Democratic Voice of Burma |
- Arakan displaced running out of food
- Ye Htut rebukes Shwe Mann over president bid claims
- Thai pharmaceutical company steps up Burma presence
- Kachin clashes blamed on poor oversight of peace deal
- Suu Kyi: ‘the army must be the foundation of the country’
Arakan displaced running out of food Posted: 28 Oct 2013 04:56 AM PDT Muslims and Buddhists who lost their homes and livelihoods due to conflict in Burma's Arakan state, one of the country’s poorest regions, are quickly running out of food, the World Food Programme (WFP) warned. Thousands of people who fled the violence are now living in camps for displaced people. With tension still high, they will not be able to return to their communities in the near future but will face severe food shortages, the WFP says. The UN agency said they are able to source food locally to help the displaced people but unless new funding is found, the food will run out in February. Footage filmed by the WFP in October during Eid showed destroyed mosques and houses and locals living in temporary camps. According to the WFP some 3,000 displaced Buddhist are living in the Sae Yoe Kya camp, most fled Sittwe city after the unrest, leaving behind their homes and livelihoods. “We had to run because Muslims burned our home. We never thought that this would happen. We had to run to save our lives, and had no time to collect our belongings or even our food,” said Nwe Nwe, a young Buddhist woman living in the camp. The WFP provides the people in the camp with rice, chickpeas, oil and salt. Children, pregnant women and new mothers are given special fortified cereals. The displaced Muslims in Baw Du Ba camp receive similar food rations. The WFP has built 320 shelters, water pumps and tanks and latrines in the camp, which houses some 15,000 people. One of them is a young Muslim mother of five called Fatima. She, too arrived at the camp empty-handed after having to flee from her home. “They burned our homes and chased us with knives,” she said. Near Sittwe, at a nutrition centre run by Action Against Hunger (ACF) health checks on locals provide an indication of the level of malnutrition in the region. A six-month-old baby was diagnosed as severely malnourished. While Burma has one of the highest stunting rates in the world, Arakan State is particularly hard hit and has a fifty percent stunting rate for children, the WFP said. The UN agency said it has been providing regular food assistance to displaced people in Arakan State since the outbreak of violence in June 2012 and currently reaches some 142,000 people per month in and around Sittwe. In order to help local farmers and the economy, the WFP says it uses locally grown rice for its food rations. As a consequence of the conflict, local economies have broken down and many people no longer have access to jobs and markets and are reliant on humanitarian assistance. But the WFP warned it urgently needs funding to keep the food aid going. “The World Food Programme is reaching almost all of them-almost all the people who have been displaced but, the funding is going to run out at the end of the year", said WFP spokesperson Jonathan Dumont. "It doesn’t look good. It doesn’t look like these people are going back to their communities anytime soon. If funding doesn’t continue then they are going to be in even worse shape than they are now because the food is going to run out.” According to the agency, US $13 million is needed to provide life-saving food assistance to the displaced people over the next six months. |
Ye Htut rebukes Shwe Mann over president bid claims Posted: 28 Oct 2013 04:46 AM PDT Burma's presidential spokesperson has rebuked parliamentary speaker Shwe Mann for telling a press conference that Thein Sein would not be seeking a second term in office. Speaking to DVB on Monday, Ye Htut said that any remarks made by President Thein Sein to Shwe Mann were made in private and should not have been shared with the media. "When there is a matter that the public should be informed about, the president will directly address the public himself. There is no need for a second person to do that," he admonished. "The president may have shared his views with the parliamentary speaker in a private meeting but he only meant to share it with him. According to international procedures, one cannot disclose this kind of information to the public without seeking permission from by the other party." Last week, Shwe Mann made international headlines for telling reporters that Thein Sein, who took office in March 2011, would not be running for president again in 2015. “President U Thein Sein has told me he will not run for the president,” said the parliamentary speaker and leader of the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP). “I think he meant what he said. He is not running in the election.” Ye Htut said that he did not know why the speaker would have disclosed this information, adding that he must have had "his own reasons". Shwe Mann, who outranked Thein Sein during military rule in Burma, took over from him as leader of the military-backed USDP in May. They are described by many analysts as political adversaries and locked horns in a heated dispute over the role of Burma's constitutional tribunal last year. But Ye Htut denied reports of a power struggle between the president's office and the parliamentary