"If we still believe in ourselves that one day, our country will practice Democracy, wiping out every piece of the current army trash led by General Than Shwe, and we are striving for it no matter what the costs will be, our belief will become the reality."
~Kyal Zin Lin Latt

Tuesday, August 31, 2010


UN hails ‘trusting’ relations with Burma

By DVB

Trust has been built between the UN and the Burmese junta in the two years since cyclone Nargis, a UN representative said at a regional conference on Monday.

That sentiment however has been approached cautiously by the chief of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) bloc, Surin Pitsuwan, who warned that if and when a natural disaster like Nargis strikes again, “we will go to the field together from the very beginning”.

The military generals who have ruled Burma in various guises for nearly half a century were roundly condemned for refusing offers of foreign aid in the wake of the cyclone on 2 May 2008, which killed some 140,000 people and left 2.4 million destitute.

Many of the deaths were attributed to the slow response by the government, as thousands became ill with water-borne diseases that were easily treatable by basic medicines.

But instead as the scale of the catastrophe, one of Asia’s worst recorded natural disasters, became apparent, the junta locked the country’s borders, barring aid workers and journalists from entering the cyclone-stricken Irrawaddy. Numbers of Burmese relief workers who helped bury the victims are now serving lengthy prison sentences.

Several weeks after the cyclone, the Burmese government finally acceded to requests to form a Tripartite Core Group (TCG) with the UN and ASEAN, but earlier this month officially bowed out and brought ongoing relief efforts under the sole jurisdiction of the military generals.

Surin said however that “Myanmar [Burma] has come to realise there is help out there” from the international community, but added that a lot of work still needed to be done by the generals to convince the world that it will cooperate, a contentious scenario given elections later this year that may well cement the status quo in Burma.

“If this…fails, then the world will certainly be very reluctant to continue to work and integrate Myanmar into the international community post-elections…So it is extremely critical, extremely important.”

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma).

My opinion:

US, UN, ASEAN should not have trust in Burma's junta from the start because there is no reason to trust the Burmese junta since his actions and words do not match obviously. No matter how flowery words the junta use or promise, at the end, the junta will do whatever he wants for his only welfare, neglecting the civilians totally. Be aware of that, everyone! Instead of negotiating or giving chance or trusting the junta, we should boycott the junta.

Burma ‘hosting India’s greatest security threat’

By Joseph Allchin

Maoist rebels in India are being trained at bases inside Burma run by a Northeast Indian insurgent group, Indian press has reported.

The Maoist rebels, known as the Naxalites, are collaborating with the Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) of Manipur, the Indian state which borders northwestern Burma, the Asian Age newspaper said yesterday.

It cited a Director General of Police conference given in New Delhi last week that focused on a growing “nexus” between the two groups and allegations that the Naxalite leader Kishenij has visited Manipur to meet with the PLA and “succeeded in sending a batch of Maoist cadres to Burma for arms training recently”.

The Naxalites have their heartland in the belt running from the Nepali frontier down through Bengal, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and into Andhra Pradesh; areas with a large proportion of tribal peoples, or Adivasis.

The conference was reportedly dominated by “serious concern” about the Maoist-Manipuri nexus, which regional analyst Bertil Lintner, who visited the area earlier this year, “absolutely” corroborated when contacted by DVB.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in his first term in office called the Maoist insurgents India’s greatest security threat; the rebels are believed to be active in a third of the country’s districts, and were allegedly behind an attack on a high-speed Indian train in May this year which killed upwards of 100 people.

The northeastern states of India, many of which border Burma, form a fractious and trouble-prone region, with numerous ethnic separatist groups fighting for independence from India.

As in Burma, the combination of ethnic diversity and geographical remoteness has formed a formidable obstacle to attempts by the central government in Delhi to pacify the region.

The Naxalites nearer the central plains of the subcontinent have had a significant year in terms of military victories, with two major successes on the battlefield against beleaguered and ill-equipped Indian security services, including an ambush in which almost 80 Indian security personnel were killed.

The wellspring of the Naxalites has been their disenfranchised support base, the Adivasis and lower castes. These are groupings for whom the economic miracle, which Prime Minister Manmmohan Singh has embodied in India, has all but failed, with land taken for mining projects and few, if any, improvements in living standards.

There is also a continual fear from Delhi of Chinese influence over the region, much of which is still claimed by Beijing. In July the BBC reported alleged links between the United Wa State Army (UWSA), Burma’s largest ethnic army, and the Naxalites, with UWSA-made clones of Chinese weaponry making it into their hands.

Lintner confirmed to DVB that the PLA, which has no intrinsic relation to the Chinese army of the same acronym, is believed to have bases in the Kabaw Valley in Burma’s northwestern Sagaing division and was trained by the Chinese in Lhasa in the 1980s. Indeed so were the UWSA, who have strong ethnic and historical links to their northern neighbour, being former communist allies of Beijing before the Communist Party of Burma (CPB) disintegrated in 1989.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Joseph Allchin.

My opinion:

This is a terrible news that Burma hosts India's greatest security threat. I don't know what the Burmese junta has secretive plan or treaty with India. But, I do know that the junta is crazy. What if these threats do something bad to Burmese civilians?

Friday, August 27, 2010


Shwe Mann quits ‘to become Burma president’

By DVB

The Burmese junta’s third-in-command, General Shwe Mann, has retired from his post in preparation for taking the top position after elections this year, government sources say.

The Joint Chief-of-Staff privately announced his retirement to senior cabinet members last night, and becomes the latest top-level junta official to step down from the military to pursue a ministerial position in post-election Burma.

It is rumoured that the retirement from the military of Senior General Than Shwe and vice-chairperson Maung Aye will shortly follow, an official at Burma’s foreign ministry told DVB on condition of anonymity.

Current Burmese prime minister, Thein Sein, will become the new vice president, while Than Shwe and Maung Aye will become the official president and vice president of the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which is currently headed by Prime Minister Thein Sein, who quit his military post in April. The two however will play no official role in the government or army, but instead act as patrons of the party.

The USDP has been widely tipped to win controversial elections slated for 7 November, and the foreign ministry official said that the party may stay in power for two terms, equating to 10 years.

It is not known who will take the place of the 77-year-old Than Shwe as army chief, but the current Chief of Bureau of Special Operation – 2, Min Aung Hlaing, will be promoted to Adjutant General, the official said, ranking at around sixth in the military hierarchy.

Thein Htay, who heads Defence Industry 1 and who accompanied Shwe Mann on a top-secret visit to North Korea in 2008, will become Chief of Military Ordinance, while Wai Lwin, from the Regional Military Command, will become Quartermaster General.

