firm, said, "Most companies and business leaders are embracing transparency because being transparent is the key for them to get access to funding and convince their stakeholders and shareholders that they are doing good and well."

According to Bowman, the criteria are "a way to measure whether the company 'walks the walk' or just 'talks the talk'. It is more challenging, as it requires companies to put in place systems to capture and measure performance data."

"Above all I would like companies and government departments and enterprises to see that maintaining an up-to-date website is a win-win situation, which avoids misunderstanding between them and their stakeholders, whether these are voters, shareholders, journalists or potential investors, and is an important contribution to Myanmar's reform process and SDG16, which concerns effective, accountable and inclusive institutions," she told The Irrawaddy in an email interview. SDG16 is one of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals established by the UN in 2015. It refers to the goal of securing peace, justice and strong institutions.

According to the report, the situation concerning corporate governance, transparency and business integrity in Myanmar "has generally been improving" since political reforms were introduced in 2011 under the administration of former President U Thein Sein. It said the incumbent National League for Democracy (NLD) government continued the regulatory reforms including a new Investment Law in 2016, and a new Companies Law in 2017.

In August 2018, the government adopted the Myanmar Sustainable Development Plan, which outlined steps to improve corporate governance and disclosure rules, and to enforce them, as well as ways to fight corruption and improve sustainability.

This is the second report on the subject of transparency released this month. In early April, the International Finance Corporation in partnership with the Securities and Exchange Commission of Myanmar, the Directorate of Investment and Company Administration (DICA) and the Yangon Stock Exchange published the Myanmar Corporate Governance Scorecard (MCGS), in which 24 large companies were assessed using the ASEAN CG Scorecard criteria.

Bowman explained, "That MCGS study found that the average score of the 24 companies they assessed was 31 percent, compared to an ASEAN average of 69 percent or more. This partly reflects the greater number of publicly listed companies in some ASEAN markets, but also reflects the fact that CG [corporate governance] is a new concept for many Myanmar companies.  Those that are keen to adopt it are pressing ahead."

MCRB said that 108, or 44 percent, of the companies assessed (based on 2017 DICA data) do not have corporate websites and most of those that do publish little or no corporate governance and performance data.

The five companies listed on the Yangon Stock Exchange had an average score of 32 percent based on a total of 143 criteria, and continue to outperform the public and private companies assessed, where the average score in each category was 4 percent.

State-owned enterprises (SOEs) were included in the 2019 report for the first time. Among the 28 SOEs, Construction and Housing Development Bank  and Yangon Electricity Supply Corporation led the way in terms of disclosure. Overall, however SOEs—including the military-owned Myanmar Economic Corporation—had the lowest average score in terms of overall disclosure of corporate governance information.

The report outlined a set of recommendations to the government for enforcing regulatory requirements to disclose information and getting companies to abide by the law.

"Regulatory requirements to disclose beneficial ownership data, currently mentioned in several different directives from the Central Bank and others, should be made consistent and the information should be available via MyCo, the companies register. The government regulators—mainly the Securities and Exchange Commission of Myanmar (SECM) and DICA—should start to enforce these requirements, including through fining companies who do not comply," Bowman said.

However, most companies seem unaware of the extensive regulatory disclosure requirements for listed and public companies with more than 100 shareholders.

"Companies should disentangle the finances of their company from their foundations or donation programs, and improve the governance and transparency of these, to reduce the scope for these being used for corruption," Bowman said.

According to DICA, there were 61,631 companies registered as of March this year, but many of them are small and medium-sized enterprises and not included in MCRB's assessment.

The report also highlighted issues such as corruption, environmental impact assessments (EIAs) and beneficial ownership. Of the companies assessed, 52 disclosed their subsidiaries, of which 19 companies disclosed beneficial ownership data.

According to Bowman, "It [information about beneficial ownership] facilitates banks in undertaking customer due diligence, which is why it is already mentioned in CBM [Central Bank of Myanmar] Directive 21/2015, and helps in combating money laundering. For the extractives sector, it will also enable Myanmar to be compliant with the EITI standards, which should encourage more responsible and transparent investment in the sector."

The government formed a beneficial ownership (BO) task force last June to encourage businesses to make more information available to the public as part of implementing the EITI standards. As an EITI candidate country, Myanmar is trying to meet 2016 EITI standards, one of which is having businesses' BO information made available to the public.

According to Delange at consultancy firm Yever, as "Investing is all about trust," investors will shun companies that do not disclose information on governance, strategy, shareholding structures and the like.

"Companies which are able to embrace transparency will have—and already have—a competitive advantage over their peers: we talk more about them, we respect them more, and we are more keen to do business with them. As an employee I may want to join a good company, as a customer I will select a company selling good products, as an investor I will choose a company with a good reputation. Therefore, being able to disclose information about ownership is essential for building trust. Moreover, in certain sectors—finance, extractive, etc.— it can be mandatory," he said.

The post Large Corporations Dominate 'TiME' Transparency Ranking appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Renewed EU Sanctions Don’t Affect Us: Military Spokesperson

Posted: 30 Apr 2019 04:57 AM PDT

YANGON—Myanmar's military, or Tatmadaw, has said the European Union's (EU's) renewed embargo on arms and equipment wouldn't have any serious impact on it because the majority of its arsenal are of Russian and Chinese origin.

On Monday, the bloc extended sanctions which are already in place for a further year until April 2020.

The sanctions comprise of an embargo on arms and equipment that can be used for internal repression, an export ban on dual-use goods for use by military and border guard police, restrictions on equipment for monitoring communications, and a prohibition on military training and cooperation. Plus, asset freezes and travel bans on 14 people for serious human rights violations against the Rohingya population and civilians in Rakhine, Kachin and Shan states.

Military spokesperson Brig-Gen Zaw Min Tun told the media on Tuesday that a majority of the military's weaponry system doesn't come from the EU, "…..but from Russia and China, so Myanmar will not be affected very much." He added that as the military is trying to develop into a "standard army," it would accept technology from any country.

This was a rare admission by a senior military official about the sources of military weaponry.

Crippled for decades by international sanctions—especially by those imposed by the West—it has long been an open secret that the military relies on Russia and China for hardware. However, they have rarely revealed that. The two powerful countries have been long-time supporters of the military regime, especially since the 1990s and early 2000s during a time when Myanmar was shunned by the international community for its human rights abuses and political oppression. Even now, decades later, military ties between them still appear to be strong.

On April 21, Myanmar's military chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing left for Russia for his third trip since taking his post in 2011. During the six-day trip, at the invite of Russia's defense minister, he participated in the 8th Moscow Conference on International Security. He also met the government of the Russian Federation and military leaders and visited plants and factories in Ulan-Ude, Irkutsk, Murom, Saint Petersburg and Moscow.

According to the Commander-in-Chief of Defense Services website, in Ulan-Ude, he visited an aviation plant; he viewed the MIG-29 Service Support Center in Moscow while admiring a skills demonstration and the firing of armored vehicles manufactured by the OJSC Muromteplovoz Factory in Murom.

During his trip, Russian news outlets reported that six Sukhoi SU-30SM fighter jets are being assembled for Myanmar under a contract worth about US$204 million (300 billion kyats) which was signed between the two nations last year.

Prior to his Russian trip, also in April, Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing was in China for a fifth time since 2011. He visited an armored vehicle training school in Beijing and met with senior officers of China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) on April 11.

It wasn't known if the military chief made any deals on military hardware with China this time, but records show that Myanmar owns a number of Chinese-made aircraft. In June 2017, a Y-8 military tactical transport aircraft crashed into the Andaman Sea, killing 124 people onboard. The plane was made in China. The military later blamed bad weather for the crash.

The post Renewed EU Sanctions Don't Affect Us: Military Spokesperson appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

China to Provide 1 Billion Yuan Socioeconomic Grant to Myanmar

Posted: 30 Apr 2019 02:25 AM PDT

YANGON—China will provide a grant of 1 billion yuan (225.39 billion kyats, or approximately US$148 million) for socioeconomic development projects under an economic and technical cooperation agreement signed in Beijing last week.

Myanmar's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a press release on Monday that the 1 billion yuan would be used to support socio-economic development, particularly projects to improve people's livelihoods, feasibility studies for major projects and humanitarian assistance for IDPs in northern Myanmar.

State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi recently completed a six-day visit to China to attend the 2nd Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation at the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is Xi's signature foreign policy project. Unveiled in 2013, it is also known as the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road. The project aims to build a network of roads, railroads and shipping lanes linking at least 70 countries from China to Europe passing through Central Asia, the Middle East and Russia, fostering trade and investment.

Myanmar officially became a BRI partner country after signing a 15-point MoU establishing the China-Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC) in September. The estimated 1,700-kilometer-long corridor will connect Kunming, the capital of China's Yunnan province, to Myanmar's major economic checkpoints—first to Mandalay in central Myanmar, and then east to Yangon and west to the Kyaukphyu Special Economic Zone (SEZ).

