Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Detainee bombs Myanmar police station, kills self
1 hr 33 mins ago

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) – A man detained at a police station Wednesday in eastern Myanmar detonated a bomb, killing himself and wounding at least four policeman in the latest in series of blasts apparently linked to political discontent.

A security official said Wednesday the man had been taken to a police station in Demawso, in Kayah State, 200 miles (320 kilometers) northeast of Yangon, for interrogation.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media, said the man set off a bomb, but was unable to provide further details.

It was not clear why the man had been detained.

The explosion was the seventh known bombing in recent weeks in military-ruled Myanmar. The attacks come as the ruling junta prepares for a general election that its opponents have called unfair and undemocratic.

Bombings are rare but not unknown in Myanmar, though the latest attacks appeared aimed at higher profile targets than earlier ones. The country has a long history of internal conflict, especially between the central government and ethnic minorities in border areas seeking greater autonomy. But there is also opposition to the ruling junta among the public at large.

The highest profile explosions occurred on April 15 in Yangon, the country's biggest city, when three bombs killed ten people and wounded 170 others during the traditional water festival.

Two days later, 10 mines exploded and several more were found undetonated at a controversial hydropower dam project site in northern Myanmar's Kachin state. They wounded one person and caused damage to several buildings and six vehicles.

Two separate explosions occurred on April 13 at checkpoints near the Chinese border and at Kawkareik in Kayin State injuring three people.

An explosion at a district telecommunication office in Kyaikmaraw, in Mon State, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Yangon on Tuesday night wounded three people. A series of grenade attacks at a hydropower project about 140 miles (225 kilometers) north of Yangon early Tuesday morning wounded four workers.

There have been no claims of responsibility for any of the blasts, some of which the government has blamed on unspecified "terrorists."

Myanmar's military rulers declared they would hold elections this year as part of the their "roadmap to democracy," but critics say the military shows little sign of relinquishing control and note that the government has made every effort to prevent detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi from taking part in the polls.

Myanmar had its last election in 1990. Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy topped those polls, but the military — which has ruled the country virtually continuously since 1962 — refused to recognize the results and would not allow it to take power.

The party decided against registering this year, a move that is tantamount to boycotting the vote. A recently enacted election law require existing political parties to register or be disbanded.
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French leader stresses Iran nukes on China visit
By GILLIAN WONG,Associated Press Writer - Thursday, April 29

BEIJING (AP) – French President Nicolas Sarkozy stressed the urgency of ongoing efforts to curb Iran's nuclear program in a meeting with China's leader Wednesday, saying new sanctions must be imposed on Tehran if negotiations fail.

Sarkozy hoping to make headway on the nuclear standoff in talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao when the two met privately Wednesday at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

"China hopes to use dialogue to solve this problem. France completely understands China, and we are willing to discuss this problem together at an appropriate time, but if dialogue does not work then we can only use sanctions," Sarkozy said at a joint news conference with Hu after their meeting at the start of his three-day visit.

"Everyone thinks this must be solved right now," he added.

Three permanent U.N. Security Council members _ France, Britain and the U.S. _ have been pressing for a fourth round of U.N. penalties on Iran for its refusal to halt a key part of its nuclear program that could be used to make weapons. Iran says it only wants the technology to produce nuclear power.

China and Russia _ which also have permanent Security Council seats _ have important commercial links to Iran and have been reluctant to support new sanctions.

Sarkozy's visit to China is being billed as a return to healthy diplomatic relations between the two countries after spats over Tibet. Relations nose-dived in 2008 after protests by exiled Tibetans and other activists during the Olympic torch's passage through Paris and Sarkozy's talks with Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

Hu told Sarkozy while reporters were present that he was "willing to further expand China-France relations through a deep exchange of views."

Earlier Wednesday, Sarkozy and his wife, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, visited the life-size terracotta warriors at the famed ancient tomb of China's first emperor in the western city of Xi'an.

Besides Iran, Sarkozy and Hu were expected to discuss Afghanistan, Pakistan, North Korea and Myanmar, a French official said on condition of anonymity on Tuesday.

The two leaders said they also discussed reforms of the international financial system, agreeing that instituting more controls was key to preventing another global financial crisis like the one in 2008 that revealed flaws in financial regulation.

"China believes the emphasis in the reform of the international financial system should be on strengthening financial controls," Hu said to reporters.

"We believe the global financial crisis has not changed the long-term momentum of global economic growth," Hu said. Countries should strengthen coordination among economies and oppose protectionism to maintain the momentum of global economic growth, he said.
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Myanmar leaders shed uniforms ahead of vote
AP - Wednesday, April 28


YANGON, Myanmar (AP) – The leaders of Myanmar's ruling junta have resigned their military posts, a government official said Tuesday, in an apparent move to prepare to run in upcoming national elections.

Under the new constitution, a newly created 440-member House of Representatives will have 330 elected civilians and 110 military representatives.

Those who resign from military positions now won't be counted in the military's quota. Having additional seats outside the quota filled by loyalists out of uniform will help ensure the army's power and influence in the body.

Prime Minister General Thein Sein and 22 Cabinet ministers gave up their uniforms Monday, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release information.

While the reason for the resignations was not made explicit, it is widely assumed that the move was made so they can run in the polls, the date of which has not been set.

Myanmar's military rulers declared they would hold elections this year as part of the their "roadmap to democracy," but critics say the military shows little sign of relinquishing control and note that the government has made every effort to prevent opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi from taking part in the polls.

Although the prime minister and 22 ministers resigned from their military positions, they still retain their Cabinet posts, said the official.

Several more Cabinet ministers are expected to resign their military posts, and all will later step down from the Cabinet to prepare for the polls, he said.
The resignations were not reported by state-controlled media.

The junta-backed social organization known as the Union Solidarity and Development Association is expected to turn into a political party on whose slate many Cabinet ministers would contest the election.

Myanmar had its last election in 1990. Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy topped the polls, but the military _ which has ruled the country virtually continuously since 1962 _ refused to recognize the results.

Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy decided against registering their party, which is tantamount to boycotting the polls. The party says the election laws are unfair and undemocratic.

So far, 21 new political parties have applied for permission to register as such and 4 out of 10 existing parties have reregistered to contest the elections.
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U.S. energy bill could affect Myanmar
Published: April 27, 2010 at 4:09 PM


BANGKOK, April 27 (UPI) -- Human rights activists are following the progress of U.S. legislation that could force energy and mining companies to disclose payments to Myanmar's government.

The U.S. Energy Security through Transparency Act, should it pass Congress and be signed into law, will require oil, gas and mining companies registered with the U.S.

Securities and Exchange Commission to reveal payments made to foreign governments, which could greatly affect countries such as Myanmar with poor human rights records, the Irrawaddy news magazine reported Tuesday.

Matthew Smith, a spokesman for the non-governmental organization EarthRights International, said at a news conference in Bangkok that the legislation would place enormous pressure on Total, Chevron and Thailand's PTTEP, all involved in Myanmar's Yadana gas project and pipeline, to reveal payments made to Myanmar's military regime.

ERI estimates that in the decade since Yadana began production it has generated $7.5 billion in sales to Thailand and that the Myanmar junta has diverted much of the revenue into banks in Singapore.
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Reuters AlertNet - Myanmar: Two years after cyclone Nargis - Malteser International: Ongoing reconstruction and rehabilitation of the country
28 Apr 2010 12:54:00 GMT
Source: Malteser International - Germany
Malteser International
Website: http://www.malteser-international.org


Cologne. "The majority of the people are still struggling for daily survival. A lot of them do not yet have a solid source of income", reports Sandra Harlass, Senior Desk Officer Myanmar of Malteser International, the relief service of the Order of Malta for worldwide humanitarian aid. "The present situation cannot be compared to the life and income situation before cyclone Nargis hit the country on 2 Mai 2008. To give an example: At the moment, no one can afford to buy drinking water." Therefore, at request of the government and the affected population Malteser International distributes purified drinking water by boats to areas with acute water shortage in the dry seasons.

In its rehabilitation and reconstruction programmes, Malteser International focuses on the sectors of health, WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene) and disaster risk reduction. The rehabilitation in the most affected Irrawaddy delta is far from being completed: "We are especially concentrating on mother-child care," Harlass continues. Malteser International supports vaccination campaigns by providing the midwifes with boats and fuel. To reduce the high maternal and infant mortality rate, Malteser International also facilitates trainings of auxiliary midwifes and provides them with the equipment needed for a safe delivery. "The set-up of mother-child groups has proven to be especially useful. In regular meetings, pregnant women come together in order to exchange experiences, to get advice and to prepare themselves for delivery. Each group has launched an emergency referral fund to ensure timely referral to a hospital in case of complications during delivery," the Malteser International expert explains.

