Wednesday, October 31, 2018

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Veteran Artist Shares Vision of ‘Splendid’ Yangon

Posted: 31 Oct 2018 08:28 AM PDT

YANGON — Among the 7 million residents of Yangon, how many can truly appreciate the city's beauty and its age? Artist Ko Ko Naing is surely one.

"Yangon is splendid. Its buildings look like those in London. I am interested in them," said Ko Ko Naing, who has spent more than three decades in Yangon's art circle.

The artist usually enjoys the beauty of Yangon on its streets and among its high-rise buildings. He sometimes stops in a crowd to gaze at a building or take its photo. He is now showcasing his paintings from those experiences in "Urban Atmosphere, Far and Near" at the Panthuriya Art Gallery in Bogalay market, his sixth solo exhibition.

"It can also be called 'Ages, Far and Near' or ' Times, Far and Near,'" he said.

A government printing factory. The Secretariat building and telegraph office. Independence Monument. The Evangelical church on Bandoola Road and the telephone towers above it. Satellite dishes on rooftops. A new building on Bogyoke Aung San Road. To Ko Ko Naing, they not only calm the heart but make him aware of the rivalry between new and old. For the buildings demolished since he painted them, his works are also a historical record.

"Things have been changing since 1988. Some of the scenes of Yangon have disappeared. Lower parts of buildings have been covered with shop signs. These are the things of the past," he said while putting the finishing touches on a painting of the government printing factory, which is more than a century old.

Fifteen of his paintings will be on display in the exhibition, which runs from Nov. 2 to 6.

A native of Moulmein, in Mon State, Ko Ko Naing learned to paint from his grandfather and father. With the help of Maung Maung Thike, a famous artist, he stared working as an artist himself and became known for his portraits of urban scenes. He has joined many group exhibitions and teamed up for shows with British artists Kate Bowen and Dutch artist Ietje Preel.

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EU Delegates Encounter Broad Show of Opposition to Ending Trade Preferences

Posted: 31 Oct 2018 08:08 AM PDT

YANGON—A visiting EU delegation has encountered vocal opposition to the possible withdrawal of trade preferences in numerous meetings with a wide range of government officials, union leaders, businesspeople and garment workers as it starts its mission to examine human rights and labor conditions in Myanmar.

From Monday to Wednesday, the joint mission of the European Commission's trade arm and the EU's diplomatic service met with numerous officials from government ministries and labor organizations as part of its investigation of the crisis in Rakhine State, as well as labor rights and workplace conditions.

In Naypyitaw on Tuesday, EU delegation members met with high-level officials from 10 ministries: Home Affairs; Foreign Affairs; the Ministry of the State Counselor's Office; Information; the Ministry of the Office of the Union Government; Labor, Immigration and Population; Industry; Commerce; Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement; and Union Attorney General's Office.

According to a government statement, Myanmar officials made a strong appeal to the delegation to consider the impact on ordinary working people if the EU were to withdraw Myanmar's tariff-free import status, a move they said would leave more than 400,000 people jobless, mostly women working in the garment sector.

The arrival of the EU monitoring mission follows a statement by EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom on Oct. 5 warning that Myanmar could lose its Everything but Arms (EBA) status over human rights violations alleged in a UN fact-finding mission's report. Part of the EU's Generalized System of Preferences, the EBA scheme allows participating countries to export any goods except weapons to the EU tariff-free.

According to a statement from the Ministry of Information, U Thaung Tun, the minister of the Office of the Union Government, and Helena Konig, deputy director general of the EU's Directorate General of Trade, held a separate meeting in Naypyitaw on Tuesday. They had an "open" discussion about the EBA scheme, the ministry statement said.

In separate meetings with the EU delegates, Myanmar government officials, lawmakers, labor policy experts, academic scholars and members of the business community have voiced strong disagreement with the idea of the EU withdrawing trade preferences.

According to the Myanmar Garment Manufacturers Association (MGMA), the EU is Myanmar's largest partner in the garment sector. Brussels lifted duties on goods from Myanmar in 2013, and the EU now purchases more than 47 percent of the country's garment products. The second-largest buyer is Japan, which purchased 27 percent of Myanmar's garments in 2017.

The garment sector accounts for 71 percent of overall exports to the EU and employs more than 450,000 people, according to the MGMA. It is the most labor intensive of the country's major industries.

Historian U Thant Myint-U attended a private meeting with the EU delegates in Yangon on Monday. U Thant Myint-U did not disclose to the media what was discussed at the meeting, but told The Irrawaddy the meeting was "a very open and engaging discussion on many aspects of the situation in Myanmar."

"Revoking Myanmar's GSP privileges would be an unmitigated disaster that must be avoided," he said.

"Myanmar's had its fair share of tragedies these past years; one of the few really good stories has been the growth of the garment sector, providing jobs to hundreds of thousands of otherwise impoverished young women," he said.

EU monitoring mission delegates meet with high-level government officials in Naypyitaw on Tuesday. / Ministry of Information / Facebook

"The EU has been a good friend of Myanmar and I understand why they are reviewing their relationship. But revoking the GSP would be a kind of collective punishment against some of the most vulnerable people in Myanmar society; young women who are finally able to help themselves and help their families," he added.

EU delegates also met with representatives of the Myanmar Confederation of Trade Unions and the Myanmar Infrastructure, Craft and Service (MICS) organization at the EU's office in Yangon on Monday. During the meeting, representatives of both organizations said targeting ordinary Myanmar people is not the right way to apply pressure over alleged human rights violations in the country.

MICS vice president U Naw Aung told EU mission officials that Myanmar's workers had faced rights violations for many years. However, conditions had improved recently, he said. "We don't want to see the current conditions devastated. If the EU withdraws trade preferences, its support for our country's democratic reform would be fruitless," he said.

U Naw Aung said he asked the EU officials, "Do you think withdrawal of the trade preferences is the only way to solve the problems in Rakhine and Kachin states?"

On the same day, the delegations held a meeting with garment factory owners and major exporters to the EU at the Union of Myanmar Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry (UMFCCI). The meeting was also attended by 22 garment workers, who were asked about their incomes and working and living conditions.

UMFCCI vice president U Mg Mg Lay told The Irrawaddy the federation opposes the EU's possible withdrawal of trade preferences. He said, "I also object personally. It doesn't support Myanmar's transition to democracy."

"The move will badly hurt ordinary women and also dent the confidence of foreign investors," U Mg Mg Lay said.

"If the EU decides to withdraw trade preferences, it would be hard to believe that the EU supports Myanmar's democratic transition in a positive way," U Mg Mg Lay added.

Prominent lawmakers also warned that a halt to EU trade preferences would cause widespread harm by throwing Myanmar's civilian government into another crisis as it attempts to implement economic reforms after more than six decades of international isolation under military dictatorship.

The EU officials told Myanmar that the decision-making process would take months, and promised they would carefully investigate human rights violations, and whether Myanmar had committed labor rights violations and followed international law and regulations.

In Naypyitaw, EU delegates also discussed accountability for human rights violations, promotion of collaboration with UN organizations, humanitarian aid to Kachin, Rakhine and Shan states, the repatriation process for Rohingya in Rakhine State, press freedom and the improvement of labor rights and protections, according to the Ministry of Information.

UMFICC joint secretary Daw Khine Khine Nwe said the organization welcomed the EU delegation's visit, but added that, "After meeting with stakeholders here, I hope they will report back their findings with proper consideration."

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Two Rural Development Dept Officials Charged with Taking Bribes

Posted: 31 Oct 2018 07:46 AM PDT

YANGON—Corruption charges have been filed against a deputy director and a clerk of the Rural Development Department who allegedly abused their positions to demand more than 10 million kyats (USD6,200) in bribes, Myanmar's Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) said.

The anti-graft body announced Wednesday that U Aung Myint Kyaw, the department's deputy director in Mandalay, and clerk Daw Thuzar demanded more than 10.278 million kyats in "office expenses" from six companies that won tenders to build roads in rural areas.

Cases were opened against the men under Articles 56 and 63 of the country's Anti-Corruption Law. If convicted, the deputy director faces a maximum of 10 years in prison. The clerk is accused of being an accomplice to the alleged graft.

Founded in 2013, the ACC has stepped up its activities since U Win Myint was sworn in as president in March. He has vowed to fight the country's chronic corruption.

Last month, the ACC filed cases against the attorney general of Yangon Region and five other officials including a judge, law officers and a police officer for accepting more than 70 million kyats (nearly USD46,300) to drop cases against three suspects in the murder of Facebook comedian Aung Yell Htwe.

The six accused are currently facing trial in Yangon.

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Bangladesh, Myanmar Set Date For Start of Rohingya Repatriation

Posted: 31 Oct 2018 06:51 AM PDT

NAYPYITAW — The first 2,000 mainly Rohingya refugees sheltering in Bangladesh will start returning to Rakhine State on Nov. 15, Myanmar’s social welfare, relief and resettlement minister, U Win Myat, told reporters in Naypyitaw on Wednesday.

