Thursday, October 2, 2014

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Heavy Fighting in Shan State Kills 17 Govt Soldiers, Rebels Claim

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 05:52 AM PDT

TNLA troops on the march in northern Shan State's Kyauk Mae Township. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

TNLA troops on the march in northern Shan State's Kyauk Mae Township. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Heavy clashes between the Burma Army and a combined force of Palaung, Kachin and Kokang ethnic rebels in northern Shan State's Kutkhai Township killed 17 government soldiers on Wednesday, a Palaung rebel source has claimed.

Tar Ban Hla, a spokesperson of the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), told The Irrawaddy that the Burma Army's Infantry Division 11 made an incursion into TNLA area, prompting a response by fighters of the TNLA, the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA), a small Kokang militia.

He said the rebels in northern Kutkai Township's Tarmoenye Sub-Township had then been surrounded by government forces and were forced to face the approaching soldiers at close range.

"From our side, we do not have big artillery. This is why we always try to get as close as possible on site when we fight them. They used a lot of artillery," Tar Ban Hla said, adding that clashes began at 10 am and ended at nightfall.

"We ended the attack when the rains began to pour down last night at 6 pm," he said. "According to our ground report, 17 of them were killed and 4 were wounded. We fought for long hours. They tried to block every movement of our troops. This is why we have to attack them," Tar Ban Hla said, adding that four rebels were wounded.

Since early 2014, northern Shan State has been the scene of occasionally heavy fighting between the Burma Army and the TNLA, which has been joined by other rebels operating in the region. In recent weeks, it appeared fighting in the area had quieted down.

Government forces have sharply increased their presence in Palaung areas in Kutkhai, Namkham and Namsam townships since 2013, and the TNLA has claimed that 2,000 soldiers are deployed in the area. The TNLA has said that it killed more than 200 soldiers during clashes this year.

The TNLA and the KIA are the only two major ethnic armed groups that have yet to sign bilateral ceasefires with the central government.

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Burmese Worker Admits to British Murders in Thailand: Police

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 05:47 AM PDT

Pictures of killed British tourists David Miller and Hannah Witheridge and a message of support is displayed during special prayers at Koh Tao island on Sept. 18, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Sitthipong Charoenjai)

Pictures of killed British tourists David Miller and Hannah Witheridge and a message of support is displayed during special prayers at Koh Tao island on Sept. 18, 2014. (Photo: Reuters / Sitthipong Charoenjai)

BANGKOK — A Burmese man has confessed to the murder of two British tourists in Thailand, police said on Thursday, after pressure to solve a case that the government fears will damage Thailand’s tourist industry.

The bodies of Hannah Witheridge, 23, and David Miller, 24, were found on Sept. 15 with severe head wounds near where they were staying on the southern island of Koh Tao, known for its coral reefs and diving.

The island has a large community of migrant workers from neighboring Burma.

"The investigation has advanced considerably," deputy national police chief Lieutenant General Jaktip Chaijinda told Reuters.

"Three Burmese workers were detained and we took their DNA for testing. During the investigation one of them admitted to killing the two foreigners," he said.

Thai authorities have warned that the killings would scare off tourists and government leaders have been urging police to solve the case quickly.

The tourist industry accounts for 10 percent of Thailand’s economy and it has yet to recover from a slump in visitors during months of sometimes bloody protests on the streets of Bangkok that preceded a military coup in May.

Jaktip said the man who had confessed was being detained but had not been arrested.

"We still have to wait for DNA tests results which we expect to have in 14 hours from now in order to confirm this," he said.

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President Criticized After Saying Ceasefire Necessary for Successful Elections

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 05:34 AM PDT

Burma President Thein during a televised address in March 2013. (Photo: President's Office website)

Burma President Thein during a televised address in March 2013. (Photo: President's Office website)

RANGOON — President Thein Sein has said that the signing of a nationwide ceasefire accord is necessary for the success of the 2015 general elections and a smooth political transition in Burma.

"This is the time that goodwill, patience and serious efforts of all the political forces are especially needed. Only when we can successfully implement a nationwide ceasefire accord, which is a very important step, can we start a political dialogue that can shape our country's political future," he said in his monthly address to the nation on Wednesday.

"[Please] note that only when we can start [dialogue], can we ensure political stability in the transition period, successfully hold the 2015 general elections, and have a smooth political transition," Thein Sein said, according to a transcript of his remarks published in Burmese-language state media.

His remarks were rejected by an opposition lawmaker and a political analyst, who said that holding successful elections does not directly depend on the ceasefire talks.

The government and an alliance of 16 ethnic armed groups have been in talks over a nationwide ceasefire since mid-2013, but an agreement has proven elusive and last week the sixth round of high-level talks hit a deadlock. The 2015 elections are supposed to be the first free and fair elections in Burma after decades of military rule.

Hantha Myint, a member of the National League of Democracy's Central Executive Committee member, said, "Whether there were ceasefire talks or not, elections were held in 1990, 2010 and 2012. I think it's groundless to say that holding a [successful] election is not certain if a nationwide ceasefire agreement is not achieved."

"But we do believe that the elections will have a more profound meaning if a nationwide ceasefire agreement is successful" before the 2015 elections, he added.

Yan Myo Thein, an independent political commentator, also criticized the president's remarks, saying, "I think it is groundless, the analysis that this [a lack of a ceasefire] could lead to uncertainly about holding the 2015 elections.

"Because in what sort of situation were the 2010 elections held?" he said, referring to the rigged elections by the former military regime that gave the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) its current parliamentary majority.

Yan Myo Thein questioned the reasons for the remarks. "What is behind this conclusion, do they want to postpone the 2015 elections? Or [does it mean] they are determined to hold the political dialogue before 2015? We can't know for sure."

Yan Myo Thein speculated that Thein Sein's words also could be aimed at pressuring the ethnic armed forces into signing a nationwide ceasefire, adding that a ceasefire and a start to the political dialogue before the elections offered certain advantages to the government.

He said the government was eager to show to the United States that it is making progress in ending Burma's decades-old ethnic conflict, while starting a dialogue before the elections would also allow the USDP to demand a greater role in the process—something that might be harder if the party suffers an electoral defeat in 2015.

Yan Myo Thein added, however, that it is "unreasonable" for the government to demand that the complex nationwide ceasefire and political dialogue are resolved in haste.

Additional reporting by Sanay Lin.

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Chin State Govt Shutters Local Newspaper

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 05:21 AM PDT

The Chin State government has ordered that the Lai-language biweekly Hakha Post, seen here, cease publication. (Photo courtesy of the Hakha Post)

The Chin State government has ordered that the Lai-language biweekly Hakha Post, seen here, cease publication. (Photo courtesy of the Hakha Post)

MANDALAY — The Chin State government has ordered a local unregistered newspaper to shut down, with its chief editor crying foul over what he says was a politically motivated decision.

The editor-in-chief of the biweekly Hakha Post said the order was communicated to him by the Hakha district office on Monday.

"The district called me and said that the order was coming from Chin State's chief minister [Hung Ngai]. The district administration officer gave no reason, but just said that the Hakha Post was not registered and would have to shut down," Lalawmpui, the editor-in-chief, told The Irrawaddy.