To ensure sustainable drinking water supply and improve the hygiene situation, Malteser International has rehabilitated more than 60 ponds that had been contaminated by the floods as well as 20 wells in over 120 villages. These structural measures are embedded in a comprehensive awareness raising programme about the safe handling of drinking water as well as the relation between hygiene, sanitation and water-related diseases.

"Another essential part of our work in the region is disaster risk reduction and disaster preparedness," Harlass points out. So far, four schools and six health centres were built or rebuilt. In close cooperation with the communities, Malteser International furthermore conducts participatory risk analysis to design disaster preparedness plans. To implement these plans each village sets up local disaster risk management committees that are trained by Malteser International staff in first aid, search and rescue as well as disaster risk management.

In May 2009 Malteser International had handed over health centres that had already been reconstructed to the local health authorities on "Middle Island" in the Irrawaddy
Delta. The reconstruction and rehabilitation measures of Malteser International are financially supported among others by Caritas International as well as by the Australian and German Government. Malteser International assumes that from the end of 2011 on the local communities will be in a position to manage the projects independently.

In total, Malteser International up to now has provided relief for more than 275,000 people after cyclone Nargis struck the country. Nargis was one of the most disastrous tropical storms since recordkeeping began. It claimed 140,000 lives and left 1.5 million people homeless.

Malteser International has been working in Myanmar in several regions already since 2001 with currently 350 local and 14 international staff members and was one of the first organisations providing relief after the cyclone.
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ReliefWeb - "It could be mined again" - Ongoing armed conflict in Myanmar/Burma threatens mine clearance efforts in Thailand
Source: International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL)
Date: 27 Apr 2010
By Yeshua Moser-Puangsuwan, Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor


The mountain is called Na Taung by the Burmese and Doi Ya Moo by the Thai, and its peak is on the Thai side of the shared border. The Thailand Mine Action Center (TMAC) arranged for me to visit the mountain in March 2010. It is the site of a former insurgent camp, but is now a Thai Army outpost. "The insurgents moved across the border when we requested them to no longer use Thai soil" said Col. Monkol Pakamma, Deputy Commander of one of the Royal Thai Army's humanitarian demining units. From where I stood, only meters from the border, I could clearly see within the rugged fold of the western slope of the mountain several camps of the Karenni Army, a group which remains in armed conflict with Myanmar's military government. Further up the border, but quite close by, are camps of two other insurgent groups, the All Burma Student's Democratic Front and the Pa'O National Liberation Army. The Thai Army officer confirmed that both groups are militarily active and that the areas fronting these camps are thick with landmines.

To reach the top of Doi Ya Moo, it was necessary to traverse an area which had just been cleared by the Thailand Mine Action Center. It was formerly a transit route used by both the Karenni Army and the Burmese Army to attack one another across a short span of Thai soil. Both mined the route. After two Thai villagers and a border patrol soldier stepped on mines in the area TMAC was asked to clear it. Local villager's wished to have safe access to the area to collect forest products growing in the jungle.

Thailand was one of the first countries in Southeast Asia to join the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty, which required clearance of all mines within 10 years. While the passage to the peak of Doi Ya Moo has been cleared, the few meters between where I stood and the border, just outside the camps bamboo fence, remained mined. "Although we have determined that there are mines there, the precise line of the border must be agreed between Thailand and Burma before we can proceed with clearance." I was told by one of the soldiers who went on to explain that the exact boundary is uncertain due to descrepencies caused by the fact that Thailand uses metric maps and Burma uses maps based on the British mile. As we left the area, Col. Monkol worried about the future. Even though his team had demined the area it could for now, "I can't say that the same parties might not mine it again in the future.", he said.

Last year, Thailand had to request an extension of time to meet its mine clearance obligations under the Mine Ban Treaty. However, with all warring factions across frontier engaging in mine warfare, the threat of new mine pollution in Thailand remains real. Ongoing war virtually assures that border demarcation will not take place any time soon, and hold Thailand's ability to meet its Treaty obligations hostage, and Col. Monkol will remain a worried man.

Yeshua Moser-Puangsuwan is an editor and research coordinator for Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor for Asia (ban policy) and for non-state armed groups (global), and the country researcher on Myanmar/Burma.
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The Malaysian Mirror - OPINION: Myanmar's continued political imbroglio
Nehginpao Kipgen
Wednesday, 28 April 2010 15:25


In an annual routine policy review, the European Union extended economic sanctions against the military-ruled Myanmar for another year on April 26, 2010. With the continued political imbroglio in this Southeast Asian nation, the decision was not something unexpected.

The sanctions, which include a travel ban and a freeze of assets of enterprises owned by members of the ruling junta and people associated with them, is aimed at bringing the military leadership to the path of dialogue that would eventually lead Myanmar to democracy.

The European Union wants to see the establishment of a democratically elected civilian government which engages in socio-economic development, and respects human rights while rebuilding relations with the international community.

The European Union renewed its call for the release of Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of the opposition and general secretary of the National League for Democracy, and also offered to hold dialogue with the junta if it makes a tangible democratic progress.

Given its history of recalcitrance, the military junta is unlikely to give in to the calls of the European Union. Nevertheless, the junta in its own way is seeking recognition, if not endorsement, from the international community.

Two important reasons

With years of criticisms and pressures from the international community, the military leaders plan to legitimize its rule by holding a general election. The goal is to transform the dictatorial-type of regime to a civilian form of government, where the ultimate power rests in the hands of military.

There are two important reasons, among others, that concern the military leadership of losing its power to a civilian government – safety and control.

After decades of brutality on its own people, the military leadership is concerned about their own safety under a democratically elected government. The trial and execution of former military leaders in Iraq is something that probably worries the Myanmar military leaders.

With the different ethnic nationalities demanding political autonomy, the junta is wary of any decentralization of the Myanmar society. Under the present system, the military controls all branches of the government – legislative, executive and judiciary.

It is symbolically significant, at this juncture, to the Myanmar opposition that the European Union has extended sanctions for another year. The move can be construed as support for the democratic movement. However, this initiative will remain to be unyielding as long as there is economic engagement by countries such as China, India, and members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

Myanmar's policy failure

It is not the European Union that is solely responsible for Myanmar’s policy failure. It is the conflicting approaches of engagement and sanctions which make the international community’s strategy ineffective.

Beyond economic sanctions, what the European Union can possibly do is to lobby and convince its international partners, at least the Western countries, not to recognize the result of the election if held under the existing restrictive laws.

It could also strive to formulate a coordinated international strategy to effectively deal with the military junta.

If the European Union, together with its international partners, decides not to recognize the election result, the Myanmar military junta will lack the global legitimacy it pursues.

Regardless of the outcome of general election, Myanmar’s decades-old conflicts will continue as long as suppression of ethnic minorities is unabated, and their fundamental rights are denied.
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04/28/2010 13:03
AsiaNews.it - MYANMAR: Attacks against dams target military junta’s economic interests
Four workers are wounded in yesterday’s attack against the Thaukyegat hydropower project, Bago Division. In Kayah State, a man stopped for questioning blows himself up, wounding four police officers. Some 20 top military officers retire, including the prime minister, in order to run for office.

Yangon (AsiaNews/Agencies) – A series of blasts hit a hydropower project in Bago (south-central Myanmar), wounding four workers. In the eastern State of Kayah, a man stopped for questioning by police detonated a bomb, killing himself and wounding four officers who were close by. Both attacks, which took place yesterday, are but the latest in a series of violent episodes to have hit the former Burma in the past few weeks. In the meantime, a number of top military officers are retiring in order to run for office in elections scheduled for later this year.

This morning police stopped a man in Kayah State. Before he could be questioned, he set off an explosive device, an official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media. One person, the suicide bomber, died and four police officers were wounded.

“A man of about 30 years old exploded the bomb and killed himself. Four police agents beside him were injured during the blast at the police station," said a resident of Loikaw town in Kayah State, some 400 kilometres from Yangon. It was unclear exactly why he was stopped and if he had intended to commit suicide.

Elsewhere, three grenade attacks hit the Thaukyegat hydropower project in Bago Division, about 220 kilometres northeast of the country's main city of Yangon, wounding four workers.

The Myanmar company behind the project, Asia World Construction, is involved in the controversial Myitsone dam project in Kachin State, which was hit by a series of bombs blasts on 17 April.

The latest wave of violence, especially the bombs against dams, appears aimed at the heart of the Myanmar economy.

The country’s ruling junta has been criticised for selling out the national interests by selling off its natural resources through agreements with energy-hungry China and India.

Although the country has known violence in the past, the recent episodes are exceptional. Myanmar is under the tight control of a military dictatorship that censors opposition groups and human rights activists, and is involved in a fight with groups representing ethnic minorities in some of the states of the federation.

Even the former capital of Yangon, which is the country’s financial hub, has not been spared. On 15 April, during the Water Festival that marks Burmese New Year three bombs killed about 30 people, ten according to official sources, with more than 170 people injured.