He said U Myint Thu, permanent secretary of Myanmar’s Foreign Affairs Ministry, settled on the date during a meeting in Dhaka on Tuesday with Bangladeshi Foreign Secretary M. Shahidul Haque.

"Both governments agreed at yesterday’s meeting that the Myanmar government will receive 150 people per week and they would come through the Ngakura entry point,” U Win Myat said.

Ngakura is located along Bangladesh’s border with Rakhine State’s Maungdaw Township.

The social welfare minister said Myanmar assured its neighbor that after many delays it was now safe for the refugees to return, nearly a year after they agreed in principle to repatriate the 700,000 mostly Rohingya who have fled Rakhine since late August, 2017, to escape a military crackdown.

Bangladesh has to date given Myanmar a list of just over 8,000 refugees it says have volunteered to return.

On a visit to the refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar on Wednesday, U Myint Thu said Myanmar has so far vetted and verified 5,000 of them as former residents of Rakhine.

During the secretary’s visit to the camps, a Rohingya community leader, Abdul Rahim, said Myanmar should grant the returning refugees equal rights and issue them national ID cards, not national verification cards, which the Rohingya say block their path to citizenship. He also urged the international media to monitor the repatriations and resettlements carefully.

U Tun Kyi, a Muslim and former political prisoner who lives in Yangon, said Rohingya who fled Myanmar deserve full citizenship rights on their return.

"When you listen to the voices of the refugees from the camps, they have made demands. If they truly lived in those places [in Myanmar], they have the right to become citizens. If they are eligible to become citizens, they must be entitled to the full rights of a citizen," he said.

And while some have argued that the Rohingya crisis is isolated to northern Rakhine, U Tun Kyi said the international pressure the military’s alleged human rights violations have brought to bear on Myanmar was affecting the entire country.

"Only when the refugees know that they can come back safely and shape their futures will the international pressure subside," he said.

U Pe Than, an Arakan National Party central committee member, said the government had to make sure that any refugees involved in the militant attacks on security posts in Rakhine State that triggered the military crackdown are not allowed to return.

"Accepting the refugees alone won't help to decrease the international pressure, because it [the international community] is ambitious,” he added. “There will be more pressure to ensuring their citizenship and related rights and to accept the term Rohingya."

The government of Myanmar does not consider the Rohingya an ethnic group. It refers to them as Bengali, implying they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, even though many have lived in Myanmar for generations.

Myanmar has agreed to accept the UN’s help in speeding up the repatriation process and formed an ad hoc commission to investigate alleged human rights violations in northern Rakhine following the August 2017 militant attacks.

The UN says there are now 887,661 refugees from Myanmar living in the Cox’s Bazar camps, driven out of Rakhine by the violence late last year and by earlier bouts of communal violence. Bangladesh puts the number at 1,118,578.

Additional reporting from Dhaka by Muktadir Rashid.

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Thousands of Refugees Arrive in Lashio After Fleeing Clashes in Northern Shan

Posted: 31 Oct 2018 05:53 AM PDT

MANDALAY—About 2,000 villagers from northern Shan State arrived in Lashio on Tuesday after fleeing armed clashes between the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army South (RCSS/SSAS) and the Shan State Progressive Party/Shan State Army North (SSPP/SSAN).

Residents of Ei-Naing, Pan Pone, Kalar and Nang Har villages—located just 13 miles from Lashio—and Man Pyein, Namt Taung and Maing Taung villages in Namtu Township arrived in the state capital amid intensifying fighting.

"There are 1,402 refugees currently taking shelter at Mansu Monastery in Lashio. More than 500 others are taking shelter at Kachin Baptist and Roman Catholic churches," said Ma Kaythi, a member of the Lashio Charity group, which is helping the refugees.

Local charities, civil society groups and local authorities were supplying the refugees with food, water, sanitary products and clothing.

"There is no need for [additional] aid yet, but we are worried that if the fighting continues, the children's schooling will be disrupted," Ma Kaythi said.

According to the groups helping the refugees, among the refugees are dozens of children whose schools have been closed by the fighting.

The refugees initially took shelter at monasteries and churches located in villages neighboring their own. However, as the fighting between the RCSS/SSA and SSPP/SSA become more severe in recent days, they decided to flee to Lashio.

"The SSPP soldiers frequently entered the church and monastery where we sheltered in recent days, so we no longer felt safe staying there. Our village chiefs suggested we go to Lashio, so we all moved out here," said Ma Khun Nu, a resident of Ei-Naing who initially took refuge at a church in her village.

"We hope the fighting will end very soon so that we can go back home," she said.

Fighting over territory between the RCSS/SSAS and SSPP/SSAN near Lashio erupted last weekend, displacing more than 500 people from five villages.

Additional clashes over territory near Namtu Township between the RCSS/SSAS, SSPP/SSAN and Ta'ang Nationalities Liberation Army (TNLA) that broke out last week have displaced about 750 people from eight villages.

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Analysis: Muse-Mandalay Railway Agreement with China Raises Debt, Conflict Fears

Posted: 31 Oct 2018 05:08 AM PDT

YANGON—Even as Laos's planned railway connecting southern China with northeast Thailand comes under scrutiny due to its huge cost and uncertain benefits, Naypyitaw has agreed to conduct a feasibility study on a high-speed railway project that would link two economic centers in Myanmar as part of Beijing's grand infrastructure plan for the region.

Critics of the rail project warn that it could saddle Myanmar with unsustainable debts, and point out that the route passes through conflict zones. By approving the feasibility study despite these concerns, the government has again signaled its willingness to cooperate with China in its bid for economic supremacy in the region.

Two state-owned companies, China Railway Eryuan Engineering Group (China Railway Group Ltd) and Myanmar Railways signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) last week to begin studying a proposed railway line from Muse, in northern Shan State, to Mandalay.

The rail link would form part of the China-Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC), which is itself a part of China's ambitious Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), President Xi Jinping's signature foreign policy unveiled in 2013. The BRI would create a trade network of more than 70 countries in Asia, Africa and Europe. Muse and Mandalay are envisioned as key hubs in a plan to improve connectivity in Southeast Asia, so the proposed railway is viewed as economically and strategically important for both sides.

Muse sits on Myanmar's border with Yunnan province in southwestern China, and is the largest trade portal between the two nations, while Mandalay is central Myanmar's commercial center and the country's second largest city, so the railway could become a lifeline for China-Myanmar trade.

Another component of the BRI announced by Beijing is the Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Economic Corridor (BCIM-EC). Encompassing the CMEC—which the two countries formally committed themselves to developing in an MoU signed in September—this route from Kunming, China to Kolkata, India would follow the ancient Southern Silk Road trading route through Myanmar and Bangladesh.

Beijing plans to build a parallel expressway and railway from Ruili to Kyaukphyu with a separate road running through northern Myanmar, the northeast states of India and Bangladesh.

The 1,700km CMEC runs from Kunming to Mandalay, then east to Yangon and west to the Kyaukphyu Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in western Rakhine State. China has already succeeded in renegotiating its stake in the SEZ, where it plans to build a deep seaport and which already serves as the terminus for twin cross-border oil and gas pipelines between the two countries.

A map showing the route of China's planned Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Economic Corridor. / "China's Asian Dream" by Tom Miller

Longtime Myanmar observer U Maung Maung Soe told The Irrawaddy, "After the government agrees to move forward the Kyaukphyu SEZ, the railway project is unavoidable. Rail is the fastest way to transport goods. But mostly it will benefit China." He added that, "The important thing is who will take control of the railway; it is important that Myanmar establish control of railways in its own territory."

The proposed railway link is not the first between the two countries. In 2011, Beijing and Naypyitaw signed an MoU to build a railway between Muse and Kyaukphyu. According to Chinese media reports, China Railway Group was to be in charge of building the rail line from Ruili in southwestern Yunnan Province to Kyaukphyu via Muse. The entire rail line was to run 810km. Under the terms of the MoU, the project was to have been completed at a total estimated cost of $20 billion in less than three years. However, the government of then-President U Thein Sein suspended the project following strong local objections. In 2014, the agreement expired and the railway project remains in limbo. China has since completed a stretch of line from Kunming, the capital of Yunnan Province, to Ruili, to be connect with Myanmar in the future.

China later approached the government led by State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, asking it to consider building a railway from Muse to Mandalay as the initial part of China's strategic railway link from Ruili to Kyaukphyu.

China Railway Group proposed the feasibility study for the line from Muse to Mandalay in May 2017, according to the Myanmar Transport Ministry. To assist the study, the ministry asked for recommendations from the Shan and Mandalay chief ministers, and related ministers. In June, both sides worked on the MoU draft. On Oct. 2, a government economic committee gave the Ministry of Transportation and Communications the green light to sign the MoU.

