Friday, June 30, 2017

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Hundreds Protest Detainment of Journalists, Repressive Laws

Posted: 30 Jun 2017 07:20 AM PDT

YANGON — Several hundred Myanmar press members and civil society representatives protested in Yangon on Friday, calling for the release of detained journalists under the colonial-era Unlawful Associations Act and the repeal of the controversial online defamation law.

Members of the Committee for the Protection of Journalists (Myanmar) and other media representatives gathered in front of the Yangon City Hall after the recent arrests of four journalists—The Irrawaddy's Lawi Weng, also known as U Thein Zaw, and U Aye Nai and Ko Pyae Bone Naing (also known as Pyae Phone Aung) from Democratic Voice of Burma, as well as The Voice Daily's chief editor U Kyaw Min Swe, all of whom are facing charges filed by the Myanmar military.

The Irrawaddy's Lawi Weng and the two journalists from DVB were arrested by the army on the road between Namhsan and Lashio townships in northern Shan State on Monday, along with four other unidentified people. The three reporters had gathered information in areas controlled by ethnic armed group the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) for a story on a drug-burning ceremony. The trio were handed over to local police only on Wednesday and they are currently being charged with having violated Article 17(1) of the Unlawful Associations Act. Police remanded them to Hsipaw Prison.

The Voice Daily's U Kyaw Min Swe was charged with defamation under Article 66(d) of the Telecommunications Law for publishing a satirical article in his newspaper, questioning the country's long-running armed struggle.

Ko Tha Lun Zaung Htet, a member of the Committee for the Protection of Journalists (Myanmar), said that the purpose of the campaign was to respond to the oppression of the press by the military, which has been using controversial laws to arrest journalists.

"Press members must have the right to do their job anywhere," Ko Tha Lun Zaung Htet said. "What is important [for journalists] is to report fairly with no bias…It makes no sense to arrest journalists for doing their job and gathering information."

Protesters in Yangon on Friday, demonstrating against repressive laws affecting the media and the arrest of journalists. (Photo: Myo Min Soe / The Irrawaddy)

Members of different civil society organizations and rights groups were also present at the campaign supporting the movement, including Equality Myanmar and the 88 Generation Peace and Open Society.

U Aung Myo Min, executive director of human rights advocacy group Equality Myanmar, said that authorities are using the Unlawful Associations Act, enacted under British rule, to threaten media freedom.

"If [the journalists] were simply carrying out their responsibilities, but not supporting the armed groups' operations, they should not be charged under Article 17(1)," U Aung Myo Min said.

The arrests, he explained, are "a threatening message" to "the whole media industry" implying that the military "can do whatever they want to journalists."

Friday's campaign also included a collection of public signatures demanding that Article 66(d) of the 2013 Telecommunications Law be repealed.

"Using Article 66(d) is a dangerous trend for all citizens," Ko Tha Lun Zaung Htet said, highlighting that everyone on social media is made vulnerable by this provision. "It should either be completely revoked or amended not to violate our citizenship rights."

According to the Research Team on the Telecommunications Law led by activist Maung Saungkha—a poet who was himself sentenced and jailed in 2016 under Article 66(d)—there have been a total of 71 lawsuits filed under the law since its enactment. Among these cases, nine involved the press, with 14 journalists facing trial.

The post Hundreds Protest Detainment of Journalists, Repressive Laws appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Fiancée Opens Up About Detained Irrawaddy Reporter

Posted: 30 Jun 2017 06:19 AM PDT

YANGON — The sudden arrest of her fiancé by the Myanmar Army shattered Loa Htaw's dreams. Before Monday—when the Tatmadaw arrested Irrawaddy senior reporter Lawi Weng, also known as U Thein Zaw, on his return from a reporting trip in northern Shan State—the 33-year old Mon woman was thinking about the wedding ring that Lawi had promised to purchase for her ahead of their nuptials in November.

Loa Htaw had recently bought fabric for the traditional Mon clothing that they would both wear for the big day. They had agreed to spend their married life together in Yangon and Mon State. It would mark an end to five years of long-distance love, with Lawi based in Yangon since 2012 and Lao Htaw in Thailand studying for her master's degree in Global Communication Studies at a university in Bangkok.

"I dreamt of building a very peaceful family with him after we were married. I want to have a son. We would go to monasteries and pagodas together," Lawi's fiancée told The Irrawaddy five days after his arrest.

Currently, her partner is in prison, along with two other reporters form the Democratic Voice of Burma, in Hsipaw, a provincial town in northern Shan State. The reporters are charged with violating the Unlawful Associations Act, with the Myanmar Army accusing them of connections with the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), a group labeled as "terrorists" by the Shan State parliament.

The reporters had covered the TNLA's drug burning ceremony on Monday to mark the UN's International Day against Drug Abuse and were detained shortly after. In the wake of the arrest, The Irrawaddy's Kyaw Phyo Tha had a conversation with Loa Htaw detailing her reaction to the arrest, her expectations and requests for her boyfriend's freedom and about Lawi Weng as a person as well.

What are your reactions to Lawi's arrest?

I have never thought he would go through something like this. We are unprepared to have that kind of situation, and when it happened I had no idea how to deal with it. But I really want to talk to him to ask what I can do for his release.

What do you mean by being 'unprepared?'

He didn't seem to think that he would face restrictions on the media under the new [National League for Democracy] government or by the military as well. So he sticks to reporting the truth and what he witnesses, and doesn't seem to worry about his own safety or wellbeing. Sometimes I worried about him while reading his stories, as most of them are about fighting between government troops and ethnic armed groups and the situations in conflict areas. When I raised my concerns to him, he just replied, 'No worries. We are now under a democratic government.'

Do you have any requests to make regarding his release?

 I want to make a request here to anyone concerned: Please release him. He is an innocent man who did his job as a journalist. As he mostly writes about conflict, it's natural that he needs to talk to his sources, whoever they are. If not, how can he write stories without verification? He needs to see what is happening out there as well. I believe 100 percent that he is innocent.

What are your worries at the moment?

I am worried he was forced by the army to confess before they handed him to the police. I don't want him spend time in jail. Based on my 17 years of experience knowing him, I swear he is not a guy who would do something bad. If he has to spend more time in jail, I'm afraid it will have impacts on his health—both physically and mentally. Plus, as he is an ethnic Mon, I'm worried that he wouldn't be seen as speaking properly at the court hearing, because his Burmese is not that good in that kind of situation, despite his knowledge of the language.

When did you two last talk?

I received a message about his safe arrival in Lashio at around 10 p.m. on Saturday. We talked on Friday night before his trip. I complained to him about his frequent travels. He said, 'I want to go there.' When I learned about his arrest on Monday afternoon, I called his phone but there was no answer, and then it was switched off.

How would you describe Lawi Weng's character?

 As a very caring person. Whenever he got back from trips, he always brought something for me. He said he had bought a piece of amber from his recent trip in Kachin State, to make me a pendant for a necklace. I haven't seen it yet as we didn't have a chance to meet. He is someone who knows me very well. As he is older than me, he is also like a brother who never fails to give me guidance or assistance when I am in need. I feel secure when I am with him.

What will you do now?

I will have to wait for his release. After my dad, he is the man who I respect, love and trust most in my life. I used to tease him, by asking which side he was on: journalism or me. But he never answered. I won't even mind, if he no longer needs me after his release.