More than 5,000 high-level delegates from over 150 countries attended the 2nd BRI Forum, including 37 heads of state and government, and representatives of international organizations.

On Thursday last week, as part of the forum, Myanmar and China signed three agreements: the Agreement on Economic and Technical Cooperation; a Memorandum of Understanding on the China-Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC) Cooperation Plan (2019-2030); and a Memorandum of Understanding on the Formulation of the Five-year Development Program for Economic and Trade Cooperation, which aims to enhance cooperation in investment and productivity.

According to the ministry's statement, the MoU on CMEC will promote cooperation in the following areas in line with the Myanmar Sustainable Development Plan: industry, transportation, energy, agriculture, "digital silk road", finance, tourism, environmental protection, people-to-people exchanges, science and technology, personnel training, water resources and flood prevention and control.

China has proposed 30 projects under the CMEC, but Myanmar has only approved nine so far. Under the CMEC agreement, the Myanmar government agrees to build three border economic cooperation zones in Shan and Kachin states.

Amid growing public concern that involvement with BRI projects will incur unsustainable debt to China, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi said at the High-Level Meeting Session 1, which was held under the theme "Belt and Road Cooperation: Shaping a Brighter Shared Future," that all BRI projects "must win the confidence and support of local people".

Myanmar serves as a land bridge between South Asia and Southeast Asia, in close proximity to large economies such as China, India and ASEAN. It has always been Myanmar's policy to maintain close and friendly relations with all nations, especially with its neighbors, she said.

She also expressed her belief that "BRI projects selected in line with Myanmar's national plan and priorities will contribute to its endeavors for the improvement of much needed infrastructure that will not merely enhance domestic connectivity but also improve cross-border connectivity."

The State Counselor held separate bilateral talks with Xi and Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang during the trip. The Foreign Ministry statement said the two sides emphasized promoting bilateral cooperation under the BRI framework; continued provision of assistance to Myanmar's efforts for peace and national reconciliation; maintaining peace, stability and rule of law along the border areas, including a successful repatriation process in Rakhine State; and continued support to Myanmar at the UN and in other international forums.

China's recent effort to revive the controversial Myitsone Dam inflamed negative sentiments among the people in Myanmar. It was widely expected that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi would use the Beijing visit to discuss the most controversial China-backed projects in Myanmar including Myitsone. However, the Myanmar President's Office said the dam was not on the agenda in Beijing, while promising that all developments related to the dam would be handled transparently and that nothing would be done without the public's knowledge.

Yangon-based ethnic affairs and China analyst U Maung Maung Soe told The Irrawaddy that the small grant comes at a time when local political tensions over Myitsone are on the rise.

"You could say it is just to soothe the people's feelings [over the Myitsone issue] and to assist border stability. The absence of larger grants at this time means the Myanmar government may need to negotiate [with China on major issues]."

At the 2nd BRI Forum, China signed more than $64 billion in deals with several countries. It repeatedly reassured existing and potential partners that Beijing does not intend to saddle them with unsustainable debts and aimed to benefit all parties involved in the initiative.

The post China to Provide 1 Billion Yuan Socioeconomic Grant to Myanmar appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Overall Corruption Situation Has Not Improved, Anti-Graft Chief Says

Posted: 30 Apr 2019 01:10 AM PDT

NAYPYITAW—Despite the strenuous efforts that have been made to fight corruption, the practice remains rampant in the country, Anti-Corruption Commission chairman U Aung Kyi said.

The chairman stressed the severity of the situation as he submitted his agency's annual report for 2018 to the Union Parliament on Monday.

To assess the level of corruption and gauge the success of its measures to combat it, the commission hired an independent third party to conduct a nationwide survey. The survey, which did not include Chin State, was conducted from October through December.

"According to the survey, corruption had not declined significantly by the end of 2018, and remained at the usual [level]," U Aung Kyi told Parliament.

Asked for their opinions on the major factors contributing to corruption, survey respondents cited a self-interested mindset, resistance to change, ineffective action against corruption, and poor rule of law in certain places.

Corruption will remain as long as there is vast bureaucracy in government departments, said Lower House lawmaker U Nay Myo Tun of Htantabin Township.

"For example, even the process of applying for a citizenship ID card is not simple. And [departments] ask for a lot of information and people can't present all the documents. So, they choose to pay bribes in order to get things done, which leads to corruption. Unless procedures are streamlined in the departments, this will continue to happen," U Nay Myo Tun told The Irrawaddy.

The commission received 1,054 complaints in 2018, of which only 46 could be handled under the Anti-Corruption Law. The remaining 1,795 complaints were referred to the concerned departments for action according to the code of conduct for civil servants.

Of the 1,795 complaints it handed over to the departments, the commission said action was taken on 536 complaints.

The Education Ministry will establish complaint-handling counters in the basic education sector next academic year, which starts in June, said the deputy director-general of the ministry, U Ko Lay Win.

"For example, people with links to the Education Ministry offered appointments [as basic education teachers] and transfers [to schools in major cities] in exchange for money. They asked that the money be transferred via Wave Money," he said.

Wave Money, a provider of mobile financial services, is a joint venture between Norwegian telecom operator Telenor and local bank Yoma Bank.

"In that case, we asked the Home Affairs Ministry to investigate. We can sue the perpetrators under other laws, but not under the Anti-Corruption Law," he added.

In cases of corruption among education staff and teachers, an internal investigation is done and action is taken against them under the code of conduct for civil servants. Punishments include demotions among other steps.

"Corruption will not die unless and until it is viewed as a sin, as shameful by society. [But what is happening in reality is] that people take pride in getting rich due to corruption. That wrong notion is entrenched in society," said Yangon-based author Zarni Soe Htut.

Fighting corruption will take time, said U Aung Kyi, calling corruption the major obstacle to poverty reduction and development, and a problem that weakens the entire society, with harmful political, administrative, economic and cultural effects.

"It is a long-term process to be carried out with a grand strategy that takes into consideration the structure of the country, strength of institutions, behaviors of citizens, traditions and customs," he said.

The fourth amendment to the Anti-Corruption Law has given the commission a broader mandate. The amended law gives the commission the authority to investigate any civil servant who is seen to be unusually wealthy at its own discretion. Previously, it could only probe allegations of corruption in response to formal complaints filed with strong supporting evidence.

The commission can also take action against bribe givers under the new law. The amendments also expand the anti-graft body's reach, with commission branches to be opened in other states and regions. The new law also focuses on educating the public about combating corruption, starting in primary schools as well as in government departments.

The post Overall Corruption Situation Has Not Improved, Anti-Graft Chief Says appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Cambodian PM says China Ready to Help if EU Imposes Sanctions

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 11:13 PM PDT

PHNOM PENH—China will help Cambodia if the European Union (EU) withdraws special market access over its rights record, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said on Monday as he announced a 600 million yuan (US$89 million) Chinese aid package for his military.

Hun Sen, who is on a five-day trip to China to attend a Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) forum in Beijing, held bilateral talks with President Xi Jinping and signed several agreements with Cambodia’s most important ally.

Cambodia benefits from the EU’s “Everything But Arms” trade scheme which allows the world’s least developed countries to export most goods to the EU free of duties.

But Cambodia risks losing the special access to the world’s largest trading bloc over its human rights records.

During a meeting with Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang, Li pledged to help Cambodia if the EU withdraws the market access, according to a post on Hun Sen’s official Facebook page.

“In this regard … Prime Minister Li Keqiang also confirmed his efforts to help Cambodia,” the post said.

China is Cambodia’s biggest aid donor and investor, pouring in billions of dollars in development aid and loans through the Belt and Road initiative, which aims to bolster land and sea links with Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa.

Unlike, Western countries, China does not question Cambodia’s record on rights.

The EU, which accounts for more than one-third of Cambodia’s exports, including garments, footwear and bicycles, in February began an 18-month process that could lead to the suspension of the special market access.

Among the agreements Hun Sen struck in China was one for Huawei Technologies to help Cambodia develop a system for 5G technology. The Chinese tech giant has ambitions to build the next generation of data networks across the world and boasts 40 commercial 5G contracts worldwide.

China also agreed to import 400,000 tons of Cambodian rice, according to Hun Sen’s Facebook page.

“China will continue to support the national defense sector in Cambodia, and in this regard, the Chinese president announced that China will provide 600 million yuan to Cambodia’s defense sector,” the post said.

The post Cambodian PM says China Ready to Help if EU Imposes Sanctions appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

China’s Xi Appeals to Youth Patriotism on Centenary of Student Protests

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 11:04 PM PDT

BEIJING—President Xi Jinping appealed to China’s youth on Tuesday to love the country and dedicate themselves to the Communist Party, warning on the centenary of student-led protests there was no place for those who ignored the country’s needs.