Under the agreement, China Railway Eryuan Engineering Group will cover the full cost of the study, which will assess the environmental and social impacts of the proposed railway line. While the agreement calls for a study period of two years, Union Minister of Transport and Communications U Thant Zin Maung said Myanmar expects to finish it within one year.

Though the MoU only commits the two sides to begin a feasibility study, the minister said the railway is a priority project and part of Myanmar's national transport master plan.

Myanmar and China sign an MoU agreeing to conduct a feasibility study on the development of a high-speed railway between Muse and Mandalay. / Chinese Embassy / Facebook

The minister said Myanmar is in the process of implementing five priority transportation corridors. The Muse-Mandalay railway would be part of the South Transportation Corridor section of the Trans Asian Railway Network (TAR), a project implemented by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific. Myanmar and China expect to link with the eastern states of India via this route.

The Mandalay-Muse railway project will be 431km (268 miles) long, with trains running at speeds of 160 km per hour, the ministry said. The journey from Mandalay to Muse would take roughly three hours. Currently, Mandalay is connected to Muse via Lashio by the national highway. The drive normally takes more than eight hours.

There is an existing 313 km meter-gauge railway from Mandalay to Lashio. Since 2017, as a key project of the China-Myanmar railway, a standard gauge line has been under construction from Ruili, in western Yunnan Province, across the border from Muse and around 140 km from Lashio, according to the New China TV.

New China TV reported in August 2017 that Chinese engineers are drilling one of the world's longest rail tunnels—the 34.5-km Gaoligong Mountain Tunnel in southwest China's Yunnan province. It will be part of a railway that will eventually connect China and Myanmar.

According to the ministry statement, the proposed route will connect the Ruili East Railway and run to Muse, Lashio, Kyaukme, Pyin Oo Lwin and end in Mandalay.

Chinese Ambassador Hong Liang said the project would support the BRI and CMEC while promoting peace and stability in northern Myanmar.

In June, U Thaung Tun, the Union government minister and national security adviser, told the South China Morning Post that a railway project linking Ruili and Mandalay "would start quite soon". He said it had potential to extend to Yangon and Kyaukphyu.

Although both sides have voiced confidence in the project, regional experts warned that it will face many challenges, particularly the armed conflicts in project areas and resistance from local people who have negative sentiment toward China based on past impressions of the country's investment in the country.

"It could easily provoke more fighting in those areas, not necessarily because of the construction of the railway itself but because troops will be brought in to provide security for the project, so it is almost inevitable that there will be fighting when the Myanmar Army engages 'clearance operations' along the railway route," longtime Myanmar observer Bertil Lintner told The Irrawaddy.

"And who will the workers be? Will China, as usual, bring in their own labor, or employ local people? If they bring in Chinese labor, there is bound to be resentment among local people along the railway route," he said.

It is also likely that land will be confiscated to make way for the railway, and people are not going to like that, he added.

Experts point to broad pushback against China's BRI projects from Malaysia and Sri Lanka to Zambia. The NLD-led government should bear this global pushback against China in mind and use it as leverage when dealing with China, they say. Some of the BRI projects have been slow to get off the ground, while others have been criticized for creating unsustainable debts for the host countries.

According to a March 2018 report by the Washington-based Center for Global Development, China is putting many countries involved in the BRI at financial risk through a series of "aid" activities and huge amounts of lending.

Amid increased pressure on Myanmar from the West due to the Rohingya crisis in Rakhine State, the government has grown more agreeable to involvement in the BRI.

"The Rohingya crisis, and the West's condemnation of what has happened in Rakhine State, have pushed Myanmar back into the hands of the Chinese, and the Chinese are taking full advantage of the situation to advance [their] own interests," Lintner said.

In recent months, Naypyitaw has signed an MoU committing itself to the USD2-billion CMEC, but key questions remain over ownership, operation, project terms and financing, and whether Myanmar can afford the BRI infrastructure projects.

Thitinan Pongsudhirak, associate professor at the Institute of Security and International Studies in the Faculty of Political Science at Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University, told The Irrawaddy, "Myanmar has time on its side. It can study and review other similar projects and maximize its own national interests. There is no need to rush, and China's bargaining power now appears less than it used to be in view of being pushed back in many countries."

The head of the US Overseas Private Investment Corporation has warned that the BRI was creating a debt trap for many poor nations.

According to Thitinan, "Debt avoidance and public benefit for Myanmar should be the key criteria."

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Ex-Child Soldier Aung Ko Htwe Acquitted of Latest Charge

Posted: 31 Oct 2018 02:44 AM PDT

YANGON — Aung Ko Htwe, a former child soldier in the Myanmar Army, was acquitted of violating the Union Seal Law by a court in Yangon’s Botahtaung Township on Tuesday, according to his lawyer.

Aung Ko Htwe, who is serving a two-year prison sentence for incitement handed down in March, was facing another three years in jail after police charged him under Section 7 of the Union Seal Law for allegedly standing on a copy of the Constitution during a protest.

"The court did not find that he stepped on the Constitution and the prosecutor could not even prove that he stepped on the book. Therefore, he was acquitted of the second charge," Robert San Aung, Aung Ko Htwe’s lawyer, told The Irrawaddy on Wednesday. "We welcome the court’s decision."

The lawyer said he would write to President U Win Myint to ask that his client be absolved of his standing conviction.

Both local and international rights groups have condemned the incitement case against Aung Ko Htwe and urged the government to secure his release.

In 2005, at the age of 14, Aung Ko Htwe was abducted at Yangon's central railway station and forced into military service, according to his family. After two years he escaped with two other men. While making their getaway, however, the owner of a motorbike they were stealing was strangled to death. Aung Ko Htwe denied responsibility.

All three were charged with murder, convicted and sentenced to death. In 2013, however, Aung Ko Htwe had his sentence commuted to life in prison and was released in July 2017, after 10 years in jail.

He was rearrested late last year after the military charged him with incitement for an interview he gave Radio Free Asia in which he claimed he was abused by authorities during his first trial.

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Analysis : Only a ‘Peace Approach’ Can End the Cycle of Conflict in Myanmar

Posted: 31 Oct 2018 01:05 AM PDT

Historically, the peace process in Myanmar has been dominated by men. Peace talks have focused on "security" as the main factor in ending conflict.

In the past, negotiations between the military government and insurgent groups including the Communist Party of Burma (CPB) and ethnic armed organizations (EAOs) followed a familiar pattern: Insurgent groups demanded autonomy for their states and recognition of their ethnic armies; the military government rejected those demands and the peace talks broke down.

In The Rise and Fall of the Communist Party of Burma, Swedish journalist Bertil Lintner writes about the failures of peace talks in 1963 and 1980s. He observes that in 1981, "Kachin rebel leader Brang Seng declared that his troops were willing to lay down arms if the government granted autonomy to Kachin State, stressing that separation was no longer an issue. But the rebels were offered 'rehabilitation' only—no political concessions were forthcoming, and the talks eventually broke down."

The cessation of armed conflict was the focus of the negotiations, but this was not sufficient to achieve genuine conflict resolution. The root causes of the conflict, such as historical context, ideological divide and political will, were not given priority in the peace process between male-dominated armed groups.

In their book Equal Opportunity Peacekeeping, Sabrina Karim and Kyle Beardsley discuss three different "masculinities"—warrior masculinity, protective masculinity, and militarized masculinity—as the main obstacles to negotiating peace.

These masculinities are frequently on display in speeches by Myanmar military commander-in-chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing. In his opening speech to the Third Session of the 21st-Century Panglong Peace Conference earlier this year, he stated that "We, the government and the Tatmadaw [Myanmar's military], are actively leading the peace process—[but] not because we are weak." Drawing attention to the power imbalance between the Myanmar military and EAOs doesn't help the peace process; it only creates more doubt in the minds of EAO leaders about the military's desire for peace.

And in the most recent peace talks involving the government, the Tatmadaw and EAOs that are signatories to the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA), the military chief again warned EAOs not to abuse the NCA.

"The NCA shouldn't be misappropriated. If there is a misappropriation, the Tatmadaw, which is responsible for protecting the lives and property of ethnic people, will not just stand by and do nothing." His statement clearly showed the protective norms of the military with regard to ethnic people. Yet dozens of EAOs operate under a similar protective norm vis-a-vis their own people and territory.

Furthermore, the Tatmadaw holds firm to the principle of "non-secession," based on one of the three main national causes, the "non-disintegration of the Union". The concept originated from a security point of view in regards to "perpetuation of sovereignty".

"A guarantee of non-secession is a one-sided demand of the Tatmadaw," General Yawd Serk, the chairman of the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS/SSA), said during a recent interview with The Irrawaddy.

Turning this demand back on the military, Gen. Yawd Serk commented that "We also have a question for the Tatmadaw: Will they promise not to stage another military coup if they are [sincere about] building a federal democratic nation?"