A number of other senior Regional Military Command members have also been promoted: Light Infantry Division (LID) 33 commander Aung Kyaw Zaw becomes the Northeastern Regional Military Commander (RMC), while LID 88 commander, whose name is not known, will become the Southern RMC. LID 99 commander Khin Maung Htay will become the Coastal Region Military Commander, and LID 101 commmander Sein Win has been transferred to the ministry of foreign affairs. The previous RMCs have all been moved to the Bureau of Special Operations (BSO) to replace their predecessors who have now retired.

The government has stipulated that no one older than 60 shall serve as the commander-in-chief of Burma’s 500,000-strong army, who’s various leaders have ruled the Southeast Asian pariah since a coup in 1962.

The Burmese junta has launched a wholesale reshuffle of its ranks in recent months, starting with Thein Sein’s resignation in April. It is only two months until the country’s first elections in 20 years, and conditions surrounding the polls appear to have been carefully orchestrated to ensure that while a cosmetic change takes place at the top of the government, the same people will continue to pull the strings after November.

The re-positioning is also apparently in accordance with a clause in the 2008 constitution that says that both the vice president and president “shall be well acquainted with the affairs of the Union, such as…military”, implying that experience in the army may be a prerequisite for the top jobs.

Moreover, the constitution rules that 25 percent of parliamentary seats must been given to military personnel, which may be a key reason behind the reshuffle.

This would rule out the vast majority of candidates running in the elections, and seems to reinforce concerns that Burma’s future is being planned before polls even take place.

Forty-one parties have so far been approved to compete, but many of the smaller groups have complained that the 500,000 kyat (US$500) registration fee for each candidate is well beyond their reach, and therefore are forced to significantly reduce the number of candidates they’ll be fielding.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma).

My opinion:

Don't be surprised by this. This is nothing. They are just trying to hold the power no matter what. And, it is really obvious that several officials cannot retire at the same time. This is part of their plan to win the election. Period.

How the CIA bedded down in Burma

By Joseph Allchin

The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) chief was asked to come to the transmissions room in the US embassy in Rangoon. It was 1992 and Richard Horn had only recently been made DEA chief in what was then the world’s largest producer of heroin, Burma.

“A day or two after Horn had this conversation over the phone with another DEA agent, a guy at the embassy that runs all the transmissions told Horn that he may want to look at something. It was a cable from Huddle to Huddle’s headquarters, quoting verbatim a conversation that Horn had had two nights before,” says Brian Leighton, Richard Horn’s lawyer for one of the longest-running court cases in US history, Horn vs. Huddle & Brown.

Huddle and Brown were officially State Department, but in reality Brown worked for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), one of the US’ many intelligence bodies with a long history in Southeast Asia, whilst Huddle assisted the agency from his position as Charges d’Affaires of the Rangoon embassy.

“The lawsuit was a class action in which they were accusing the CIA of interfering with their anti-drug activities,” explains investigative journalist Dennis Bernstein.

“Horn’s confrontation came in Burma when he was trying to cut a deal through the UN to get a crop substitution program in place. He had people he was working with towards that end, not in a legal way but in a quiet way because so much of this was controversial with the military; a monster of a dictatorship, a narco-dictatorship really.”

Leighton continues: “[Arthur] Brown, the CIA official, requested Horn to introduce him to his liaison with the Burmese government, introduce him to his informants, then they requested the DEA to provide in documents the names and dates of birth of their informants, allegedly so the CIA knows that if they deal with a person they know that he or she is also an informant for DEA, which is bullshit.”

One informant was a man named U Saw Lu, a Wa ethnic leader who was a DEA ‘asset’. He inspired Horn with the ‘novel’ drug eradication plan that involved crop substitution and foreign aid to wean drug-producing areas away from manufacturing.

What the Horn case documents is a spat between US government departments or the people representing them which resulted in a 16-year legal battle, a US$3 million payout for the plaintiff, and which saw the CIA lie in court about Brown’s security status, claiming at the time that he was covert when in actual fact he was not.

In any case nobody in the CIA was held accountable and the reasons for the spat are even murkier still. Despite having represented Horn for 16 years, Leighton knows little about the situation in Burma during the time his client was allegedly bugged by the CIA. Horn also refused to speak when approached by DVB.

The dispute is therefore presented as a simple case of an anti-drugs agency, the DEA, trying pragmatically to work with the Burmese government to fight ethnic rebels who are opposed to the despotic, yet drug-free junta, whom the CIA wants to remove. But this, it seems, could not be further from the truth.

US-trained torturers

Khun Myint Tun is an MP-elect from the 1990 elections for Thaton in Mon state, running for the National League for Democracy (NLD). As it became apparent that the NLD would win the polls, the military government prevented parliament from sitting, and the rest, as they say, is history.

But like many MP’s, Khun Myint Tun was arrested for the so-called crime of being selected by a democratic mandate, and like many prisoners in Burma, his welcome to captivity was torture. During his torture however his captors, members of Burma’s military intelligence (MI) – at the time known as the Directorate of Defence Services Intelligence (DDSI) – told him that they had been trained by the US.

Why had members of a military intelligence under the Burmese Path to Socialism era been trained in the bastion of ‘freedom and democracy’, possibly in torture techniques, almost certainly in how to interrogate peaceable democrats?

One such American-trained intelligence officer is a man named Aung Lynn Htut, who has since defected and now resides in the US. He told DVB that he had studied in the US on a “special course…with the CIA. I studied VIP special security course – at that time I studied a shooting course, driving course, incident management”.

This was in 1987, a year before Burmese students would take to the streets and the world would start to roundly condemn the brutal dictatorship controlling the country.

“Before 1988 our intelligence and American intelligence was very close,” he says, before adding however that the now-defunct DDSI had later ferried CIA agents around Burma in their helicopters on trips to see northern ethnic rebels. “At that time in our intelligence office there were around 30 officers who had taken the course with the CIA in the US. But the CIA recommended me, and between 1992 and at least 2000, we did an opium yield survey with the CIA agents.”

Other sources speak of a close relationship between the agents of the CIA and the DDSI during the nineties, as the two played tennis together and enjoyed a social relationship outside of work; or, as prominent Burma journalist and scholar, Bertil Lintner, put it, the CIA were “practically in bed with the [DDSI]”.

So after 1988 the CIA was actively working with both DDSI and the DEA on its counter-narcotics operations. As Huddle was fishing around for information on Horn’s “assets”, and during the time that courts reveal that Horn was bugged, one of these so-called assets, U Saw Lu, is believed to have informed Horn of the business dealings of a DDSI officer. He allegedly told Horn that the late Major Than Aye was involved in the drugs trade. Major Than Aye was based in Lashio in Burma’s eastern Shan state where the majority of the heroin is produced.