The May 4 Movement of 1919 started out as anti-imperialist student protests against a decision at the Paris Peace Conference, after World War One, to award Japan control of German concessions in China’s Shandong province.

It soon encompassed a broader debate about how China should modernize, having only just overthrown the emperor and ushered in a republic in 1911.

The issue of student protests is especially sensitive in China this year, which also marks three decades since the bloody suppression of pro-democracy protests on and around Beijing’s Tiananmen Square on June 4.

Speaking to officials and youth delegates at the Great Hall of the People, Xi said China’s young should be grateful to the party, the country, the society and the people.

“Tell every Chinese person that patriotism is one’s duty, is an obligation,” Xi said, in comments carried live on state television.

“For Chinese youth of the new era, ardently loving the motherland is the foundation of building the body and of talent,” he added.

Xi also warned about the need for young people to be morally upstanding and avoid what he termed “mistaken thoughts.”

“In the new era, Chinese youth should consciously establish and practice the core values of socialism, and be good at drawing morality from the traditional virtues of the Chinese people,” he said.

“Consciously resist mistaken thoughts such as the worship of money, hedonism, extreme individualism, and historical nihilism,” Xi added, referring to attempts to reevaluate core events and personalities of the party’s revolutionary past.

Despite the optimism the May 4 Movement brought at the time, the period following it was marked by turmoil and civil war in China, which eventually lead to the overthrow of the Republican government which fled to Taiwan after the Communist revolution in 1949.

Xi said that China had to make achievements on the back of its own work, and not rely on anyone else. “A bright China is not a gift that can be given by anybody,” he said. While May 4 remains widely discussed in China, June 4 is taboo in China and it will not be marked by any officially approved events.

Xi is expected to be outside the country in early June this year, on a state visit to Russia and Central Asia.

The post China’s Xi Appeals to Youth Patriotism on Centenary of Student Protests appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Death by Diet—The Race to Transform the World’s Bad Food Habits

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 10:28 PM PDT

ROME—Half a century ago farmers grew rice, sesame and pulses on the land around Myint Soe’s village in Myanmar. Now only paddy fields remain.

Technology has made farming easier, but government policy and climate change have slashed the variety of foods being produced by villagers, and they fear this is killing them when combined with an explosion of fast-food.

“Now we don’t know where the oils we eat come from because we buy what’s quick and cheap and easy,” said Myint Soe, 59.

He said many people are suffering from cancer, hardening of the arteries and other ailments, likely caused by eating low-quality oil, sugary drinks, salty snacks and instant noodles.

Fellow farmer Kyaw Lin, 47, said younger, thinner people were now having strokes.

What is happening in Thar Yar Su is just a microcosm of one of the world’s biggest problems—deadly diets, which have now overtaken smoking as the world’s biggest killer.

Data shows one in five deaths worldwide in 2017 was linked to unhealthy diets in both poor and rich countries as burgers and soda replaced traditional diets and a warming planet impacted the variety of crops grown.

The Global Burden of Disease study by the U.S.-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation said unhealthy eating is killing 11 million people a year, up from 8 million in 1990—while smoking kills about 8 million people a year.

Meanwhile billions of people lack the nutrients their bodies need.

United Nations’ figures show the global population is both hungrier and heavier than it was five years ago, and food and policy experts fear the escalating food crisis could fuel conflicts and migration without action to reverse this trend.

“We cannot only focus on tackling hunger anymore,” Jose Graziano da Silva, head of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), said of the agency’s plans for the next two years. “We are witnessing the globalization of obesity.”

"Tipping point"

Jessica Fanzo, a professor at Johns Hopkins University and co-chair of the annual Global Nutrition Report—described as the world’s most comprehensive report on nutrition—said diets were “the number one cause of disease, disability and death.”

“We’ve already reached the tipping point,” she added, emphasizing that “massive changes” were needed.

Too many children are not growing or developing properly due to a lack of food while obesity is escalating, she said.

After decades of concentrating on how to feed an expanding global population, political leaders are realizing that nutrition—not hunger—is the new frontier, and the focus is shifting from providing enough food to food that is good.

Alan Dangour, professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said governments have not thought enough about how environmental change will impact food.

“We could have successful trade policies which enable food to be passed between countries in a sensible way, in a fair way,” he added. “If that doesn’t happen, we could see civil unrest [and] mass migration.”

Gerda Verburg, UN assistant secretary-general and coordinator of the Scaling Up Nutrition Movement, told a public forum in Rome this year that the future of food was “not in the calories … but in the quality and diversity.”

Governments, companies and aid agencies are now racing to shake up the world’s unhealthy food habits, using legislation, educational campaigns, new and reformulated products, and greener ways of farming.

The challenges, however, are huge—not least because climate change threatens to reduce both the quantity and quality of crops, lowering yields.

Nutrition researchers said healthier, plant-based traditional foods and plant species are being shunned for Western fast-food diets laden with sugar, salt and fat.

The fruits and vegetables backed by nutritionists as crucial to good health were expensive for many, while research funding for them was “virtually non-existent,” said Emmy Simmons, senior adviser at the Washington DC-based think-tank Center for Strategic and International Studies.

That is why the farm sector must adapt to make healthier foods accessible to all, said Marie Ruel, director of poverty, health and nutrition for the Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).

Fast-food frenzy

The latest Global Burden of Disease study found the world on average ate only 12 percent of the recommended amount of nuts and seeds—but drank 10 times more sugary drinks and consumed nearly twice as much processed meats.

Modern diets are contributing to ballooning overweight and obesity figures, and a rise in non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as stroke, cancer, diabetes and heart disease.

Treating these diseases will cost the world more than $30 trillion—about 40 percent of today’s global GDP—between 2010 and 2030, according to a report from the World Economic Forum and Harvard University.

“Today, not a single country has been able to reverse the trend in obesity and NCDs,” said Karel Callens, deputy leader of FAO’s strategic program to end hunger and malnutrition.

“People are starting to suffer from all those chronic diseases at a much earlier age because now they’re getting exposed to poor nutrition, bad diets and lifestyles from a much earlier age.”

This situation could cause life expectancies to fall, experts warned, including in wealthy countries like Spain, home to the famed Mediterranean diet long praised by nutritionists for being rich in olive oil, fish and fresh produce.

For that traditional diet has been abandoned by the younger generation in favor of fast-foods like burgers, sodas and French fries, said Miguel Angel Martinez-Gonzalez, professor of preventive medicine at the University of Navarra in Pamplona.

This was the main reason about 35 percent of Spanish adults are now obese and close to another 35 percent overweight, he said.

“This is a failure and a humiliation for public health,” said Martinez-Gonzalez.

Big food corporations have put a lot of effort and money into thwarting public campaigns and research to improve diets, he said, a charge echoed by other scientists and nutritionists.

For example, in 2016, companies making sugary drinks spent almost $50 million lobbying against U.S. government initiatives to reduce consumption of the beverages, wrote a team of experts led by New Zealand’s University of Auckland in January.

In Africa, the situation looks particularly dire, said IFPRI’s Ruel, as economies, populations and cities are predicted to expand quickly in the coming decades.

Hunger, alongside obesity and an emphasis on calorific staple crops, together with rising incomes and availability of unhealthy foods bode ill for the continent, she said.

Asian nations are fighting similar challenges.

Myanmar hopes to diversify what its people eat and grow to help the 30 percent of adolescent girls now anemic due mainly due iron deficiencies and one-fifth of women who are overweight.

That includes cultivating crops other than the staple rice—such as pulses, vegetables and fruit—using better fertilizers and improving livestock production, said Kyaw Swe Lin, director-general at the agriculture ministry.

Changing climate

Additional threats to diets stem from the world’s failure to rein in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, the main greenhouse gas that is heating up the planet, according to scientists.

Agriculture, forestry and other uses of land account for nearly a quarter of greenhouse gas emissions, according to the FAO.

Atmospheric concentrations of CO2 emitted by burning fossil fuels, clearing forests and other actions could reach 550 parts per million (ppm) by 2050, reducing iron, zinc and protein levels in staple crops, said Samuel Myers, principal research scientist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

In 2017 concentrations of CO2 hit a record high of 405.5 ppm, figures from the World Meteorological Organization showed.

Vitamins and minerals are vital to human development, disease prevention and wellbeing, yet more than 2 billion people are estimated to be deficient in micronutrients, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Working with scientists growing six staple foods across three continents, Myers and colleagues estimated that in 2050, emissions would cause zinc-deficiency in an additional 175 million people and protein-deficiency in 122 million more.

South and Southeast Asia, Africa and the Middle East would be most at risk, but the nutrient reductions may be less obvious than a loss of calories, so people may not adapt their diets without a push, they added.