The post Fiancée Opens Up About Detained Irrawaddy Reporter appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Soldier Photographs Reporters at Article 66(d) Hearing

Posted: 30 Jun 2017 05:49 AM PDT

YANGON — Journalists filed a complaint against a plain-clothed soldier on Friday who was photographing them outside the hearing of a newspaper editor being charged for publishing an article satirizing Myanmar's peace process.

The Protecting Committee for Myanmar Journalists (PCMJ) filed the complaint against Private Soe Myint Aung of Yangon Military Command at Bahan Police Station under a bill enacted this year that was drafted to restrict state surveillance.

Dozens of reporters were outside the fifth court hearing of The Voice Daily chief editor Ko Kyaw Min Swe on Friday who has been prosecuted by Lt-Col Lin Tun of Yangon Military Command under Article 66(d) of the controversial Telecommunications Act.

Most journalists were not allowed inside to witness the trial, in which Ko Kyaw Min Swe was denied bail for the fourth time.

Private Soe Myint Aung approached journalists, including PCMJ committee members, and used his mobile phone to photograph their faces, as they interviewed the chief editor's legal advisor U Khin Maung Myint under Shwe Gone Daing flyover after the hearing.

At first, the soldier refused to answer the journalists' questions concerning his name and organization, but then he answered "territorial security," according to the reporters. The Irrawaddy was also at the scene.

Soe Myint Aung then gave his service number and rank after calling an army officer for permission. The soldier was ordered by a high-ranking official to collect news of the hearing, he said. The plaintiff Lt-Col Lin Tun did not attend the hearing.

The journalists told Soe Myint Aung that by taking photos of individuals instead of a wider shot he was breaching the Protecting the Privacy and Security of Citizens law, which was enacted in March in order to curtail the state's intrusion on people's privacy with surveillance and the repressive security apparatus.

The journalists asked him to delete the photos, but said he only deleted some.

The PCMJ filed the complaint to police, saying its members were targeted. The police will reply to the complaint in 30 days, according to standard procedure.

Some reporters told The Irrawaddy they had been tracked since the beginning of the chief editor's trial.

"The army is closely watching how we gather news," said Ma Thuzar of 7 Day TV, who said she was photographed by Soe Myint Aung. "This is threatening the work and private lives of reporters. As far as I know, that kind of surveillance was carried out by 'Special Branch' officers previously—now the army does the work itself."

Press Council member U Myint Kyaw said surveillance activities should be conducted within the legal framework, adding that a throwback to the activities of the military regime era would now be illegal.

"People who are individually photographed without committing any crime are having their privacy breached. We can't accept such conduct," he said.

The post Soldier Photographs Reporters at Article 66(d) Hearing appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Five Inmates Escape from Mon State Labor Camp

Posted: 30 Jun 2017 04:58 AM PDT

MAWLAMYINE, Mon State — Police and government officials are searching for five male inmates who escaped from Inn Paung labor camp in Mon State's Paung Township on Wednesday after attacking a police lance corporal, a township police officer confirmed.

"[The inmates] threw stones and attacked the policeman with a hammer and ran away from the quarry at around 10 a.m.," police officer Tun Zaw Oo of Paung Township Police Station told The Irrawaddy, adding that the lance corporal who was attacked did not sustain major injuries.

Three of the prisoners are serving terms of 13, nine and eight years while two are serving terms of ten years, according to police records.

Officials from the Correction Department and village administrative bodies joined police in combing the area to search for the escapees, said the police officer.

"There are mountains at the back of the quarry and rubber plantations. We think they are hiding there," said the police officer.

Translated from Burmese by Thet Ko Ko.

The post Five Inmates Escape from Mon State Labor Camp appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Thousands of Myanmar Migrants Return from Thailand

Posted: 30 Jun 2017 03:20 AM PDT

CHIANG MAI, Thailand — Thousands of illegal migrant workers from Myanmar have been returning to the country amid a crackdown by Thai authorities.

The migrants have flocked to the Myawaddy-Mae Sot border and other border checkpoints along the Thaungyin River—known as the Moei River in Thailand—since Thai authorities began arresting illegal migrants on June 22, said U Moe Gyo, chairman of Mae Sot-based Myanmar Citizens Affairs' Committee.

"Thai authorities should not make immediate arrests after imposing new labor laws. Myanmar authorities should also open counters at the border checkpoints to warmly welcome back our citizens. Most of those who have fled from Thailand are now disheartened," U Moe Gyo told The Irrawaddy.

Locals from the Myanmar border town of Myawaddy told The Irrawaddy they had joined immigration officials, police and local authorities in welcoming back those migrants who crossed the border on Thursday.

Thailand's government has made a stream of arrests of illegal migrants since it introduced changes to its labors laws on June 20, pushing many to return to their native countries.

Under Thailand's previous labor laws, illegal migrants were imprisoned for 48 days and then deported to their native countries. But the new amendments carry the possibility of a five-year jail sentence and a fine, according to the migrants.

The majority of illegal migrants in Thailand are Myanmar; others are Cambodian and Laotian among other nationalities, according to the International Organization for Migration.

Thai media reports state thousands of illegal migrants have been arrested in a move heavily criticized by Thai businessmen and politicians, who argue that it has affected Thailand's productivity, said U Kyaw Thaung, chairman of the Myanmar Association in Thailand.

"It has caused controversy in Thailand. Some politicians have warned that it could result in the collapse of the Thai economy. Thai businessmen have asked the government to reconsider its move as it threatens the country's manufacturing industry," said the chairman.

U Kyaw Thaung said he hoped that a meeting between Thai and Myanmar labor officials on Friday in Naypyitaw would deliver good results for Myanmar illegal migrants in Thailand.

Rights groups in Thailand urged the Myanmar government to arrange for its citizens who are working in the country illegally to return through the border, stressing that many of them have already fled raids by Thai authorities and left their belongings behind.

The Myanmar Embassy in Bangkok also told Myanmar workers who are holding passports, pink cards or temporary passports to apply for work permits with their employers.

According to the embassy, there are about 4 million Myanmar migrants in Thailand and about 1.7 million of them have work permits.

The Thai government plans to deport all illegal migrants from the country by 2018.

Translated from Burmese by Thet Ko Ko.

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Lawmaker Criticizes Govt on Rakhine Issue

Posted: 30 Jun 2017 01:48 AM PDT

Former chief of general staff for the Myanmar Army U Hla Htay Win criticized the National League for Democracy (NLD)-led government for not doing enough to prevent international interference in Rakhine State on Thursday.

The ex-general, who is now a lawmaker in the Lower House, urged the NLD-led government to take action against a UN fact-finding mission appointed to investigate reports of extensive human rights abuses by Myanmar security forces in Rakhine State, among other places in Myanmar.

"My assessment is that what the government is doing is not enough. It should speak out and reject [the mission] as a necessity," he told reporters at the Lower House on Thursday.

He also said the government had failed to oppose use of the word "Rohingya" by the UN and the US Embassy in Myanmar.

The Myanmar government does not recognize Rakhine State's Muslim minority Rohingya among the country's official ethnic groups, and labels them as "Bengali" to suggest they are interlopers from Bangladesh.