“Major Than Aye was one of my bosses, he was very close with the ethnics along the northern border” says Aung Lynn Htut. “I remember U Saw Lu – at the time he was very close with the DEA chief, Richard Horn. Richard was very tough; Horn and CIA was a problem!”

Indeed before long Major Than Aye had caught up with U Saw Lu and the whistleblower was captured. According to investigative journalist Dennis Bernstein, U Saw Lu was hung upside down for 56 days with 220 electrodes clipped to his body; when he passed out, a doctor was on hand to revive him by pouring a bucket of urine over his face. Major Than Aye oversaw the torture; a vindictive punishment, perhaps combined with the ‘refined’ techniques of the world’s most omnipresent intelligence agency.

On death’s door U Saw Lu was saved by the Wa leader Chao Ngi Lai, who phoned then-head of DDSI, Khin Nyunt, and said the ceasefire deal between the United Wa State Army (UWSA), Burma’s largest ethnic army, and the junta was over unless U Saw Lu was released. Needless to say, the junta knew how much money the Wa and other northern drug producers had: a number of banks owned by them and their business cronies are widely believed to have laundered money for them in Rangoon. The junta therefore knew how many guns the Wa could buy, and U Saw Lu was released.

Indeed Major Than Aye was said to have been dealing with none other than Lo Hsing Han, a man who started his career in the CIA-backed Kuomintang (KMT) Chinese nationalists who fought out of the Shan hills in their failed attempts at raiding communist China. Their major source of income was the heroin trade, which as prominent historian Alfred McCoy has exhaustively documented, was ferried to markets in the CIA’s infamous Air America airline.

Lo’s underground businesses went from strength to strength and his ‘legitimate’ enterprise, the sanctions-listed Asia World Company, was set up with the profits from the drugs and which he ran with elements of the Burmese state.

Asia World is now a major recipient of contracts from the junta, with its fingers in the Shwe gas pipeline, the Myitsone dam and other lucrative, and often Chinese-funded, projects, and through such patronage is one of Burma’s largest conglomerates. Its ample wealth is enough to support Lo’s son, Steven Law, as he races round Rangoon and Singapore in his Lamborghini.

So how had Major Than Aye known that U Saw Lu was a DEA asset and that he had informed them of his activities? Could a bugged conversation between Horn and Saw Lu have been the subject of discussion over a post-tennis whiskey between CIA and DDSI agents, just as Horn’s conversations were with colleagues back in Washington?

Khin Nyunt meanwhile was at this time an important player in the Burmese junta, both as Prime Minister and intelligence chief, and seen as number three in the chain of command. He was also thought to be a fairly approachable character for the west; as Dr Zarni of the London School of Economics (LSE) notes, he was viewed as “the only general in the country whom the outside world could do business with”.

Cautious belief in Khin Nyunt was fairly common, even though his intelligence network was an imposing enemy of anybody pushing for progressive change in Burma, as well as involvement in the brutal suppression of activists which included torture of the sort meted upon U Saw Lu with training from the CIA. However it is believed that his network of spies had become too powerful and too friendly with western diplomats and interests, and may have sought to betray Than Shwe’s established order.

As Aung Lynn Htut recalls, “Khin Nyunt and parties tried to approach the US government via the CIA and other people. They wanted understanding between the American and Burmese government”.

In any case Khin Nyunt would have been a key player in arranging for his spooks to get training from the CIA in the States, even though this was a long-running program. His style was very different to the reclusive Than Shwe’s: Lintner recalls him as “flamboyant” and hungry for attention.

Khin Nyunt was renowned for making strategic ententes with opposition blocks, a facet that was extremely successful at neutralising any serious alliance between the ethnic armies and the democracy movement, as ethnic armies signed a slew of treaties with the junta which sidelined them to the feudal warlording and narco-business that has entombed many regions in medieval poverty, while a few families traipse the countryside in huge 4-wheel drives.

The intelligence chief’s connections in the US meanwhile were deep, particularly in the early 2000s when he worked to repair relations with Washington. This time was seen as the most hopeful for Washington-backed reform in Burma. Then, it all seemingly dried up as Khin Nyunt was removed from office by Than Shwe in 2004, initially on the pretense of “health reasons”.

So was the CIA really working to fight drugs and defend human rights? If the personnel they chose to associate with are anything to go by, these considerations were far from their priority.

Vested interests

The thaw of the Cold War has hardly set in in the hills of northern Burma, where the battles between communists and western-backed groups have heirs everywhere. But could the US be fighting a new cold war or, in the parlance of our days, a ’soft war’ against China?

In the 1930s, shortly after the crash of 1929, the capitalist system had heaped distress upon working people the world over and the Soviet Union looked like it could dominate the rest of the century with its apparently starkly different system. The ensuing post-war period gave the world the Cold War in which in all corners of the globe, the two protagonists battled it out for client states. The architecture of that war is still in place, with US nuclear weapons still waiting to the south and west of Russia and thousands of US forces stationed globally. The intelligence services however were as integral to that war as any faculty of either force.

In fighting this war, intelligence services backed enemies of enemies seemingly without consideration for justice or any semblance of concern for the desires of the inhabitants of the client states, spawning such movements as the Mujahedeen in Afghanistan, dictators like Augusto Pinochet in Chile, Joseph Mobutu in Zaire, or the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. In Burma, leaders such as Ne Win were quietly supported, whilst the anti-Mao KMT forces were allowed, and apparently even assisted, to produce narcotics to fight the enemy to north.

Such information is often the result of exhaustive journalistic endeavours, ones that, as the case of Gary Webb demonstrate, sometimes come at great cost. And so it is that our times and this region have been wracked by stand-offs in areas like the South China Sea as both powers posture and seduce the smaller nations of the region like cheap wrestlers at a dubious fair.

With each small nation on a veritable swing-ometer of allegiance, the US recently celebrated the 15th anniversary of its normalisation of relations with Vietnam, a small nation deemed so “terrifying” 50 years ago that it induced the dropping of 300 tons of bombs for every man, woman and child of that country, by sending a nuclear-powered ’super carrier’, the USS George Washington, to its waters: a sadly ironic gesture given the brutality that continuation of hegemony requires.

As US-based intelligence firm Stratfor notes, “there is the added fear that as China becomes stronger, the United States will become more aggressive.”

The impetus to combat China can easily be seen and it is this that Bernstein suspects is a primary motive of US intelligence in the post-war period. “The CIA was really interested in something else; they wanted to use [Burma]. This is the emerging China century, the CIA is interested in the border, they are interested in the influences China has in the region… So the CIA is being more like a corporate frontline police force, ‘cleansing’ to make way for business. They weren’t interested in crop substitution or trying to end the poppy trade or trying to end the flow of heroin into the US – that was the cross-purpose; that’s how Horn came into this and in the process several of Horn’s sources were brutally tortured.”