On the other hand, hotter temperatures could actually offset nutrition loss linked to higher CO2 levels, said a study by researchers from the University of Illinois and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) published in January.

This two-year field study of soybeans found increasing temperatures by about 3 degrees Celsius boosted the amount of iron and zinc in the crop.

They are now trying to understand the causes and whether humidity plays a part, said Carl Bernacchi, a scientist at the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service.

Rising temperatures and erratic rainfall associated with climate change would also exacerbate water scarcity, change the relationships between crops, pests and pathogens, and shrink the size of fish, scientists have warned.

A global review of historical reports by researchers from the University of Sydney and University of Queensland warned that more than 40 percent of insect species were at risk of extinction, mainly because their habitats had become farm land.

Climate change could worsen their decline, further damaging food networks, other scientists have said.

Earlier this year, scientists led by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Germany’s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research unveiled an ideal diet for the health of the planet and its people.

It was dominated by fruit, vegetables, nuts, seeds and legumes, most of which depend on pollinating insects, said Harvard’s Myers.

“I want to shine a spotlight on the need to start embracing more pollinator-friendly practices,” added Myers, who has started studying the demise of insects.

Dangour, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia—where food demand was expected to rise the most, according to the World Bank—would likely be hit hardest by falling yields.

This could create “a tremendous imbalance in where people live and where food is”, he said.

Old and new

Governments may be slow to react, but scientists, economists and entrepreneurs are coming up with some innovative ideas about how to change agriculture and launching revolutionary products, some based on ancient foods. For example, improved knowledge of the vast community of microbes living inside humans has led to a better understanding of health and disease in the past decade. These microbes, especially in the gut, have been linked to depression, allergies and obesity—and they are affected by diets and exposure to antimicrobials, biologists said.

Antimicrobials are drugs that destroy dangerous pathogens, making them essential for human and animal health, but whose misuse and abuse can lead to drug resistance.

They are used to promote growth in livestock farming and aquaculture—and also in crops—thereby entering the human food supply, said FAO’s Callens.

Research by the U.S.-based University of Georgia found a correlation between obesity rates and the amount of antibiotics prescribed in each U.S. state between 2011 and 2014, linked to the way antibiotics disrupt stomach bacteria.

This points to how the industrialization of agriculture, while allowing the world to feed a growing population, is having unintentional consequences for human health, Callens said.

“We really need to rethink, not just what and how we eat as people, but how we actually produce and process food,” he said.

In the Asia-Pacific region, home to the largest number of hungry and malnourished people and where obesity is rising, businesses are coming up with ways to keep weight down and diseases at bay.

These include seafood grown in a lab, plant-based alternatives to meat to suit the Asian palate, and fiber and sugars that can lower the glycemic index of food, a measure of how quickly it raises blood sugar levels.

This could help reduce the incidence of diabetes, which affects 422 million people globally and killed about 1.6 million in 2016, according to the World Health Organization.

In India, confectionery giant Mars Inc. and charity Tata Trusts recently launched a snack made from yellow peas, targeting people like Chhaya Sunil Jadhav, a local health worker whose daughter fell ill from eating cheap, salty chips. “If it is nutritious, I will buy this,” said Jadhav, trying the new crunchy squares, which cost 10 rupees ($0.15) per pack and are high in iron, protein and vitamins.

Other food aficionados are rediscovering local, often forgotten, grains and plants that are inexpensive and easily available, such as moringa from which Cameroonian mother and entrepreneur Rosette Fien makes organic cereals for children.

Brazilian chef Bela Gil uses babassu coconut flour, rich in iron, fiber and vitamins, from the Amazon to make healthy cookies, while Indian chef Anahita Dhondy is popularizing traditional cereals such as millet and sorghum.

Planet veggie?

Healthier diets could also require consumers in rich countries to reduce their meat intake.

So scientists and vegetarian advocates are turning to more subtle ways and an understanding of human nature to shift behavior, instead of relying on laws and food taxes.

Those measures include tweaking the names of dishes to make them sound indulgent and tasty, like “slow-roasted caramelized zucchini bites” instead of “lighter-choice zucchini.”

At the other end of the spectrum are millions of refugees and people forced from their homes whose health and nutrition are highly dependent on food from governments and aid agencies.

As seen in camps for families who have fled violence in Burkina Faso, most had to leave their animals behind, and have no land to grow their own fresh food.

With U.N. figures showing wars, persecution and other violence have driven a record 68.5 million people from their homes, more people than ever are dependent on food aid—and for longer periods, making it critical for rations to be nutritious.

But the majority must survive on cereals, beans and oil, because it is too expensive for humanitarian agencies to distribute meat, milk and vegetables, aid workers said.

“We’re covering the basics. If we could do more, we would want to do more,” said David Bulman, the U.N. World Food Programme representative for Burkina Faso, citing funding as the main constraint.

Providing a wholesome diet in refugee camps, remote areas and places with few resources is a logistical and cost challenge, especially when some residents are there for decades.

“The modern-day crises are not short-term,” said Corinna Hawkes, director of the food policy center at City, University of London and co-chair of the Global Nutrition Report.

“There’s no question that the current world of food aid is not fully caught up with that.”

Even for those not trapped in a crisis, nutritious foods like fruit and vegetables are often costly and out of reach.

This is partly because they are in short supply—a situation that is unlikely to change, according to a study by researchers, led by the University of Illinois, published last December.

If the world wants more healthy food, producing fruit and vegetables has to be profitable but is hampered by a lack of reliable water supply, land tenure and labor, said Christopher Barrett, a professor at New York’s Cornell University.

Part of the problem is agricultural subsidies focused on grains and cereals, which Barrett said amounted to more than $1 billion a day in high-income countries.

“It’s absolutely absurd. And it’s not at all aligned with what’s most necessary for good human health,” he said.

While the knowledge already exists to feed the world’s population well without destroying the planet, using it effectively is a matter of political and personal will, nutritionists and scientists said.

“If we can employ very sophisticated technology to send people into space, why can’t we tackle something very basic, which is how to feed ourselves and stay healthy?” asked FAO’s Callens.

The post Death by Diet—The Race to Transform the World’s Bad Food Habits appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

The Day the British Blew Up the Sagaing Bridge

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 06:58 PM PDT

Seventy-seven years ago today, retreating British forces destroyed the Sagaing Bridge to prevent invading Japanese troops from pursuing them. Also known as the Ava Bridge, the span linking Mandalay and Sagaing had been built by the British during the colonial period.

The center of the structure finally collapsed after being dynamited by British troops around 18 times.

The 3,948-ft-long road, rail and pedestrian bridge boosted the flow of trade in the country after it was opened in 1934 by Governor Sir Hugh Lansdown Stephenson.

It was built by India's Braithwaite Co. at a cost of 14.3 million rupiahs. The company imported cement from India and had the quality of the bricks and stones used to build the bridge tested at Rangoon University.

The bridge was not renovated during Japanese rule. Authorities attempted to repair the bridge in 1946, but at that time it was difficult to order the trusses needed from abroad, and the bridge was not repaired until 1953.

Myanmar President Dr. Ba Oo re-opened the bridge the following year. The historic structure is now a tourist attraction in Sagaing. A new span, the Ayeyawady Bridge (Yadanabon), was built in 2008 and both bridges are in use at present.

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Monday, April 29, 2019

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Scheduled Power Outages for Myanmar’s Major Cities

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 04:43 AM PDT

MANDALAY—The electricity supply boards in Yangon and Mandalay have told the public to prepare for reduced power distribution rates and major power outages due to a reduction in rates of electricity being generated by hydropower stations.

The Mandalay Electricity Supply Corporation (MESC) announced on Sunday that it will cut power to different districts of Mandalay in rotational shifts during which the blackouts will last one hour or more at a time.

"As the power demand is rising in summer [as well as] a lower power supply, the corporation plans to reduce power distribution," said the MESC announcement.

All six townships in urban Mandalay will experience blackouts for one to two hours daily, and the industrial zone located at the outskirts of the city will experience blackouts in the late evening.

As the scorching summer temperatures have led to reduced water levels in the hydropower dams, electricity production has declined. Meanwhile, power consumption is rising as people need more electricity to cool their homes and workplaces.

"The water levels at the main hydropower dams have dropped to 14 feet (4.3 meters) so power production is declining and we have to reduce the power load," said U Zarni Aung, Mandalay Region's minister of electricity and construction.

According to the ministry's figures, the overall power production from gas turbines and hydropower dams combined is 3,600 megawatts per day, while the demand is currently over 3,800 megawatts. Gas turbines across the country produce about 1,460 megawatts per day, while the hydropower dams produce 2,000 megawatts per day.

Meanwhile, the Yangon Electricity Supply Cooperation (YESC) has also announced that power supply shortages could cause blackouts in the city during peak hours—between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. and from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.