According to the Hakha Post editor, there are more than 20 local newspapers circulating in Chin State, only a few of which are officially registered.

"Only the Hakha Post has faced this, while many other newspapers have not received any notification or order to shut down. I've asked them about those newspapers but they have just pled ignorance. They even told me that we will be punished if we continue to publish without registration," he said.

The Hakha Post, with a circulation of 2,500, has been distributed in Hakha and the surrounding area since 2012 in the local Lai language.

The Irrawaddy contacted the Hakha district administration, but a duty officer said his office was not authorized to comment on the matter.

Lalawmpui said that he believed the order to shut down the newspaper was given because his publication regularly produces news criticizing the poor administration of the state government.

"Since the Union government said it would promote literature and media of the ethnic people, the order to shut down the Hakha Post shows there is no transparency yet in Chin State. If the chief minister wants to take action on the newspapers that do not have registrations, they should take equal action against all of them, not only us," Lalawmpui said.

"We will try to register. During this, we have to suspend production. We will wait and see whether the registration will be approved or not. If we do not receive the registration, or the other unregistered newspapers are still publishing, the injustice of the state government will be clear to see," he added.

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Court Reduces Unity Journalists’ Prison Sentence to 7 Years

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 04:18 AM PDT

Unity journalist Lu Maw Naing (L) and the paper's CEO Tint San on their way to Pakkoku Township Court in July. (Photo: Citizen Journalist)

Unity journalist Lu Maw Naing (L) and the paper's CEO Tint San on their way to Pakkoku Township Court in July. (Photo: Citizen Journalist)

RANGOON — Magwe Divisional Court on Thursday reduced the sentence of five journalists from the defunct Unity Journal from 10 to 7 years' imprisonment with hard labor following an appeal by the defendants, their lawyer said.

"The court reduced the imprisonment for the journalists with three years this morning," lawyer Robert Sann Aung told The Irrawaddy.

"We appealed for acquittal from the [previous] court verdict, but the court only reduced their jail term with three years. A reduction of only three years imprisonment is not special because the journalists still have to face seven years in jail," he said.

Robert Sann Aung said the defendants will appeal for a full acquittal by the Supreme Court of the Union in the capital Naypyidaw within the next 15 days. "We will appeal step by step until the journalists get acquittal from the sentences," he added.

The five journalists are currently being held at Pakokku Prison.

On July 10, a Pakokku Township Court sentenced four journalists and the CEO of the Unity journal to 10 years imprisonment with hard labor under the colonial-era State Secrets Act for reporting allegations that a Burmese military facility in the Magwe Division township was being used to manufacture chemical weapons.

The President's Office had filed a lawsuit against CEO Tint San, 52, and journalists Lu Maw Naing, 28, Sithu Soe, 22, The Yazar Oo, 28, and Aung Thura, 25, for publishing state secrets and trespassing.

The sentence caused outrage among the Burmese media and rights activists, and gave rise to concerns over a worsening of media freedom under the President Thein Sein government, which has initiated a number of criminal cases against several media organizations in recent months and passed controversial media laws.

In 2012, the government had begun to lift draconian media restrictions such as pre-publication censorship and a ban on daily newspapers that were enforced for decades under the previous military government.

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Thai Junta Says It Will Help Kick-Start Stalled Dawei SEZ Talks

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 04:14 AM PDT

A dirt road at the Dawei SEZ, a planned regional hub that remains largely empty. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

A dirt road at the Dawei SEZ, a planned regional hub that remains largely empty. (Photo: JPaing / The Irrawaddy)

BANGKOK — Thailand will revive talks with Japan and Burma aimed at kick-starting the floundering multi-billion dollar Dawei Special Economic Zone in Burma, a junta spokesman said on Thursday.

The project is arguably Southeast Asia’s most ambitious industrial zone – a 250-sq-km (100-sq-mile) deep-sea port, petrochemical and heavy industry hub located along the slim Thai-Myanmar peninsula.

Thailand’s ruling junta pledged to step up involvement in the project, which has seen years of delays, following talks in Bangkok on Thursday between Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and Minoru Kiuchi, Japan’s vice foreign minister.

"The prime minister said we will push to develop the Dawei zone with Myanmar and Thailand and all sides are prepared to move forwards with trilateral talks so that the Dawei project can materialize as quickly as possible," Yongyuth Mayalarp, a junta spokesman, told Reuters.

The project has seen years of delays that were largely blamed on Italian Thai Development Pcl, the project’s leader, which had failed to secure private investment and agree on a power source for the complex.

Thailand and Burma seized control of the strategically located complex, billed as a gateway for trade in Southeast Asia, from ITD, Thailand’s largest construction firm, in Nov. 2013.

Japan has expressed increasing interest in Dawei – the project could be a significant boost to swelling Japanese industrial interests in the region – though talks with Tokyo have stalled.

"We would like to see the Dawei project advance in cooperation with Thailand and Myanmar after a long suspension," Kiuchi said, giving no further details.

Located in southeastern Burma with highway links to Bangkok and Thailand’s eastern seaboard, Dawei is slated to be Southeast Asia’s largest industrial complex, if ever completed.

The industrial zone would be a potential boon for firms relying on the transport of goods around the cumbersome Malacca Strait, the world’s busiest shipping lane.

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‘I Don’t Want Women’s Participation Just for Show’

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 04:10 AM PDT

Mar Mar Cho serves as the coordination officer of the Women's Organization Network of Myanmar. (Photo: Nan Sai Nuam / The Irrawaddy)

Mar Mar Cho serves as the coordination officer of the Women's Organization Network of Myanmar. (Photo: Nan Sai Nuam / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Mar Mar Cho is the coordination officer of the Women's Organization Network of Myanmar (WON), a network providing training on women and peace, gender equality and women in leadership. She recently shared with The Irrawaddy her views of the role of women in modern Burma, a country that she says still has a long way to go on the women's rights front.

Question: What is WON working on at the moment?

Answer: We are an advocacy group working on the advancement of women, including their role in the peace process and politics, gender equality, women's rights and justice.

Q: What areas does WON focus on most in educating women?

A: We mainly educate on the provisions of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women [CEDAW]. The Burmese government says there is no violence or discrimination against women in Burma. But it does exist until now, and women themselves do not know that it exists. We are also educating women to better enable them to participate in politics.

Q: What difficulties does your organization face in providing leadership training to women?

A: We have been calling for the participation of women in decision-making processes and 30 percent of seats reserved for women in Parliament, and providing related training and education. As a result, women now recognize their leadership abilities and the need to participate in decision-making. Women are now encouraged to take part in ward and village administration. Yet there remains discrimination. Since we are traditionally not the breadwinner, we are rejected from taking ward/village administrator posts. We are only allowed to take lower positions.

Q: What benefits do you think leadership training for women can deliver?

A: We ourselves have received training and have then shared what we learned with others. So, many women come to recognize that they have leadership skills and are ready to take leadership positions. I believe many women will be able to take part in administration, from ward/village level to the national level in 2015. We are also preparing to contest the 2015 elections.