Attacks on police border guard posts by Rohingya militants on Oct. 9 of last year flared tensions among Buddhist and Muslim communities in Rakhine State, which remain largely segregated since anti-Muslim violence in 2012 and 2013 displaced around 140,000 people.

Myanmar Army "clearance operations" in response to the attacks led to the displacement of 75,000 Rohingya refugees to Bangladesh and allegations of torture, extrajudicial killings, and widespread sexual violence, prompting the UN Human Rights Council to assign a fact-finding mission to investigate.

Recently, the Myanmar Army and border police found evidence of training camps for suspected Muslim militants, including in the forests of Mayu mountain range of Rakhine State's southern Maungdaw Township last week.

There have also been reports of villagers fleeing their homes after an increasing number of killings in the area.

"We are facing threats in all aspects. We are facing a terrorist threat," said the ex-general. "Rakhine State is being portrayed as a national hotspot of international concern. Therefore there is a need for [the government] to exercise extra caution."

The ex-general is a central executive committee member of the opposition Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) and was elected to the Lower House in the 2015 general elections to represent Naypyitaw's Zayarthiri Township.

During the Lower House session on Thursday, he questioned what action the government had taken to stop the UN Fact-Finding Mission from coming to Myanmar, labeling it a "political trap" for Myanmar.

"There are difficulties for security agencies to do their jobs in line with the law, to protect the country from terrorism and to ensure national security due to the sensitivity surrounding the issue," he said.

Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs U Kyaw Tin responded that his ministry had already told the UN that it would not accept the UN fact-finding mission.

The Myanmar government released a statement on March 24, rejecting the UN's resolution to form the mission at the Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva.

"If they are going to send someone with regards to the fact-finding mission, then there's no reason for us to let them come," said U Kyaw Zeya, permanent secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Thursday, according to Reuters.

"Our missions worldwide are advised accordingly," he said, explaining that visas to enter Myanmar would not be issued to the mission's appointees or staff.

U Oo Hla Saw of the Arakan National Party (ANP), which won the largest number of seats in the Rakhine State Parliament, also criticized the government's response as weak.

"The government should have opposed strongly rather than saying it could not accept it. I think its response is too weak," U Oo Hla Saw told The Irrawaddy.

The post Lawmaker Criticizes Govt on Rakhine Issue appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Myanmar Says it Will Refuse Entry to UN Fact-Finding Mission

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 10:45 PM PDT

YANGON — Myanmar will refuse entry to members of a UN probe focusing on allegations of killings, rape and torture by security forces in Rakhine State, an official said on Friday.

The government led by Nobel laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi had already said it would not cooperate with a mission set up after a Human Rights Council resolution was adopted in March.

"If they are going to send someone with regards to the fact-finding mission, then there's no reason for us to let them come," said U Kyaw Zeya, permanent secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the capital, Naypyitaw.

"Our missions worldwide are advised accordingly," he said, explaining that visas to enter Myanmar would not be issued to the mission's appointees or staff.

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, who came to power last year amid a transition from military rule, leads Myanmar through the specially created position of "State Counselor", but is also minister of foreign affairs.

Although she does not oversee the military, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi has been criticized for failing to stand up for the more than 1 million stateless Rohingya Muslims in the western state of Rakhine.

She said during a trip to Sweden this month the UN mission "would have created greater hostility between the different communities."

The majority in Rakhine are ethnic Rakhine Buddhists who, like many in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, see the Rohingya as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

Some 75,000 Rohingya fled northwestern Rakhine state to Bangladesh late last year after the Myanmar army carried out a security operation in response to attacks by Rohingya insurgents that killed nine border police.

A UN report in February, based on interviews with some of the Rohingya refugees, said the response involved mass killings and gang rapes of Rohingya, and "very likely" amounted to crimes against humanity and possibly ethnic cleansing.

Myanmar, along with neighbors China and India, dissociated itself from the March resolution brought by the European Union, which called for a mission to look into the allegations in Rakhine as well as reports of abuses in ethnic conflicts in the north of the country.

Indira Jaising, an advocate from the Supreme Court of India, was appointed to lead the mission in May. The other two members are Harvard-trained Sri Lankan lawyer Radhika Coomaraswamy and Australian consultant Christopher Dominic.

Myanmar insists that a domestic investigation—headed by former lieutenant general and Vice President U Myint Swe—is sufficient to look into the allegations in Rakhine.

"Why do they try to use unwarranted pressure when the domestic mechanisms have not been exhausted?" said U Kyaw Zeya.

"It will not contribute to our efforts to solve the issues in a holistic manner," he said.

An advisory panel headed by former UN chief Kofi Annan is set to propose solutions for the broader issues in Rakhine but has not been asked to investigate human rights abuses.

The post Myanmar Says it Will Refuse Entry to UN Fact-Finding Mission appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

The Tripartite Power Struggle in the KIO

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 09:49 PM PDT

After major reshuffles in the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) in January 2016, the power struggle among the senior leadership of the KIO is gradually becoming more visible.

The KIO reshuffled seven positions: Vice Chairman of the KIO, the Deputy Chairs 1 and 2 of the Kachin Independence Council (KIC), Vice Chiefs of Staff 1 and 2, General Staff Officer, and Foreign Affairs Liaison. The shakeup was implemented to create a new political landscape in what some skeptics believe to have been a silent coup by the hardline leader Gen N'Ban La.

Regrettably, disagreements between three senior generals—Gen N'Ban La, Lt-Gen Gam Shawng and Maj-Gen Gun Maw—have recently erupted. This raises a number of questions: What makes this power struggle more visible? What are the major controversies at hand? And, lastly, what will be the outcome for the organization?

Historical Savior: Gen N'Ban La

Gen N'Ban La holds two positions: the KIO's Vice Chair and the Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA). He is also a former chairperson in the ethnic coalition the United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC).

Historically, Gen N'Ban La has been known for cracking down on military coups within the Kachin ranks. The first crackdown occurred in 2001. He ousted Lt-Gen Mali Zup Zau Mai, the then KIO chairman, who had attempted to disarm the KIA under a secret agreement with then Myanmar intelligence supremo Gen Khin Nyunt. After deposing Mali Zup Zau Mai, Gen Lamung Tu Jai was appointed to the chairmanship. Since that time, Gen N'Ban La has been hailed by the junior ranks as a savior and protector of the KIO/A.

A second suppression occurred on January 7, 2004 at Pajau, the old KIO/A headquarters by the Chinese border. Gen N'Ban La, then KIA Chief of Staff, cracked down on a handful of senior ranking officers who had attempted a military coup aimed at replacing him. The plan was to instate the KIO intelligence chief, Col Lasang Aung Wah, in his role.

The coup failed. It resulted in both a major split and in Lasang Aung Wah fleeing to National Democratic Army-Kachin (NDA-K) territory in Pangwah, taking about 100 KIA soldiers with him. Later he would form his own militia group, the Lasang Aung Wah, stationed in Gwi Htu, Waimaw Township. Since then, Gen N'Ban La deposed several senior ranking officers and has taken on many important roles in the KIO/A himself.

Notorious Drug-Eradicator: Lt-Gen Gam Shawng

Lt-Gen Gam Shawng also holds two powerful positions: Chief of Staff of the Kachin Independence Army and Deputy Chair of the Kachin Independence Council (KIC). His name was infamously recorded in history when he commanded that scores of drug users be shot in 1990, while serving as a Commanding Officer in the No. 6 Battalion in Hpakant.