That Burma is a strategic goal for China is undeniable: the Shwe gas pipeline is ample evidence, and this context provides little reason why the US can afford not to take action.

Lintner corroborates that “covertly cooperation continues [between the Burmese intelligence and CIA after 1988] and the main reason for that is China”, but he contends that the relationship goes back right the way to the Burmese Path to Socialism and Ne Win, a man whom Lintner describes as a “fascist” and whose fight with communism was armed by the west, most prominently the US.

Dr Zarni sees it differently: “If US intelligence was interested in Burma vis-a-vis China’s influence, the opposition would be getting everything it needs to change the regime.”

So why hasn’t the CIA backed the opposition in its attempts to hedge out China? Lintner talks of CIA officials in Burma lampooning him and other journalists for giving the junta “bad press” during their blood-soaked suppression of opposition protests in 1988. “The CIA has always had its own agenda and it has nothing to do with democracy or human rights or anything like that,” he tells DVB. “It’s other issues like China.” As the backing of Ne Win, or the examples of Laos and Cambodia demonstrate, the CIA is not prone to back neutralist open governments; reactionary, violent men like Khin Nyunt, Chiang Kai-shek, Suharto and Ne Win serve them the best.

So as the chords of America’s founding father’s echo in the speeches and statements of elected leaders, it seems that the CIA is, in reality, the ‘pragmatist’ hidden beneath a vocal, sugar-coated crust, with little real impetus or effect. As Aung Lynn Htut told DVB, “the CIA is a policy maker” fashioning policies as devoid of ideals and justice as any political body, and with the singular ruthless aim of furthering US strategic and political power whatever the cost.

“Government is not reason, it is not eloquence — it is force! Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master. Never for a moment should it be left to irresponsible action” – George Washington, 1st President of the United States.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Joseph Allchin.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

UDP blasts ‘stubborn’ election authority

By Ahunt Phone Myat

Burma’s supreme election body is unyielding and does not care about the people, the chairman of the Union Democratic Party (UDP) has said.

The comments came in response to apparent intransigence by the Election Commission (EC), which has refused to bow to requests by UDP leaders to ease repressive election laws and create dialogue with the opposition by 25 August, six weeks prior to the 7 November election date.

“They have never responded to any of our demands. Our responsibility is to keep the people informed – we will do whatever is necessary to the extent that is possible,” UDP chairman Thein Htay said.

He added that myriad controls were being implemented by the government-appointed commission at a time when the “political system…needs to be changed”.

The UDP, one of the more prominent parties featuring in Burma’s first elections in 20 years, belongs to the so-called ‘third force’ in Burmese politics, outwardly allied to neither the opposition nor incumbent.

Thein Htay said that due to frustration at the election laws, which ban former prisoners from running and which severely curtail parties’ ability to campaign effectively, the UDP had decided to field only three candidates, one in Bago division and two in Rangoon division.

Included in the raft of election campaigning laws is a ban on the chanting of slogans and waving of flags during processions, as well as a requirement that parties give at least a week’s notice before holding any public gathering.

Earlier this month UDP leader Phyo Min Thein quit his post, also in protest at lack of election law reform. He had sent a letter to party colleagues announcing his resignation and lamenting the fact that increasingly repressive election laws were being rolled out by the Burmese government.

The UDP was founded earlier this year and quickly became one of the more vocal parties. Out of the 49 parties that have registered for elections, 41 have so far been approved by the Election Commission.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Ahunt Phone Myat.

My opinion:

Everyone should be aware of the unfairness of the election and should quit participating like Phyo Min Thein. This election is crazy!


Opposition NDF leader pulls out

By Aye Nai

A leader of the opposition National Democratic Force (NDF) party has announced he will not run in Burma’s elections this year, but will remain at the helm of the party.

Khin Maung Swe is one of four members of the NDF, which split from the National League for Democracy (NLD) in May, who under Burmese law are permanently banned from participating in the 7 November polls.

As a senior member of the NLD, headed by Aung San Suu Kyi, he was an elected member of parliament following the 1990 elections which the NLD won in a landslide. Regardless, the ruling junta held onto power and sentenced Khin Maung Swe to 16 years in prison for treason, providing a pretext for his ban this year.

The four, which include Sein Hla Oo, Tin Aung and Thar Sai, were told by the Election Commission (EC) last month that they could appeal the ban, but when the appeal was lodged the EC said that the documents submitted were “insufficient”.

Khin Maung Swe decided against resubmitting the appeal, which would have involved signing again a raft of agreements to prove financial health and acquiescence of governmental laws and the controversial 2008 constitution.

“I wouldn’t go as far to appeal in such a way as to sign the agreements. Due to concerns that the party’s reputation and my political reputation as the party’s leader will be damaged, I will not go forward [with the appeal],” he said.

“I’m not against the elections. As our party stands, we are not against the elections, and I will remain in my position as the party leader and will be enthusiastically participating in the party’s activities. My decision to not stand in the elections is my personal choice.”

The party is looking to compete for 120 seats in the new parliament and to form a opposition coalition through alliance with other parties.

Meanwhile, charges have been dropped against two brothers leading two different parties into the elections. Aye Lwin and Ye Htun, who head the Union of Myanmar Federation of National Politics and the 88 Generation Students and Youth parties respectively were accused of collecting donations from the public in violation of strict election laws.

It was the same two arties who were attacked last year by a 200-strong mob led by a local Union Solidarity and Development Association (USDA) secretary in Rangoon’s Kyimyindaing township. They were then sued for disturbing national tranquillity.

Both parties countersued the USDA secretary, who is closely allied to the Burmese junta, for attacking them, but all charges were later dropped.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Aye Nai.

My opinion:

I'm wondering if these NDF memebers are already working under the junta. There is no way to abandon NLD and to be against NLD's decision unless they are already the junta's boys.

Burmese tycoon eats into tiger reserve

By Thurein Soe

Villages are being flattened and farmland confiscated in the world’s largest tiger reserve in northern Burma to make way for a cash cropping venture led a powerful business tycoon.

Some 200 locals in the Hukawng Valley in Kachin state begun filing complaints to authorities and the International Labour Organisation (ILO) after the removals started.

Nearly 200,000 acres of land is being prepared for the planting of sugar cane and cassava plant to produce biofuels. The man behind the venture is Htay Myint, who is close to the Burmese government and heads the Yuzana company conglomerate, which was give the license to move in on the Hukawng Valley in 2007

The Kachin News Group reported last year that Yuzana had built around 100,000 houses in the valley for men and women working on the plantations, which are being created in what last month became the world’s largest tiger reserve and the largest protected area in Southeast Asia, and celebrated enthusiastically by the Burmese junta.