Gen. Yawd Serk's question demonstrates the EAOs' concern with security, and illustrates the degree to which the Tatmadaw's willingness to grant autonomy to the ethnic states influences to issue of non-secession.

The Tatmadaw's concerns are of a similar nature. The 2008 Constitution was drafted to protect the military and gives it "the right to independently administer and adjudicate all affairs of the armed forces."

Negotiations based on security concerns alone lead to deadlock in peace talks. "We have no areas of compromise, which is why there is no mutual trust. We are acting based on our own principles," Gen. Yawd Serk.

The masculinity-influenced security approach is a key obstacle to the success of peace talks among these groups of "warriors". After 70 years of shooting at one another, they are still fighting a war of words with no room for compromise. And the peace talks are only getting more complicated.  In 1963 there were only four guerrilla groups. Today, there are many. In the space of five decades, four main guerrilla groups mushroomed into 24, including breakaway ethnic armed groups and newfangled militias across the country.

The NCA's political roadmap, drafted under the Thein Sein government, is also based on a security approach. It contains three main steps: signing the NCA, holding a national political dialogue, and negotiating "security reintegration matters".

If we look at peace talks from 1963 to 2015, we can see that both the Tatmadaw and the EAOs have held fast to the security approach, leaving them trapped in a cycle of conflict.

Women can play a leading role

After the National League for Democracy (NLD) won the 2015 election by a landslide, its leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi became the state counselor and, for the first time in Myanmar's history, a woman took a leading role in the country's peace process.

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's administration has tried to change the peace process from a "security approach" espoused by armed men to the "peace approach." As a woman, and therefore perceived as a natural peacemaker, she has tried to kill two birds with one stone: the peace process and constitutional amendment. The NLD's roadmap for national reconciliation and the Union peace process is not based on "security matters" but rather cites "constitutional amendment" and "building a democratic federal union," both of which can lead to multi-party general elections. It sounds promising, but in fact it is rather vague and unrealistic.

But it is not a new concept. It is based on sub-para (d) of Paragraph 22 of the NCA, which holds that "all decisions adopted by the Union Peace Conference shall be the basis for amending, repealing and adding provisions to the Constitution and laws, in line with established procedures."

During the constitutional amendment campaign in 2014, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and her fellow party members said that the "undemocratic" 2008 Constitution creates inequality between the military and people, and called for it to be amended. "The basic principle of unity is equality. This country can become a genuine federal union only if we have equality. Where can equality be started? We have to start from the Constitution, as it is a foundation of the country," she said.

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's government maintains that "peace" is the best approach to "security" and "conflict transformation". But for the groups who are mainly concerned with security, this approach is fraught with complications and requires time. Moreover, many people involved in the peace process think it is unrealistic to expect that it will be concluded by 2020.

Johan Galtung, founder of the Oslo, Norway-based International Peace Research Institute, asserts that "the peace argument against the security approach is strong: It works like a bandage over a festering wound. The conflict formation of parties with goals with too many incompatibilities has to be transformed into a peace formation by bridging the legitimate goals non-violently, empathically, creatively. An untransformed conflict will reproduce violence sooner or later."

Because of the divergent approaches taken by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and the Tatmadaw, some EAOs are confused about whether they should sign the NCA.

The Karenni National Progressive Party (KNPP) is one of the EAOs that remain undecided as to whether to sign the NCA. "The Tatmadaw's principle is to lay down arms after a national political dialogue. Then we have to take part in the elections. The Tatmadaw wants us to abandon armed struggle. But the NLD wants us to work together to amend the Constitution. As the Tatmadaw's principle is to protect this Constitution with its life, their principles are different. So no matter which side we take, we will face one problem or another," KNPP second secretary Khu Daniel told the author during an interview.

The Tatmadaw seems unhappy with the NLD's actions, and with the dual process of constitutional amendment and peacebuilding. In his speech, Sen-Gen. Min Aung Hlaing voiced displeasure at the notion of amending the Constitution. "We agree in principle with amending and supplementing the really necessary provisions of the Constitution with the aim of achieving lasting peace. But it would be difficult for us to agree to amending and supplementing the Constitution and other laws with the intent of serving [specific groups'] self-interest and abusing the NCA," the military chief said.

Nonetheless, the Tatmadaw still has to follow the political framework of the NCA drafted by Thein Sein's government, because the international community is involved in Myanmar's peace process and has recognized the agreement.

Before 2016, the NLD led the discussion on the constitutional amendment issue, but now ethnic people and EAOs have started talking about amending the Constitution and putting the military under the civilian government's control.

Amend the undemocratic 2008 Constitution and drafting federal principles should be done in parallel, not sequentially, because they are equally important. The DDR (disarmament, demobilization and reintegration) and SSR (security sector reform) approaches failed because of a lack of specific principles or an appropriate Constitution.

During the transition from the "security approach" to the "peace approach", the peace process got stuck and made no progress. Somehow, we have reached the third anniversary of the NCA signing ceremony, making it the longest peace process in Myanmar's history. In mid-October, senior leaders of the government, the Tatmadaw and 10 NCA signatory EAOs attended the first round of special peace talks focusing on deadlock issues such as non-secession and the integration of military forces.

In his interview with The Irrawaddy, Gen. Yawd Serk of the Shan State Army accused the Tatmadaw of stalling the peace process: "This deadlock happened because of these two issues brought up by the Tatmadaw. If the Tatmadaw wants peace, they do not need to bring up these two issues. Whether there is any will to make peace depends on the Tatmadaw."

Peace approach based on conflict resolution

Galtung discusses six peace tasks: three "absences" and three "presences". "A ceasefire is only one-sixth of a complete peace process, yet often mistaken for the real thing," he says.

The three "absences" he discusses are the absence of direct violence such as civil war and conflict, the absence of structural violence and the absence of cultural violence. The three "presences" are those of cooperation; equality and equity; and a culture of peace and dialogue.

Myanmar's peace process is still in the beginning stage. After the first step, a ceasefire agreement, there are other steps that must be taken. To take these steps, a Constitution that guarantees equality must be drafted along the way. A democratic federal constitution should guarantee the absence of structural violence and absence of cultural violence in order to prevent "massive suffering by economic, political and cultural structures," according to Galtung.

It is impossible for the Tatmadaw, the government or any particular EAO to implement the peace process alone. To stop the cycle of conflict which has been going on for more than 70 years, all parties must participate.

For the time being, the gradual development of a political dialogue proves that all parties are on common ground, and agree that there is a need to stop the cycle of conflict.

Although people might think that the peace approach based on conflict resolution is unachievable, it has the potential to end the conflict cycle if everyone steadfastly steps forward.

Not only Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, but anyone involved in the peace process who has the spirit of a natural peacemaker can carry on the "peace approach."  Crucially, we need to recognize that the "security approach," despite many years of attempts, has failed. We need to recognize and adopt the "peace approach" as the best chance for a long-lasting peace.

Mon Mon Myat is a freelance writer/journalist and a graduate student in the Ph.D. program in peacebuilding at Payap University in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

The post Analysis : Only a 'Peace Approach' Can End the Cycle of Conflict in Myanmar appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Kitchen Building Material Could Cut Urban Flooding by Half: Scientists

Posted: 30 Oct 2018 09:32 PM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR — Cities could reduce flooding by constructing sidewalks from an absorbent building material commonly used in household kitchens, scientists have discovered.

Sidewalks made from travertine — a form of limestone used for tiles and kitchen bench tops — can cut flooding by up to 50 percent, according to a study by researchers at Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University in Suzhou, southeast China.

As well as helping water escape into the ground, travertine removes a number of pollutants that occur when rainwater mixes with dirt, rendering it suitable for agriculture, they said.

“We have more evidence to show that flooding is happening more often all over the world due to climate change,” said Xiaonan Tang, a co-author of the study and associate professor at the university’s department of civil engineering.

“This new material helps reduce urban surface flow to reduce flooding,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation on Tuesday.

Over the past four decades, natural disasters have cost the Asia-Pacific region about $1.3 trillion, according to UN estimates, with China, the Philippines, Vietnam and Japan worst-hit by typhoons.

As the region’s population becomes more urban and the effects of climate change cause more extreme weather conditions, exposure to flooding is increasing, UN experts say.

Flood-prone cities such as Wuhan, in China, are increasingly testing new innovations to reduce risks. The metropolis has dubbed itself a “sponge city” and turned to water-absorbing asphalt, among other measures.

Travertine is cheaper than both water-absorbing asphalt and concrete, and is found in volcanic areas around the world, but it has yet to be tested to determine whether it is strong enough to be used for roads, the researchers said.

Traditional materials like concrete are not very absorbent, which exacerbates flooding, they said.

“Travertine is a porous material with kind of sponge texture. It has many tiny holes in it, and those holes actually decrease its economic value in the current market,” said Hamidreza Rahimi, the report’s lead author.