He gradually garnered higher roles in the KIO/A, serving as Commander of the No. 1 Brigade, Chief of the KIO Representative Office (the Liaison Office in Myitkyina) and as General Secretary of the KIO central committee. He then took a position as Chief of Staff after La Sang Aung Wah's failed mutiny in 2004. During the decade of Lt-Gen Gam Shawng's leadership, the KIA has expanded three Brigades—Nos. 6, 7 and 8—and many battalions. The greatest success of the KIA thus far has been to found the military academy in which many potential young leaders, as well as cadets from different ethnic armed groups, are trained.

Popular Maj-Gen Gun Maw

Maj-Gen Gun Maw has arguably been the officer most quickly promoted within the KIO/A ranks. He is popular among the Kachin public, particularly with youth, and is a charismatic leader. He once led a KIO negotiating team and has earned trust both domestically and internationally for his diplomacy. The major success of his career was to initiate the program Education and Economic Development for Youth, in which the KIO provides young people with basic military training and courses on drug awareness, Kachin culture and ideology, democracy and federalism. Maj-Gen Gun Maw also initiated the founding of the Military Strategic Office, of which he was in charge as Colonel. After Vice Chief of Staff Brig-Gen Zau Nan died suddenly, Gun Maw was promoted from Colonel to Brig-Gen and took on the vacant position. In January 2016, he was reshuffled as Deputy Chair II of the KIC.

What Creates Power Struggles?

From external observation, there are three potential causes of the split between these generals.

First, it is likely that there is weak communication amongst the leadership. Gen N'Ban La, who served as a chairman in the UNFC, is known to not often reveal the detailed information or policies set by the ethnic bloc to the KIO's central committee. Due to his UNFC ties, he is known to reside largely in Thailand, contributing to a lower frequency of face-to-face meetings with other members of leadership in Kachin State. There have been reports of miscommunication regarding Gen N'Ban La's attendance at the second session of the 21st Century Panglong Conference in May. The KIO as an organization opted out of participating, but the Chinese special envoy Sun Guoxiang allegedly arranged for the Northern Alliance of ethnic armed groups to attend at the last minute—a delegation which Gen N'Ban La joined.

Another potential source of contention involves the evolving role of Maj-Gen Gun Maw. He was previously involved in several peace talks under the UNFC's delegation for political negotiation (DPN). In this regard, he held a high profile, but his role has diminished since the Myanmar Army rejected the UNFC's nine-point peace proposal.

Following this turn of events, Maj-Gen Gun Maw returned to the KIA's Laiza headquarters. As Gen N'Ban La further invests in peace talks led by the Northern Alliance, Gun Maw's opportunities to contribute to the peace process in turn become more limited.

It is possible that the three men each see one another as believing in different policy approaches and leadership styles, as well. To someone with the stance of Gen N'Ban La, Lt-Gen Gam Shawng could be perceived as being uncomfortably close with the Chinese. After Gam Shawng took a position as chief of the KIO's economic committee, he was approached by a number of Chinese businesspeople interested in extracting the Kachin region's natural resources. According to the economic department of the KIO, Ms. Ali Chye—a prominent Chinese tycoon—negotiated special permits with Lt-Gen Gam Shawng, reportedly bonding over shared religious beliefs.

While Gen N'Ban La has been criticized for his rigidity, the younger Maj-Gen Gun Maw's own popularity and embrace of more "youthful" tools of communication, like social media—including the posting of KIO updates on his personal Facebook page—could also be viewed as threatening to older, more traditional members within the organization.

These three generals each have their own patrons who back them in case of a power struggle. For Gen N'Ban La, this includes junior leaders who respect him for "saving" the KIO/A from attempted coups. Lt-Gen Gam Shawng enjoys the confidence of holding control of the full chain of command from the KIA military. Maj-Gen Gun Maw obtains support from both peers within the central committee and from the greater Kachin public.

Yet historically, internal power struggles lead to splits within organizations. This was witnessed when known druglord Zahkung Ting Ying formed the New Democratic Army-Kachin in 1989, and again in 1990 with Mahtu Naw, along with whom parts of the KIA's 4th Brigade broke away to form the Kachin Defense Army in northern Shan State, and finally, in 2004, when Lasang Aung Wah formed his 100-man militia at Gwi Htu. Observers, myself included, worry how the current fragmentation among the leadership will play out, and what its impact will be on the Kachin movement.

Healing the Fragmentation

It is believed that some Kachin religious leaders have intervened and have been advising the KIO on how to avoid a potential split. Internally, there appear to be two ways in which the KIO could act halt any fragmentation. In what could be described as a worst-case scenario, the organization could enact a statute limiting officers' careers by restricting the maximum serving age to 60 years. Once the ruling is in effect, generals over sixty years old would be forced to resign from their respective positions and hand over power to junior generals. This could serve as a mechanism for a peaceful transfer of power.

The seemingly best option is a face-to-face meeting in which the central committee members confront and address existing contentions. Moreover, the junior officials—particularly Brig-Gen Hkawng Lum (VCS-I), Brig-Gen Aung Seng La (VCS-II), Brig-Gen Zau Tawng (Gen Staff Officer), Col Brang Nan, Col Tawng La, Col Hkun Seng and Col Naw Hkan—would need to collectively step in and put forward solutions.

Absent such a timely intervention, the existing fragmentation among the senior generals could lead to unprecedented results, including the potential split of the KIO, which no Kachin wants.

Joe Kumbun is the pseudonym of a Kachin State-based analyst.

The post The Tripartite Power Struggle in the KIO appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

National News

National News


Disability no longer handicap for college entrance: ministry

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 02:42 PM PDT

Restrictions on the disabled to pursue a college education will be removed and they will be eligible to apply to study in institutions of higher learning, said U Aung Aung Min, deputy director general of the department of higher education.

Yandnarbon night market to open at end of July

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 02:41 PM PDT

The Yandnarbon night market will be opened for business during the last week of July, according to U Ti Kyi Aung, general manager of the Myanmar Da Yi company, Ltd, which is managing it.

Students set up union at Sittwe Technological

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 02:40 PM PDT

The Technological University in Sittwe township, Rakhine State, held its first student union election to choose a chairman, vice chairman and general secretary on Monday.

Kawmhu squatters get ID cards

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 02:37 PM PDT

Smart cards have been issued to squatter families in Yangon Region's Kawhmu township, and over 900 other families were given smart cards that show they are not trespassing, said U Kyaw Thu Soe, administrator of the township.

Over 1000 Mandalay farmers protest land seizure, suits

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 02:35 PM PDT

More than 1000 farmers in the Mandalay Region staged a protest against what they described as unfair lawsuits filed against them pertaining to seized land.

No entry to UNHRC fact-finding mission in Rakhine

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 02:18 PM PDT

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs will not allow a UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) fact-finding mission into Rakhine State to probe allegations of human rights violations.

With Japan’s help, Myanmar sets up money-earning postboxes in three cities

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 02:15 PM PDT

Myanmar is replacing its aging postboxes with new ones offering advertisement space in three major cities with Japanese assistance to reform the Southeast Asian country's postal system.

Bidding for waste-to-energy plant soon

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 02:11 PM PDT

The next energy plant which can recycle all waste and rubbish produced in Yangon will be built after calling for tenders, according to Dr Aung Myint Maw, Assistant Chief Engineer, Pollution Control and Cleansing Department of Yangon City Development Committee (YCDC).