In the meantime, the military junta is organising elections for later this year (October-November) in order to give itself a new respectability.

As part of this operation, more than 20 senior Burmese government ministers, including the prime minister, General Thein Sein, retired yesterday from their military posts in a move that analysts claim will allow them to focus on this year’s elections.

Internal sources said that Myanmar’s strongman, General Than Shwe, picked the current prime minister, as the leader of a new pro-junta political party that will contest the general election. The apparent goal is to clean up the regime’s image, tarnished after more than 20 years in power.

The poll, whose outcome is a foregone conclusion, is likely to strengthen the regime.

Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is under house arrest and cannot vote or be elected.

Her party, the National League for Democracy, has decided not to run in the election to protest against the junta-drafted constitution of 2008, which guarantees the military 25 per cent of the seats, with the remaining 75 per cent going to former military officers as well as regime officials or cronies.
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Viewlondon.co.uk - Burma 'beginning transition to civilian dictatorship'
28 April 2010 12:00 GMT

More than 20 senior officials in the Burmese junta casting off their army uniforms to stand in national elections as civilians is a "sham aimed at maintaining dictatorship", campaigners have warned.

The Burma Campaign UK said the decision by prime minister Thein Sein and a host of other officials was the "beginning of the transition of Burma from a military to civilian dictatorship".

The first national elections in Burma for 20 years are expected to be held in November, with a quarter of parliamentary seats reserved for the military under the 2008 constitution passed by a disputed referendum.

But despite the polls the head of the armed forces will remain the most powerful figure in the country, while the most important ministries will be firmly under military control.

The National League for Democracy (NLD) won the last nationwide elections in Burma by a landslide in 1990 but since then military rule has been entrenched in the south-east Asian country.

NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi has spent 14 out of the last 20 years under house arrest and is currently barred from standing in the new elections.

U Nyan Win, a spokesman for the party, reaffirmed to the Reuters news agency the NLD plan to boycott the elections.

"We have always expected the emergence of parties that are supported and backed by the army in the election," he said.

"Based on the 2008 constitution, the parliament after the election will mostly be controlled by army and retired army personnel."

Commenting on the move by military figures to renounce their uniforms and stand in elections as civilians, Mark Farmaner of Burma Campaign UK said: "Burma's military are already guaranteed 25 per cent of seats in parliament, but also plan to pack parliament with soldiers wearing suits, in order to ensure their complete dominance in the new system.

"After their defeat in elections in 1990 the generals are leaving nothing to chance. The new parliament will be a rubber stamp one, but they are still ensuring they completely control it. The only real change after the election will be a few hundred men wearing suits instead of uniforms."
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VOA News - Fears of Violence Renewed Along China-Burma Border
Kate Woodsome | Washington 27 April 2010


Armed ethnic groups in rural Burma face a choice on Wednesday - join a government militia, or be outlawed and face possible attack. The standoff between the two sides has renewed fears of violence along the China-Burma border.

Burma's military government keeps tight control over most of the country. But along the border with Thailand and China, armed ethnic groups are effectively in charge. The most powerful rebels are refusing to bow to the government's pressure to join a state-run border defense force ahead of national elections later this year.

Aung Kyaw Zaw, a former rebel based on the Chinese side of the border, says the biggest group - the United Wa State Army - is preparing for a long war. He says leaders of the Wa do not want to fight, but they feel the government has left them little choice.

The Wa and other ethnic groups signed a ceasefire with the government two decades ago. They enjoy more political and religious freedom than the ethnic Burmese under the government's tight control. And income from logging, illegal drugs and cross-border trade pays for reliable electricity - unlike the rest of the country, which suffers from power blackouts.

Ready to fight

The Wa say that joining the government's border guard could be the first step to giving up their rights. They say they have at least 20,000 soldiers in Burma's Northern Shan state who are ready to fight. Reports from the region indicate that at least 5,000 Burmese troops are massing in the area.

Aung Kyaw Zaw says the government also has deployed fighter jets and tanks as a show of force. But, he says, with the monsoon rains coming in June, the army does not have time to wage a real war.

Still the military buildup is making some people nervous. Aung Kyaw Zaw says some residents have moved their cars and valuables into neighboring China, and that the elderly and some children have fled.

Jennifer Quigley is the advocacy director for the U.S. Campaign for Burma in Washington. She says the military government's poor human rights record gives civilians cause for concern.

"It could be very detrimental," said Quigley. "In the case of the Burmese regime, they have a traditional habit of attacking the civilian population and not necessarily the military. And so there's this great potential that they will seize land, they will seize forced laborers, they will seize child soldiers."

About 30,000 refugees fled into China last year when the Burmese army attacked the Kokang, a small ethnic-Chinese group also in Shan state. The Wa and its civilian population are much larger than the Kokang.

Quigley says conflict with this group could cause serious problems for China. "There is huge potential that you're looking at over 100,000 refugees fleeing into China," she said.

Thousands of Chinese troops are stationed in Yunnan province along the China-Burma border, where brisk trading brings in big money. In 2008, China reported nearly $2 billion in exports to Burma.

Chinese officials have been making regular visits to the Burmese capital to try to calm ethnic tensions. They even escorted Wa rebels to a recent meeting with Burmese officials to ensure their safety.

Consolidating power

Political analysts say that any other poor, isolated country would pay attention to the concerns of its rich and powerful neighbor. But Burma could be a different story because of its leader, General Than Shwe.

"It's a huge question mark, said Quingley. "Because Than Shwe is not somebody most people understand."

Jennifer Quigley of the U.S. Campaign for Burma says regional military commanders appear reluctant to start a war with the ethnic rebels. But she says, Than Shwe is focused on consolidating his power.

"One army, one Burma. No more pesky internal ethnic problems," said Quigley. "So it's going to be whether or not he's willing to jeopardize their relationship with the Chinese to have their final solution, and whether they will do that before the elections."

On the China-Burma border, former rebel Aung Kyaw Zaw says the Wa fighters will be ready, no matter what the government decides.
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New Mon State Party prepares for war
Thursday, 29 April 2010 00:07
Phanida

Chiang Mai (Mizzima) - The New Mon State Party is making preparations in case war breaks out between it and the Burmese Army, after its militia under ceasefire rejected the junta’s order for it to be brought under the command of the Border Guard Force, a spokesman said.

The junta had given the party until April 22 to respond to its offer of a place for the party’s militia in the new guard force. The party rejected the offer and since has secured all documents from its communication offices and ceased their operations except for those in Moulmein, in preparation for a crackdown, party spokesman Naing Chay Mon said.

“We answered the junta at the deadline on April 22 that we could not accept their proposal. So, we have closed the offices so that if the junta takes action against our organisation, most of our members will not be left in the area,” he said.

He said Rangoon, Ye Township, Myawaddy Township, Three Pagodas Pass and Than Phyu Za Yap offices have been closed, and only two staff members are left in charge at Moulmein, capital of Mon State.

The party agreed to a ceasefire with the junta in 1995, after which the offices were opened for bilateral communications with the government. Its rights to do business were revoked, so the party had no concerns about economic loss from the closures, former party member Naing Tin Aung said.

“We had invested heavily in timber businesses. Later [some years after the ceasefire], the government revoked our permits to conduct those businesses. So, we have nothing to lose from the closures,” he said.

After initial years of ceasefire, the party also ran bus lines and import-export businesses but those permits were also revoked later by the regime.

Tension was building between the junta and the New Mon State Party and both sides were preparing for possible armed clashes, political analyst Aung Thu Nyein in Thailand said.

The junta has three military units and one military operations command centre at Ye.

It also has three units at Three Pagodas Pass, the South Eastern Command is at Moulmein, and many military units are positioned between Moulmein and Mu Done Township.

About 700 soldiers from the party control all or parts of the following areas: Moulmein District, Tavoy District, Tha Htone District, Bahoquin at the top of Ye stream and Three Pagodas Pass.

Sources said that more than 400 villagers from Toehaparouk, Ani, Chelltike, Waisin and Naungbwae in Ye Township had fled to the Hlokhani Mon refugee camp on the Thai-Burmese border on April 25 because the worry about war.

Mon separatists formed the Mon Peoples Front, which was later superseded by the New Mon State Party (NMSP) in 1962. Since 1949, the eastern hills of the state (as well as portions of Thaninthaya Division) have been under control of the NMSP.

The NMSP was formed in 1958 and they continued the for self-determination and the rights of other ethnic minorities.

Many Mon were against the 1995 ceasefire agreement, but the NMSP convinced them to try a political compromise with the regime. In 2003, the party joined the national constitutional convention, where it proposed that the junta create a federal union of Burma. The junta turned down the proposal, and in 2007 the party sent only observers to the convention. NMSP leaders say the 2008 constitution is undemocratic, allowing for no ethnic rights.
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Win Tin unhappy over EU parleys with junta
Wednesday, 28 April 2010 13:09
Ko Wild

Chiang Mai (Mizzima) - Though European Union’s extension of its existing economic sanctions against Burma for one more year was welcomed by the National League for Democracy (NLD), Win Tin, a senior leader was unhappy with its decision to continue parleys with the junta.