“In its holey form, it’s considered waste material as it needs to be smooth and hole-free when used in domestic building projects,” he said in a statement.

The post Kitchen Building Material Could Cut Urban Flooding by Half: Scientists appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

China Factory Growth Weakest in Over 2 Yrs, Slump in Export Orders Deepens

Posted: 30 Oct 2018 09:05 PM PDT

BEIJING — China’s manufacturing sector barely expanded in October and missed expectations, as both domestic and external demand ebbed, in a sign of deepening cracks in the economy from an intensifying trade war with the United States.

The official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), released on Wednesday, fell to 50.2 in October, the lowest since July 2016 and down from 50.8 in September. It was a touch above the 50-point mark that separates growth from contraction for a 27th straight month.

Analysts surveyed by Reuters had forecast the official gauge, which gives global investors their first look at business conditions in China at the start of the last quarter of the year, would dip slightly to 50.6 for the month.

The latest reading suggests a further slowing in the world’s second-biggest economy and could prompt more policy support from Beijing on top of a raft of recent initiatives.

A production sub-index fell to 52 in October from 53.0 in September, while a new orders sub-index declined to 50.8 from 52.0.

New export orders, an indicator of future activity, contracted for a fifth straight month and at the fastest pace in at least a year. The sub-index fell to 46.9 from 48.0 in September.

China’s exports unexpectedly kicked into higher gear in September, largely as firms front-loaded shipments to dodge stiffer US duties, though analysts see pressure building in coming months. The continued slump in export orders may be bearing that scenario out.

October is the first full month after the latest US tariffs went into effect. Washington and Beijing slapped additional tariffs on each other’s goods on Sept. 24, and US President Donald Trump has threatened to hit China with more duties.

China’s economy grew at its weakest pace since the global financial crisis in the third quarter, as manufacturing output and infrastructure investment slowed. Analysts believe business conditions will get worse before getting better.

Firms are already facing pressure on earnings. A survey over the weekend showed profit growth at the country’s industrial powerhouses cooled for the fifth consecutive month in September on the back of a greater slowdown in production and sales.

China’s manufacturing sector has been squeezed by a reduction in sources of credit amid Beijing’s multi-year crackdown on corporate debt and risky lending practices, with smaller firms especially under strain.

Premier Li Keqiang said last month that the country’s economy faces increasing downward pressure, and pledged to take targeted measures to prevent large fluctuations in growth.

Policymakers have already shifted their priorities to reducing risks to growth. Earlier this month China’s central bank announced the fourth reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cut for this year, and is expected to ease monetary policy further.

It is also stepping up moves to lower financing costs and pledged more support to private firms, a key source of jobs. On the fiscal side the government is also stepping up stimulus through infrastructure projects, and has also pledged more tax cuts next year to support growth.

Another sister survey released by the NBS on Wednesday showed growth in China’s service sector moderated in September, with the official non-manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) dipping to 53.9 from 54.2 the previous month.

The post China Factory Growth Weakest in Over 2 Yrs, Slump in Export Orders Deepens appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

From ‘Cardboard Nannies’ to ‘Fruit Money’: Fast-Paced Hong Kong Slow to Adapt to Its Elderly

Posted: 30 Oct 2018 09:03 PM PDT

HONG KONG — At the Tanner Hill apartments in Hong Kong, the residents – all aged 60-plus – are enjoying the ancient Chinese tile game of mahjong along with some bite-sized delicacies, dimsum, at one of the on-site restaurants.

Each of the 588 units comes with wheelchair-height kitchen countertops, an emergency button and a motion sensor that will alert the nurses in the building if it does not detect movement for a prolonged period.

“I feel independent living here. I don’t need a helper to look after me – I feel safe,” said Chun Man-lin, 75, who moved two years ago to Tanner Hill, just a stone’s throw from the shopping hub of Causeway Bay.

However, gerontology experts say, complexes like this are the exception in Hong Kong, not the norm. They warn that the fast-paced, business-focused city is lagging in its efforts to make life easier for its growing army of elderly residents.

From Japan to Britain and Portugal, cities around the world are aging rapidly as authorities struggle to boost birth rates.

One-third of Hong Kong’s population will be 65 or older in two decades, official data shows – up from one-fifth now. Observers say not enough is being done to prepare for this demographic shift.

“Aging in Hong Kong … is still an issue that people put in the background – it’s not mainstream at all,” said Jean Woo, the director of the Jockey Club Institute of Aging at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

“Right now the aging issue is still invisible to a lot of people. It is there but they don’t see it – not like other countries,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

‘Cardboard Nannies'

In the shadows of Hong Kong’s famous skyscrapers, a common sight is the grey-haired women – so-called “cardboard nannies” – pushing carts filled with old paper and card that they send to be recycled as they eke out a living.

With sky-high property prices and rising living costs, about of third of those aged above 65 – some 340,000 people – are trapped in poverty, a government report released in 2017 shows.

Authorities provide a monthly living allowance of up to about HK$3,400 ($430) for senior citizens, but that buys so little in this expensive city that it is dubbed “fruit money."

The elderly are most unhappy about housing, community support, health services and employment, a survey of over 9,500 people led by the Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust found this year.

Still, there are some bright spots. Hong Kong scored well in areas like transportation – for HK$2, senior citizens can take most public transport to any part of the city.

Its compactness also allows the elderly easy access to shops, clinics, banks and transport networks, with most places located within walking distance.

Woo, who was one of the survey’s researchers, said the biggest barriers to making the Asian financial hub more senior-friendly were a lack of awareness and public debate on the consequences if agiing issues were not addressed.

“Suicides are high among the elderly, including double suicides when the spouse can’t cope by living by themselves,” she said.

People aged over 65 have the highest suicide rates in Hong Kong, with nearly 300 cases in 2016, according to the Center for Suicide Research and Prevention.

Other developed parts of the world have already ramped up efforts to deal with aging, with the global population of people over 60 expected to outnumber children under five for the first time by 2020, according to the World Health Organization.

In Britain, the government this year created a new ministerial post on loneliness, and allocated £20 million ($26 million) to fund efforts to tackle the isolation felt by more than one in 10 people there.

Efficiency over Decency

In her annual policy address this month, Hong Kong’s chief executive Carrie Lam vowed to boost community care services for the elderly, although her speech largely did not address other challenges as the city ages rapidly.

One government adviser said the authorities had been making adjustments, including ensuring barrier-free access on public walkways and putting wider corridors and non-slip floors in new public rental housing.

“These measures are just a start … The government can only do so much,” Bernard Chan, who sits on Hong Kong’s Executive Council which advises the government on policy, wrote in the South China Morning Post newspaper in June.

“Meeting our aging society’s day-to-day needs will largely come down to innovators and entrepreneurs,” he said.

Projects like Tanner Hill, which was built by the non-governmental Hong Kong Housing Society, is one example where charity groups try to address the need for elderly housing.

It offers a lifelong lease where residents pay a flat fee that is determined by age. For a two-bedroom unit for example, an 85-year-old resident would pay HK$2.94 million and a 60-year-old would pay HK$6.51 million.

“Aging is an indisputable fact and the demand for elderly housing is emerging,” said Daniel Lau from the Hong Kong Housing Society, which also works with the government to improve housing conditions for the city’s poorer seniors.

Making Hong Kong more accepting of its elderly residents, said aging expert Terry Lum, is not only about improving the facilities, and it is not just a job for government.

Changing people’s mindset and how they treat older people are also important, said the professor at the University of Hong Kong.

After living in the United States for 18 years, Lum moved home to Hong Kong in 2011. The first thing he noticed was how Hongkongers quickly became impatient when an older person walked slowly in front of them.

“We are focusing so much on efficiency that sometimes we lose basic decency – everything is being rushed through at a very fast pace,” he said.

“Hong Kong definitely needs to slow down.” 

The post From ‘Cardboard Nannies’ to ‘Fruit Money’: Fast-Paced Hong Kong Slow to Adapt to Its Elderly appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Tuesday, October 30, 2018

The Irrawaddy Magazine

The Irrawaddy Magazine


Dig Into a Turkish Feast at Sule Shangri-La

Posted: 30 Oct 2018 07:59 AM PDT

YANGON — Turkish food is today considered among the main cuisines of the world, and also one of the most appetizing and rich. Sule Shangri-La is celebrating that achievement with a special buffet week called “Flavors of Turkey” featuring the culinary creations of guest chefs Harun Imre and Erhan Ustun from the Shangri-La Bosporus, Istanbul.

Appetizers with bread. / Supplied

While Turkey traces its roots back to the Ottoman Empire in the 17th century, it has fused and refined the cuisines of Central Asian, the Middle Eastern, Eastern Europe and the Balkans. But the guest chefs will also be preparing the most well-known and popular Turkish dishes for this buffet, from Oct. 30 to Nov. 5 at Café Sule.