Q: Do you think a quota of 30 percent of Parliament's seats for women is achievable?

A: To make it a reality, we have to speak in a single, united voice and bring it forward to the Parliament. There are lady lawmakers in Parliament now, but they are not the ones who we want to be there. What we want is women engaged in civil society, female staffers in government departments and women elected by the people.

Q: What measures are you taking to win support for a reserved bloc for women in Parliament?

A: We need to rally support for it. We are taking steps to advocate for it in Parliament and we need to do it through a campaign.

Q: How many members are there in WON?

A: We cover the entire nation. We have links with many networks. For example, WON in northern Shan State is composed of 23 networks. We are networking with most women's organizations.

Q: Some female military representatives entered Parliament this year to replace their male counterparts. What do you think of that?

A: They are women, but from the military. It shouldn't be that all female lawmakers are from the military. We are also providing capacity-building training for women so that women engaged in social welfare work can join the Parliament.

Q: Do you think the women planning to contest the 2015 elections have the right leadership skills for it?

A: They currently are taking charge of women's networks. Some of them are from Karen and Shan states and Dawei [in Tenasserim Division]. We are providing relevant training to them. If necessary, we have a plan to offer intensive training. Currently, there are around 10 women members of our network who will contest the 2015 elections.

Q: What else do you want to say about women's participation in society?

A: Apart from female staff in the government, I would like to call for the participation of women from civil society and women with leadership abilities in all decision-making processes. Women in government departments do not represent the entirety of womanhood. I also don't want women being allowed to participate just for show. I would like to stress that harmonious and collaborative efforts are necessary for national development.

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The Rising Power of Burma’s Women’s Workforce

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 01:37 AM PDT

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After a two month strike against their former Korean employer, workers at the Master Sport Shoe factory read an arbitration order on 18 Aug, awarding them compensation and severance pay. (Photo: Spike Johnson)

RANGOON — Some 700 young Burmese women waited outside the gates of the Master Sport Shoe Factory in Hlaing Tharyar Industrial Zone in northern Rangoon in late August.

For two months they had been watching the same metal warehouse behind the locked gates of their former workplace. Some crouched on the dirt beneath bamboo and tarpaulin structures to shelter from monsoon rains or intermittent sun, others haggled over bunches of vegetables and herbs with opportunistic market sellers who saw the striking workers' encampment as a fresh business opportunity.

Some still sat on the split vinyl benches of the parked, rusty Chinese buses that used to transport them from home to work, and back again. The women said they would strike as long as they need to.

Since President Thein Sein's reformist government lifted a draconian, junta-era ban on labor unions two years ago, thousands of women in Burma's predominantly female industrial workforce have begun to organize themselves; walking out of workplaces, striking, and demanding changes to their working conditions.

According to Ministry of Labor, 959 Basic Labor Organizations have been set up since unions were legalized, and the Department of Labor Records has recorded 447 garment worker strikes between 2012 and 2014. In a country with a patriarchal culture historically weighted in favor of men, the newly emerging labor movement seems to have placed socio-economic power in the hands of a growing number of female laborers.

According to Myanmar Garment Manufacturers Association, women account for 90 percent of the workforce in Burma's garment industry, a sector that is expected to expand through foreign investment by international garment manufacturers in the coming years. The sector already makes up 44 percent of Rangoon's total industrial output, according to Myanmar's Department of Labor Records.

The Myanmar Garment Manufacturers Association estimates that around 200,000 people work in garment factories. The typical garment worker is female and on average 24 years old, works six days a week and 13 hours per day, and earns about US$80 per month, according to a report by the Labour Rights Clinic.

Factory owners blame activists groups like the 88 Generation Peace and Open Society and Burma's largest opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), for mobilizing strikes and organizing unions, and they worry that labor unrest will increase in frequency as the 2015 election approaches.

According to the Myanmar Investment Commission, foreign investment is five times greater every year since 2010 when Burma began to slowly open up. Garment factory owners from South Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan in search of cheap labor are expected to increase investment in the country. But Western garment brands, such US retail brand GAP, which these manufacturers supply are sensitive to the labor conditions under which their brand clothes are produced. Enforcing and improving Burma's new labor laws will be an important factor in attracting garment sector investment.

Learning to Fight for Labor Rights

On the evening of the 26th of June the owner of Master Sports Shoe Factory waited for his workers to leave for the night, locked up the heavy grey factory gates, and flew home to his native South Korea. He left without notice, without paying his workers or discussing severance pay. Immediately, the 717 female workers demanded what was owed. They staged strikes outside of the factory, the Korean Embassy, the Ministry of Labor in Naypyidaw, and appealed to the Myanmar government.

Two months on, near Junction Zawana in Rangoon, two young factory workers sit at a plain wooden desk in the corner of the concrete office of the 88 Generation, Burma's most important activist group. Zar Zar Theint, 23, and Phyu Phyu Soe, 25, were the leaders of the strike against Master Sport; now they’ve turned to 88 Generation for lessons in trade and employment law.

Guarding over them is the hulking metal "88" sculpture that watches the entrance, and between them stands Daw Mar Mar Oo. She’s small between her two students; dressed in a conservative white blouse, with a Burma-shaped broach high by her neck and short black hair that reaches her ears. People are easy in her presence, and she has an open expression and hazel eyes—but something about her manner lets slip that she’s been pushing for labor condition changes for a very long time.

"The labor organizations are not very effective yet," said Mar Mar Oo. "They have difficulties because the workers are not familiar with the law and their rights."

Mar Mar Oo would like to see workers liaising with factory owners, lawyers and parliamentarians representing their constituencies to create a labor environment that’s fair and productive for all. Currently, the workers are disadvantaged because they don’t know the law, so they’re being exploited by the owners, according to Mar Mar Oo. "At the moment we can’t solve working conditions, just general problems as they occur," she said.

The 88 Generation are trying to create a labor organization for the whole country, setting up many small labor organizations and linking them into a social network. They’ve connected with the International Labor Organization, and are offering labor rights training to female garment workers across Burma.

An hour north of Rangoon, in the dusty industrial zone of Shwe Pyi Thar, hidden down single track roads flanked by slimy ditches and the hulks of crippled eighteen wheelers, stands the garment factory of Myitta Yait. From the road it’s almost invisible, hidden behind fences covered with blooming flowers. Inside, a group of women sing a hypnotizing chorus while they work.

Myitta Yait, meaning "under loving kindness", was founded by Myo Myo Aye in July 2014, as an active arm of the 2,000-strong National Unity Party, a small political party. "I want to train the girls to create a new market, not only to work like a worker but also to run their factory like an owner," said Myo Myo Aye. When she speaks she stands square, holding unblinking eye contact. Her hair is tied up, and wire-framed glasses rest on her nose. She moves through the factory calmly, scooping her children onto her lap, and treating her workers like extended family.

The aim of Myitta Yait is to employ female garment workers who’ve been fired and are employed after participating in failed strikes, and help workers organize into effective labor unions. Currently, it employs 15 women from various parts of Burma who make garments for international export. Their production is expanding fast and plans are afoot to create sister factories around the city.