A report, ‘Tyrants, Tycoons and Tigers’, by the Kachin Development Networking Group (KDNG), said that bulldozers had been at work in the valley, razing animal corridors and preparing land for the plantations and for a factory and supermarket to support workers and visitors.

The reserve was first highlighted in 2004 after it was discovered to be only one of three areas where tigers remain in significant numbers. Hukawng Valley is also home to a number of other rare or endangered animals, including leopards, Himalayan bears and elephants.

Locals said that Yuzana had confiscated land in seven villages in the region and compensated only 80,000 kyat (US$80) for an acre of land normally valued at 300,000 kyat (US$300). More than 160 families are so far thought to have been displaced.

“The local farmers’ houses and gardens were seized and they were moved to another location,” one woman told DVB. “Now this it’s like we can only stay where they want to keep us and do what they tell us to do. We cannot accept this, we don’t want to move.”

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Thurein Soe.

My opinion:

This is terrible that the junta's authorities only know what they want to know. They are never considerate of the civilians' lives and needs. Disgusting!!

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Int’l rights framework ‘meaningless’ for Burma

By Francis Wade

Calls from international rights groups and monitors for a response to abuses in Burma are “meaningless” because there is no framework within the country to listen to these, an Asian legal group warns.

The international community has been “unwilling” and incapable of promoting change in military-ruled Burma, the Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC) said in a far-reaching report that documents the “absence of minimum conditions” for torture, corruption and elections this year, as well as the country’s “injustice system” of police, prosecutors and courts under military guidance.

Earlier this month the US gave its backing to a UN commission of enquiry to investigate possible war crimes and crimes against humanity in Burma, a call that has been echoed by a number of governments and senior UN officials.

Basil Fernando, executive director of ALRC, said that while “there is no domestic mechanism for any kind of inquiry,” it is precisely this absence – “more than any other reason” – that justifies such an inquiry.

“When you don’t have these mechanisms, you are living in a kind of zoo – it’s not a human place, the state cannot do any kind of investigation,” he told DVB.

“So the only option left is to ensure that some kind of process begins from outside, and to bring some people to justice outside. What you need in a country like that is an opening for the future; otherwise it’ll stay closed forever.”

Burma’s military dictatorship has ruled the country in various guises since a coup in 1962 that toppled the government of U Nu, Burma’s first civilian prime minister since British rule ended in 1948. Little appears to move the current junta chief, Than Shwe, although he is said to be fearful of an International Criminal Court (ICC) indictment that the UN investigation could bring.

But Burma’s placement on the international community’s priority list has long been questionable, with the domestic crises apparently paling in significance to alleged international threats posed by North Korea, Iran, and so on.

The ALRC report criticised the international community for being “unwilling and therefore unable to address the true extent and nature of these problems” in Burma.

“In order to do anything, you must first of all begin at least to admit the problems: openly say that there is nothing inside [Burma]. If you say otherwise, you are making and wrong and misleading statement…which will never transform into action,” Fernando said.

The constant mouthing of human rights rhetoric that is devoid of substantial action “is a source of immense frustration that should provoke exploration of new avenues for effecting change in very serious human rights situations of the sort found in Myanmar [Burma]”, the report continued.

Critics of the UN commission of inquiry argue however that any sort of investigation now would be premature, given the elections due to be held on 7 November that the current junta claims will mark the transition to civilian rule.

But with a quarter of parliamentary seats already awarded to military officials, and apparent favouring of the main junta-backed party, the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) in the run-up to elections, the chances of any real civilian government coming to power appear slim.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Francis Wade.

My opinion:

Don't just shout or try to encourage the junta. These doesn't work against the junta. Do some dramatic actions.


Southeast Asia rich-poor gap ‘widening’

By Agence France-Press

Southeast Asian leaders warned Wednesday of a widening gap between the booming region’s richest and poorest nations that could threaten its ambitious drive for an EU-style single market.

Cambodia, Laos, Burma and Vietnam have recorded high growth rates but their per capita gross domestic product remains the lowest among the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

“The danger of widening development gap remains a major obstacle to ASEAN’s future development, especially given the context of expanded ASEAN economic integration,” Vietnam’s Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said in opening remarks to an annual meeting of the bloc’s trade and commerce ministers.

Emulating the European Union’s example, ASEAN wants to establish by 2015 a single market and manufacturing base of about 600 million people – a goal that has been spurred by intensifying competition from China and India.

The discrepancy between ASEAN’s rich and poor members “is quite wide” and could undermine efforts to create the single market, ASEAN secretary general Surin Pitsuwan told reporters. “A house divided by such a gap is not stable.”

According to ASEAN statistics, GDP per capita in the bloc ranges from US$419 in Burma to more than US$36,000 in Singapore.

Surin said the gulf within ASEAN had widened because some countries were better able to attract investment as the global economy recovered from the crisis which struck in 2008.

“It has come up quite often at the highest level, of how to help bridge this gap,” he said.

The Vietnamese prime minister, who chaired the meeting, urged ministers to “work out concrete and robust measures” to create a more equitable ASEAN.

But the bloc has been more focussed on initiatives such as forging individual free trade deals and does not have the budgets or structures in place to address the issue, said Leon Perera, group managing director of Spire Research and Consulting in Singapore.

“I think they haven’t really set that goal in a serious way,” he told AFP by telephone.

Perera said that “other things being equal, you tend to get more inequality” as a consequence of globalisation, and a development gap may be more significant within countries than between them.

China, Japan, Australia, the European Union and the United States have all expressed interest in boosting development in the region’s poorer nations, Surin said.

Another strategy, he said, is an infrastructure fund that the region’s finance ministers have agreed in principle to establish.

In Vietnam alone, the European Chamber of Commerce has cited estimates that the country needs around US$70 to US$80 billion of infrastructure investment over the next five to 10 years.

Foreign businessmen in the country have frequently expressed concern about the lack of seaports, roads, electricity and other essential infrastructure.

Surin also said that Southeast Asian nations need closer cooperation to deal with incidents such as this week’s Philippines bus hijacking that left eight Hong Kong tourists dead.

“I think there is room for more cooperation and more exchange of best practices, training for example,” he said, when asked whether he was concerned about Monday’s incident in Manila.

Surin made no reference to how police handled the case, but he said generally that management of terrorism or “non-traditional security threats… is something that I think we probably need to consult more closely with each other”.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Agence France-Press.

My opinion:

It is good that developed countries are aware of this gap and are willing to boost the development of developing countries.