Like the people of Myanmar, the people of Turkey love to eat rice, and most dishes include the starchy staple.

Chefs prepared dishes for the buffet. / Supplied

Our private tasting group started its food tour with some popular appetizers including stuffed meatballs. Inside a shell of fine bulgur, potato and spices, the balls are filled with ground beef, nuts and more spices, and fried until red. The shell was a bit hard, but not too hard, and the meat filling was perfect.

The next appetizer was pachanga borek, and one of my favorites. It may look like a spring roll, but the taste and ingredients are different. The yufka, or Turkish flat bread, is filled with meat, cheese and vegetables such as tomato and spices. It’s cheesy, but not too rich, and a bit chewy.

Lamb shank with eggplant puree. / Supplied

There are plenty more Turkish appetizers to explore at the buffet.

The main dishes on offer make clear that Turkish people also love their lamb and beef. One of the best main courses is lamb shank with eggplant puree; it’s so tender it almost melts in the mouth.

The chef said the kitchen needs to prepare this lamb dish for about five hours. That's why the meat is so tender and sweet. But the smell of the lamb isn’t too strong.

A variety of Turkish dishes. / Supplied

The next main dish was pilic topkapi, backed chicken with spinach and mushrooms. The chicken was tender and the combined flavors with the spinach and mushrooms was perfection.

Most of the dishes were rich and savory and not very spicy. Restaurants serving Turkish food are rare in Myanmar, so this is your best chance to experience it for yourself.

The buffet is available during dinner only and costs $36 per person. Customers can also enter a lucky draw for the chance to win a round-trip flight to Istanbul and other prizes.

The post Dig Into a Turkish Feast at Sule Shangri-La appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

First Group of Rohingya to Be Repatriated Next Month

Posted: 30 Oct 2018 06:18 AM PDT

DHAKA—Dhaka and Naypyitaw have agreed to repatriate the first group of Rohingya to Myanmar by mid-November, Bangladeshi Foreign Secretary M. Shahidul Haque announced on Tuesday.

"We're looking forward to starting the repatriation by mid-November. It's the first batch," Shahidul Haque told reporters without saying precisely how many Rohingyas would be repatriated in the first group.

The senior Bangladeshi diplomat made the announcement after the third meeting of the Joint Working Group (JWG) to discuss the repatriation of verified Rohingya in Dhaka.

The third meeting of the JWG, a foreign secretary-level forum, was held at the Meghna State Guesthouse in the capital. It was co-chaired by Shahidul Haque and Myint Thu, permanent secretary of Myanmar's Foreign Affairs Ministry.

Myint Thu said they had a very friendly and candid meeting and came up with "very concrete results" on the commencement of repatriation.

"We have shown political will, flexibility, and accommodation in order to commence the repatriation at the earliest possible date," he told reporters.

The Myanmar diplomat said the two sides had streamlined local directives to promote awareness of repatriation among potential returnees.

They discussed the Rohingya issue in detail amid "intensive efforts" to begin repatriation, he said.

JWG members from both sides will visit Rohingya camps in Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar on Wednesday to meet with refugees.

The officials said Bangladesh on Tuesday sought updates on what steps would be taken to facilitate the "safe" and "sustainable return" of Rohingya to their homes in Myanmar.

Bangladeshi Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali on Oct. 15 told reporters in Dhaka that, "We've completed the village-based verification of 8,000 Rohingyas to determine who came from which village. We want to make sure they can start living in houses in their own villages."

The foreign minister said India had built 250 houses for returnees in Myanmar, while China is building 1,000 more.

"The returnees will first stay at reception centers in Myanmar and then will go to their villages."

Chinese Minister and Party Committee Secretary of the Ministry of Public Security Zhao Kezhi and his Bangladeshi counterpart discussed the Rohingya issue on Friday.

Bangladesh sought China’s assistance in repatriating the Rohingyas.

Speaking at the 73rd UN General Assembly recently, Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina made three recommendations for solving the Rohingya crisis at its root.

The first was that Myanmar should abolish discriminatory laws, policies and practices against the minority group.

The second was that Myanmar should create an acceptable environment by building trust and guaranteeing protection, rights and a pathway to citizenship for all Rohingyas. If needed, it should create a "safe zone" inside the country to protect all civilians.

The third was that further atrocities against Rohingyas in Myanmar should be prevented by ensuring accountability and justice, particularly in the light of the recommendations of the Fact-Finding Mission of the UN Human Rights Council.

To facilitate repatriation, Foreign Minister Ali has emphasized the need to accelerate efforts to create a "conducive environment" in northern Rakhine State by, among other things, building houses and villages for returnees.

In August this year, Ali and JWG members visited northern Rakhine State and saw the "trail of widespread devastation" suffered by people there, Bangladesh Foreign Ministry officials said.

The foreign minister also visited Shwe Zar village, where around 148 prefabricated houses for returnees are being built with assistance from the government of India.

Bangladesh and Myanmar formed the JWG in December 2017 with an initial goal to start repatriating Rohingya refugees by Jan. 23, 2018.

In May, Myanmar urged Bangladesh to commence the repatriation of 778 Muslims and 444 Hindus whose identities had been verified earlier.

The post First Group of Rohingya to Be Repatriated Next Month appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Govt Says Karen Armed Group Not to Blame For Stalled Peace Process

Posted: 30 Oct 2018 04:11 AM PDT

BANGKOK — The Myanmar government said it did not blame the Karen Nation Union (KNU) for setbacks in the national peace process following the ethnic armed group’s recent decision to temporarily suspend participation in negotiations.

"We don't blame anyone in regards to the current peace [process]; it is normal," government spokesman U Zaw Htay said of the KNU’s move.

"We can meet such challenges because we are nearer to overcoming the deep problems regarding peace," he said at a press conference in Naypyitaw on Monday.

The spokesman urged ethnic armed groups (EAOs) to speak openly with the government and military so that they can help each other.

In a letter on Saturday to State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, who also chairs the National Reconciliation and Peace Center, the KNU said it would temporarily stop taking part in negotiations with the government and military to give itself time to consult with its members on the current state of the peace process.

U Zaw Htay said he hoped thorough discussions within the KNU would ultimately help move the national peace process forward and noted that the group managed to overcome internal divisions before signing the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) in 2015.

"Therefore we fully believe the KNU will overcome this challenge regarding the political talks,” he said.

KNU Vice Chairman Padoh Kwe Htoo Win told The Irrawaddy on Tuesday that the group remained committed to achieving a sustainable peace through negotiations based on the NCA.

But he confirmed that the EAOs, government and military made no progress in addressing the military’s demands that armed groups forsake secession and agree to a single military when they met for a peace summit in Naypyitaw earlier this month, though they did agree to a rough schedule for further negotiations.

Padoh Kwe Htoo Win said KNU members needed to "reach a common understanding." And while the group operated on democratic principles and harbored diverse opinions, he added, "that does not mean we are divided."

He said the KNU would hold consultations with its members on the NCA — in light of recent changes to the implementation process — and the current structure of the negotiation process. But he did not expect the consultations to take long.

U Zaw Htay said the government also wanted to stick to the process laid out in the NCA, especially since they were already about halfway through the implementation process.

The government, military and EAOs have already agreed to review the current structure of the negotiation process in order to make it more inclusive.

EAOs are also planning to meet with the government and political parties represented in the Union, region and state parliaments to discuss the negotiation process later this week in Yangon.

The post Govt Says Karen Armed Group Not to Blame For Stalled Peace Process appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Stoking the Embers of Fear in Rakhine State

Posted: 29 Oct 2018 11:51 PM PDT

The recent arrest of three Arakanese youth activists has come to the fore of Rakhine State’s political scene, a typically unpredictable affair complicated by regional strife.

Theirs was among a series of arrests linked to the death of a military intelligence officer, Phoe Lone, who was shot at point-blank range in the state capital, Sittwe, last month. After mostly silence from authorities, the three have since appeared in court and been charged with murder.

It is but the latest episode to spread fear and anxiety among the local Arakanese community. Two main factors are contributing to their increasing sense of insecurity — a rise in crime, and the growing perception that they are being pushed out of the public debate on anything the powers that be deem politically sensitive. Together, they are hardening the sense of marginalization within a community that already feels squeezed.

Violence in a chaotic state

In Rakhine State, 2018 opened with a deadly riot in the ancient city of Mrauk-U when authorities revoked permission on short notice for the flagship event at an anniversary for the fall of the Arakanese Empire. Seven civilians were killed in the ensuing clash between the crowds and security forces. Another eight people hospitalized with gunshot wounds were arrested and convicted of destroying public property. After serving their eight-month sentences, they were re-arrested and sued in connection with the riot again, drawing widespread public rebuke.