“When we wanted them to apply more pressure on the junta, they still wanted to talk with the regime. We are unhappy with this,” Win Tin a Central Executive Committee member of NLD said.

Given that the appalling human rights situation has not shown any improvement, European Union foreign ministers decided to extend sanctions against military-ruled Burma for one more year at a meeting in Luxemberg on April 26. At the same time the meeting decided to send a diplomatic mission to Burma for parleys with the junta.

Western countries should persuade veto power holders like China and Russia to take practical actions on Burma through the United Nations Security Council, such as weapons sanctions and strong diplomatic pressure, Win Tin said.

EU had imposed sanctions against Burma since 1996. These include, ban on sale of weapons to Burma, halt to visas for regime officials, their families and their cronies so that they are unable to visit EU countries, stopping aid, except humanitarian aid, sealing bank accounts of Burmese military officials, and restricted diplomatic relations with Burma.
The judges, who initiated legal action against Aung San Suu Kyi were added to the sanction list last year. EU has also called for the unconditional release of political prisoners, including Aung San Suu Kyi.

However, the chairman of the Union of Myanmar National Political Force, Aye Lwin, who has opposed sanctions by western countries, since 2006, said it is impractical.

“The sanction is a negative approach, where it ignores the political, economical and social opportunities of Burmese people while we proceed towards democracy”, he told Mizzima.

He pointed out that the EU had said the junta’s electoral laws cannot ensure free and fair election, because the NLD and its allies among ethnic parties did not like the electoral laws.

Sanctions affect not only the junta but also the people, so they should revoke the sanction to sympathize with the Burmese people, Aye Lwin added.

“Sanctions are an obstacle to investment and it is negative in nature. If the head of a family has been pushed aside, negative effects will impact his family members,” he said.

Though Win Tin accepts the fact that sanctions can affect the ordinary people, it hurts the junta more, he felt. “Watering a burning house is not enough, sometimes we need to tear and break bamboo walls and roofs,” he said.

London based Burma Campaign (UK), the organization fighting for democracy in Burma, also welcomed the EU’s decision. They said if EU revokes the sanction, the junta will have the opportunity to abuse human rights more freely.

The EU statement welcomed and supported the report of Qunitana, the United Nations human rights envoy to Burma. They urged cooperation with the UN envoy. In Quintana’s report, he urged the UN to consider establishing a Commission of Inquiry into war crimes and crimes against humanity by the Burmese military junta.
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The Irrawaddy - Experts Warn of Cyclones, Storms in Burma
By KHAING THWE - Wednesday, April 28, 2010


RANGOON—People along Burma's western coastal areas should pay close attention to weather reports of cyclones and storms in the Bay of Bengal during the early monsoon season in April and May, experts have warned.

Meteorologist Htun Lwin said government authorities will soon release announcements regarding storm precautions.

“Storms will form as usual this monsoon season,” said Htun Lwin, the former director general of the Department of Meteorology and Hydrology. “We just need to watch if they will enter Burma.”

A state-run newspaper, The Mirror, recently carried an article written by Chit Kyaw that warned about storms in April and May.

Life-threatening storms broke out 32 times in April during the past 100 years, with 15 striking Burma's coast, the article said. It said storms broke out 92 times in May over the past 122 years, with 27 striking the coast.

The article stressed that storms this time of the year can be very powerful because of the heat rising in the air during hot season.

“Every storm will not come straight towards Burma's coast,” Chit Kyaw said, noting that they frequently change course and head for other South Asia countries.
Htun Lwin, however, said Burmese in coastal areas should stay alert and exercise caution.

“According to the record, nearly 50 percent of the storms in April in the Bay of Bengal hit the country. This is not a small amount,” said Htun Lwin.

Burma was hit by storms before the rainy season in 2006, 2007 and 2008, successively.

In 2008, Cyclone Nargis devastated the country, killing more than 100,000 people and leaving millions homeless.

Meanwhile, the Washington-based Human Rights Watch has called for renewed international pressure on the Burmese government to gain the release of imprisoned local aid workers and other political prisoners and to ensure humanitarian aid reaches the entire country.

“Two years after one of the world’s worst natural disasters, local aid workers still feel the brunt of continued repression by the military authorities,” said Elaine Pearson, the deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Intense international pressure pushed the military government to open the door to foreign aid agencies, but Burma’s generals have kept it shut for domestic critics, many of whom remain in prison for speaking out for fellow citizens in need.”

The 102-page report, “‘I Want to Help My Own People’: State Control and Civil Society in Burma after Cyclone Nargis,” based on 135 interviews with cyclone survivors, aid workers and other eyewitnesses, details the Burmese military government’s response to Nargis and its implications for human rights and development in Burma, It describes the government’s attempts to block assistance in a desperate three- week period after the cyclone hit and the concerted response from increasingly assertive Burmese civil society groups to overcome governmental restrictions to providing assistance.

The report details continuing violations of rights to free expression, association and movement against Burmese aid workers and their organizations. In the months following the cyclone, the Burmese regime arrested scores of Burmese activists and journalists who publicly spoke out about the government’s poor response to Nargis. More than 20 people active in cyclone relief efforts remain in prison, including one of Burma’s most popular comedians, Zargana, who received a 35-year prison sentence.

In the face of the government’s callous response, Burmese civil society groups and individuals raised money, collected supplies and traveled to the badly hit areas of the Irrawaddy Delta to help survivors in shattered villages.
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DVB News - Gry Larsen: ‘The UN has its limits’
By THAN WIN HTUT
Published: 28 April 2010

Norwegian state secretary Gry Larsen visited Burma last week where she met with both government officials and opposition groups, and travelled to the country’s dry zone.

Norway remains one of the leading funders of exiled media and pro-democracy groups, and was one of the first country’s to open its doors to Burmese political refugees following the 1988 uprising.

Asked what she thought of a UN commission of enquiry into war crimes in Burma, Larsen warned of limitations of the security council, whilst urging the international community to unite in its approach to Burma.

What is your assessment of the situation in Burma?

The elections need to be free, fair and inclusive, and it’s important that the regime takes steps now to ensure that they will be free. I had meeting with the NLD [National League for Democracy party] and I respected their decision not to re-register and take part in the elections; I also respect other democratic voices in Burma who say they want to stand and see these elections as not free and fair but as a step.

Are you optimistic about the elections?

The elections laws that have been passed are not meeting international standards when it comes to free and fair elections and therefore I think it’s important that the international community has a strong voice towards the regime about freeing political prisoners, about freeing Aung San Suu Kyi and making sure there is freedom of press and freedom of assembly. Just having an election doesn’t make you a democratic state – it’s also the process towards the elections and what happens afterwards, and the will of the people must be respected.

Do you feel the elections give a window of opportunity?

I’m not saying that; some people inside Burma are saying that these elections could be a window of opportunity, that this is the first election that has been held in Burma for 20 years, and that it’s a step that can be in the right direction, but I think it’s too early to say.

You’ve also said that one should engage with the person in the driving seat. What do you feel the direction will be?

I think that in the international debate, which has been one of either sanctions or dialogue, it’s important to have both. You can have sanctions and dialogue at the same time – sticks and carrots. Therefore that’s why I say that the Burmese regime is at a crossroads – they have to decide. If they decide to take a democratic path and hold free and fair elections, the international community will respond to that. But we need to see them take some steps before they do respond.

What is Norway’s approach towards addressing poverty in Burma?

After cyclone Nargis international organisations and Norwegian organisations have been working on the humanitarian field inside Burma. That’s making sure that people get shelter and go to school. We will continue to give humanitarian aid to Burma, but not just in the delta – in other areas of the country that have humanitarian challenges. I went to the dry zone myself and saw that the local farmers are struggling.

Were you able to visit the ethnic areas?

I didn’t ask to visit the ethnic areas. The humanitarian organisations cannot operate so freely in those areas and I think that that’s one issue that we need to discuss. I raised the issue of ethnic minorities with the Burmese authorities. My visit was one of the first political visits from Norway in a long time; I think that’s the right approach, that we broaden our contacts in Burma, both with the regime and the NLD and different civil organisations, and we will continue to do that.

What is Norway’s position on the UN human rights rapporteur’s proposal to have a war crimes investigation done on Burma?

Right now we are focusing on what is going to happen now until the elections so a lot of the international attention is on making sure the elections will be more free and fair than it seems that they’re going to be. We need to be honest about the fact that it’s going to be very hard to get an agreement in the UN security council on this issue, but it’s important that Burmese authorities cooperate with the UN and allow UN representatives to operate freely within the country so they can monitor the situation themselves.

Do you have a benchmark for engagement with the regime?