UN aid has ‘limited impact’ in Burma

By GAYATRI LAKSHMIBAI

UN aid efforts in Burma are “unsatisfactory” and “with modest or limited impact”, a report released by an internal UN Development Programme watchdog has warned.

The study, carried out by the Independent Assessment Mission (IAM) and based on surveys conducted in a control group of villages, finds that there is only a “modest or limited” difference between the villages that receive the Human Development Initiative (HDI) support and the non-HDI villages. This difference is particularly starker in the fields of education and health – two important developmental concerns for Burma.

“Sadly, I am not surprised by it [the report’s findings], but I have to say that it is more a reflection of the restrictions put in place by authorities than the failure of international efforts to expand humanitarian space,” David Mathieson, senior researcher with Human Rights Watch (HRW), told DVB.

“At a ground level, they [UNDP] are actually implementing projects and going through the long, hard grind but at a national level, policy makers just don’t want to make decisions.”

The HDI, which arrived in Burma in 1994, aims to bring change in areas of basic health, training and education, HIV/AIDS, the environment and food security.

The IAM report is especially critical of the Integrated Community Development Project (ICDP), Community Development in Remote Townships (CDRT) Project and the Early Recovery (ER) Project, concluding their performance as “unsatisfactory” and denouncing “the idea of continuation of these projects beyond 2011 in their current form.”

The findings of the independent team suggest that the problem with these projects lies in their design rather than management. It says: “The proposed measures, even if implemented, will fall far short of the change of approach and revision of programme design that is needed.”

Aid agencies have long complained about the difficulties of working with corrupt officials at the local level and the authoritarian regime on the national level.

“The complexity of the working environment within the country is difficult to comprehend,” Mathieson says. “There are too many regional variations – geographic and ethnic. Also, in places around urban areas, maybe authorities don’t see having foreign aid workers as much of a security issue but in border areas there are far more restrictions.”

One of the main reasons cited for the failure of the programmes is the broad scope of activities falling under the purview of the UNDP, leading to excessive diversion of limited funds. The lack of other aid efforts in the region is a contributing factor for the HDI’s involvement in a wide array of issues. Changes in environmental and political conditions during the last couple of years are added reasons behind the poor results.

The report, with its negative findings, could add to the already existing donor fatigue. The poor performance of UNDP raises questions about its presence in Burma and the viability of its projects. If the HDI does discontinue its activities in the 60 designated townships, what alternative model of development could bring a welcome change?

Mathieson doesn’t think the report “should add to donor fatigue.” In fact, he hopes that it raises awareness about the difficulties involved in working inside Burma. “There’s no way that the international community should be walking away from this, either in terms of funding or scaling of the project. If anything, this report should encourage aid workers and agencies to think of more adaptable ways of functioning,” he added.

The team, however, lauded the achievement of self-help groups (SRGs) and micro-finance (MF) projects which were implemented with the aim of empowering women.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author GAYATRI LAKSHMIBAI.

My opinion:

This is sad that even UN's aid has limited impact on Burmese civilians. It is true that there are so many restrictions in Burma and even problems with morally bad authorities. I wish UN could figure out better plans to aid Burmese civilians who are in real trouble.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Election curbs ‘ensure PM’s party victory’

By Agence France-Press

Burma’s military regime has restricted the opposition to such an extent that the junta-backed party will win the poll without having to cheat on election day, a pro-democracy group said Sunday.

Senior members of the Democratic Party said pro-democracy parties were struggling to put forward enough candidates to contest seats in Burma’s first poll for 20 years, owing to intimidation and limitations by the junta.

“Creating difficulties is one of the government’s intentions, including financial difficulties,” party chairman Thu Wei told reporters in Rangoon.

The 78-year-old said the government “planned to create problems for us so they can win without doing anything unfair” when it comes to the vote itself.

The Democratic Party is among 41 groups that have been allowed to register for the polls so far, but still face serious hurdles.

“Because the security officials pressure the people, they dare not to come forward to stand,” said Than Than, one of three daughters of former top Burma ministers who are members of the Democratic Party.

The Democratic Party has already complained to the election authorities about intimidation of its members by security personnel in the run up to the poll, which has been widely condemned by activists and the West as a sham aimed at entrenching military rule.

Chairman Thu Wai expected that about 500 of 1,200 positions to be contested in the 7 November poll would be secured by members of the junta-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) without any competition.

The USDP received a major boost after the Union Solidarity and Development Association (USDA) – a powerful pro-junta organisation with deep pockets and up to 27 million members – recently merged with it.

“I think the government will be fair at the election. They already know they will win without having to do anything unfairly or by trickery,” said Thu Wai, whose party is putting forward about 100 candidates, though it had hoped for 1,000.

Under strict rules, members of all parties are banned from marching, waving flags and chanting to garner support. They must apply one week in advance for permission to gather and deliver speeches outside their offices.

Democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who has spent much of the past 20 years in detention and is seen as the biggest threat to the junta, is barred from standing in the polls because she is a serving prisoner.

Her National League for Democracy party won a landslide victory in 1990 but was never allowed to take office. It is boycotting the upcoming vote, saying the rules are unfair.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Agence France-Press.

My opinion:

Only crazy people participate in election held by crazy junta. And, they claim that they are trying to adapt to the election laws. Craziness. Craziness.


E Timor eyes ‘strong business ties’ with Burma

By Agence France-Press

East Timor’s president said Friday his country is seeking to improve relations with Burma, including commercial ties.

“We want to increase our relations,” President Jose Ramos-Horta said after meeting Burma’s foreign minister during a visit that drew protests over human rights abuses in military-ruled Burma.

“This is in accordance with Timor-Leste policy, which aims to improve relations with neighbouring countries,” Ramos-Horta said.

“And in order to improve commercial ties, Timor-Leste Foreign Minister Zacarias Da Costa will visit Myanmar [Burma] with a business representative soon. The aim is to start a strong commercial relationship with Myanmar,” he said.

Ramos-Horta said East Timor had also urged Burma’s military regime to open a dialogue with detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

“Timor-Leste’s position, and also that of the international community and ASEAN, is that if the dialogue occurs, then it should aim to free her to become a regular citizen,” he said.

Ramos-Horta, a 1996 recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, last year called for a global arms embargo on Burma, claiming that “the deterioration in the political and humanitarian situation calls for a clear response by the international community”.

The visit by Burmese Foreign Minister Nyan Win was marked by protests, with clashes breaking out between police and human rights activists demanding Suu Kyi’s release.

Dozens of protesters gathered at Dili airport as Nyan Win arrived Friday to meet with Ramos-Horta and other senior officials, protest organisers said.

Scuffles broke out as police seized banners and other written material condemning human rights abuses in Burma, where Nobel laureate and democracy leader Suu Kyi has been under house arrest for years.