A peaceful atmosphere prevails and employees work in a clean building, with the windows open, the swaying branches of trees rustle on the window ledges as work rolls on, steady with their song. Everyone lives together at Myitta Yait in lodgings just next door. "I’m like everyone’s mother," Myo Myo Aye jokes.

The staff of Myitta Yait were part of a female workers strike against a local wool factory. About 150 women went on strike for two months over a disagreement with the factory owner over daily productivity standards. But when a compromise couldn’t be met at the wool factory, the women were fired, and many went back to their homes in the countryside, some found employment at Myitta Yait.

Myo Myo Aye said she has organized around 30 strikes, and was arrested once. She’s even organized a demonstration in front of the Ministry of Labor in an attempt to force a change to the labor laws. "I feel strong now that I have a union," she said referring to Myitta Yait.

Under the previous military government, striking workers faced jail time and interrogation for speaking out against employers. As Burma's labor laws are slowly brought in line with international standards, the situation is improving and the new labor movement is having success in demanding better pay and labor conditions. Yet, even with reforms, many women are still fired for striking, or prospective employers find out about their activities and avoid hiring them.

For Myo Myo Aye and Mar Mar Oo that means there is still a lot that needs to change; labor laws needs be further improved and the newly acquired labor standards need to be enforced. "Employees have no protection from negative consequences of striking," Myo Myo Aye said. "And if owners don’t follow through with promises, the law isn’t yet adept enough to support the workers."

In order for a union to be legal, at least 10 percent of all workers in a factory must vote in support of it. After a vote is held on the creation of a union in a factory, the names of those who voted in favor of it are often noted down by the management. It’s then common for a factory owner to fire those who initiated the unionization in order to set an example and deter others, according to labor rights activists.

Factory owners have also taken steps to set up their own labor organizations, sharing information, and informing each other on employees they may see as problematic. The names of workers involved in labor organization are registered with the government and circulated through the factory managers' organizations; these women are far less likely to find work in the future, labor rights activist said. Industry owners avoid hiring unionists and will try to force them out of the workplace.

"The country doesn’t operate within the law because of corruption. Local businessmen take bribes, and are very untrustworthy," adds Mar Mar Oo.

Penalties for owners and workers are unbalanced too. "If the owner does something illegal, the fine is 500,000 kyat (US$500)," said Myo Myo Aye, "whereas if a worker does something illegal, the fine is 30 percent of their annual wage." She wants legal reform of laws to set heavier punishments for factory owners, such as fines that are a percentage of their investment or prison terms in case of serious violations.

Outside the Master Sport Shoe Factory a crowd was gathering to hear the announcement of a Rangoon Division Labor Tribunal order about their labor dispute. The striking workers climbed from their buses and appeared from under their plastic shelters. Umbrellas went up, to protect from the sun, and they formed a giant huddle in the street.

The crowd is silent as the terms are read, it’s good news: The factory owner must pay the workers owed wages for June, severance pay, and compensation amounting to one month's salary for every three months employed at the factory. The owner will be contacted three times, but if he fails to comply payment will be delivered through seizure and liquidation of his assets.

The bait is set. Burma’s desire for economic and industrial progress will certainly tempt its government to appease foreign investors by reforming its labor practices. This developing framework of labor laws will lead female workers and their new labor unions into the forefront of industrial decision-making. It will hand them greater control of their futures and improve the socio-economic conditions of tens of thousands women and their families across Burma.

The post The Rising Power of Burma's Women's Workforce appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

China Tells Foreign Countries Not to Meddle in Hong Kong

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 01:18 AM PDT

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (R) delivers remarks as China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi (L) looks on, before their meeting at the State Department in Washington October 1, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (R) delivers remarks as China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi (L) looks on, before their meeting at the State Department in Washington October 1, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

WASHINGTON — Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi responded on Wednesday to comments by the United States and others on pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, saying foreign countries should not meddle in China’s domestic affairs.

Wang, the most senior Chinese official to speak publicly about the protests, said Beijing had "very formally and clearly stated its position: Hong Kong affairs are China’s internal affairs. All countries should respect China’s sovereignty."

He was speaking at the U.S. State Department before talks with Secretary of State John Kerry, who repeated U.S. calls for Chinese authorities to show restraint toward the mass protests challenging the communist government.

Wang said no country, including the United States, would tolerate "illegal acts that violate public order." He added: "We believe that the Hong Kong special administrative region’s government has the capability to properly handle the current situation in accordance with the law."

He met at the White House later with President Barack Obama, who told him the United States was closely watching the Hong Kong protests and urged a peaceful solution to the issue. Obama also affirmed he would be traveling to China later this year.

Riot police in Hong Kong used tear gas, pepper spray and baton charges last weekend to try to quell unrest, but streets in the Asian financial hub were calm early on Thursday while police largely kept their distance from tens of thousands of mostly young people who have continued protests for nearly a week.

Kerry said: "We have high hopes that Hong Kong authorities will exercise restraint and respect protesters’ right to express their views."

The protesters are demanding full democracy and have called on Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying to step down from the top office of the former British colony that reverted to Chinese rule in 1997. On Aug. 31, Beijing decreed that it would vet candidates wishing to run for Hong Kong’s leadership in 2017. Protesters are demanding that Beijing refrain from vetting candidates.

Greater Autonomy

On Tuesday, U.S. officials said the legitimacy of Hong Kong’s chief executive would be enhanced if Hong Kong residents had a genuine choice of candidates.

Kerry did not explicitly make that point on Wednesday in his public remarks, but said: "We believe an open society with the highest possible degree of autonomy, governed by the rule of law, is essential for Hong Kong’s stability and prosperity."

Asked why Kerry did not repeat that language, his spokeswoman Jen Psaki said it remained the U.S. position and that the secretary of state had focused his remarks on China’s role.

Wang met earlier with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel. The State Department said he and Kerry would continue their talks later at a second, previously unscheduled meeting.

More than a dozen protesters gathered under overcast skies outside the Chinese Embassy in Washington in support of Hong Kong’s democracy movement.

Grace Ho, an attorney from Hong Kong, was in a taxi when she heard about the protest and decided to attend. "I believe in a post-democracy movement," Ho said. "I believe in one person, one vote. I am proud that China has done so well. But it means nothing without democracy."

In Toronto, more than 600 people held a rally in support of demonstrators in Hong Kong, chanting: "One country, two systems. Hong Kong autonomy."

Obama's 'Pivot'

The Washington talks with Wang were arranged to prepare for Obama’s visit to China in November for an Asia-Pacific summit but were overshadowed by the Hong Kong events.

Other issues affecting the two major powers were also on the agenda in the talks between Wang and Kerry, as Obama presses his "pivot" to refocus U.S. attention increasingly on Asia.

The United States has been carefully calibrating its response to the demonstrations, voicing support for non-violent protests while signaling it has little interest in seeing them escalate and risk a harsher crackdown by Chinese authorities.

Any U.S. response to the Hong Kong protests is a tricky balancing act, given Beijing’s transformation into a global economic powerhouse and how interdependent the U.S. and Chinese economies have become since the Tiananmen crackdown in 1989.