speaker. "As we are practicing democracy system, one cannot really say this is a power struggle," said Ye Htut. "The constitution encourages checks and balances so there might be times when we have to negotiate with each other – this is just a common scenario in the democratic system. But it would be wrong to call it a dispute." Shwe Mann also raised eyebrows for saying that former junta leader Than Shwe, who retired in 2011, was “watching developments in the country with keen interest” and worried that things ”might go wrong”. But he insisted that the former dictator no longer played any role in political affairs. Democracy icon and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is also expected to run in Burma's next general elections. However, the 2008 constitution currently bars her from becoming president on the basis of her foreign familial ties. Thein Sein formed the USDP in April 2010 in order to run in the November election, which the party won by a landslide amid widespread reports of electoral fraud. Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy famously boycotted the polls. The USDP is estimated to have over 4 million supporters nation-wide and is dominated by former generals from the military junta. |
Thai pharmaceutical company steps up Burma presence Posted: 28 Oct 2013 03:35 AM PDT Mega Lifesciences Plc, the wholly owned Thai pharmaceutical and consumer health firm, plans a Burma expansion with a new warehouse costing 300-600 million baht (US$96,500-193,100) to store pharmaceutical and consumer products. Chief executive Vivek Dhawan said the company will in next year’s first quarter propose to the Burmese government building the warehouse on 25 rai [40,000 m² of land] in Rangoon. The actual cost will depend on the price of land. Construction is expected to start by 2015. The move is part of a bid to double overall company sales, both domestically and internationally, to US$400 million over the next 3-5 years. The goal will be realised through organic growth and mergers and acquisitions, said Mr Dhawan. “We’re focusing on expanding in developing countries, as there is more potential in these markets for Mega to compete,” he said. Sales totalled $195 million last year, with 30% from Burma, the top contributor. Another 24.8% came from Vietnam, 19.5% from Thailand and the rest from 26 other countries, particularly Chile, Peru and Indonesia. “We’re very optimistic about the potential for growth in Myanmar [Burma],” said Mr Dhawan, adding that Mega has been contacted by several multinational companies about distributing their products in Burma. Mr Dhawan estimates the value of Burma's pharmaceutical business via hospital and pharmacy channels is worth $400 million but has the potential to double over the next 5-7 years. To take advantage of this opportunity, the company will continue to expand its investment in Burma, he said. Mega set itself up in Burma in 1995 with seven staff. Its distribution operations have since grown to 27,000 outlets covering 85% of the country with 1,400 employees. Mega now distributes pharmaceutical and consumer products for 31 companies from Thailand and abroad including Osotspa, Johnson & Johnson and Nestle. The company operates two businesses in Myanmar: Maxxcare, which distributes pharmaceutical and consumer goods for outer brands; and Mega We Care, its own food supplement brand. In addition to Myanmar, the company will continue to expand in Thailand by building a second soft gelatine capsule factory worth 450 million in Samut Prakan’s Bangpoo Industrial Estate. Construction will be on seven rai and start next January. This will boost the company’s annual capacity for soft gelatine capsules to 3.8 billion, serving both local and international markets, from 2 billion now. Mega was established in Thailand 30 years ago. Today it operates in 29 markets worldwide. The company also manufactures pharmaceutical and healthcare products in Australia. This article was first published in the Bangkok Post on 22 October 2013. |
Kachin clashes blamed on poor oversight of peace deal Posted: 28 Oct 2013 03:11 AM PDT Activists have blamed the latest clashes in northern Burma on a failure by both the government and Kachin rebels to follow up on their peace agreements. Violence flared in southern Kachin state less than a week after government and rebel negotiators reached their latest peace deal in the state-capital Myitkyina. The Rangoon-based Kachin Peace Network (KPN) insists that both the Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO) and the Burmese armed forces must honour their agreements to avoid future incidents. In Myitkyina, the two sides agreed to lay the foundations for political dialogue, re-open roads across the conflict-torn state, establish a joint-monitoring committee and develop a plan for the voluntary return of internally displaced persons. "As there is no implementation on the formation of the joint-monitoring committee which would allow the public to independently monitor clashes, we only get to hear both sides accusing each other of starting the fight," said KPN's coordinator, Khon Ja, adding that roads in the region have not been reopened yet either. The KIO has accused the government of causing the recent violence, which claimed the life of a child and injured two others in Bhamo and reportedly forced the rebels to abandon two of