K20m in donations collected for family of maid in S’pore suicide

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 01:51 PM PDT

Public donations amounting to K20 million has been collected for the grandparents of Ma Zinmar Oo, a Myanmar national worked as a maid and committed suicide in Singapore two weeks ago.

Shan Herald Agency for News

Shan Herald Agency for News


2 villagers killed as hundreds flee clashes between Burma Army and TNLA

Posted: 30 Jun 2017 07:17 AM PDT

At least two villagers were killed by shelling and another 300 fled their homes amid fighting between Burmese armed forces and the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) in northern Shan State.


According to TNLA's news and information department, two local people in Wan Penghoi Village, Kutkhai Township, were killed and another was seriously injured earlier this week when Burmese army battalion 45 launched artillery shells at TNLA positions near the village.

"Tar Aik Tae, 44, died at the scene," the TNLA reported. "His wife Yar Aye Am, 41, was taken to hospital and pronounced dead later. Tar Aik Sam, 53, was seriously injured."

A week of ongoing hostilities also forced villagers to flee their homes in Namhsan Township's Man Lan village.

"In Lashio Township, there are currently 141 evacuees sheltering in Khur Nong Mon temple; 87 people at Shwe Kyethi Thatanar temple; and 79 in Aung Yartharnar temple," resident Sai Seng told Shan Herald. He said that the temples were helping gather support for the evacuees, but rainy season conditions were exacerbating the problems.

The TNLA news reported that some villagers had been captured and detained by the Burmese army, according to a joint statement on June 27 by the Ta'ang Women's Organization and Ta'ang Youth Organization. The statement urged both sides to cease hostilities and release all detainees immediately.

Fighting between Burmese units and the TNLA has broken out regularly in various areas in northern Shan State, including Namhsan, Kyaukme, Kutkhai, Muse and Namkham.

The TNLA was excluded from the first round of peace talks, unofficially dubbed the 21stCentury Panglong Conference, or 21CPC, in 2016. However, the group did attend the second round of political dialogue, represented as a member of the newly formed Federal Political Negotiation Consultative Committee (FPNCC), which is headed by the United Wa State Army (UWSA).

Joint Monitoring Committee opens in southern Shan State

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 11:38 PM PDT

The Joint Monitoring Committee opened its first local-level office (JMC-L) in southern Shan State's Langkhur Township on Wednesday.

Representatives from local government, military officials and the State Level Joint Monitoring Committee (JMC-S) joined nationwide ceasefire groups the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army (RCSS/SSA) and Pa-Oh National Liberation Organization (PNLO) for the public launch.


The chairman of the JMC-L is to be commander-in-chief of Langkhur Township, while the RCSS/SSA serves as vice-chairman. The general secretary will be appointed from Langkhur military officials.

Sai Ba Han, a member of JMC-L, said that the office is supported by JMC-S, and will be available to serve the public and deal with their issues.

"These groups are NCA [Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement] signatories," he said. "The office has been opened to monitor the peace process. Anyone can file a complaint if they are threatened by any armed groups or any other matters."

He said that the new office will hold meetings with local people in order for them to understand the JMC-L work, adding that next month they plan to meet with local people in Maukmai Township.

National and regional Joint Monitoring Committees were formed after eight ethnic armed groups – the RCSS/SSA; the Karen National Union (KNU); the Democratic Karen Benevolent Army (DKBA); the Karen National Union/Karen National Liberation Party-Peace Council (KNU/KNLA-PC); the Arakan Liberation Party (ALP); the Chin National Front (CNF); the PNLO; and the All Burma Students Democratic Front (ABSDF) – signed the NCA with the Burmese government on 15 October 2015.

The Shan State JMC was established on January 1, 2016. However, to date only four meetings have been held. The first meeting took place on January 9, 2016, in southern Shan State's Kholam Township, where the headquarters of the Burmese military Central Eastern Command is based.

By Shan Herald Agency for News (SHAN)

600 villagers hold forest blessing ceremony to oppose coal mining in Nam Ma

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 08:26 AM PDT

On June 23, 2017, about 600 people from over 30 villages gathered in Nam Ma village tract, Hsipaw township, northern Shan State, to hold a religious ceremony to bless the forest and call for a stop to coal mining in the area.


The ceremony, led by fifteen monks, was held at the Ho Na Pa forest area, the main watershed for farmers in Nam Ma tract. Rituals began at 9 am, with monks conferring blessings on the surrounding forest, and villagers praying for the longevity of the forest and natural surroundings. Farmers from southern and eastern Shan State also attended.

Over 3,000 residents of Nam Ma tract and surrounding areas have suffered impacts from the coal mining for over ten years, including loss of farmlands, disruption of water supplies, and dust pollution.

Most of the mining is taking place near Na Koon village, using underground tunnels. In recent months, villagers have been alarmed to see cracks appearing in the earth nearby. On June 24, 2017, a 25-feet deep sinkhole suddenly appeared in a cornfield west of the mine. The next day, smoke suddenly began pouring out of one of the mining tunnels.

Another coal mining site in Nam Ma, at Pieng Hsai village, stopped operation in 2015, but the land has not been restored. The mining pit has filled with water, causing nearby land to subside.

The Shan State Farmers' Network (Nam Ma) is demanding a complete stop to the coal mining.
 "Stop Coal Mining in Nam Ma" a booklet by the Nam Ma Shan Farmers detailing impacts of the mining is available on (http://shanhumanrights.org/eng/index.php/shrf-archives/shrf-english-newsletter/323-stop-coal-mining-in-nam-ma).

Media release by Shan State Farmers' Network (Nam Ma)

Contact person:
Nang Lao         tel:       +95 (0) 94-482-088-58

Download PDF file here : Media release-Eng

Thursday, June 29, 2017

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Journalists: NLD Spokesman’s Comments on Detained Reporters Highlight Legal ‘Double Standard’

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 07:32 AM PDT

YANGON — Legal experts and members of the press have denounced comments made by a senior member of ruling National League for Democracy (NLD) party regarding the arrest of three journalists under the colonial-era Unlawful Association Act.

The Myanmar Army arrested seven people, including three journalists, on the road between Namhsan and Lashio townships in northern Shan State on Monday after they had reported in areas controlled by ethnic armed group the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA). The reporters included The Irrawaddy's Lawi Weng, also known as U Thein Zaw, and U Aye Nai and Ko Pyae Bone Naing (also known as Pyae Phone Aung) from Democratic Voice of Burma.

After more than 48 hours of no information regarding whereabouts of the three journalists, Tatmadaw Adjutant Thet Naing Oo from Light Infantry Battalion No. 503 filed a lawsuit against them under Article 17(1) of the Unlawful Associations Act on Wednesday and local police remanded the trio to Hsipaw Prison.

NLD senior member U Win Htein spoke to the media on Wednesday and said that the three journalists had visited the area illegally.

"[Ethnic armed groups] should inform the Peace Commission that they would like to invite reporters and that permission be granted. It will be legal if the Peace Commission allows it," U Win Htein commented.

He added that those involved in the peace process that meet with ethnic armed groups do not violate any laws, but those who are not related to peace process and do so violate Article 17(1) of the Unlawful Associations Act.