Kerry said the United States welcomed China’s rise and reiterated Washington’s view that with its greater clout, Beijing should also bear more responsibility in world affairs.

He referred to Chinese efforts to help tackle the spread of Ebola in West Africa. "We are appreciative for China’s willingness to put both equipment and personnel on the line in order to help deal with this," Kerry said. "We view that in very positive terms with respect to China’s important role in global leadership."

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Hong Kong Leader Plays Waiting Game, Protesters Demand He Resigns

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 01:15 AM PDT

Joshua Wong, leader of the student movement, delivers a speech as protesters block the main street to the financial Central district, outside the government headquarters building in Hong Kong October 1, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

Joshua Wong, leader of the student movement, delivers a speech as protesters block the main street to the financial Central district, outside the government headquarters building in Hong Kong October 1, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

HONG KONG — Hong Kong’s leader is willing to let pro-democracy demonstrations blocking large areas of the city go on for weeks if necessary, a source close to him said, while defiant protesters vowed they would not budge.

The city’s streets were calm early on Thursday while police largely kept their distance from the thousands of mostly young people keeping up protests, now nearly a week old, in several areas of the global financial hub.

The protesters want Hong Kong’s leader, Leung Chun-ying, to step down by the end of Thursday and have demanded China introduce full democracy so the city can freely choose its own leader. Leung, appointed by Beijing, has refused to stand down, leaving the two sides far apart in a dispute over how much political control China should have over to Hong Kong.

The popular "Occupy Central" movement presents one of the biggest political challenges for Beijing since it violently crushed pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989.

Leung, Hong Kong’s chief executive, is prepared to allow the protests to subside and will only intervene if there is looting or violence, said a government source with ties to Leung.

"Unless there’s some chaotic situation, we won’t send in riot police … We hope this doesn’t happen," the source said. "We have to deal with it peacefully, even if it lasts weeks or months." Leung could not be reached for comment.

Riot police used tear gas, pepper spray and baton charges last weekend to quell unrest, the worst in Hong Kong since China resumed its rule of the former British colony in 1997.

The protests have calmed considerably since then, and the numbers on the streets have fallen sharply from the tens of thousands seen at the weekend, although an air of tension remains and the demonstrations appear far from over.

However, a crowd of about 100 protesters had blocked the main road leading to Leung’s office in the Central business district, some chanting, "Leung Chun-ying, Step Down!"

U.S. President Barack Obama told visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who earlier met Secretary of State John Kerry, that Washington was watching the protests closely and urged a peaceful solution.

"The United States has consistently supported the open system that is essential to Hong Kong’s stability and prosperity, universal suffrage, and the aspiration of the Hong Kong people," the White House said in a statement about the meeting, also attended by national security adviser Susan Rice.

Universal suffrage is an eventual goal under the "one country, two systems" formula by which China rules Hong Kong. Under that formula, China accords Hong Kong some autonomy and freedoms not enjoyed in mainland China.

However, protesters calling for free elections reacted angrily when Beijing decreed on Aug. 31 that it would vet candidates wishing to run in Hong Kong’s 2017 election.

Wang said before an earlier meeting with Kerry that countries should not meddle in China’s internal affairs.

"The Chinese government has very formally and clearly stated its position. Hong Kong affairs are China’s internal affairs. All countries should respect China’s sovereignty," Wang said.

'What Else Can We Do?'

National Day, a public holiday marking the Communist Party’s foundation of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, passed on Wednesday without the police crackdown many in Hong Kong had feared, although some people booed while the national anthem was played at a ceremony.

Protesters across the city have dug in, setting up supply stations with water bottles, fruit, disposable raincoats, towels, goggles, face masks and tents. Even so, some in the crowds wondered how long the status quo could last.

"I don’t think we can stay like this for more than two weeks," said Moses Ng, a 26-year-old who works in sales and marketing, gesturing towards young people milling around barricaded streets in Causeway Bay, a major shopping district.

"(If so) this action would have totally failed, so we are thinking about what else we can do."

Others, like 17-year-old secondary school pupil Wong Chi Min, were more defiant.

"People will keep coming back every day," he said. "We will wait for CY [Leung] to step down so we can choose our own leader. If he doesn’t, we will continue to wait here."

The Hong Kong Federation of Students, one of the protest organisers, urged people to surround more government buildings from Friday unless the authorities accepted their demands.

But Leung has said Beijing would not back down and that Hong Kong police would be able to maintain security without help from People’s Liberation Army troops from the mainland.

Beijing's Dilemma

China has dismissed the protests as illegal, but in a worrying sign for the Communist Party leadership in Beijing, the demonstrations have spread to neighboring Macau and Taiwan.

China now faces a dilemma.

Cracking down too hard on the movement could shake confidence in market-driven Hong Kong, which has a separate legal system from the rest of China. Not reacting firmly enough, however, could embolden dissidents on the mainland.

An editorial in the People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s official organ, said the "Occupy Central" protests were confrontational and that some protesters wanted to make trouble.

"[They] will eventually suffer the consequences of their actions," it said on Wednesday.

Rights groups said a number of China-based activists supporting the Hong Kong protests had been detained or intimidated by police on the mainland.

Around 5,000 people crowded into Taipei’s Liberty Square on Wednesday in a show of solidarity with Hong Kong. Events are being watched closely in Taiwan, which has full democracy but is considered by Beijing as a renegade province that must one day be reunited with the mainland.

In the world’s largest gambling hub of Macau, a former Portuguese colony and like Hong Kong a Chinese "special administrative region", organizers said around 1,200 people gathered in Friendship Square to show their support.

In London, hundreds of protesters gathered outside the Chinese embassy, some carrying umbrellas that have become the symbol of the Hong Kong demonstrations. About 100 people also gathered in New York’s Times Square in support of the protest, many holding aloft open umbrellas.

Turmoil in Hong Kong has begun to affect the economy.

Hong Kong radio RTHK quoted Joseph Tung, executive director of the city’s Travel Industry Council, as saying China’s tourism authorities had suspended approval of tourist groups from the mainland to Hong Kong, citing safety issues.

Some banks and other financial firms have begun moving staff to back-up premises on the outskirts of Hong Kong to prevent growing unrest in the financial hub from disrupting trading and other critical functions.

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India Set to Run Out of Critical Free Drug for HIV/AIDS Program

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 01:11 AM PDT

A man displays an anti-retroviral drug used to treat HIV/AIDS, inside his residence in New Delhi on May 16, 2012. (Photo: Reuters)

A man displays an anti-retroviral drug used to treat HIV/AIDS, inside his residence in New Delhi on May 16, 2012. (Photo: Reuters)

NEW DELHI — India could run out of a critical medicine in its free HIV/AIDS drugs program in three weeks due to bureaucratic bungling, a senior government official said, leaving more than 150,000 sufferers without life-saving drugs for about a month.

Missed dosages for long durations can increase patients' drug resistance and result in faster spread of the virus, while changes in medication regimens expose patients to side effects.

The supply crunch will be an embarrassment for the four-month-old government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has promised to deliver more affordable and better health services.