The YESC also stated that the power supply from hydropower dams and natural gas power plants are reducing and plants in Yangon are currently using diesel to generate electricity in an attempt to meet the city's power needs.

The total power consumption in Mandalay Region is over 600 megawatts per day and in Yangon Region, 1,548 megawatts.

The post Scheduled Power Outages for Myanmar's Major Cities appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Myitsone Dam Flashback

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 04:06 AM PDT

YANGON—Had its original construction schedule not been derailed by controversy and public condemnation, leading to its suspension in 2011, the Chinese-backed Myitsone Dam hydropower project near the source of the Irrawaddy River in Kachin State would be operational by now as scheduled.

It has been eight years since the suspension. Currently, the project site on the bank of the river is mostly deserted. When it was launched on Dec. 21, 2009, the Myanmar Investment Commission estimated total investment in Myitsone Dam would amount to US$4.3 billion (6.54 trillion kyats). The project was in the middle of construction when it was halted in September 2011. Before the suspension, resettlement at the dam site was finished, and site formation, water supply, electricity and transportation facilities had commenced, according to its Chinese developer, State Power Investment Corporation (SPIC), which was known as China Power Investment (CPI) until 2015.

Despite recent pressure from China to resume the dam's construction, anti-dam sentiment is still on the rise among the public. Recently, prominent civil society leaders, environmentalists, writers and artists announced that they would launch a one-dollar campaign to collect money from the public to compensate China in exchange for scrapping the project. The campaign clearly reflects how unpopular the project is among Myanmar people. They don't like it because the project near the confluence of the Maykha and Malikha rivers, which gives rise to the Irrawaddy River, would destroy the country's lifeline waterway, which runs through the country from north to south before emptying into the Andaman Sea. For Myanmar people, the river is the source of their identity because the Irrawaddy valley is the cradle of Myanmar civilization. Furthermore, they fear the dam would disrupt the flow of sediment along river, harming agricultural livelihoods. Plus, the dam site is reportedly seismically unstable; a collapse would have the potential to flood an area twice the size of Singapore.

It's interesting to note how such a controversial mega project came into existence. The following is a brief flashback summarizing the development of the Myitsone Dam issue and identifying those involved in the project's inception at a time when Myanmar was under military rule.

Beginnings

It all started with the Ministry of Electrical Power's hydropower project master plan for the upstream Irrawaddy River basin in Kachin State in late 2005. The plan was initially developed with Yunnan Machinery (Equipment) Export & Import Company (YMEC) and Kunming Hydropower Institute of Design. The plan was scrapped when the ministry was reformed in May of the following year as the Ministry of Electric Power-1 (MOEP-1) for generating electrical power and the Ministry of Electric Power-2 for distribution.

Enter the CPI

On Oct. 29, 2006, Myanmar's then prime minister, the late General Soe Win, left for Nanning, the capital of Guangxi autonomous region in southern China. The visit came three years after he oversaw the bloody attack on then opposition leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's motorcade in Depayin in upper Myanmar in May 2003, shortly before he assumed the prime minister position. The purpose of the China trip was to attend the Third China-Asean Exposition (CAEXPO) and Summit. Among those he met during a series of meetings in Nanning were officials from China Power Investment (CPI). On Oct. 31, the prime minister officially invited CPI on behalf of the Myanmar government to invest in and develop hydropower projects along major rivers including the Irrawaddy and the Chindwin. After careful consideration, the CPI decided to accept the Myanmar government's invitation to develop hydropower projects in the upstream Irrawaddy River basin, according to the Chinese company.

 

Snr-Gen. Than Shwe (front left) and Vice Snr-Gen. Maung Aye (behind him) welcome then Prime Minister Gen. Soe Win (front right) on his return from an ASEAN summit on Nov. 3, 2006 at Naypyitaw Airport. / New Light of Myanmar

Two months later, on Dec. 28, a CPI delegation led by its vice president, Shi Chengliang, arrived at the office of Electric Power-1 Minister Colonel Zaw Min in Naypyitaw. Among them was CPI's local partner, U.S. sanctions-listed Stephen Law, aka U Htun Myint Naing, managing director of Asia World Company (AWC). He is the son of the late drug lord Lo Hsing Han. The purpose of the visit was to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between MOEP-1 and CPI for the Maykha-Malikha Water Resources Development and Ayeyawaddy (Irrawaddy) Confluence Hydropower Project. Hydro Power Implementation Department director general U Aung Koe Shwe and the vice president of CPI's Department of Planning and Development, Wang Xian Chun, signed the MoU and exchanged documents. State-run newspapers at the time reported that the department and CPI would build a 2,000-MW hydropower project at Chipwe on the Maykha River and a 3,600-MW project near the confluence of the two rivers that form the Irrawaddy River.

Eight Projects

On April 30, 2007, a groundbreaking ceremony for another project, the 65MW Chipwe Nge hydropower project, was held. According to the government's announcement, the project aimed to provide electricity for seven other projects slated for the Maykha and Malikha rivers near Myitsone. The ceremony was attended by CPI vice president Shi and then Northern Command chief Lieutenant-General Ohn Myint, AWC's Htun Myint Naing and others. In 2011, when military junta chief Snr-Gen. Than Shwe ceded power to a quasi-civilian government led by his subordinates, U Ohn Myint became minister for livestock, fisheries and rural development. As minister he was widely known by his nickname "Slapping Ohn Myint" for a physical threat to the public he made during his tenure, saying, "I can go around and slap anyone's face… if they insult or oppose the government."

A few days later on May 6, a site management office for the Myitsone and Chipwe projects opened in the Kachin State capital, Myitkyina.

Environmental Impact Assessment

According to International Rivers, CPI funded and commissioned China's Changjiang Institute of Survey, Planning, Design and Research (CISPDR) to conduct the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) with Myanmar experts from the Biodiversity and Nature Conservation Association (BANCA) in the project areas. On Dec. 24, 2008, BANCA and CPI signed an agreement to conduct an EIA.

From January to July 2009, Myanmar and Chinese experts conducted the study on the upper Irrawaddy. The report was finalized in October of that year, but BANCA chairman Dr. Htin Hla said BANCA's environmental baseline assessment report and the broader EIA could not be regarded as a perfect observation document because the study was forced to conclude within five months instead of seven due to time constraints faced by the Chinese experts.

CPI did not wait for the EIA to be finalized before commencing construction and resettlement. Construction began in December 2009, three months before the final EIA was reportedly made available to CPI from CISPDR in March 2010. International Rivers said parts of the EIA are contradictory to BANCA's findings.

MoA Signed in China

In March 2009, the Myanmar and Chinese governments reached a framework agreement on hydropower cooperation. According to CPI's Myanmar subsidiary Upstream Ayeyawaddy Confluence Basin Hydropower Co., Ltd (ACHC), both parties expressly supported the CPI's investment and development in the projects.

Myanmar Ambassador U Thein Lwin and CPI president Lu Qizhou sign the MoA on behalf of the Department of Hydropower Implementation and CPI for the development, operation and transfer of hydropower projects on the Maykha and Malika rivers and at Myitsone on June 16, 2009 in Beijing. Then Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping (back row, eighth from right) and Vice Snr-Gen. Maung Aye (10th from left) are also in attendance. / New Light of Myanmar
In June, Myanmar's State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) Vice Chairman cum deputy military chief Vice Senior General Maung Aye and his wife headed to Beijing for a goodwill visit at the invitation of then Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping. SPDC Secretary-1 General Thiha Thura Tin Aung Myint Oo, Major General Min Aung Hlaing (now the military commander-in-chief) and MOEP-1 Minister Colonel Zaw Min and others joined the delegation. Snr-Gen Maung Aye met with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao. On June 16, after their evening meeting in the Eastern Hall of the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Snr-Gen Maung Aye and Xi oversaw the signing of two memorandums of agreement (MoAs) and one MoU between Myanmar and China. One of the MoAs concerned hydropower projects in Kachin State. Myanmar Ambassador U Thein Lwin and CPI president Lu Qizhou signed the MoA on behalf of the Department of Hydropower Implementation and CPI for the development, operation and transfer of hydropower projects on Maykha, Malika and Myitsone.

Myitsone Project Launched

In December 2009, the Myanmar government, CPI Yunnan International Power Investment Co., Ltd. (CPIYN) and Asia World Co., Ltd. entered a joint venture agreement (JVA) on the development of Myitsone Dam Project or Myitsone Hydropower Project. Officials of the two states witnessed the signing of major agreements.