It’s very difficult to set a timeframe for this. What is important is that the international community always tries to discuss whether it is taking the right approach and achieving what it wants to achieve. The past 20 years have shown us that we haven’t achieved what we wanted to achieve and now I believe that it’s important that the international community speaks with one voice, that we have carrots and sticks. But it’s not the international community that needs to decide – it’s the Burmese authorities that need to decide what path they want to walk. If they want to walk the democratic path, then the international community will follow up on that.
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DVB News - Burmese blogger wins top US award
By FRANCIS WADE
Published: 28 April 2010


Imprisoned Burmese blogger Nay Phone Latt, whose role in disseminating news of the September 2007 uprising in Burma won him international applaud, has received the prestigious PEN/Barbara Goldsmith award.

Speaking prior the award ceremony last night in New York, PEN president Kwame Anthony Appiah said that Nay Phone Latt, who was arrested in January 2008 and sentenced to 20 years in prison, “represents a younger generation of Burmese who are longing for freedom and willing to pay the cost of speaking out in its defense”.

According to news alerts following his sentencing, the 29-year-old was arrested for posting satirical cartoons of Burmese junta chief Than Shwe on his blog. The charge of “causing public alarm” accounted for two of 20 years he is to spend in prison.

He was also a prolific writer, and posted regular articles during the so-called Saffron Revolution in 2007 that partly compensated for the media blackout enforced by the regime. Burma has one of the most draconian media environments in the world, and journalists are regularly given painfully long sentences.

Aye Aye Than, the mother of Nay Phone Latt, told DVB today that he was already aware of the honour via someone who visited him in prison, and that “he was very happy to win this literature award because that is what he is fond of.”

“He didn’t attack or criticise or denounce anyone on his blog. I have no regret about his blogging,” she said, adding that she last visited him on 1 April and “he was in good health”.

Burma ranked 171 out of 175 countries in the Reporters Without Borders’ Press Freedom Index. Appiah, a Ghanaian novelist and philosopher, also lamented the fact that internet censorship had become “one of the great threats to free expression today”.

“That Nay Phone Latt is also a poet reminds us that every society speaks with the voice of the imagination as well as through its non-fiction writers. We honor him. We thank him. We ask all who have any influence on the government of Burma to press for his release.”

The Burmese junta is expected to intensify its crackdown on journalists in the run-up to elections this year. Around 14 media workers are currently behind bars, some serving sentences of up to 35 years. Nay Phone Latt had been given no legal representation during his trial due to his lawyer being imprisoned the week before.

Fellow Burmese activist, comedian and part-journalist, Zarganar, was last year honoured with the PEN/Pinter award for ‘imprisoned writers of courage’ – Zarganar was sentenced in November 2008 to 59 years, later reduced to 35 years, after giving interviews to foreign media in which he criticized the Burmese junta’s reaction to cyclone Nargis in May 2008.

PEN, which advocates for global freedom of expression, is the world’s oldest human rights organisation and the oldest international literary organisation.
Myanmar ministers to resign from military: government source
By Aung Hla Tun – Tue Apr 27, 3:26 am ET

YANGON (Reuters) – At least 20 ministers in Myanmar's ruling junta will resign from the military this week to become civilian politicians ahead of this year's election, a government official said on Tuesday.

"So far as I heard, about 20 ministers ... and some deputy ministers will officially give up their military positions effective this week," a government official told Reuters by telephone from the capital, Naypyitaw.

"However, they will remain in their present cabinet positions for some time," added the official, who requested anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

Among those due to resign from their army posts will be Prime Minister Thein Sein, the official said.

The move means the ministers could potentially take parliamentary seats not included in the 25 percent quota allocated to serving armed forces personnel.

The general election, a date for which has not yet been set, has been widely dismissed as a move by the military to extend its five-decade hold on power by creating a facade of civilian rule.

Under the 2008 constitution passed in a disputed referendum, the armed forces chief will still be the country's most powerful figure and key ministries will remain under military control.

Analysts say the legislature will act only as a rubber stamp for the military's policies and will be dominated by the army and its civilian proxies, with independent lawmakers in the minority and largely powerless.

"It's just part of the military's attempt to secure its grip on state power in the post-election period," a retired senior civil servant said of the resignations from the military. He also requested anonymity.

So far, 19 organizations have requested permission to form political parties to run in the election. Five have been given the go-ahead, most of them believed to be close to the junta.

Only four of the existing 10 parties have applied. The deadline for registration is May 6.

The National League for Democracy (NLD), which won the last election in 1990 by a landslide but was denied the chance to rule, announced last month it would boycott this year's polls.

It complained the election rules were unjust and would exclude most of its top politicians, including detained Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, the charismatic NLD leader who analysts say heavily influenced the decision.

The county's biggest party said it would continue to fight for Myanmar's people, even after its dissolution. Many analysts say the move could backfire, playing into the hands of the generals who have long fought to minimize the NLD's influence.
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Pariah states show warm, fuzzy side at Shanghai Expo
by D'Arcy Doran – Mon Apr 26, 11:33 pm ET

SHANGHAI (AFP) – Wags are already calling it "Axis of Evil Square" -- a corner of Shanghai's World Expo where the North Korean and Iranian pavilions put on a friendly face to the world.

The Expo opening Saturday features a line-up like never before as Chinese allies seen as pariahs in the West -- including Myanmar and Sudan -- join other states trying to show off their accomplishments.

The list shows the wide spectrum of 192 countries that China has brought together for the largest World's Fair yet, attracting every country with diplomatic ties with Beijing except the principality of Andorra.

"I don?t know the name of Expo 2010?s Master Planner, but I?m sure that -- whoever it is -- has a good sense of humour," Shanghai blogger Adam Minter wrote of the pairing of the North Korean and Iranian pavilions as neighbours.

The pavilion of the United States -- which is spearheading efforts to rid North Korea of its nuclear capability and halt a suspect Iranian nuclear programme -- is at the opposite end of the site, with China's in between.

It marks the first time North Korea has participated in an Expo. Its pavilion will celebrate the nation's history, culture, folk customs and modern buildings, the official Xinhua news agency said.

It also plans to shed light on life in the secretive country using sculpture, pictures and video.

"The 2010 Shanghai World Expo will be the most sweeping World Expo ever held," the vice chairman of North Korea's Chamber of Commerce, Ri Song Un, told Xinhua last month, adding it would be a chance to work with other countries.

The Pyongyang Art Troupe will take centre stage on the Expo's North Korea Day on September 6, performing fan, drum, and "small bell" dances.

Iran, meanwhile, will display a collection of 152 Persian paintings, photos of its Islamic Revolution and a poster collection focusing on the "environment and mankind", the Tehran Times wrote last week.

The pavilion will also feature video art projects and Pardehkhani, or curtain-reading, in which story-tellers recount tales depicted on a painted curtain, the report said.

"Iran will present the civilization of its cities," Iranian consul-general Mohammad Reza Nazeri said in comments on the official Expo website.

Myanmar, also known as Burma, is another largely isolated country heavily dependent on ties with China that aims to use the Expo to give visitors a taste of life inside its borders.

It will use "advanced display methods to introduce local customs, rich resources and brilliant culture of Myanmar," according to the Expo website.

The theme of Sudan's exhibition will be "City and Peace", promoting the war-torn country as a quiet and harmonious place.

A multimedia area will show films on the Naivasha Agreement, or Comprehensive Peace Agreement, that was signed in 2005 and ended a two-decade north-south civil war, the longest in Africa, after the loss of 1.5 million lives.

The peace deal remains fragile, and in a separate conflict, fighting continues in the western Darfur region, where civil war since 2003 has killed some 300,000 people and displaced another 2.7 million, according to UN figures.
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Sin Chew Jit Poh - Four wounded in grenade attack at Myanmar power project
2010-04-27 17:33

YANGON, April 27 (AFP) - A series of grenade blasts hit a hydropower project in Myanmar Tuesday, wounding four workers in the latest unrest in the military-ruled country, officials said.

The attacks occurred at the Thaukyegat hydropower plant under construction in Bago Division, about 220 kilometres (137 miles) northeast of the country's main city Yangon, a local official told AFP.

"Four workers were injured during three grenade attacks at the Thaukyegat hydropower project site," the official said, asking not to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the media.

The Myanmar company behind the project, Asia World Construction, was also involved in a controversial dam project in Kachin State where there was a series of bombs blasts earlier this month, injuring one engineer.

Three other bombs on April 15 hit a water festival in Yangon, in the city's worst attack in five years. The death toll from that attack has now risen to 10 people, with at least 170 people wounded.

Myanmar authorities have arrested some suspects in their search for the perpetrators of those blasts, officials said, but they did not give any further detail as the investigation is still underway.

Myanmar has been hit by several bomb blasts in recent years which the junta has blamed on armed exile groups or ethnic rebels.