As drugs in the open market are expensive, the government provides more than one-third of India's 2.1 million HIV/AIDS patients with free antiretroviral drugs that are procured from pharmaceutical companies via a tender process.

Delays in approving such tenders has left the National AIDS Control Organization (NACO) scrambling to secure supplies of tenofovir/lamivudine tablets that are prescribed to thousands of patients during initial stages of treatment.

"We are also fed up. What to do? There are so many bureaucratic hurdles. The file goes to so many tables, and so many comments," NACO Deputy Director General A.S. Rathore told Reuters.

Several sources, company executives and documents seen by Reuters revealed that a tender for the medicine was approved last week, but supplies normally take at least 60 days to reach patients, which in this case would take it to late November.

NACO had raised the demand in January, Rathore said.

Patients and activists complained of shortages of several HIV drugs in September, forcing one group to send a legal notice to India's health secretary, Lov Verma. Verma directed NACO to take stock of the program and told Reuters on Sept. 4 that the situation was not as grave as activists described.

However, Rathore said on Tuesday that the program had only 1.6 months of tenofovir/lamivudine tablets in stock on Sept. 4. That means, supplies will run out in about 20 days from now.

As of Sept. 24, 10 Indian states had less than a month of stocks of such tablets, data available on NACO's website showed.

NACO is now leaning on companies—including Aurobindo Pharma, one of the manufacturers that has been awarded the contract—to help avert a crisis.

Asked about the consequences if supplies run out, Rathore said: "If they don't give medicines, we can't make medicines, we can't do anything. If stocks won't be there, they won't be there."

India had the third-largest number of people living with HIV in the world at the end of 2013, according to the UN AIDS program, and it accounts for more than half of all AIDS-related deaths in the Asia-Pacific. In 2012, 140,000 people died in India because of AIDS.

The government has been providing free antiretroviral drugs for HIV treatment since 2004, but only 50 percent of those eligible for the treatment were getting it in 2012, according to a report by the World Health Organization.

Other than bureaucratic delays, Rathore said poor coordination between NACO and the state centers that dispense the medicines had made it difficult to collate data on the real supply-demand situation.

Documents reviewed by Reuters showed government officials referring to the situation as a "crisis" several times in September and were seeking emergency donations to fill the gap.

"In the long run it [the tender approval] is going to help, but in the immediate term it's already too late," said Loon Gangte of the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition, South Asia, who has been tracking the nation's HIV/AIDS drugs status.

While NACO is confident it will be able to secure supplies before stocks go dry, companies are not committing.

A senior executive at Aurobindo Pharma confirmed on Tuesday that his company had received the approval five days earlier, but said the manufacturing process—which usually takes a minimum of 60 days—would only begin on Wednesday or Thursday.

"As per the books we can only supply by November-end, but we are trying to do something by which we can supply earlier to meet the urgent demand," the official, who had direct knowledge of the matter, said on condition of anonymity.

"We are trying to work against time."

A senior company executive at Hetero Drugs, another company that has been awarded the contract to supply tenofovir/lamivudine tablets under the latest tender, blamed NACO for a lack of planning and delaying the approval process.

"I have all the respect for our ministries, but when you're looking at HIV patients, who can't be deprived even for a single day, this is not an effective way of handling the system," said the executive, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Documents accessed by Reuters also showed that NACO in June raised a demand for another medicine, lopinavir/ritonavir syrup, which is manufactured by companies including Indian pharma giant Cipla and given to children infected with HIV.

Another NACO official, who did not wish to be identified, said the tender for the syrup was pending approval.

The program's current stock of the syrup will reach its drug expiration date by the end of this month, forcing the government to discard unused bottles, the official said.

To meet the urgent need, the Clinton Health Access Initiative of the Clinton Foundation was diverting 1,200 bottles of the syrup from Nigeria and Cipla has been asked to supply 2,000 bottles under a corporate social responsibility program, the official said.

The NACO official said Cipla was slow to submit tender documents, which led to a delay in approval.

The company declined to comment on NACO's allegation.

"Once the applications are checked, NACO will place orders," a Cipla spokeswoman said via email. "No orders have been placed by NACO so far. It is believed that this process will take two months."

Additional reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in Mumbai.

The post India Set to Run Out of Critical Free Drug for HIV/AIDS Program appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Supreme Patriarch Sees Rangoon’s Armenian Church Granted Heritage Status

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 01:41 AM PDT

Catholicos Karekin II, the supreme patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church, attends the unveiling of a blue plaque to honor the heritage status of the Armenian Apostolic Church of St. John the Baptist in Rangoon. (Photo: Sai Zaw / The Irrawaddy)

Catholicos Karekin II, the supreme patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church, attends the unveiling of a blue plaque to honor the heritage status of the Armenian Apostolic Church of St. John the Baptist in Rangoon. (Photo: Sai Zaw / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Catholicos Karekin II, the supreme patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church, attended a ceremony in Rangoon on Wednesday that saw the city's historic Armenian Apostolic Church of St. John the Baptist fitted with a blue plaque to honor its status as a heritage site.

The church, Rangoon's oldest Christian place of worship, is the third beneficiary of a larger project by the Yangon Heritage Trust (YHT) to highlight the city's expansive colonial architecture.

Along with Karekin II, who made his first-ever visit to Burma this week, Rangoon Division Chief Minister Myint Swe, Rangoon Mayor Hla Myint and the British ambassador to Burma, Andrew Patrick, attended an event unveiling the plaque at the church, located on the corner of Merchant and Bo Aung Kyaw streets.

The plaques serve to commemorate landmarks, or well-known events or people, in the city, YHT said.

"It is a special day for us. Because today, at the entrance of the church, there is a plaque which has been established to indicate its heritage position," Karekin II told attendees via a translator.

"We have come here to encourage Armenians and their children to preserve the tradition. We have come here not only to see the preservation of the church, but also to strengthen [Rangoon's] Armenian heritage," he said.

Burma's dwindling population of Armenians arrived in the 17th century from Iran, where they had settled after fleeing the Ottoman Empire. In 1881, a census by the colonial administration revealed that there were 466 Armenians living in the country, and a decade later that number had grown to 1,295.

But today the church is struggling to fill the pews, with only a small number of worshippers attending service each week. Of these, few trace roots back to the community that founded the building more than 150 years ago.

Distinguished by its tropical architecture combined with Gothic features, the church is the oldest church surviving in Rangoon, according to a press release from YHT on Wednesday.

Canadian Sharman Minus, who said her great-great-grandparents helped build the church, told The Irrawaddy that the Armenian delegation had been incredibly welcoming to her, inviting her to Wednesday's event and taking great interest in her personal family history.

"I feel like I am in dream," she said of Wednesday's ceremony.

"This event marks the third plaque to be installed in a historic building of Rangoon," said Moe Moe Lwin, director of YHT, at the unveiling ceremony. "We hope that this blue plaque will highlight our city's heritage, and serve as a gateway for Rangoon residents as well as visitors to celebrate its wonderful diversity and incredible history."

Previously, plaques have been fitted on City Hall and the building that once housed the up-market department store Rowe & Co.