Xi paid a one-day visit to Naypyitaw on Dec. 20. During the trip he met with the military junta's Snr-Gen Than Shwe and Vice Snr-Gen Maung Aye. Sixteen MoAs, including one for the Kyaukphyu-Yunnan crude oil pipeline project, were signed on the same day in the presence of Vice Snr-Gen Maung Aye and Xi.
SPDC vice chairman Vice Snr-Gen. Maung Aye and then Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping view a model of the Kyaukphu-Yunan gas pipeline (Myanmar section) on Dec. 20, 2009 in Naypyitaw. / New Light of Myanmar

Right after Xi's visit, on the next day, Dec. 21, the Myitsone Dam project was launched at the project site, 4.3 miles downstream of the Irrawaddy confluence. Northern Commander Major-General Soe Win, MOEP-1 Minister Colonel Zaw Min, CPI President Lu Qizhou, Yunnan Province Vice Governor Zong Hua and others were present.

According to CPI's Myanmar subsidiary Upstream Ayeyawaddy Confluence Basin Hydropower Co., Ltd (ACHA), Myitsone Dam is a 139.5-m high concrete face rock-fill dam with an installed capacity of 6,000 MW—more than 2,000 MW larger than the figure Myanmar announced in 2007. Myanmar would have free use of up to 10 percent of the electricity generated. The franchise period of the project is 50 years, raising concerns among the public that China is taking a heavy-handed approach, as most joint venture projects in the country have a period of 30 years.
Col. Zaw Min delivers an address at the launch of the Myitsone Dam on Dec. 21 2009. / New Light of Myanmar

ACHC, a joint venture established by the Ministry of Electricity and Energy (MOEE), SPIC Yunnan International Power Investment Co., Ltd. (SPICYN) and Asia World Company (AWC), was registered in Naypyitaw on June 18, 2010. According to ACHC, the shareholding ratio between MOEE, SPICYN and AWC is 15, 80 and 5 percent, respectively.

Apart from Myitsone Dam on the Irrawaddy River, the company plans to construct seven other hydropower dam projects: Chipwi, Wutsok, Hpizaw, Kawnglanghpu, Renam and Chipwi Nge on the upper reaches of the Maykha River, and Laza on the Malikha River. The total planned installation capacity is about 21,600 MW with a total investment of more than $25 billion.

Out of the slated eight projects, only Chipwi Nge has been completed so far and is generating electricity. Most of the rest are in the initial stages and suspended due to public criticism as well as armed conflicts between local ethnic armed groups and government troops in their areas.

 

Slated hydropower projects in Kachin State / UACHC

Criticism and Suspension

On January 24, 2011, then Prime Minister U Thein Sein visited the Myitsone Dam site to inspect the progress of the dam, which was 8.5 percent complete. From its inception, the project had been never been popular among local Kachin. The following month saw anti-dam sentiment spread across the country and abroad.

To counter the criticism, the MOEP-1 minister, ex-Col. Zaw Min—under the pseudonyms "Staff Member of MEPE" and "Kyaw Min Lu"—penned two articles on Aug. 9 and 10 in state-run newspapers, saying, "I wish they would view the Myitsone Dam reasonably."

The next day, Aug. 11, an appeal letter from then opposition leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi urging that the Irrawaddy River be spared kicked the anti-dam movement into high gear. Writing in a private capacity, she asked that more thought and study be put into the project before authorities proceeded with it.

"While recognizing that large sums of money have already been spent on the realization of the project, we would urge that in the interests of both national and international harmony, concerned parties should reassess the scheme and cooperate to find solutions that would prevent undesirable consequences and thus allay the fears of all who are anxious to protect the Irrawaddy," Daw Aung San Suu Kyi said.

Exactly one month later, in September, the minister told the media during a press conference that the Myitsone Dam project "wouldn't be given up for all the criticism" because it was needed for electricity.

When asked about the dam's negative impact on the environment and residents, the one-time colonel retorted: "We need to think which is bigger, the damage to the environment or benefits to our country. We are implementing this project because the benefits are bigger than the anticipated damage to the environment."

On Sept. 17, the Myanmar government hosted a workshop in Naypyitaw to discuss the impact of hydropower projects on the Irrawaddy River, with ministers, NGOs and Chinese investment interests represented. The workshop turned into heated argument as the attendees differed on the pros and cons of the project.

At the workshop, Minister for Industry-1 and Industry-2 ex-vice admiral Soe Thane, who was also Myanmar's Industrial Development Committee chairman and President U Thein Sein's aide at the time, favored other upstream dam projects over Myitsone.

He later wrote in "Myanmar's Transformation & U Thein Sein: An Insider Account" that he had known that instead of Myitsone, U Thein Sein preferred other hydropower projects upstream, and was in favor of replacing Myitsone's 6,000 MW with projects totaling 4,000 MW, thereby reducing the area to be flooded.

On Sept. 30, President Thein Sein announced the suspension of the Myitsone Dam "in the time of our government", citing the adverse ecological consequences, hydrological risks, the displacement of up to 20,000 people, and the loss of their livelihoods. However, he said later, other dams upstream would continue, as Myanmar was "not failing to honor what one friend should do for another."

Then President U Thein Sein waves to the media in January 2015. / The Irrawaddy

The suspension announcement caught China off guard. CPI President Lu Qizhou told China Daily that the Myanmar side never communicated with them in any way about the suspension. Lu said the president’s decision was "very bewildering" because U Thein Sein himself had urged CPI to accelerate work on the dam when he inspected it in January as the military's then prime minister. He warned that a complete halt to construction would "lead to a series of legal issues" because the two countries had already secured loans to pay for $20 billion worth of hydropower projects in Kachin State.

However, Beijing's recent efforts to revive the dam have fueled negative sentiment among the Myanmar public. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's government hasn't made public its view on whether the dam should be resumed or terminated. But recent remarks by the State Counselor suggesting that governments ought to respect the deals made by their predecessors have raised public concerns that the dam project is back on track.

Unfulfilled Promise

While on the campaign trail on Oct. 2, 2015 in Myitkyina, Kachin State, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi told prospective voters that the first thing the NLD would do if it was elected would be to make public the deal between the government and the Chinese firm on the dam. Now, after more than three years in office, her government has yet to publish the contract.

Instead, she formed a 20-member commission tasked with evaluating hydropower projects on the Irrawaddy River on Aug. 12, 2016. The commission has produced two reports to date, but the government has yet to make either of them public.

After a few years in the wilderness, the Myitsone Dam issue sparked public concerns again this year after Chinese Ambassador Hong Liang's claim, following a visit to Kachin State in late December in 2018, that the Kachin people were not opposed to the dam's resumption. It prompted a series of protests in major cities calling for the project to be scrapped. On the other hand, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's government hasn't made public its view on whether the dam should be resumed or terminated.

Residents of Waimaw Township protest against the Myitsone Dam project on April 22, 2019. / Htoi Awng

Adding to the public's concerns, the State Counselor suggested in Pyay on March 14 that governments ought to respect the deals made by their predecessors, causing worries that the dam project is back on track.

When Daw Aung San Suu Kyi left for Beijing on April 24 to attend the 2nd Belt and Road Summit, many at home believed that Myitsone would be on the agenda during her meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping on the same day.

State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet in Beijing on April 24, 2019. / State Counselor's Office

However, Myanmar President's Office spokesperson U Zaw Htay told The Irrawaddy on April 26 that the issue was not discussed during the trip.

"We won't do any secret dealings [about the dam]. There will be transparency and we will let the public know how we will deal with it," he said.

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Yangon Region Gov’t, HK-Taiwan Consortium Ink Industrial Zone Deal

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 04:01 AM PDT

YANGON—The Yangon regional government will sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with a consortium of Hong Kong and Taiwan companies next month to develop an international-standard industrial zone in Htantabin Township in the west of the commercial capital.

Worth an estimated US$500 million (761.2 billion kyats) the Htantabin Industrial Zone will be implemented on more than 1,000 acres and is expected to create more than 150,000 job opportunities, said Naw Pan Thinzar Myo, Yangon Region Karen ethnic affairs minister, at a press conference on Friday.

The regional government and the Hong Kong-Taiwan consortium, Golden Myanmar Investment Co., are scheduled to sign the MoU at the 2nd Yangon Investment Fair on May 10, which will showcase about 80 projects across Yangon Region in an effort to drum up local and foreign investment.

It is expected to take about nine years to fully implement the Htantabin Industrial Zone. The MoU is the first to be implemented among 11 industrial zones planned by the Yangon regional government in undeveloped areas on the outskirts of Yangon.

A map of the Htantabin Industrial Zone / Invest Myanmar Summit website

At the country's first Investment Fair in late January, the Yangon government showcased planned international-standard industrial zones in 11 townships: Kungyangon, Kawhmu, Twantay, Thingyan, Kyauktan, Khayan, Thongwa, Taikkyi, Hmawbi, Hlegu and Htantabin. The government hopes the zones will boost development and job opportunities for local people and reduce overcrowding and traffic congestion in the metropolitan area.

Naw Pan Thinzar Myo said, "Many investors are interested in the industrial zones. Many of them are still in the process of complying with rules and regulations. They are not yet ready to sign an MoU."