“We are here to bring support to our friends in Burma in their struggle to release political prisoners and to stop continuous human rights violations there,” rally coordinator Carolino Marques said.

“Aung San Suu Kyi must be released immediately and the military junta must be toppled as soon as possible.”

A tightly controlled election scheduled in Burma on 7 November has been condemned by activists and the West as a sham aimed at cementing decades of military rule.

Suu Kyi, who has spent much of the past 20 years in detention, is barred as a serving prisoner from standing in the election.

Her National League for Democracy – which won the last election in 1990 but was not allowed to take power – it is boycotting the vote.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Agence France-Press.

My opinion:

It is good that the President urged the junta to release all prisoners, including Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. But, it is still needed to see if he really wants for Burmese benefits or for his own country's benefit since every leader is selfish, doing something only if something beneficial is there for his/her own country. And, it is still needed to see if he actually wants benefits from Burma without having any desire to bring something good to Burmese civilians.

Friday, August 20, 2010


PM’s party opens offices to roars of support

By Joseph Allchin

The pro-government Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) today opened offices across the country, with hundreds of supporters seen chanting and waving flags.

Footage captured by DVB journalists at the opening of the Mandalay office showed supporters decked out in USDP regalia and shouting victory slogans, as well as lauding the “multi-party elections” in a responsorial style led by a master of ceremonies on a nearby stage.

The USDP is led by Burma’s prime minister, Thein Sein, and is widely tipped to win the first elections to be held in the country in two decades.

The 200-strong ceremony appeared to edge close to violating restrictive campaigning laws announced by the Election Commission that include a ban on the chanting of slogans and waving of flags “in processions”.

Individuals deemed guilty of breaking these laws, that state-run media has said will guarantee free and fair elections but which have received international condemnation, can land the perpetrator with a one-year prison sentence.

The laws are typically vague and malleable: another regulation includes applying a week in advance of holding a public gathering, whilst speeches or slogans that apparently tarnish the image of the military are also banned.

The USDP has recently been the subject of numerous accusations of election irregularities, while competing candidates have claimed that it is receiving preferential treatment.

The party evolved from the so-called mass organisation, the Union Solidarity and Development Association (USDA), which until it was recently disbanded had held Senior General Than Shwe as one of its patrons.

The organisation was implicated in the 2003 Depayin massacre, in which some 70 opposition supporters were killed, and has been employed by the government to harass and intimidate pro-democracy activists.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Joseph Allchin.

Monday, August 16, 2010


Drought depletes Burma’s second-largest lake

By Shwe Aung

Water levels have fallen by half in Burma’s second largest lake following a severe drought this year that affected much of the country, with temperatures hitting a record high.

Locals around Inle Lake, in Burma’s northeastern Shan state, fear that an annual 18-day pagoda festival, that includes popular boat races, may have to be cancelled this year unless the water level rises by some 1.5 metres in the next two months.

The Phaung Daw Oo festival is southern Shan state’s most important religious celebration, usually held in October each year, but with the average water level now at 1.2 metres, instead of the normal 2.7 metres, many of events may not take place.

The warning comes after a summer of intense heat and drought, in which temperatures in some parts of the country reached 47C, causing hundreds of deaths. Severe water shortages also hit major towns across the country.

Burma is also suffering the effects of intense damming of its major rivers, some of which begin in China. The Mekong River, which separates Shan state from neighbouring Laos, is a lifeline for around 60 million people in Southeast Asia, but is being heavily dammed by China.

The Mekong is at its lowest levels in nearly half a century, but China has strenuously denied any link between this and its hydropower projects along the river. The same concerns have surrounded the Salween River, which also begins in China but cuts through the centre of Shan state and forms one of Burma’s major waterways.

Environmental groups have warned that rare species could be lost if Inle Lake continues to dry up. The expanse of water is home to a number of endemic species of fish and snail, which are not found anywhere else in the world. Four urban areas also border the lake, and are home to some 70,000 people, many of whom rely on the lake for commercial fishing.

The recent drop in water levels feeds into wider concern about the health of the lake, which has lost 32 percent of its water volume over the past 80 years. The effects of this have been compounded by increasing local populations and an intensification of tourism and agriculture on and around the lake, with slash and burn farming practices causing silting of tributary rivers.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Shwe Aung.

My opinion:

It is really sad to know this bad news. Inle Lake is one of the most beautiful lakes and one of the valuable resources. I do hope that local specialists in environmentalism can make it like usual again. And, I do hope that people around the world notice this global warming more than before.


World’s oldest person found in Burma

By DVB

The Burmese government announced today that it had discovered a 118-year-old woman living “healthily” in a monastery in Mandalay division.

Daw Mya Kyi was born in 1892, the Department of Social Welfare claims, making her older than the French national Eugenie Blanchard, who was born four years later and in May this year was validated as the world’s oldest living person.

Xinhua news quoted Department of Social Welfare sources who said that Daw Mya Kyi is living in a monastery in Puak Chan Kone village in Amarapura township, just south of Mandalay city, and is “enjoying good health”.

“She can eat whatever she has appetite [for] but not sour food for health reason,” it added.

Life expectancy in Burma is currently 63.4 years for women and 59 years for men, according to the UN Development Programme. The Burmese government is thought spend only 1.8 percent of its annual budget on healthcare, ranking it amongst the lowest in the world.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma).

My opinion:

We should be proud to have such a healthy and oldest person in the world found in Burma. The government has been ignoring health care for the civilians, and the average life span of Burmese people is really short. On the other hand, it is suspicious if the government has such good records on date of birth of a person who was born long ago because actually, there is no such official record in Burma.

UN, US and UK slam Burma elections

By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE and DVB

Burma’s announcement of the date for elections this year has been met with strong words by the international community, with the US saying there remains “no level playing field” for the polls.

The date for the country’s first elections in 20 years has been set for 7 November, after months of wild speculation and rumours, and even doubt as to whether they would be held this year.

But the UK foreign minister, Jeremy Browne, said that the polls “are set to be held under deeply oppressive conditions designed to perpetuate military rule,” adding that the opportunity for prosperity and an open society “has been missed”.

November will mark the fifth elections since Burma won independence from British rule in 1948, but only the second since a coup in 1962 heralded the start of military rule.

His comments were echoed by US state department spokesman Philip Crowley, who said that “given the oppressive political environment in Burma…[elections] cannot be inclusive or credible under these circumstances.”

The Burmese government has already allocated 166 out of 654 parliamentary seats to military officials, while the constitution stipulates that elected vice presidents must have prior military experience.

The election date, announced by state media on Friday, falls about a week before Aung San Suu Kyi’s current term of house arrest is due to expire on 13 November. Her party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), has boycotted the election, while 40 parties have so far been approved to run.