their outposts in Mabein township, northern Shan state. Hundreds of refugees also fled into hiding. "I can assure you there was no deliberate intention to engage on our part," KIO spokesperson Dau Kha told DVB last week. The KIO has been fighting the government for greater autonomy and ethnic rights since a 17-year ceasefire broke down in June 2011. It is the only major ethnic armed group that is yet to ink a formal ceasefire with the government. The rebel group is set to meet with other ethnic armed groups, including representatives from the umbrella organisation, the United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC), at its headquarters in Laiza this week to discuss the peace process. The government hopes to secure a nationwide ceasefire by the end of next month. Ethnic representatives have insisted that President Thein Sein and the head of Burma's armed forces, Min Aung Hlaing, must join the negotiations to ensure progress. Hla Maung Shwe from the government-backed Myanmar Peace Centre said it may be time to consider this proposal. "As a matter of course, state-level ceasefire agreements are signed by state border and security affairs officials [but] ethnic representatives have been calling for the president to publicly sign any agreements before international diplomats," he said. "I think we should consider this if it would make them feel more assured and confident [in the ceasefire]," he said. President Thein Sein has received international acclaim for his efforts to resolve decades of civil conflicts in the former military dictatorship, securing an end to years of crippling economic sanctions against Burma and earning a nomination for this year's Nobel Peace Prize. Despite several attempts to broker peace, the KIO says government forces continue to attack their positions, especially in areas near crony-owned natural resource projects. Fighting also continues to flare in Shan and Mon states. On Friday, the UN expressed "serious concern" for the 100,000 civilians who have been ripped from their homes during the conflict. |
Suu Kyi: ‘the army must be the foundation of the country’ Posted: 28 Oct 2013 12:04 AM PDT Democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi on Friday praised the British military, insisting that she wanted to learn “how a good, professional army operates” in order to take lessons back to Burma. On a visit to the UK military academy Sandhurst, the Nobel laureate said Burma needed to have a “good, professional army that is respected and honoured by the people”. “The country should not be the servant of the army," she told an audience of academy members. "The army must be the foundation of the country. That is exactly what you’re trying to teach people at Sandhurst. You serve to lead.” She met with cadets over a cup of tea and praised Sandhurst for teaching “the right kind of leadership that will make an army body that is meant to defend rather than to destroy”. Suu Kyi, whose father Aung San is the founder of the modern Burmese army and hero of the campaign for independence from Britain, is currently on a diplomatic tour of Europe where she has met with political leaders, including Prime Minister David Cameron. Britain has already offered to deliver training to the Burmese military, which they say will focus on human rights and democratic accountability, but has sparked concerns among campaigners who worry that it could fuel abuses in ethnic minority regions. The opposition leader spent much of two decades under house arrest at the hands of the former military regime, before finally being released in November 2010. She has since taken a seat in parliament and has expressed hopes of running for president in the next general elections in 2015. But she has insisted that the current constitution, which bars her from the presidency and is considered deeply undemocratic, must first be reformed. “It’s not just to do with me as a possible president, the constitution as it stands is meant to create a very, very limited form of democracy," she said. "The whole world thinks that Burma is on the path to democratisation, with this constitution we’d only get so far and no further.” Suu Kyi, who has transitioned from icon to politician in little over a year, has also come under increased media scrutiny. Last week, she faced a barrage of criticisms for an interview with the BBC in which she appeared to trivialise a wave of anti-Muslim violence to grip the country.
According to government figures, almost 250 people have been killed and 140,000 people displaced in several bouts of clashes, which kicked off in western Arakan state last year and has since spread to other parts of Burma. A UN envoy warned last week that the violence, which has disproportionately targeted Burma's Muslim minority, threatens to derail the country's reform process. “I condemn all violence and hatred but I don’t believe in condemning people. It’s the axe we don’t like," Suu Kyi told Reuters in an interview. "The people we can reform, people can be made to see things in a different light. If we want to get them together, condemnation is not the way." "The way is to make them feel secure enough to be able to look at each other's problems objectively and to recognise that everybody has his own fears and hatreds, and we’ve got to try to get rid of those." |
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