Moe Moe Lwin said YHT is working to extend the existing list of heritage buildings in Rangoon. The blue plaque designation means the Armenian Apostolic Church of St. John the Baptist will be included in the extended list, help to ensure its long-term preservation.

The post Supreme Patriarch Sees Rangoon's Armenian Church Granted Heritage Status appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


Lion’s share of Burma’s new bank licenses awarded to Japan

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 05:41 AM PDT

Burma's Foreign Bank Licensing Committee awarded preliminary licenses to nine foreign banks on Wednesday, and Japanese banks were by far the biggest winners. The license application process was kicked-off in May when the Burmese government sent letters to 40 foreign banks inviting them to apply for a license—a coveted privilege that carries the potential to give foreign financial institutions a lucrative foothold in Burma's banking sector.

Japan's three largest banks—Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation; Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ; and Mizuho Bank—were among the nine lucky banks awarded licenses by the government, which reportedly conducted an extensive screening process led by a committee of Burmese government officials and foreign consultants. Given the high stakes involved, the process was extremely competitive, with 25 banks from 12 different countries eventually submitting applications.

Although some local banks and individuals are concerned that foreign banks will gobble up the local banking sector, there is also optimism among Burmese bankers and officials that foreign banks will promote the development of Burma's financial sector by transferring technical skills to local players and injecting much-needed liquidity into local banks in the form of kyat-denominated loans. In addition, the Burmese government is keen to modernize its banking system by incorporating the latest technology, a crucial factor which contributed to the success of Japanese financial institutions this week.

The Japanese banks that received licenses are also among the world's largest in terms of capital, and Burma is betting that Japanese banks will advance the government's goal of boosting liquidity and increasing the capital stock of Burma's thinly-capitalized financial system.

By contrast, China's state-owned banks might boast more capital on their balance sheets, but many of them are also dangerously exposed to China's shadow banking system and real estate bubble, which many economists predict will eventually saddle China's banking system with unsustainable amounts of debt.

When the Foreign Bank Licensing Committee announced the successful foreign banks on Wednesday the committee insisted that its decisions were based on “detailed quantitative and qualitative criteria.” However, it's quite possible that political imperatives played a determinative role in the committee's decision process. Anti-China sentiment is still running high in Burma, whereas Japan is still viewed as a more "friendly" country—not to mention the fact that Japan was Burma's largest source of foreign aid during the military era. Japan has also provided massive amounts of investment, foreign aid, and debt forgiveness to Burma since the country transitioned to a quasi-civilian government in 2011.

Indeed, Gwen Robinson's recent Nikkei Asian Review article indicated that some analysts believe that Japan's success this week may be connected to how Japanese officials felt snubbed by Burma's recent decision to award several big infrastructure contracts to non-Japanese companies.

In particular, officials in Tokyo were convinced that Japanese companies would easily win last year's bidding for a telecommunications license and the construction of Rangoon's new international airport, but in both cases their hopes were dashed—and to add insult to injury, the airport contract was awarded to a consortium from Korea, Japan's arch rival in many sectors.

Apparently, Burma's bank licensing scheme is designed to support the country's banking sector by prohibiting foreign involvement in retail banking on the one hand, while also requiring foreign banks to channel their kyat-denominated commercial loans through Burmese banks.

That is, foreign banks cannot extend kyat-denominated loans directly to local companies, but they are allowed to provide kyat loans to local banks. As a consequence, foreign licensees will need to partner with local banks in order to access the lucrative market of extending kyat-denominated loans to local enterprises. In doing so, the Burmese government expects that foreign banks will transfer the skills and technology which local banks will need to stand their ground against foreign banks if the financial sector is further liberalized.

Indeed, among the most important criteria considered by the license selection committee was the willingness expressed by foreign banks to train local staff, transfer critical technology, and cooperate with local banks. In her article, Gwen Robinson said that "It is understood that the Japanese banks pledged various programs to assist local banks, including the provision of training and, in the case of MUFG, setting up an education institute for banking personnel."

The licensing system demonstrates that Burma is aiming to find a balance between enhancing the competitiveness of local banks and providing foreign banks with access to Burma's red-hot economy, which the IMF projects will grow 8.5 percent in the current fiscal year. If successful, the scheme is expected to benefit both sides by attracting badly needed foreign investment while providing local banks with the protection, support, and time they need to compete with experienced and well-capitalized international financial institutions.

It's unclear whether the selected foreign banks will focus on providing foreign-currency loans to foreign investors in Burma or devote more capital to indirectly providing kyat-denominated loans to local companies—partly because like many of Burma's new laws it's unclear how the licensing regime will work in practice. Moreover, regulations may be needed to implement the legal framework, which is governed by a recently-enacted Financial Institution Law that requires licensed foreign banks to hold at least US$75 million in capital and limits them to opening only one branch. The one-branch requirement is designed to alleviate concerns that foreign banks will monopolize the financial sector while encouraging foreign banks to cooperate with local and regional banks.

The nine lucky foreign banks now have 12 months to open a branch which complies with the Financial Institution Law, and if Burma's Central Bank determines that a foreign bank has satisfied the law's requirements within this time-frame it will receive a "final" license.

The five other foreign banks which obtained preliminary licenses this week included the following: Thailand’s Bangkok Bank; China’s Industrial and Commercial Bank of China; Malaysia’s Malayan Banking (Maybank); Australia & New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ); and two Singaporean banks—United Overseas Bank and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation.

Bullet Points: 2 October 2014

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 04:08 AM PDT

On today's edition of Bullet Points:

You can watch Bullet Points every weeknight on DVB TV after the 7 o'clock news.

Unity journalists’ sentences reduced on appeal

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 03:25 AM PDT

Magwe Regional Court on Thursday reduced the sentences of five members of the now defunct Unity Journal to seven years following an appeal.

The five individuals— CEO Tint Hsan and reporters Lu Maw Naing, Sithu Soe, Aung Thura and Yazar Oo—were initially given a 10-year jail sentence in July after being found guilty of "exposing state secrets" following the journal's publishing of an article alleging the existence of a secret chemical weapons factory in central Burma.

According to the wife of convicted reporter Lu Maw Naing, the regional court reduced the sentences on Thursday morning. However, she said, the five have vowed to lodge another appeal in Burma's Supreme Court in Naypyidaw because "their sentences are not in line with freedom of the press".

The decision to reduce the defendants' sentences to seven years came after a two-month-long appeal process.

Lawyer Robert San Aung, who represents the four Unity reporters but not CEO Tint Hsan, told DVB on Thursday that "The sentences were reduced from ten to seven years after a successful appeal process."

The lawyer said that his argument on appeal was that the original sentences constituted a breach of right to free speech enshrined in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.*

Robert San Aung also told DVB that he still hasn't received a certified copy of the court judgment.

"As soon as I get the court judgment I will file an appeal for a 'criminal revision' at the Supreme Court in Naypyidaw. That should be in another two weeks' time," he said.

"Once again I will base our appeal on the human rights charter."

DVB asked Robert San Aung why the sentence was only reduced by three years on appeal.

"I believe the divisional administration has undue influence over the court," he responded.