U Kyee Myint, a senior lawyer, told The Irrawaddy on Thursday that the comments were made recklessly, and that U Win Htein should think thoroughly before talking to the media as he holds a senior position in the ruling party.

For political purposes, many members of government and military institutions, including army chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing, have met with ethnic armed groups that have not signed the nationwide ceasefire agreement, U Kyee Myint pointed out. Because of this, meetings between other institutions, including members of the press, and the armed groups should not be considered illegal if they take place for professional purposes.

"Practicing such a double standard is not acceptable," U Kyee Myint said.

The Legal Aid Network, a Kachin community-based organization, issued a statement on Thursday describing U Win Htein's comments as "totally false."

The statement also pointed out that during peace dialogue conducted around 1963, the then ruling military regime, led by Gen Ne Win, suspended the Unlawful Associations Act to meet with the leaders of rebel groups, and that the NLD government has not done this thus far.

U Myint Kyaw, a member of Myanmar Press Council, said that U Win Htein made such a comment only after this incident had occurred, adding that there was no prior information about a mandate given to the Peace Commission regarding permission for press coverage in ethnic armed group-controlled areas.

"Media should be at least informed in advance if the government will take action against such an incident," U Myint Kyaw told The Irrawaddy.

U Ye Naing Moe, founder of the Yangon Journalism School, said journalists would not be able to carry out investigative reporting if they had to seek permission from certain organizations in order to meet with news sources.

"This is a fundamental right of journalists given by the society," U Ye Naing Moe said. "I am extremely surprised, and pity [U Win Htein] for not understanding this fundamental right as a spokesperson [of the ruling party]," he added.

The Legal Aid Network stated that the three journalists did not violate the law, as they were conducting their duties: attempting to get information about TNLA's drug eradication event to the public, noting that the reporters did not assist in the operations of the armed organization.

If meetings by any ordinary citizen with an "unlawful" association—unilaterally declared as such by the ruling administration—are criminalized, then the standard should apply to any government official or others sent by the government, the organization said.

"Equality before the law is one of the major undisputed principles of the rule of law," read the Legal Aid Network's statement. "There is no exception for the government officials. It applies to every person, including those assigned by the government."

U Win Htein also faced severe criticism from media stakeholders for saying that the arrest of the three journalists would not impact press freedom.

The Myanmar Press Council's U Myint Kyaw said the comment was made "irresponsibly."

U Ye Naing Moe, of the Yangon Journalism School, said that the arrest "undoubtedly threatened" press freedom and the rights of those who work in the media industry, including news editors and reporters. He also emphasized the criminalization of journalists through Article 17(1) of the Unlawful Associations Act as a "disturbing" and "dangerous" trend.

Conflict is ongoing in Myanmar and journalists and editors will continue reporting on it, as it is very impactful news for the public, U Ye Naing Moe said.

"If communicating with ethnic armed groups is considered illegal, how are media supposed to report on civil war?" he asked.

He also added that the government, particularly the Ministry of Information, should mediate between respective parties in the case.

U Shwe Mann, chair of the Union Parliament's Legal Affairs and Special Cases Assessment Commission, told The Irrawaddy on Thursday in Naypyidaw that he would do an assessment on the arrest of the three journalists if media organizations submitted the case to his commission. The commission also has plans to review Article 17(1) of the Unlawful Associations Act, he said.

The Irrawaddy's Pe Thet Htet Khin contributed to this report from Naypyidaw.

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‘Just Doing Their Jobs:’ Families Decry Case Against Reporters

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 06:41 AM PDT

Family and colleagues of three Myanmar journalists who face up to three years in prison on charges of contacting ethnic rebels appealed for their release on Thursday.

The men have been accused of breaching the colonial-era Unlawful Associations Act after covering an event on Monday where the rebel Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) burned piles of narcotics to mark the International Day Against Drug Abuse.

"We don't really think our journalists have working relations with the TNLA group, which [the government] calls terrorists," said Than Win Htut, planning editor at the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), the employer of two of the journalists. "They are just doing a journalist's job."

Broadcaster DVB's Aye Nai and Pyae Phone Naing, and Lawi Weng of The Irrawaddy magazine, were remanded along with three others in Hsipaw prison, in northern Shan State, on Wednesday.

They will be brought before a court on July 11, said Thein Zaw, head of the police station handling the case in the town of Hsipaw.

But Phil Robertson, deputy director for New York-based Human Rights Watch's Asia division, said Daw Aung Suu Kyi should use her majority in Parliament to rein in the military.

"It's hard to tell what Daw Aung San Suu Kyi thinks, but if she believes she can convince the army to somehow reform or moderate their behavior, this is more evidence to show that she's profoundly mistaken," he said.

The case has sparked outrage among the boisterous media that emerged in the commercial hub Yangon after the government lifted pre-publication censorship in 2012.

Journalists will gather signatures on Friday calling for the release of the three men—and of an editor charged in a separate case with defamation over a satirical article mocking the army.

Both DVB and The Irrawaddy were set up in exile in Thailand, receiving funding from Western governments and NGOs, and have opened bureaus in Yangon since 2012.

Aye Nai, 53, and Lawi Weng, 38, returned to Myanmar to cover the conflicts between the army and ethnic rebels.

Lawi Weng, a member of southern Myanmar's Mon ethnic minority, is a practicing Buddhist who meditates each morning and night. He had planned to marry this year.

Loa Htaw, his fiancée, said Lawi Weng knew the risks his repeated trips to conflict areas entailed.

"Both he and I [were] aware that he might face prison if he keeps writing about our ethnic armed groups and criticizes the military and government," she wrote in a message to Reuters.

However, "he needs to report for the voiceless and the powerless," Loa Htaw said.

Part of the new generation of Myanmar journalists to emerge since the reforms, 24-year-old Pyae Phone Naing worked for several media organizations before joining DVB about four months ago, his father, Kyaw Soe Oo, told Reuters.

On Monday evening, Pyae Phone Naing called his mother. He informed her that he was in a military camp, but not to worry, his father said.

The parents did not realize the gravity of the situation until later, when relatives started calling having seen news reports of their son's detention.

"It gives me pain in my heart. I always worry about him, even when he comes home late on usual days," Kyaw Soe Oo told Reuters. "I want my son to be released."

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Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s Lackluster Visit to Canada

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 04:23 AM PDT

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar's State Counselor and de facto leader of the government, made a five-day visit to Canada earlier this month—long overdue after already visiting the United Kingdom, the United States, and Australia.

The question is: What has been achieved, other than a photo-op with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau? Some might say that the announcement of US$8.8 million of aid will boost humanitarian assistance and peace building efforts in Myanmar. This financial assistance, however, doesn’t appear to be anything new, and may actually be part of a $44 million aid package announced when the previous Foreign Minister Stephane Dion met Daw Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar in early April 2016.

Others might add that she brought with her a team (independent from her entourage) to learn from "Canadian Federalism." Is there any point, however, of drawing comparisons between the two countries when it comes to federalism? The Canadian Confederation is straightforward, whereas Myanmar's federalism is complicated by a number of ethnic armed organizations at war with the central government—there is nothing to be adopted from Canada.