The regional government also plans to invite investment in the hotel and tourism; digital economy; real estate; and industrial sectors at the 2nd Yangon Investment Fair. According to the Myanmar Investment Commission, Yangon Region received 77 percent of the country's total foreign investment last year. The top investors were China, Hong Kong and South Korea.

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Dhaka Jails Myanmar Nationals Linked to 2014 Blast in Burdwan, India

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 03:42 AM PDT

DHAKA—A special tribunal in Dhaka sentenced three Myanmar nationals linked to a 2014 blast in Burdwan, India to 10 years' imprisonment each for their roles in carrying explosives on Sunday.

Special Tribunal-4 Judge Muhammed Rabiul Alam announced the verdict to a packed courtroom in the presence of two of the three convicts.

The tribunal also fined the men—Muhammed Nur Hossain, 30, and Yasir Arafat, 26, who were on the dock and Omar Karim, 29, who is on the run after securing bail—10,000 Bangladeshi Taka (US$119) each.

According to investigators all three had previously been residents of Rakhine State.

"They were Myanmar nationals and linked with an international extremist group," said Muhammad Salahuddin Howlader, assistant public prosecutor at the Dhaka court.

He said the convicts had no lawyers but the state engaged state defense for them. No state defense was present during the verdict announcement.

According to a First Information Report filed by police at the Lalbagh Police Station in Dhaka on Dec. 1, 2014, Nur Hossain, Yasir Arafat and Omar were arrested the the Lalbagh area for being found with explosives during a raid carried out by the Detective Branch of Dhaka Metropolitan Police on Nov. 30, 2014.

A number of others who avoided arrest during the raid were not named in the charges as their whereabouts remain unknown.

Police investigators said in the report that the men were active members of an extremist group and suspected that they had tried to commit sabotage in Bangladesh.

The Detective Branch's bomb disposal unit sub-inspector SM Raisul Islam stated in the report that they learnt the three arrested had "links to the recent Burdwan explosion [in India]."

The arrests were made two months after an explosion in a house in the Khagragarh area of Burdwan in India on Oct. 2, 2014 which left two suspected extremists killed and another injured.

The Indian police seized 55 improvised explosive devices, organic explosive compound RDX, wrist watch dials and SIM cards at the scene.

Detective Branch investigator Abdul Kader Mia submitted charges against the three accused on March 3, 2015 and charges were formally pressed on July 12, 2015.

The court examined nine of the 18 prosecution witnesses before completing concluding the case on April 9 this year. All witnesses were members of the Dhaka Metropolitan Police.

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2 Child Victims of Mine Explosion in ‘Contaminated’ Shan State

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 03:30 AM PDT

Two children were killed and eight others wounded in a bomb blast in Mong Pan Village, Namkhan Township in northern Shan State on Friday, according to local sources.

A two-year-old girl and an eight-year-old boy were the victims of a bomb blast which occurred at 6:30 p.m. according to members of the Ta’ang Students and Youth Union (TSYU), an organization which provided assistance to the families affected and transported them to the hospital in Namkham.

"After we heard the bomb blast, people saw two children had died on the spot and another eight were wounded," Lway Hlar Reang, TSYU's secretary, told The Irrawaddy on Monday.

She said that the eight children suffered injuries to their bodies, including to their heads, torsos, feet, and fingers.

According to TSYU, the six boys and two girls who received injuries were under the age of eight years old and were playing together in the village after returning from the fields with their families.

TSYU said though the area has been largely peaceful in recent years, there was an outbreak of fighting between government and TNLA troops there last year and that an unexploded device may have been left near the village during the skirmish.

"They (the TNLA and Myanmar Army) did not fight in the village, but they both were based outside the village while they fought each other," said Lway Hlar Reng.

The children often played in the area at a pile of used car tires in front of a house in the village, but the families of the victims said a bomb had never exploded there before.

Landmines and other explosive devices often detonate in the areas which have seen armed conflict between the Myanmar military and ethnic armed groups in northern Shan State, often resulting in injuries and deaths among innocent local civilians.

On International Day for Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action which fell on April 4, UNICEF reported that landmines and explosive remnants of war (ERW) from decades of armed conflict across Myanmar continue to threaten the lives of children and their families every day in nine out the 14 states and regions which are known to be "contaminated."

The report shows that in 2016 and 2017 combined, 337 casualties were reported, with conflict-stricken States such as Kachin and Shan topping the list. Out of every four casualties, at least one child was injured, and one in four accidents resulted in death.

"Even though we know that many incidents still go unreported, every second day an accident caused by a landmine happens in Myanmar. Sadly, children and women bear the brunt," said June Kunugi, UNICEF's representative to Myanmar, noting that 43% of those harmed in 2017 alone were women and children.

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ISIS a Threat to N. Rakhine: Gov’t Spokesperson

Posted: 29 Apr 2019 01:31 AM PDT

NAYPYITAW—The director general of Myanmar's President's Office U Zaw Htay has said that Myanmar has been a target of the Islamist militant group ISIS since 2012 when the group shifted its focus to northern Rakhine State after losing its footholds in Syria and Iraq.

"ISIS mainly nurtured home-grown cells. The terrorists who entered from outside linked and worked with radical elements inside the country, as in the case of Sri Lanka," U Zaw Htay told reporters.

Malaysia Police Chief Mohamad Fuzi Harun has also claimed that ISIS is believed to be shifting its focus to southern Philippines and Myanmar's Rakhine State for terrorism.

The police chief made his statement after ISIS claimed responsibility for a string of bombings in churches and hotels on Easter Sunday in Sri Lanka that killed 253 people.

"Indonesia has warned us [of terrorist attacks] several times as it carries out counter-terrorism as a priority," said U Zaw Htay.

While Myanmar's government, the military (or Tatmadaw) and security organizations have prioritized preparations against terrorist threats, they are at the same time working to address radicalism inside the country, he said.

Many youth refugees, who had to flee Rakhine State for Bangladesh following counter-insurgency operations in the north of the state in 2017 and still can't return to Rakhine, will harbor grievances as time passes, making it easier for ISIS extremists to rally their support, said Rakhine affairs analyst U Maung Maung Soe.

"I think they will choose to launch suicide bomb attacks like in Sri Lanka rather than establish an ISIS army like in Syria. Therefore, there are reasons that they may use northern Rakhine State to build a foothold," U Maung Maung Soe told The Irrawaddy.

An ISIS involvement would be another blow to troubled Rakhine State which is suffering due to clashes between the military and the Arakan Army (AA) while it is also under international pressure, said U Pe Than who is a central executive committee member of the Arakan National Party (ANP).

"The situation will get worse if religious extremists launch suicide attacks. There are fierce ongoing clashes with the AA, and under such circumstances, if ARSA [the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army] entered [Rakhine], it would be quite difficult to restore stability," said U Pe Than.

He suggested that the government makes peace with the AA, which is representing an ethnic group of Myanmar, the Rakhine. "If the AA is allowed to be based [in Rakhine] as a border guard or as part of a peace agreement, it will be difficult for ARSA to enter. It is impossible for ARSA to enter if Arakanese (Rakhine) people oppose it," he added.

Nearly 300 local civil society organizations in Rakhine released a joint statement on Tuesday calling for dialogue to be used to solve problems between the two sides, rather than using military means.

According to their statements, 66 camps have been opened in Maungdaw, Buthidaung, Rathedaung, Ponnagyun, Kyauktaw, Mrauk-U and Minbya townships for over 34,000 locals displaced by clashes.

At a high-level meeting between Myanmar's border guard forces and Bangladesh officials held in Naypyitaw on April 9, the two sides agreed to cooperate in crushing the AA and ARSA.

Translated from Burmese by Thet Ko Ko.

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The Day Myanmar Lost Its Most Renowned Anyeint Dancer

Posted: 28 Apr 2019 10:24 PM PDT

On this day in 1945, one of the most celebrated Anyeint dancers in Myanmar's history, Liberty Ma Mya Yin, passed away. She was the most famous dancer of the pre-World War II period, and was popular not only among ordinary people but also among the ruling elite, including the governor.

In the past it was customary for Myanmar communities to include Anyeint performances in ceremonial occasions such as novitiations. Liberty Ma Mya Yin was so popular that partial payment had to be made one year in advance to book her Anyeint troupe.

She was usually fully booked for the whole year and it was even said that donors could not choose the dates for their donation ceremonies, but had to organize them on the days when she was free.

Her fans included prominent figures of the colonial period such as colonial Burma's only local governor, Sir J. A. Maung Gyi; police chief U Tun Hla Aung; and ICS U Chan Than, the Yangon Mayor.

 

 

Liberty Ma Mya Yin was imbued with both beauty and a fine voice. Her dancing and singing styles were distinct from her contemporaries, which her fans found captivating.