The latest attacks come as the country prepares for elections planned for this year, which critics have dismissed as a sham due to the effective barring of opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi because she is a serving prisoner.

The military has ruled Myanmar since 1962, partly justifying its grip on power by the need to fend off ethnic rebellions that have plagued remote border areas for decades.

Armed minorities in Karen and Shan states continue to fight the government along the country's eastern border, alleging they are subject to neglect and mistreatment.
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Epoch Times - The Saffron Revolution Caught on Film: 'Burma VJ' Debuts on HBO
A chat with ‘Burma VJ’ filmmaker Anders Østengaard
By Masha Savitz
Epoch Times Staff Created: Apr 26, 2010 Last Updated: Apr 26, 2010


Risking their lives to expose the truth, the documentary Burma VJ captures, firsthand, the deadly serious matter of censorship in the repressive Burmese military regime. This Oscar-nominated film debuts April 20 on HBO.

In what has become known as the Saffron Revolution, thousands of peaceful Buddhist monks took to the streets of Rangoon to protest the brutal military rule of the State Peace and Development Council, in September 2007.

As foreign news crews were banned from entering the country, and the Internet was shut down, the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), a small and courageous network of underground video reporters, recorded the remarkable events as they escalated. The often shaky and raw footage was then snuck out of Burma into Oslo, Norway, where it was disseminated to major news stations across the globe.

On a phone interview from Copenhagen, I spoke with Anders Østengaard, the innovative filmmaker who transformed the raw footage from camcorders and cellular phones into the award-winning documentary. He explained how he got involved in the project and the artistic challenges that he faced in bringing the story forward.

Long before the uprising, Østengaard tells me that he saw a real need for a documentary to be made about Burma, specifically because of the lack of media coverage allowed from within the country.

It was the producer, Lise Lense Moller, who initiated the project—“I was interested but not committed,” said the Danish filmmaker with a deep and resonant voice. “I came to this project first as a filmmaker and later as an activist.”

“It was quite modest at the beginning,” Østengaard acknowledges of the initial concept. Given the perilous situation in Burma, the project was seemingly impossible—the idea was nearly aborted.

“In that process we discovered that the DVB was in Oslo—we got in touch with them in 2007.”

As things became tense in Burma, however, Østengaard had to break communication. “I kept quite a distance from them during the uprising—they were busy and it was too dangerous.”

It was a number of months after the uprising, in 2008, that the filmmaking team met up with the DVB. “We met up with them afterwards to piece the story together. “We had already had the contact, connection, and mutual trust,” said Østengaard.

“It was incredible,” explains Østengaard, of suddenly being in the midst of groundbreaking footage of the Saffron Revolution.

The first challenge of acquiring rare footage was accomplished. Now it was up to Østengaard to create a cohesive and compelling film.

Because of the sensitive nature of the documentary, however, people’s anonymity had to be preserved and protected. Østengaard had to therefore invent a new way of telling the story—a creative solution to the very real political limitations with potentially severe consequences.

The film therefore employs reenactments, which were shot in Thailand, focusing on cell phone conversations.

The next creative challenge facing Østengaard was “how to give a second life to the material, because it had all been on the news.”

He knew he had to have a different approach—one that gave the background story to this footage. The solution, Østengaard said, evolved organically. Because he had been involved in the personal stories of the reporters, he “combined the large story of the uprising with the story of the reporters.”

“I am very interested in first person story telling, how they look at the world,” Østengaard explains, which was enhanced with telling the story of video reporters, “they are looking at it through a camera—very physically looking at it.”

Østengaard concluded our conversation offering a philosophical perspective and overview, “It’s existential,” he said, “recording to feel alive.”

At present, the DVB is slowly being rebuilt, as new reporters are being recruited and trained in camera and safety.

While the regime brutally cracked down on the Buddhist monks with imprisonment and torture, the struggle for freedom and democracy continues.

Since 2007, hundreds of monks have fled Burma, seeking asylum in the United States, continuing to raise awareness about the non-violent struggle for democracy and human rights.
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VOA News - Activists Hold Little Hope for 2010 Elections in Burma
Laurel Bowman 26 April 2010


Burma is now preparing for elections at the state, regional and national level. But the country's much-criticized election laws prompted the main opposition party to opt out, leaving many activists disheartened and disgruntled.

This is how Burmese, pro-democracy advocates living in India reacted to new election rules in Burma. The rules essentially bar Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and other opposition leaders from running.

"Because General Than Shwe led by military government they are cheating the people," said one protester.

Burma's ruling military junta says it will hold free and fair elections this year for the first time in two decades. Priscilla Clapp, the former mission chief at the U.S. Embassy in Burma, says that while elections are a step in the right direction, Burma's constitution finalized in 2008 ensures strong control by the military.

"Many senior military leaders have resigned and they are already out campaigning," said Priscilla Clapp.

Burma's constitution bars political prisoners from running for office. The iconic Aung San Suu Kyi heads the main opposition party, the National League for Democracy or NLD, but she has been under house arrest for 14 of the last 20 years. Her party has opted out.

"How can the NLD in good conscience register themselves as a political party and participate in these elections when all of their leaders who have suffered so heavily for their engagement would be precluded from engaging with this new government," said Jared Genser.

Washington attorney Jared Genser is Aung San Suu Kyi's international counsel. He has a lot to say about the junta's upcoming elections, none of it good.

"I think they learned their lesson from 1990 when they actually allowed for a free and fair election and lost in a landslide and they are not going to allow that sort of thing to happen again," he said.

Genser is the president of Freedom Now, a group in Washington that works for the release of political prisoners worldwide. He recently helped to secure freedom for Burmese-born American Kyaw Zaw Lwin, also known as Nyi Nyi Aung. The pro-democracy activist was arrested in September in Rangoon where he traveled to visit his sick mother.

"I am seeing people dying in front of me without any water or any treatments," said Nyi Nyi Aung.

Nyi Nyi Aung says most Burmese feel the junta's elections are a sham, reminiscent of the elections in 1990, when the military refused to relinquish power despite losses at the polls. He says democracy's best hope is constant, steady pressure from the international community.

"In my case when the U.S. government requests to the regime for my release and right now I am sitting in front of Congress and I am in the United States and I am free," he said.

Nyi Nyi Aung and other Burmese pro-democracy advocates say the United States has less leverage on Burma, following years of economic sanctions. Last year, the Obama administration announced a new policy toward Burma of pragmatic engagement. Analysts say the junta still responds to international criticism, but that China, India and Burma's other allies within the Association of South East Asian Nations should be at the table for any dialogue on national reconciliation.
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The Nation - Padaeng Industry gearing up for Laos, Burma
Published on April 28, 2010


Zinc miner Padaeng Industry is witnessing progress on its new concessions in Laos and Burma while preparing for the orderly shutdown of its Mae Sot mine in 2016, when it will reach the end of its commercial viability.

Managing director Andre van der Heyden on Monday said the Lao concession would be a major project for the company over the next few years.

"Already the company has |started exploration work in the northern part of Vientiane province. Results from the initial drilling suggested high potential of deposits of one million tonnes of zinc ore," he said.

The company has acquired the operating rights to a mine located in Burma near Mae Sot district and operations are expected to commence this year, van der Heyden told the annual shareholders' meeting.

Land remediation work on the Mae Sot site began in 2003, with more than 13 million shoots of vetiver grass planted in areas where mining activities had ceased.

This makes the Mae Sot mine one of the largest growers of vetiver grass in the Kingdom. Vetiver grass, which helps prevent soil erosion and enhances soil improvement for agricultural use, is first used as a pilot plant to rehabilitate the soil before growing perennial plants, thereby reviving a once-mined area.

The company posted a consolidated first-quarter net profit of Bt296 million, up from Bt265 million in the same period last year. Shareholders approved a dividend of 92 satang a share.
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Bangkok Post - Burma niche beckons developers
Published: 26/04/2010 at 10:40 AM
Newspaper section: Business


The property market in Burma has high growth potential, especially after general elections are held and with the support of new economic networks in the region, according to the Bangkok-based developer Fragrant Property.

James Duan, CEO of Fragrant Group, a developer of The Prime 11 and Circle condominiums in Bangkok, acknowledged that the market in Burma was not typical of the region. He said it was not driven by income growth among a large group of people but by high-income investors making up only around 2% of total population.

Also helping the market, he said, was the limitation of investment choices in Burma, mainly gold and land.

However, Mr Duan said regional free trade would become a factor as property is a fundamental industry for economic development, especially in the service sector, led by tourism.

"Co-operation in Asean is expected to generate a higher number of new investors to enter the property sector in Burma. Thus residential property for medium and low-end consumers should generate higher demand," he said. "This is also helped by the lack of supply. . . . It's a good opportunity for foreign developers including Thais to start research there for business expansion."

Currently, foreigners are not allowed to own land in Burma but can join with local and private investors or the government in build-operate-transfer agreements. These allow private investors to raise funds and handle design, construction and operations before transferring the property to the government.