Interestingly, major Canadian media had no clue about her visit. Canadian media requests—including from Canada Broadcasting Company, CTV, the Globe and Mail and the Toronto—for interviews and official requests for public meetings went unanswered. Global Affairs Canada and the Myanmar Embassy threw the ball into each other's court when inquiries were made. The Canadian public barely noticed her visit and if they did, they talked about the lack of media coverage in Canada.

Why did such a high-profile figure visit in such a low-profile way? And why only in Canada? The State Counselor held a press conference with the Swedish Prime Minister when she visited Sweden directly after her Canada visit.

She also wasn't able to meet with key Myanmar supporters, including former politicians and ministers who played important roles in Myanmar affairs, as well as representatives of Canadian civil society organizations that pioneered campaigns for her freedom. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi once said: "I look forward very much to the day that conditions in Myanmar will allow me to be free to visit Canada myself and thank the Canadian people in person." She apparently failed to realize her stated goal.

She was, however, able to meet with members of the Myanmar community in Toronto and Ottawa. The Myanmar Embassy planned a community meeting in Toronto with only 250 people, when there are thousands of Bamar, Karen, Chin, and Kachin living in the city.

Originally, there was no community meeting planned for Ottawa. It was only when she was challenged in person that she immediately instructed her staff to arrange a meeting. She admitted in the Ottawa meeting attended by more than 100 community members that she wasn’t aware how many people from Myanmar lived in Ottawa, and also apologized for not being able to meet with Canadian supporters.

It is quite clear that she wasn’t fully aware of or well informed on the conditions of the country she visited. The State Counselor received a special invitation from the previous Conservative government to visit. However, she revealed in the community meeting in Ottawa that she was visiting Canada under the arrangements and invitation of the Forum of Federations, a group I have not come across in the last 25 years of campaigning for Myanmar in Canada. It appears the Canadian government hastily tried to arrange some appropriate meetings with her including a photo-op with Prime Minister Trudeau and a brief meeting with Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland.

The failure on the part of Canada is that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi wasn't invited to address the joint-chambers of the Parliament, although she is a recipient of Honorary Canadian Citizenship and an inspirational leader of the democracy movement. All major western democracies that supported Myanmar invited her to address their Chambers of Parliament—Britain even opened its historic Westminster Hall so she could address both houses of Parliament, a rare occasion for a non-head of state. The Swedish Parliament also welcomed her immediately after she left Canada.

It was only the respective speakers of the two houses that met Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. When an inquiry was made, a key adviser on international relations to the Canadian Parliament responded it was the job of the government of Canada, in this case the Prime Minister's Office, to take the initiative.

Obviously, the Liberal government's welcoming gesture has been less than enthusiastic—in some cases it even appeared casual. The previous Conservative government went to an enormous effort to bring her to Canada but to no avail. In fact, the previous government was more proactive and receptive to calls and approaches from the Myanmar activist community when it was in power.

Currently, the pressing issue among Myanmar communities across Canada is a deportation order issued to Ye Yint  (also known as Than Soe), who braved his life to draw the world's attention to Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's arrest in the late 1980s by redirecting a Myanmar airplane to Thailand. He served a jail sentence for his action, and was hailed a hero. When released, he decided to pursue education in the US. However, the political weather changed after World Trade Center attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 and he sought political asylum in Canada in 2006. It was, however, denied due to his previous conviction.

In light of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's visit, the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) assumed it was safe to send the asylum seeker Ye Yint back to Myanmar and a deportation order was issued on June 19—coincidentally Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's birthday.

It would have been interesting to see if Canada's immigration minister could have used his "ministerial power" to overrule CBSA's deportation order—the previous immigration minister Jason Kenny used this power to save two people from Myanmar from the same fate. The community are currently circulating a petition asking the Liberal government to intervene.

This, of course, makes the timing unfortunate—there is no happy ending to her visit. The smiling photos are taken in a moment, and only exist for a moment. There will be everlasting damage if we take the missed opportunities of her visit lightly, with Ye Yint's case just the latest episode.

Tin Maung Htoo is on the board of directors of the Canadian Friends of Burma and served as executive director from 2005-2013.

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Culture Ministry to Nominate Bagan, Mrauk U, Shwedagon for UNESCO Recognition

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 04:18 AM PDT

NAYPYITAW — The Union minister of religious affairs and culture U Aung Ko said his ministry plans to nominate Arakan State's Mrauk U and Shwedagon Pagoda for UNESCO's list of culturally significant sites after Bagan.

Since 2016, countries have been limited to one UNESCO nomination per year so the ministry chose Bagan first, said the minister.

The draft report and draft management plan needed for Bagan's nomination will be submitted in September and UNESCO officials will visit the site in 2018.

Bagan's nomination will then be brought up for deliberation at UNESCO's 2019 World Heritage Site convention, according to the minister.

"We have invited international experts. We plan to nominate Rakhine State's Mrauk U in 2018 and Shwedagon Pagoda in 2019. We'll later nominate Khakaborazi [in Kachin State], Inle Lake [in Shan State], Indawgyi Lake [in Kachin State], Inwa [Ava], Mandalay and Sagaing," the minister told reporters in Naypyitaw on Wednesday.

The ministry will no longer allow climbing on all of Bagan's pagodas and is currently building platforms from which visitors will be able to watch sunrise and sunset.

Myanmar's initial application for UNESCO recognition of Bagan came in 1996, but it was rejected due to poor management plans and legal frameworks.

After UNESCO inscribed the ancient Pyu cities as the first Burmese World Heritage Site in June 2014, the culture ministry decided to continue campaigning for the addition of Bagan.

UNESCO has accepted Bagan as a mixed cultural heritage zone following negotiations with the culture ministry and Mandalay divisional government which means that there is no need to relocate villages, hotels or guesthouses, said the minister.

The minister said the government would design plans for towns, industrial zones and hotel zones outside of Bagan in order to accommodate the increasing population.

U Oo Hla Saw, a Lower House lawmaker representing Mrauk U Township, said he welcomed the nomination of Mrauk U, but that there were no clear guidelines at this time for how to handle the government offices and residential wards located within the designated Mrauk U archaeological zone.

"While Rakhine people are happy about the nomination, they are also concerned that the whole town will be relocated," he told The Irrawaddy.

In February, UNESCO officials and the culture ministry discussed technical matters related to the management of Shwedagon Pagoda for its future nomination.

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Namhsan Locals Flee Myanmar Army Arrests

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 03:33 AM PDT

YANGON — Some 200 people from Manlan village in northern Shan State's Namhsan Township have fled to Lashio Township amid claims the Myanmar Army are interrogating and arresting locals for alleged connections with the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA).

A local man died during questioning by the Myanmar Army, according to one resident who asked for anonymity, adding that at least seven people had been arrested.

Fierce clashes between the Myanmar Army and the TNLA in Namhsan have taken place over the past week. Many Manlan residents have sought shelter in Buddhist monasteries and their relatives' houses in Lashio.

Two locals in Peinhwe village, Kutkai Township, were killed by artillery fire on June 26 – for which the two sides have blamed each other.

The office of the Myanmar Army chief released a statement on June 27 saying it suffered casualties in five clashes from June 23-26, although it did not give a number. Four bodies reportedly from the TNLA and ammunition were recovered, it added.

The Myanmar Army took control of a TNLA training base about 2,000 kilometers northeast of Manlan on June 21, seizing medicine, TNLA uniforms, and homemade bombs, according to its statement.