While there were no loudspeakers in her time, her voice could be clearly heard in open theaters housing audiences of more than 2,000 people. Though she had to sing daily, she never lost voice.

She later found success as a recording artist, putting out gramophone records.

Unlike some female Anyeint dancers, Liberty Ma Mya Yin was admired for not pandering to male patrons by performing seductive dances. Her original name was Ma Mya Yin; she was dubbed "Liberty" by her fans among college students who were advocating independence.

She died in 1945 of malaria, which she contracted while she fleeing the fighting during World War II. She was 42, and had worked as a dancer for 26 years

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The Day Myanmar’s Last Feudal Rulers Gave up Their Power

Posted: 28 Apr 2019 10:08 PM PDT

On this day in 1959, the saophas, the local rulers of Shan State, relinquished their titles and feudal powers, finally bringing to an end the last remaining feudal system in Myanmar.

The saophas gave up their hereditary rights in a ceremony in Taunggyi on April 29, 1959. The event was attended by President Mahn Win Maung and Prime Minister General Ne Win. Saophas of all 34 prefectures in Shan State relinquished their titles in exchange for a total of over 25 million kyats in compensation.

After the British annexed the whole of Myanmar, the colonial government separately ruled Shan State, which was made up of nominally sovereign entities, each ruled by a local monarch, but administered by a single British commissioner. The feudal system was maintained in Shan State throughout British rule, though different administrative systems were introduced in other parts of Myanmar.

The 1947 Constitution, which was drafted to regain independence from the British, also reserved seats for Shan saophas in the Chamber of Nationalities of Myanmar's bicameral Union Parliament, effectively enabling them to retain certain powers.

Shan saophas sign an agreement relinquishing their feudal powers on April 29, 1959.

Though the majority of ordinary Shan people opposed maintaining the monarchy in Shan State after Myanmar regained independence in 1948, the government of the Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League led by U Nu ignored the anti-monarchy movement, not wanting to lose the support of the saophas by abolishing the feudal system.

However, Gen. Ne Win, who staged a military coup and formed a caretaker government, finally stripped the saophas of their feudal powers in 1959.

"If you wish to retain your powers, both political and administrative problems will arise in Shan State and the Union," U Ne Win told the saophas at the event on April 29, 1959, according to a book providing a brief history of Shan State and biographies of the saophas published by the Information Ministry in 1959.

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Sri Lanka Raids Headquarters of Hardline Islamist Group Suspected in Church Bombings

Posted: 28 Apr 2019 09:48 PM PDT

COLOMBO/KATTANKUDY, Sri Lanka—Sri Lankan police raided the headquarters of a hardline Islamist group founded by the suspected ringleader behind the Easter suicide bombings of churches and hotels, a Reuters witness said, as Sunday mass was cancelled due to fears of further attacks.

Armed police in the town of Kattankudy searched the headquarters of the National Thawheedh Jamaath (NTJ) and detained one man at the premises, a Reuters reporter at the scene said. Police did not comment.

On Saturday the government banned the NTJ under new emergency laws. The authorities believe Zahran Hashim, the founder of NTJ, masterminded and was one of the nine suicide bombers in the attacks on Easter Sunday which killed 253 people. Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attacks.

Police suspect the bombings were carried out by two local Islamist groups, including the one established by Zahran. Around 10,000 soldiers have been deployed around the island as the authorities hunt for more suspects.

Police sources told Reuters on Sunday that Zahran’s father and two brothers had been killed two days earlier in a gun battle with security forces. A relative identified the three men in a video circulating on social media calling for war against non-Muslims.

The Archbishop of Colombo Malcolm Ranjith, who had asked churches to suspend Sunday mass due to security fears, delivered a televised special sermon from a chapel at his home. The service was attended by President Maithripala Sirisena, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and former president Mahinda Rajapaksa.

The archbishop said earlier this week that he had seen an internal security document warning of further attacks on churches.

“We cannot kill someone in the name of God … It is a great tragedy that happened,” the archbishop said in his sermon.

“We extend our hand of friendship and fraternity to all our brothers and sisters of whatever class, society or religion that differentiates us.”

The archbishop and political leaders then lit candles to commemorate the victims.

Most of those killed in the Easter Sunday attacks were Sri Lankans. The dead also included 40 foreigners, including British, U.S., Australian, Turkish, Indian, Chinese, Danish, Dutch and Portuguese nationals.

Police believe that radical Muslim preacher Zahran led the NTJ—or a splinter faction—to mount the attacks in Colombo as well as on a church in Batticaloa in the east.

The authorities have named the other group suspected of involvement as Jammiyathul Millathu Ibrahim.

Neither group were well known before the attacks but the government has come under heavy criticism for not heeding intelligence warnings of the bombings, including one from India’s spy service hours before the attacks.

On Friday, President Sirisena said the government led by premier Wickremesinghe should take responsibility for the attacks and that prior information warning of attacks was not shared with him.

Gun battle

More than 100 people, including foreigners from Syria and Egypt, have been detained for questioning for questioning over the Easter attacks.

The Sri Lankan military said at least 15 people were killed during a fierce gun battle with Islamist militants on the east coast on Friday, including six children.

In an apparent reference to the three men, Islamic State said on Sunday that three of its members had clashed with Sri Lankan police for several hours on Friday before detonating their explosive vests. It did not name them.

The group’s news agency Amaq said 17 policemen were killed or injured in that battle. It did not give any evidence.

Sri Lanka’s 22 million population is majority Buddhist and includes minority Christians, Muslims and Hindus.

At the Kingsbury Hotel in Colombo where one of the bombs went off last Sunday, Buddhist monks, some as young as 10 and senior clergy, performed rituals in a tribute to the victims.

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More Than 270 Died From Overwork-Related Illnesses in Indonesia Elections

Posted: 28 Apr 2019 09:16 PM PDT

JAKARTA—Ten days after Indonesia held the world’s biggest single-day elections, more than 270 election staff have died, mostly of fatigue-related illnesses caused by long hours of work counting millions of ballot papers by hand, an official said on Sunday.

The April 17 elections were the first time the country of 260 million people combined the presidential vote with national and regional parliamentary ones, with an aim to cut costs.

Voting was largely peaceful and was estimated to have drawn 80 percent of the total 193 million voters, who each had to punch up to five ballot papers in over 800,000 polling stations.

But conducting the eight-hour vote in a country that stretches more than 5,000 km (3,000 miles) from its western to eastern tips proved to be both a Herculean logistical feat and deadly for officials, who had to count ballot papers by hand.

As of Saturday night, 272 election officials had died, mostly from overwork-related illnesses, while 1,878 others had fallen ill, said Arief Priyo Susanto, spokesman of the General Elections Commission (KPU).

The Health Ministry issued a circular letter on April 23 urging health facilities to give utmost care for sick election staff, while the Finance Ministry is working on compensation for families of the deceased, Susanto added.

The KPU has come under fire due to the rising death toll.

“The KPU is not prudent in managing the workload of staff,” said Ahmad Muzani, deputy chairman of the campaign of opposition presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto, reported by news website Kumparan.com.

Prabowo, who independent pollsters said was the loser of the 2019 polls based on quick counts, had alleged widespread cheating and his campaign claimed some officials punched ballots in favor of incumbent President Joko Widodo. Widodo’s security minister said the allegations were baseless.

Both candidates have declared victory, though quick counts suggested Widodo won the election by around 9-10 percentage points.

The KPU will conclude vote counting and announce winners of the presidential and parliamentary elections on May 22.

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Thailand Rehearses Elaborate $31M Coronation for King

Posted: 28 Apr 2019 09:07 PM PDT

BANGKOK—Forty roads were closed in Bangkok as a band and officers on horseback marched past the Grand Palace on Sunday in a dress rehearsal for the next weekend’s coronation of King Maha Vajiralongkorn, Thailand’s first in nearly seven decades.

Vajiralongkorn, 66, also known by the title King Rama X, became constitutional monarch after the death of his revered father, King Bhumibol Adulyadej, in October 2016 after 70 years on the throne.

His coronation follows a mourning period for Bhumibol, whose grand funeral was held a year after his death.

The military-run government has set aside 1 billion baht ($31 million) for coronation ceremonies on May 4-6, about one-third of the cost of the funeral.

The official coronation will be a mix of Buddhist religious ceremonies and Hindu Brahmin rituals. The king will be crowned on May 4, and the procession follows the next day.

On May 6, declared a national holiday, he will meet Thai and foreign dignitaries.

Thailand has been a constitutional monarchy since 1932, but the king is regarded as the spiritual protector of its people and culture.

A revival in the monarchy’s popularity has been helped by a formidable public relations machine—the evening news in Thailand includes a daily segment dedicated to the royals.

Thais have been invited to wear yellow—a color associated with the monarch and his late father—to show support for the king from April until his birthday in late July.

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