The Unity Journal article, which the government contended was an illegal exposure of state secrets, has attracted international attention. In June, the Italian town of Sala Baganza awarded honorary citizenship to the four journalists and Unity Weekly's former CEO.

Speaking to DVB in June, the Italian town's mayor Cristina Merusi said: "Freedom of information is the basis of democracy in a free country. To support this freedom that we have through journalism and those who practice it, we decided to honour the five journalists of Unity Weekly in Burma through an act which for us is very important— honorary citizenship of our town."

 

*Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; the right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media regardless of frontiers.

Irrawaddy news site hacked following Wirathu article

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 01:43 AM PDT

The English website of The Irrawaddy was brought down on Thursday by activists calling themselves the Blink Hacker Group.

The hackers appeared to target the independent Burmese news group on the grounds that The Irrawaddy is comprised of "supporters of jihad and radical Muslims".

The news website, which covers Burma and Southeast Asia, recently ran an article covering Burma's controversial nationalist monk Wirathu, who last week visited likeminded Buddhist organisations in Sri Lanka.

The Irrawaddy's editor-in chief Aung Zaw said on Thursday that following the media group's reportage of Wirathu’s visit to Sri Lanka their Facebook sites "received hundreds of hate mail and very abusive messages within hours".

"It shows that they are working as a team," he said.

Aung Zaw said that The Irrawaddy had already tightened its internet security following crippling denial of service attacks by hackers in 2008. However, this time they believe their server was penetrated.

"It is criminal, but they are cowards," he said.

In addition to hacking the newspaper's server, The Irrawaddy said that someone called their office in Rangoon two days ago and threatened reporters in connection with the Wirathu article, saying that they would raze or bomb the news group's office.

The threats came just days after The Irrawaddy founder Aung Zaw was presented with a 2014 International Press Freedom Award by the Committee to Protect Journalists.

"We are happy to receive this award," he told DVB on Thursday. "This award is not for me but for my committed team members and those who defend press freedom and promote independent media. This award belongs to them all, including the late U Win Tin and several veteran journalists who were unjustly locked up in prisons. This award is a reminder to those who continue to muzzle the press and insist on running a propaganda machine while embarking on a farcical reform process and launching a 'public media service'—all [of which is] nonsense."

Aung Zaw confirmed that the cyber-attack began immediately after his journalism award was announced.

"We could see a steady stream of incoming abusive messages in the hundreds over the last four or five days – and then an attack!" he said.

As of Thursday afternoon, the problem had been solved and the news site resumed online.

President’s speech raises eyebrows, ire

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 12:17 AM PDT

Several leading political stakeholders in Burma reacted negatively to President Thein Sein's monthly radio address on Wednesday—not to the president's call for vigilance in the face of terrorism, but to his indication that signing a nationwide ceasefire agreement and initiating a political dialogue process are necessary pre-conditions to holding next year's general election.

"Only if we can sign a nationwide ceasefire agreement can we begin the political dialogue which will lead the political future of our country," Thein Sein said in his address to the nation, which was broadcast across Burma by radio. "I want you to note that we can only ensure political stability, the holding of the 2015 elections, and a subsequent smooth political transition only if this [political dialogue] process is commenced."

The government has been pushing Burma's armed ethnic groups to sign a nationwide ceasefire, but negotiations between the two sides have been bogged down for months and many analysts doubt an agreement will be reached any time soon.

In response to the president's announcement, Kachin State Democracy Party Chairman Dr. Tu Ja told DVB that the 2015 elections should not be postponed under any circumstances.

"Next year's elections cannot be postponed. It's a five-year term, so it must last five years," he said. "Otherwise, the public will get the wrong impression. They may think the government wants to maintain its grip on power. Even if we are unable to reach an agreement on a nationwide ceasefire, this should not affect the general election. It should still go ahead."

Rangoon MP Dr. Nyo Nyo Thin, an upper house lawmaker representing the National Democratic Force, responded to the president's speech by saying that Thein Sein's proposed course of action is unconstitutional.

"The election must be held by December 2015 at the latest, according to the constitution," she said. "But now the president is apparently suggesting that the ceasefire agreement is related to the constitutionally-mandated elections. This is not the case."

Dr. Salai Lian Sakhong, a Chin leader and senior negotiator for the NCCT—the team of armed ethnic group leaders that has been negotiating with the government on behalf Burma's armed ethnic groups—said the delay in signing a ceasefire agreement is essentially due to intransigence on the part of the government.

"We didn't refuse to discuss even a single point on the agenda proposed by the government proposed," he said. "However, the government delegation blocked the debate on items that we raised. To resolve the impasse, we need the government to show goodwill. This is the first key point."

He continued: "Secondly, both sides already agreed to amalgamate our security forces. But when we met in September the government proposed to re-visit this issue during the political dialogue phase. This in itself is a barrier to progress—not just in terms of political dialogue, but it's also a barrier to the nationwide ceasefire agreement. We are concerned that the government expects us to lay down our arms before we are given any political guarantees. The president and the commander-in-chief of the army should seriously consider whether they wish to continue pursuing this approach. That’s what I think.”

Shan alliance talks on the agenda at Bangkok parlay

Posted: 01 Oct 2014 08:17 PM PDT

Leading representatives of the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy (SNLD), the Shan Nationalities Democratic Party (SNDP), the Shan State Army- South (SSA-S), and the Shan State Army- North (SSA-N) are set to meet in Bangkok for talks on Thursday.

The objective of the meeting among the rival Shan groups is to establish common ground on various issues with a long-term goal aimed at unity, said SNLD spokesman Sai Leik.

"The agenda will be to firstly analyse the current peace process; secondly to discuss how we will approach the 2015 elections; and thirdly, the two political parties will discuss their proposed amendments to the electoral law," he told DVB. "A final step would be the agreed coalition of both armed groups and both political parties."

He added: "All [Shan] leaders realise that unity is now a necessary step. Many grassroots organisations have urged the sides to settle their differences and look towards a merger."

The meeting was set for Bangkok because some Shan representatives expressed difficulties in travelling to Rangoon, he said.

The SSA-S was recently involved in an armed clash with the Pa-O National Liberation Organisation over a territory dispute. Both sides sat for talks on 11 September at the SSA headquarters in Loi Taileng, but no conclusive agreement was made.

The SSA-S has long said that it will not fully adhere to any nationwide ceasefire agreement, but would instead work towards a separate peace deal with the Burmese government.

The SSA-N, on the other hand, signed a ceasefire agreement with the Burmese government in January 2012. Despite this truce, clashes have continued between SSA-N forces and Burmese troops to date.

In May, the SNDP and the SNLD – the two major political parties in eastern Burma's Shan State – reached a preliminary agreement at a merger.

Sai Maung Tin, a lower house parliamentarian representing the SNDP, told DVB at the time that the two parties still had some differences in policy, but were optimistic that an agreement would be reached in time to contest the 2015 elections.

"We are seeing a merger on the horizon – both parties have principally agreed on the plan – but implementation will have to be done step by step," he said. "We still need to negotiate on policy, mainly on the structure of the Union — whether we will support an eight-unit or a 14-unit federal union."