Total foreign shareholdings must be at least 35% of a venture's total value while the minimum investment is US$500,000 for the industrial sector and $300,000 in the service sector.

Mr Duan also acknowledged that investors in Burma should be concerned about the political factor. In the past, he said, foreign investors faced a relatively low risk in Burma's real estate market when compared to other sectors controlled by the military regime.

Meanwhile, his company is continuing its promotion of Thailand as well.

"Fragrant will continue to stage roadshows under the concept, 'Bangkok Your Second Home' in various countries in Asean and the Asian region to draw foreign investors to the Kingdom," he said.

The company held its first roadshow in Burma at the end of last year and received a great deal of attention. "We are considering another roadshow in the country and the plan is expected to be finalised soon."
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DVB News - Singapore mentors Burma in sham elections
By SEELAN PALAY
Published: 27 April 2010


As preparations for the sham elections in Burma get into full swing, it is not difficult to notice similarities in electoral practices between the Burmese generals in uniform and Singapore’s leaders in civilian clothes.

The Burmese regime is bending over backwards to stage the fraudulent elections while refusing to respect the results of the country’s polls in 1990 that led to the landslide victory for the National League for Democracy (NLD).

Why reinvent the wheel, when what happened two decades ago remains unfulfilled? The same military that massacred thousands of innocent civilians, including Buddhist monks, is now pretending that everything is hunky-dory.

It is an undeniable fact that the military regime holds close economic ties to Singapore – the top brass of the Burmese army are known to have parked their ill-gotten millions in Singapore’s banks, while they and their family members own properties in upmarket areas and their children go to top schools and drive flashy cars, flaunting their wealth to the envy of ordinary Singaporeans.

Burmese drug lords who are banned from entering the US freely come and go in Singapore and some even have offices in the posh commercial district along Shenton Way. It is no wonder that Singapore is the third largest investor in Burma, helping to prop up the pariah regime.

Singapore has even named a hybrid Orchid, its national flower, after the Burmese prime minister, General Thein Sein. Orchids in the same Singapore Botanical Gardens were previously named after Princess Diana and Nelson Mandela.

The similarities between Burma and Singapore do not stop there. The election process in Singapore is as opaque as it is in Naypyidaw, the new capital of the Burmese regime. Although Singapore claims to hold periodical elections to legitimise the rule of the People’s Action Party (PAP), the exercise itself is highly questionable.

To start with, there is no independent elections commission. Only a department that comes under the Prime Minister’s Office that decides on last-minute boundary delineation, exorbitant deposits for candidates (presently $US9,900 but expected to be raised to $US11,000 in the next election), and other regular gerrymandering practices, including what is known as the Group Representation Constituencies (GRC).

This so-called electoral system has led to almost half of the seats in parliament being uncontested on Nomination Day. Presently, Singapore’s ‘parliament’ has 84 MPs, of which 82 are from Lee Kuan Yew’s PAP. And that is “democratic elections” in Singapore for you!

The paradox of Singapore’s elections is that the electorate, some of whom are nearing their 50s, have never voted in their entire lives. This so-called anomaly is glaring in Singapore, where voting is compulsory under the Parliamentary Elections Act.

With all these well-entrenched undemocratic practices, it is not surprising to even a distant observer to understand how the ruling PAP has been in power since 1959.

What is worse is the irrefutable reality in Singapore that one man, by the name of Lee Kuan Yew, has been in power for the last 51 years. The octogenarian Lee, who is now 87 years old, calls himself Minister Mentor in the cabinet headed by his prime minster son, Lee Hsien Loong.

Compare this to the reality in Burma where the army generals have held sway since the 1962 coup, ousting the democratically elected government of U Nu. Even against this, Lee Kuan Yew’s grip on power extends longer by three years, but he continues to claim that elections in his republic are based on the Westminster model of democracy.

Anyone who believes in democratic values could easily see that it is next to impossible to continue to have a one-party dominated parliament in the name of freedom and democracy. Obviously the uniformed generals are under tutelage by the authoritarian regime in Singapore, clad in civilian clothes.

While the Burmese generals continue to not recognise the results of the 1990 elections, preparations are in full swing to hold yet another elections based on its 2008 constitution, aimed at hoodwinking the people. Singapore too is notorious for amending its constitution just before every general election to give a legal facade to what is clearly an illegitimate exercise.

The Burmese generals also appear to have been keen and obedient students to their teacher, Singapore. Burmese intelligence agents are known to visit on a routine basis to study the latest electronic eavesdropping gadgets for their surveillance of Burmese political dissidents, including the NLD leaders.

The recent announcement by NLD to boycott the army-orchestrated sham elections is the right move. How can the elections be legitimate when NLD’s leader, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, remains under house arrest and barred from taking part? Singapore too, has a history of barring genuine opposition leaders who were daring enough to challenge, through constitutional means, the regime of Lee Kuan Yew.

Victims of Lee’s political vendetta include prominent figures such as the late J B Jeyaretnam, Singapore’s former solicitor-general Mr Francis Seow (now in exile in the US), Singapore’s leading corporate lawyer Mr Tang Liang Hong (now in exile in Australia), and Dr Chee Soon Juan, who remains bankrupted and unable to stand for elections.

These are well-known democrats who stood up against Lee Kuan Yew, who had openly declared in 2003 that: “If we had considered them serious political figures, we would not have kept them politically alive for so long. We could have bankrupted them earlier.” Is this not what the generals in Burma are doing while loudly proclaiming to the world that there will be “free and fair” elections in the country before the end of the year?

While Singapore leaders are shedding crocodile tears and sermonizing the Burmese generals on the need for free and fair elections, is it not appropriate for them to look at their own backyard?

When Singapore’s Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong met the Burmese generals, including Than Shwe, last year, he urged them not to allow the ongoing trial of Suu Kyi to affect the national reconciliation process and to make sure that the proposed elections are free and fair.

It is better for Goh to take a hard look at himself in the mirror: he will then be able to see the ugly features that include a well-documented law providing for indefinite detention without trial, under which detainees are subject to regular physical and mental torture. It is also common in Singapore to prosecute opposition politicians for speaking in public and distributing flyers; laws that are no different from the Burmese junta.

Goh Chok Tong’s “advice” is double-speak at best. What right has he got to advise the generals when the same despicable acts are committed at every election in Singapore? Are elections in Singapore free and fair in the first place? Is the media in Singapore free and pluralistic for the voters to be informed before they go to the polls to choose their representatives to parliament?

Burma’s media laws are the strictest in the world, and so are Singapore’s, the most notorious being the Newspapers and Printing Presses Act that gives sweeping powers, including the appointment of editors to the 14 daily newspapers that are all under the control of the PAP government. Burma is ranked 171 out of 175 countries in the recent Reporters Without Borders’ Press Freedom Index. Singapore is also in the miserable position of 133, several ranks below that of even Angola and Congo.

The Singapore Press Holdings, whose chairman was a former deputy prime minister, runs all the newspapers of which its flagship daily is the Straits Times. It’s a known fact that intelligence operatives masquerade as reporters and journalists in Singapore’s media scene. The Straits Times has its equivalent in Burma, the New Light of Myanmar, which is nothing but a mouthpiece of the military regime.

Similarities between the autocratic rule in Singapore and the equally notorious regime in Burma are endless. Learning from Singapore on how to perpetuate one-party rule through sham elections is a natural progression for Burma under the bloodthirsty generals.

Seelan Palay is an artist and activist from Singapore. He works with Free Burma Campaign Singapore and blogs here.
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DVB News - Ethnic alliance ‘to step up resistance’
By MAUNG TOO
Published: 27 April 2010


An alliance of eight armed ethnic groups in Burma known as the National Democratic Front (NDF) has said that it is preparing to defend itself if escalating tensions with the Burmese army result in civil war.

The comment comes as the Burmese government piles pressure on ethnic ceasefire groups to transform into Border Guard Forces (BGF). The country’s two main ceasefire groups, the United Wa State Army (UWSA) and the Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO), are resisting the demands, which could spark widespread fighting, while the New Mon State Party (NMSP) last week flatly rejected the proposal.

“NDF member groups engaged in the armed struggle will step up resistance against the [government’s] political pressure in their territories,” said NDF general secretary Mai Phone Kyaw.

The eight-member group includes the NMSP, as well as the Karen National Union (KNU), whose 60-year conflict with the Burmese government is one of the world’s longest-running.

“We will cooperate with groups in upper, central and lower Burma if ceasefire agreements [with the government] are broken in one of our areas,” said Mai Phone Kyaw. “The flames of the civil war in Burma will grow larger if [the ethnic groups] continue to be pressured to transform when their basic rights are not yet granted.”

The junta has threatened to use force against groups that refuse the transformation, a move it hopes will consolidate its support base prior to elections this year. Many of the ceasefire agreements were signed decades ago and are looking increasingly tenuous.