The TNLA has claimed that the base was a school specializing in basic health and the empowerment of women. The ethnic armed group confirmed frequent clashes recently between the two forces, citing two battles on June 27 alone.

Three journalists including The Irrawaddy's Lawi Weng, also known as U Thein Zaw, were arrested on the road between Namhsan and Lashio townships by the Myanmar Army on June 26 after covering a drug-burning event organized by the TNLA.

They were charged under Article 17(1) of the Unlawful Associations Act on Wednesday and were remanded to Hsipaw Prison.

Translated from Burmese by Thet Ko Ko.

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Four Letpadaung Protesters Charged Under Peaceful Assembly Law

Posted: 29 Jun 2017 01:11 AM PDT

YANGON — Police have opened a case under Article 19 of the Peaceful Assembly and Procession Law against four local farmers who staged a protest against the China-backed Letpadaung Copper Mine on the Pathein-Monywa Road, confirmed the Salingyi Township police station.

Dozens of local farmers protested on Monday in front of China's Wanbao Co, stating that the company's mine was causing air pollution and environmental degradation. Then, police intervened.

"We've opened a case against four villagers under Article 19. We did not inform them that we've filed a complaint. We will just bring the case to court in line with the law," police officer Htay Win of the Salingyi Township police station told The Irrawaddy.

Police have charged locals Daw Yi Win, U Khin Nyein, Daw Sandar and Daw Mar Cho.

"We read in the newspapers that we had been charged. Police never informed us," Daw Yi Win told The Irrawaddy.

Demonstrators said Wanbao Co had failed to implement the recommendations made in a report by an investigation commission led by then-lawmaker Daw Aung San Suu Kyi in 2013.

Among the recommendations made by the commission were increasing land compensation, creating job opportunities for small- and medium-scale businesses in the region, and implementing environmental and social management systems for the mine.

Protesters claimed the Chinese company also failed to carry out a recommendation to reclaim 1,900 acres of land to replace their confiscated farmlands. As a result, they lost their livelihoods and face hardship. Protesters explained that this was the reason behind the demonstration.

"If actions are to be taken against local farmers for breaching the law, justice should also be served for Daw Khin Win, who was fatally shot by police," said Daw San Nwe.

Daw Khin Win, 56, was killed in a clash between police and locals demonstrating against the mine in Dec. 2014.

If we are to be charged under the Peaceful Assembly and Procession Law, I would ask where is the justice for monks who were injured in a police crackdown during previous demonstrations or for the killing of Daw Khin Win, said Daw San Nwe.

"We deliberately did not seek permission for the protest in order to highlight the company's own breach of the investigation report," she added.

Wanbao Co has operated the controversial mine in partnership with the military-owned Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings Company (UMEHL) since 2010.

Translated from Burmese by Thet Ko Ko.

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UWSA Politician: Wa to ‘Continue Asking for Autonomous State’

Posted: 28 Jun 2017 07:31 PM PDT

For the first time since the United Wa State Army (UWSA) began its anti-drug campaign in 1996, journalists were invited to witness the ethnic armed group destroying seized drugs on June 26.

The event took place in UWSA's Military Region 171 in the southern area of the Wa Self-Administered Division bordering Thailand to mark the UN's International Day Against Drug Abuse.

On the day, UWSA commander Yang Guozhong said opium poppy fields have now been completely eradicated from the southern part of the Wa Self-Administered Division after almost 30 years of UWSA's efforts to distance itself from the reputation of being a drug producer.

Nyi Kep, deputy head of UWSA Military Region 171's political department, recently talked with Irrawaddy reporter Nan Lwin Hnin Pwint about UWSA's demand for autonomy and efforts for the eradication of drugs and arms smuggling in the area.

The UWSA is trying to negotiate with the government to achieve the standing of an autonomous state instead of a self-administered division. What compromises does the UWSA have to make to achieve this?

We are not prepared to make compromises. But we want an autonomous state. We need it. We'll continue asking for it. We can do nothing if [the government] doesn't give it, but we are not prepared to give and take.

We don't have such an attitude that we would fight if we were not given an autonomous state. Whether we ask for an autonomous state or not, it will be fulfilled one day if there is peace and development. But we wish the government treated ethnicities with magnanimity. We don't want it to shoot this or that ethnicity.

The UWSA has presented detailed policies about the type of state it wants to get. How confident is the UWSA of entering political dialogue with the government?

We have trust in the government. That's why we have lived [with the government] here for ages. We have trust in them.

Unlike other areas controlled by ethnic armed groups, Military Region 171 is near military outposts of the Tatmadaw. How are the relations between the two sides?

There are many difficulties because of the proximity. But we can do nothing, at least for the time being. When this area was controlled by [drug warlord] Khun Sa, we assisted [the military] in attacking him. As we defeated Khun Sa, the government gave us this place. And now government troops are stationed here, with our troops stationed alongside. We can do nothing. We Wa attacked Khun Sa and [Shan ethnic and political leader] Yawd Serk when they were powerful.

Much of the international community, including Thailand, which borders the Wa Self-Administered Division, claim drugs are smuggled into Thailand from the UWSA. What do you say to this?

We are dedicated to fighting against drugs in our special region. We go to villages and inspect every house to fight drugs. But whenever drugs are seized, Thailand keeps saying those drugs come from Wa State. They are giving us a bad name. They lay the blame at our door and only care for their interests. The Thai government always asks us to back off our outposts at the Thai border, but it is not our government. We will never back off the posts, which were given to us by our government.

The Thai government also links arms smuggling in its territory to the UWSA.

Yes, we know there are such allegations. But we are not the only ethnic armed group in the region. There is the Lahu [group] as well as other ethnic armed groups. I just don't want to name their names. We know which groups are involved. Yes, Thai authorities have reported seizures of smuggled arms, and we know who they are. But it is not us. We don't smuggle arms to Thailand and we don't receive arms smuggled from Thailand.

We also arrest those who are responsible, and could arrest some armed men involved in arms deals.

Does the UWSA plan to establish ties with Thai authorities?

No. Previously, we did have a plan, but the Thai authorities drove us away. They didn't let us stay. They are scheming and just take advantage of our name.

Translated from Burmese by Thet Ko Ko

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Traditional Treats of a Karenni State Market

Posted: 28 Jun 2017 07:00 PM PDT

DEMOSO TOWNSHIP, Karenni State — Karenni pork sausage and khawn—local rice wine—are among the popular foods to enjoy on market day in Demoso Township.

About a 30-minute drive south of Loikaw, the capital of Karenni State, the Demoso Myoma market runs on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday mornings, with shops opening from 4:30 a.m. to noon.

Shoppers can feast on noodles, smoked meat, frog and fish, pork sausage, and a variety of vegetables for breakfast. Dozens of women vendors—young and old—sit next to their bottles of yellow, homemade khawn. The drink is made in clay jars, but the jars are rarely seen in town or even at the local markets.

"The earthen jars often break while we carry khawn to the market, so we move it to bottles, which makes it easier for us," said Daw Sha Myar, a khawn vendor from Dawt Tama Nge village of Demoso.

A Kayan woman selling woven scarves and honey bottles stood out among the crowd for her traditional dress, which included brass neck rings—a gradually fading fashion in the state.

In Loikaw and other nearby places, the locals rely on trade at the weekly market despite having daily street markets in the downtown areas.

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