Shortly thereafter, U Aye Maung, a prominent Arakanese politician, was prosecuted for unlawful association and treason for a speech at the same anniversary during which, according to the government, he encouraged the use of armed struggle to achieve sovereignty for Rakhine State. Many locals believe the arrests of the activists and politician are both part of the ethnic Bamar-dominated state’s attempts to oppress minorities.

In the same month of U Aye Maung’s arrest, the Mrauk-U administrator who oversaw the government’s handling of the riot was killed on his way to Sittwe. Though there is no evidence that the riot and murder are linked, much speculation has drifted in that direction.

In February, three bombs went off in Sittwe near government buildings and a local official’s house, injuring a policeman. Authorities soon arrested seven suspects, including a senior leader of the Arakan National Council, the political wing of the Arakan State Army.

Crime on the rise

Beyond politics, the general public is feeling ever more insecure. One reason is the dramatic increased in crime and theft, especially in Sittwe. People suspect the work of an organized criminal gang and say they see little effort from authorities to stop it.

Illicit drugs are also a growing concern. Millions of amphetamine pills have been seized across Rakhine State. Street crime, from assault to daylight robbery, is rising. The trends are eroding the public’s trust in the government and the rule of law.

Growing sense of oppression

According to a report by Athan, a free speech advocacy group, freedom of expression in Myanmar has been declining since the National League for Democracy took power in early 2016. There is increasing use of the Communications Act to sue reporters and anyone else who criticizes the government.

Rakhine State is no exception. The local government deserves credit for tolerating its critics during the first two years of the current administration, though it has lately begun to backslide.

The jailing of two Reuter reporters in Yangon sent a mixed message to the Rakhine community. Some groups, mainly nationalist and the military’s votary, hailed the prosecution of the journalists, who they condemn as traitors. But what these groups have overlooked is the parallel silencing of Rakhine voices. There was the yet-unsolved knife attack on a local Rakhine reporter for the Democratic Voice of Burma and the prosecution of an Arakanese writer arrested together with U Aye Maung.

A lawmaker representing Ramree Township is being prosecuted for a Facebook post addressing the education of ethnic Arakanese. A town elder from Sittwe is also on trial for blaming the Rakhine State secretary for the violence in Mrauk-U.

More recently, an activist from Ann Township has been put on trial for sharing news on Facebook about the sudden death of large numbers of sea mussels; authorities accused him of causing public disorder by spreading false information and sued him under the Communications Act. And in the latest case, a group of youth activists was arrested for murder.

A final verdict in most of these cases has yet to be rendered. But they all involve activists or prominent local figures.

Feeling insecure

Muslims stuck in displacement camps see few prospects for a brighter future. At the same time, the Buddhist Arakanese see a rising crime rate and are feeling increasingly oppressed. The trouble in Rakhine can be seen as a three-way struggle in which Muslims, Arakanese and the government are each acting in their own interests.

All have their particular concerns and fears. The government postures itself as the eternal protector of national unity and solidarity; perceived threats to that unity are aggressively quashed. To make it that much easier, the former military regime fostered a fear that Myanmar was ever at risk from outsiders — sometimes from the West, other times from its neighbors — and silenced those who tried to say otherwise.

The practice of state-driven fear appeared to have started dissipating with the start of Myanmar’s democratic transition in 2010. The people’s voices are being heard more than ever. But opportunistic nationalists have since emerged to polarize communities based on race and religion, helping stoke bouts of inter-communal violence across the country, though even their influence has been on the wane since a government crackdown in 2016.

The local Muslim community has faced two big blows, driving about 1 million of them to neighboring Bangladesh in recent years seeking refuge. The Arakanese are discontent and also afraid because they see little hope that conditions in Rakhine State will improve in the foreseeable future. Fear now permeates the social fabric of the state, brining latent prejudices to the fore.

The state needs to realize that it is an actor in the conflict — not a neutral observer — and help solve the communal tensions. Its actions in recent months, however, intended or not, are promoting fear, and that fear may turn to anger at any time.

Although the discontent of the Arakan community is nothing new, the fear lately engendered by the state has renewed a sense of insecurity. The rising violence and mistrust means taking a step away from a prosperous and peaceful Rakhine State.

Ye Min Zaw is a scholar of international development studies focusing on peace processes, transitional issues and Rakhine State affairs.

The post Stoking the Embers of Fear in Rakhine State appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

President’s Office Presses Yangon Govt to Drop Incitement Suit

Posted: 29 Oct 2018 11:39 PM PDT

YANGON — The Yangon Region government must follow a presidential directive telling it to adhere to the Media Law in its dispute with three journalists from the Eleven Media Group, a spokesman for the President’s Office said.

The Yangon government filed a lawsuit against the trio earlier this month accusing them of incitement under Article 505 (b) of the Penal Code for allegedly publishing false information relating to the use of public funds. They were arrested on Oct. 10 and detained at Yangon's Insein Prison but released on bail last week.

The lawsuit and arrests drew strong public rebuke from critics who pointed out that the offending article was based primarily on remarks by lawmakers in a Yangon Parliament session about a recent report by the local auditor general. The lawmakers themselves insisted the story was accurate.

The lawsuit prompted President U Win Myint to tell the Yangon government to follow the Media Law, which says the Myanmar Press Council should attempt to settle complaints against the press before they reach the courts. The Yangon government submitted a complaint letter to the Press Council following the president's directive on Oct. 18.

The Press Council then urged the Yangon government to withdraw the lawsuit because its rules forbid it from mediating a dispute that is with the courts.

But the government has yet to drop the suit.

"We have sent it the [president’s] directive. The [Yangon] chief ministers shall be responsible to the president, according to the Constitution, so it has to follow the order; I hope it will. As far as I'm concerned, it is now negotiating with Eleven Media Group," U Zaw Htay, spokesman for the President Office, said Monday at a press conference in Naypyitaw.

On Oct. 19 the Yangon government demanded that Eleven Media apologize for the article without saying whether it would drop the suit if the news outlet complied.

It is not clear if the two sides are negotiating on an apology. Eleven Media Managing Director U Thein Myint was not available for comments on Tuesday.

Upon his release on Friday, U Phyo Wai Win, the journalist who wrote the offending article, told reporters outside the court that he stood by everything he wrote.

On the day of their release, Press Council Vice Chairman U Myo Thant Tin told The Irrawaddy that, despite the bail, the suit still had to be dropped before it could start mediating. The journalists' lawyer, U Kyee Myint, urged the government to follow the president’s instructions and drop the suit without delay.

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US Restricts Exports to Chinese Semiconductor Firm Fujian Jinhua

Posted: 29 Oct 2018 09:58 PM PDT

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s administration took action on Monday to cut off a Chinese state-backed chipmaker from US suppliers amid allegations the firm stole intellectual property from US semiconductor company Micron Technology Inc.

The Commerce Department said it had put Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit Co Ltd on a list of entities that cannot purchase components, software and technology goods from US firms.

The administration is concerned the Chinese firm could flood the market with cheap chips that are also made by US companies that supply the US military. If the US chipmakers go out of business, the military would lose a supplier for an item that must come from the United States.

Trade experts said the Trump administration’s move may be an unprecedented effort to use a legal tool known for punishing foreign companies that send US-origin goods to sanctioned countries such as Iran to instead protect the economic viability of a US firm.

The move escalated what until now had been a business dispute into the realm of an international trade conflict between the United States and China. The Commerce Department spokesman said the move was “based on the regulatory standard.”

The action against Fujian Jinhua is likely to ignite new tensions between Beijing and Washington since the company is at the heart of the “Made in China 2025” program to develop new high-technology industries.

The world’s top two economies are already waging a tariff war over their trade disputes, with US duties in place on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods and Chinese duties on $110 billion of US goods.

Fujian Jinhua makes so-called DRAM, the memory chips that make computers, phones and other devices run more quickly and smoothly.

Micron, a maker of memory chips with factories in Virginia and Utah, has accused Fujian Jinhua and Taiwanese partner United Microelectronics Corp of stealing its chip designs in a lawsuit in California. In turn, the companies countersued Micron in China, where courts sided with them and banned some of Micron’s chips in China.

“When a foreign company engages in activity contrary to our national security interests, we will take strong action to protect our national security,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a statement.

A Commerce Department spokesman said the agency would review any appeal by Fujian Jinhua.

‘Entity List'

The action is similar to a Commerce Department move that nearly put Chinese telecommunications equipment company ZTE Corp out of business earlier this year by cutting it off from US suppliers.

Linley Gwennap, a chip expert and president of the Linley Group, said Fujian Jinhua was a relatively new company building DRAM as part of China’s larger plan to become self-sufficient at making such chips.

He said suppliers such as Applied Materials Inc, Lam Research Corp and KLA-Tencor Corp were likely supplying equipment to Fujian Jinhua.

“It’s pretty much impossible to build a leading-edge fab (semiconductor plant) without buying equipment from these American companies,” Gwennap said.