Mai Phone Kyaw said that if force is used, “our armed groups will launch attacks systemically across the country”.

The NSMP’s rejection has sparked an exodus of Mon refugees to a camp along the Thai-Burma border, who have fled as the Burmese army increases its presence close to NMSP territory in central Burma.
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DVB News - Mass call for Burma gas transparency
By JOSEPH ALLCHIN
Published: 27 April 2010


A grouping of NGOs led by the US-based EarthRights International (ERI) today called on oil giants Total and Chevron to publish the details of contracts they hold with the Burmese junta.

The Petroleum Authority of Thailand Exploration and Production (PTTEP) was also targeted in the initiative, which has received more than 160 signatories. These include labour unions, investment firms, scholars and world leaders, including the former Irish president Mary Robinson and Norwegian prime minister Kjell Magne Bondevik.

“The time for revenue transparency is now,” the head of ERI’s Burma program, Mathew Smith, told a press conference today in Bangkok.

The three companies were involved with the junta’s Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) in building the Yadana gas pipeline that carries natural gas to Thailand, via the Three Gorges Pass, to power Bangkok. The companies initially signed deals with MOGE in 1992.

“They can practice transparency but they’re not,” Smith said of the companies who have refused to disclose revenues to shareholders.

ERI obtained contracts that were submitted as evidence in litigation taken by human rights activists against the companies. Crucially, however, there is nothing in the contracts that would necessitate the companies keeping such details secret.

The panel, made up of Smith and Naing Htoo, both of ERI, and Wong Aung from the Shwe Gas Movement (SGM) advocacy group, noted that the transparency was also good for investors: “Sunshine is the best antiseptic for the extractive industries,” claimed Smith.

A statement from anti-corruption group Transparency International, also a signatory, noted that revenue transparency would “help the companies and their home states avoid the appearance of complicity in mismanagement of the gas revenue generated for the Burmese authorities, which could also raise shareholder value”.

ERI state that “shining a light on this is critical for Burma’s future development, and for the responsible management of the country’s vast resource wealth”. It notes that Burma has the highest poverty levels and lowest social spending in the region.

The group estimates that Total made around $US5 billion worth of profits from when the pipeline went ‘online’ in 2000 and 2008, and they paid the junta $US254 million in 2008 alone.

Naing Htoo became involved in the Yadana campaign after he had to flee his native Karen state following Burmese army operations in the path of the Yadana pipeline. The panel and numerous groups allege that Burmese troops were responsible for rape, pillage and wanton human rights abuses. These were the subject of trials brought against the companies in the United States.

He added that “the people of Burma have a right to know the financial details surrounding the country’s natural resources, including payments made by foreign oil companies”, adding that “these resources could have improved the lives of the people so much”.

The junta spends around $US1.25 per person per year on health and education; more than three times less than they receive from Total alone in a single year.

Such concerns regarding transparency, accountability, corporate practice and human rights are only likely to intensify as the Shwe gas pipeline to China comes closer to completion, expected in 2014.

Smith believes however that transparency from the companies involved with the Yadana project can help to encourage companies such as Daewoo from Korea, China National Petroleum corporation (CNPC) and India’s Oil and Natural Gas Corporation, all of which have deals with the junta, to be more transparent in their respective operations.
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Senator seeks Burmese perspective on US policy
Tuesday, 27 April 2010 18:46
Mungpi

Oklahoma City (Mizzima) – Burmese activists and community leaders in the United States have urged US Senator Richard Lugar to continue pushing for targeted sanctions on Burma’s military rulers, as they say the junta has failed to respond positively to the Obama administration’s new engagement policy, according to a senatorial aide.

Keith Luse, a senior Foreign Relations Committee assistant to Senator Lugar, told Mizzima that Burmese ethnic leaders at a meeting in the senator’s electorate of Indiana state on Sunday had expressed their view that the US should maintain targeted economic sanctions against the regime.

The meeting was held to obtain feedback from Burmese activists and community leaders on the new US-Burma policy, launched by Democrat US President Barack Obama last September, Mr Luse said.

Senator Lugar, a Republican, is the ranking opposition leader on the committee. Democrat Senator John Kerry is the panel’s chairman.

According to Luse, with the Burmese junta not responding positively to the Obama administration’s engagement efforts, the various Burmese ethnic leaders at the meeting said, “Senator Lugar should continue to support sanctions ‘[more targeted against the junta]. And, the senator and Congress should encourage the Obama administration to press the UNSC to act on Burma being referred to the International Criminal Court,” added Luse, who attended the meeting on behalf of Senator Lugar, referring to the United Nations Security Council.

After more than a decade of imposing financial sanctions and diplomatically isolating the Southeast Asian nation, the US last September announced a policy to seek direct engagement with the Burmese military rulers, while maintaining existing sanctions.

US and Burmese officials then held meetings that included a visit by the US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, Dr Kurt Campbell, the highest ranking US official to visit Burma in 14 years.

However, no significant progress was made and the Burmese junta has lately been busy with its election plans, which the US ranks below international standards.

“As you are aware, the Obama administration has embarked on a new Burma policy. Senator Lugar is interested in obtaining feedback from Burmese in Indiana about this new policy approach. Do they agree, or do they have other suggestions?” Luse told Mizzima about the meeting on Sunday.

Fort Wayne, Indiana, is home to about 1,500 Burmese, the largest contingent of Burmese dissidents in the United States. Many were active in student and labour unions and political parties such as the opposition National League for Democracy. They had fled their homeland to escape the oppressive military regime.
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The Irrawaddy - Thein Sein to Head Political Party?
By WAI MOE - Tuesday, April 27, 2010


Burma's Prime Minster Gen Thein Sein and about 20 other ministers are widely reported to be in the process of quitting their military posts to take on leading roles in a new pro-junta political party that will contest the general election this year, sources in Naypyidaw said.

Quoting Burmese officials in the capital, the sources said that Thein Sein and other generals, including: Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation Maj-Gen Htay Oo; Minister of Communications, Posts and Telegraphs Brig-Gen Thein Zaw; and Deputy Minister of Home Affairs Brig-Gen Phone Swe, will head the new party.

Although the ministers will resign from the military, sources said, they will retain their current positions within the government.

Burma's state-run media has to date made no mention of Thein Sein's new role, but ran footage and reports of the general attending a religious ceremony along with junta chief Snr-Gen Than Shwe and other top brass in Naypyidaw on Monday.

However, officials in Naypyidaw do not deny the reports. “You should listen out for the news. Then you'll hear confirmation,” an official from the Government Office in Naypyidaw told The Irrawaddy on Tuesday.

An editor with a private journal in Rangoon said, “As far I know, the news is confirmed. Officials in Naypyidaw told me the government will announce Thein Sein's candidacy in the coming days.”

Speculation among Union Solidarity and Development Association (USDA) members and businessmen in Rangoon is rife that Thein Sein will lead a pro-military party, which could be a proxy of the USDA, sources said, adding that respected civilians among local communities were being sought as candidates for the pro-government party.

An official from the pro-junta civic group, the USDA, told The Irrawaddy on Tuesday that Thein Sein was being groomed by Than Shwe to run as the party leader.

“It sounds very possible,” said Ohn Lwin, a politician in Rangoon whose party, the National Political Alliance, has applied to contest the election. “Gen Thein Sein could lead a party and become the next president.”

Several official sources have recently tipped Thein Sein to play a leading role in a post-election government.

“Following the NLD [the main opposition National League for Democracy] decision not to register as a political party for the election, Snr-Gen Than Shwe has had a change of heart,” said another official. “In his new plan, Gen Thein Sein will be president.

“Alongside Thein Sein, two chiefs at the Bureau of Special Operations, Lt-Gen Myint Swe and Lt-Gen Khin Zaw, will also be on Than Shwe’s list,” he said.

According to the sources, Htay Oo, who is also the current general secretary of the USDA, was previously in Than Shwe's favor as the man to lead the future government.

Htay Oo was reputed to be in favor of presenting a “free and fair” election in front of the international community, however. Sources have said that at a government meeting last year, he advocated “allowing” opposition parties 30 to 40 percent of parliamentary seats.

Businessmen close to the generals are now tipping Lt-Gen Hla Htay Win, the chief of armed forces training and former commander of the Rangoon regional military command, to step into the fold as an important figure in Burma's armed forces.

However, the future of the current No 3 and 4 ranking generals—Gen Shwe Mann, the joint chief of staff and coordinator of special operations (army, navy, air force), and
Gen Tin Aung Myint Oo, the quartermaster-general and junta secretary-1—is now regarded as unsure. The two are reported to be rivals.

Several Burma observers said they were surprised to read state-run reports in the press that Tin Aung Myint Oo was absent from Than Shwe’s religious ceremony in Naypyidaw on Monday. However, Shwe Mann was present.