On an earnings call on Monday, KLA-Tencor Chief Executive Rick Wallace said the company expected no financial impact in 2018 or 2019 from the move.

Neither of the other companies that Gwennap named immediately returned a request for comment.

The use of the “entity list” – which governs what companies US firms can do business with – to protect the economic viability of a US industry appears to be unprecedented, said Washington trade lawyer Douglas Jacobson.

"This appears to be a dramatic expansion of the use of the entity list for economic purposes," he said, explaining that the entity list had traditionally been used to prevent imminent violations of US export control laws.

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Indonesia Hunts For Victims, Wreckage of Air Crash; Survivors Seen Unlikely

Posted: 29 Oct 2018 09:44 PM PDT

JAKARTA — Indonesia on Tuesday stepped up a search for an airliner that plunged into the sea with all 189 aboard feared dead, deploying underwater beacons to trace its black box recorders and uncover why an almost-new plane crashed minutes after takeoff.

Indonesia, one of the world’s fastest-growing aviation markets, has a patchy safety record. With the now almost certain prospect of all on board having died, the crash is set to rank as the country’s second-worst air disaster.

Ground staff lost contact with flight JT610 of budget airline Lion Air 13 minutes after the Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft took off early on Monday from the airport in Jakarta, the capital, on its way to Indonesia’s tin-mining region.

“Hopefully this morning we can find the wreckage or fuselage,” Soerjanto Tjahjono, the head of a national transport safety panel, told Reuters, adding that an underwater acoustic beacon was deployed to locate the main body of the plane.

The search and rescue agency added that four sonar detectors were also being used in areas where aircraft debris was found a day earlier off the shore of Karawang, West Java, and 15 vessels were scouring the sea surface.

A helicopter circled over five rubber boats carrying about 36 rescuers, as some donned rubber suits, readying to dive.

Earlier, however, Yusuf Latif, the spokesman of the national search and rescue agency, had said finding survivors “would be a miracle”, judging by the condition of the recovered debris and body parts.

In a statement, Lion Air said human remains were collected in 24 body bags after sweeps of the site of the crash, in waters about 30 to 35 meters deep roughly 15 km off the coast to the northeast of Jakarta.

The bags were taken to a hospital for identification, with more expected overnight, authorities told broadcaster Metro TV.

On tarpaulins at Jakarta’s port, officers laid out items retrieved from the sea, ranging from oxygen bottles to personal effects such as wallets, a mobile telephone, cash and backpacks.

Although searchers halted efforts overnight, sonar vessels and an underwater drone kept up the hunt for the wreckage, where many victims were feared trapped, officials said.

A witness in Karawang said he had heard an explosion from the beach around the time the aircraft went down.

“I thought it was thunder, but it was different from thunder — ‘Boom!’ — It was loud,” said Dadang Hambali.

On Monday, the US National Transportation Safety Board and Boeing Co said they were providing assistance in the crash investigation.

The accident is the first to be reported involving the widely sold Boeing 737 MAX, an updated, more fuel-efficient version of the manufacturer’s workhorse single-aisle jet.

Privately owned Lion Air, founded in 1999, said the aircraft, which had been in operation since August, was airworthy, with its pilot and co-pilot together having amassed 11,000 hours of flying time.

The pilot of flight JT610, which was bound for Pangkal Pinang in the Bangka-Belitung tin-mining region, had asked to return to base (RTB) shortly after takeoff at about 6:20 a.m., with landing set for 7:20 a.m. in the city of Pangkal Pinang.

“An RTB was requested and had been approved but we’re still trying to figure out the reason,” Tjahjono told reporters on Monday.

No distress signal was received from the aircraft’s emergency transmitter, search and rescue agency head Muhmmad Syaugi told a news conference.

The aircraft suffered a technical problem on a flight from the resort island of Bali to Jakarta on Sunday night but it was “resolved according to procedure”, Edward Sirait, chief executive of Lion Air Group, told reporters.

Sirait declined to specify the nature of the issue but said none of the airline’s other aircraft of that model had the same problem. Lion had operated 11 Boeing 737 MAX 8s and it had no plan to ground the rest of them, he said.

Indonesia’s worst air disaster was in 1997, when a Garuda Indonesia A300 crashed in the city of Medan, killing 234 people.

The post Indonesia Hunts For Victims, Wreckage of Air Crash; Survivors Seen Unlikely appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Myanmar Garment Workers Demand Sacked Colleagues Get Jobs Back

Posted: 29 Oct 2018 09:30 PM PDT

YANGON — Dozens of striking workers from a Chinese-owned garment factory in Myanmar marched to a government compound in Yangon on Monday, securing a late-night meeting with the city's chief minister, as part of efforts to get sacked colleagues reinstated.

Staff from Fu Yuen Ltd factory, on the outskirts of the commercial capital of Yangon, have been demonstrating alongside other labor activists since August, after 30 members of a trade union were fired.

Shouting slogans outside the Yangon regional government compound, about 100 protesters demanded to meet Chief Minister Phyo Min Thein, a protégé of Myanmar's civilian leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.

After nightfall, the minister invited a group of workers inside for talks, which ended with protesters agreeing to disperse in return for a second meeting on Tuesday afternoon.

"We are thinking a lot how we can help you," Phyo Min Thein told them in the meeting, live-streamed on Facebook. "We have responsibilities not only to protect workers who are protesting but also to protect workers who are working."

This month, dozens of Fu Yuen workers were injured when iron-wielding assailants attacked a crowd gathered outside the factory. Police said a fight had broken out after protesters urged employees still working to join them.

Myanmar's textile industry is its top export earner after oil and gas, employing more than 450,000 people and generating more than $2 billion in exports last year.

Fu Yuen says it fired the workers for their “poor attitude” rather than because they belonged to a union.

"As the cost has been rising rapidly in the past few years, the factory had no choice but to lay off those workers with poor attitude at work while hoping to increase the productivity again," Fu Yuen representative Janice Chan said on Monday.

Hundreds of thousands of jobs in the sector could soon be at risk as the European Union considers whether to reinstate economic sanctions over the treatment of members of the Rohingya minority, potentially stripping the country of tariff-free access to the trading bloc.

Thet Hter Swe, a worker from the factory, said on Monday the protesters would accept only the reinstatement of the sacked colleagues and could not be bought off with compensation.

"We want to work with dignity, so we only ask to go back to work and to work with full workers' rights."

The post Myanmar Garment Workers Demand Sacked Colleagues Get Jobs Back appeared first on The Irrawaddy.

Ten Things to Do in Yangon This Week

Posted: 29 Oct 2018 07:00 PM PDT

The sound of Eagle with Big Bag

Popular band Big Bag will perform.

Oct. 31, 8 p.m. to 10.30 p.m. The Basement, No. 785 Mahabandoola Road, Lanmadaw Tsp. Tickets 10,000 kyats at 01-229 173, 09-786 868 368.

Myanmar Traditional Dinner Show

Traditional candle dance, puppet show and more over a buffet dinner

Oct. 31, 7 p.m. Thiripyitsaya Sky Bistro, 21st floor, Sakura Tower. 19,000 kyats at 09-421 031 047.

50th Street Halloween

A Halloween fancy dress party with DJ, games and face-painting

Oct. 31, 8 p.m. till late. 50th Street Restaurant & Bar, No. 9/13 50th Street, Botataung Tsp.

Voices for Wildlife

Yangon celebrates the ban on wildlife sales with a music festival.

Nov. 2, 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. Mahabandoola Park. Free show.

Old Scull Rock Night Party

Veteran singers Ringo, Billy Tun, Sint May Phoo and Zaw Lat Htut will perform.

Nov. 2, 7 p.m. till late. Yangon Yangon Rooftop Bar, Sakura Tower. 10,000 kyats at 01-255 131, 01-255 277

A Winter Night with the Four

The Four Band will perform.

Nov. 2, 7.30 p.m. to 10.30 p.m. IBC, Pyay Road. Reservations at 09-458 884 450

Anegga Vs Babu

Celebrated hip-hop musicians Anegga and Babu will perform.

Nov. 3, 8 p.m. till late. Yangon Yangon Rooftop Bar, Sakura Tower. 12,000 kyats per head at 01-255 131.

Urban Perspective

Ko Ko Naing's views of Yangon are displayed.

Nov. 2-6, Pansuriya Art Gallery, No. 100, Bogalay Zay Street, Botatung Tsp.

Dirty

The fourth solo art exhibition by Nay Myo

Nov. 3-7, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ahla Thit Art Gallery, No. 17, University Avenue Road, Bahan Tsp.

Under the Sunlight

Win Pe Myint showcases his works.

Nov. 2-7, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Lokanat Art Galleries, No. 62, corner of Merchant Street and Pansodan Street, Kyauktada Tsp.

The post Ten Things to Do in Yangon This Week appeared first on The Irrawaddy.