Martin Nesirky, spokesperson for UN chief Ban Ki-moon, said that the secretary general had urged Burma “to release all remaining political prisoners without delay so that they can freely participate in the political life of their country”.

Burma holds some 2,150 political prisoners in jails across the country. Suu Kyi, whose party won the 1990 elections but were never handed power, has been under house arrest for 15 of the past 20 years.

Ban Ki-moon reportedly renewed his appeal to the ruling junta “to honour their publicly stated commitments to hold inclusive, free and fair elections in order to advance the prospects of peace, democracy and development for Myanmar [Burma]”.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Agence France-Press.

My opinion:

I have already posted that there is no point in believing what the junta is doing. Whatever the junta does, he does it only for himself, not for the civilians, or the justice. If the international countries still trust that the junta will do something good for the country and its civilians, then they are already in the junta's trap.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Election date announced

By Joseph Allchin

The government’s Union Election Commission has announced on the radio that the date for this year’s election, the first election since 1990 will be on the 7th of November.

Short of the numeroligically attractive 10th of the 10th 2010, it seems that the 7th was chosen for its numerological significance given that the 7 + 11= 18 and 1+8 is 9 an auspicious number in local numerology. So much so that former dictator Ne Win decommissioned bank notes not divisible by 9, in 1963 the year after he seized power.

However 11 is also significant for those inclined to numerology. The government has in the past sentenced dissidents such as the student leader Min Ko Naing to 65 years on the 11th of November at 11 am. 11 is the number for vanquishing enemies.

On Thursday it was announced that constituencies had been designated for the polling, and that further details would follow in news papers.

There will be 330 seats in the peoples parliament being contested and a further 110 seats reserved solely for members of the military, whilst a ‘House of Nationalities’ or Amyotha Hluttaw will comprise 224 seats with 56 of those reserved for the military. This will have 12 representatives from each of the administrative regions (states).

To alter the constitution it must have the consent of 75% of parliamentarians. This will make alteration particularly difficult as even if progressive parties dominate, the presence of even a few Union Solidarity Development Party (USDP), essentially a military party, will tip the balance beyond the possibility of reform.

The constitution also stipulates that the military cannot face trial in a civilian court and importantly the home minister, defence, security and border control will all be nominated by the commander in chief of the military.

In any case, the voting for the constitution was highly dubious, with approval apparently at over 92%, most found it hard to see it as a credible exercise in democracy, as it was roundly criticised by experts, casting serious doubt about the legitimacy in the upcoming election.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Joseph Allchin.

My opinion:

It is funny that the junta really believes astronomy and fortune telling that everything the junta does is related to such things. I am wondering what the parties that are going to participate in the election think. Obviously, the junta is doing crazy things like unfair and unfree election. Why are they participating in it instead of boycotting it? Are they crazy too?

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Election Commission ‘designates’ constituencies

By Joseph Allchin

The government announced on Wednesday that the Election Commission (EC) has designated constituencies for this year’s planned election.

The state newspaper the New Light of Myanmar announced that further details would follow in special ‘supplements’ of daily newspapers.

There will be 330 constituencies nationwide, with a further 110 seats reserved for unelected members of the military in the ‘lower house’ or the some what inaccurately named Pyithu Hluttaw (People’s Parliament).

An Upper house named the ‘House of Nationalities’ or Amyotha Hluttaw will comprise 224 seats with 168 elected representative and 56 unelected members of the military.

Htun Aung Kyaw of the New Era People’s Party told DVB that he knew little about the latest developments, but suspects that the polling date would be announced soon.

Meanwhile Prime Minister elect, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi was quoted by AP stating that she believes the lack of a date for the election was because; “”there could be some problems among them [the military junta].”

The quote came after her lawyers met her at her house where she is being held because an American intruder broke in, which conveniently extended the length of her detention to beyond the election.

National League for Democracy (NLD) member and Suu Kyi representative, Nyan Win told AP meanwhile that she had warned that; “No system will work without any rule of law.”

This follows a long string of allegations surrounding the Union Solidarity Development Party (USDP), widely seen as the military party and its pre election tactics.

Parties will be allowed to own business’ which meant that the USDP’s precursor, the Union Solidarity Development Association (USDA) was gifted a number of state assets in recent privatisation drives by the military government, will simply transfer these assets to the new party which will be headed by current Prime Minister Thein Sein, giving them an overwhelming financial advantage.

As a result they have allegedly been able to offer soft loans to potential members and have been using their connections to black mail others.

Whilst further ominous signs became apparent this week as prospective candidates pleaded with the EC to stop handing over their details, which had been submitted to the EC, to the military intelligence, citing fears of harassment.

Campaigning laws were released in June and were similarly archaic and repressive banning as they did chanting slogans, campaigning in public or giving speeches that ‘can harm dignity or morality’.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Joseph Allchin.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010


HRW: EU states should publicly support UN enquiry into junta crimes

By Joseph Allchin

New York based human rights NGO Human Rights Watch (HRW) has sent a letter to all European Union (EU) member states asking them to support a commission of enquiry into allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity by the military junta.

They ‘urged’ the states to push for the formation of a commission at the autumn session on Burma at the UN General Assembly in September.

The EU has shown vocal support to such a position, in May it passed a resolution, which committed: “publicly to support the recommendation of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Burma/Myanmar that the United Nations establish a commission of inquiry into war crimes and crimes against humanity in Burma/Myanmar, and to include this request in the draft resolution to be discussed at the United Nations General Assembly in 2010.”

This followed a March report by the UN Special Rapporteur on Burma, Tomas Ojea Quintana, the Argentine lawyer who was in Thailand this week to meet civil society groups.

The said report follows in a long line of highly critical reports on Burma’s human rights record and earned Mr Quintana a ban from visiting Burma after his report; “demonstrated that serious crimes by government security forces are widespread and systematic, and continue with utter impunity” according to HRW’s letter.

Whilst HRW executive director, Keneth Roth said in a press release that; “Ritually condemning Burma in annual General Assembly resolutions is no longer enough,”… “The UN needs to raise the price for continuing abuses by starting to investigate them.”

HRW note that there have been 19 resolutions in the UN general assembly but there has never been any form of commission of inquiry into the crimes committed by the ruling junta. Much of the failure of such action has been as a result of China’s veto power as a permanent member of the UN Security Council. This patronage is believed to have given China favour over rivals in Burmese mineral acquisitions.

There have been concerted calls from activists and victims to refer the military government to the International Criminal Court (ICC). Who have previously accused Sudanese leader, Omar Bashir of similar crimes relating to his government’s actions in the southern Darfur region of the country.

With 111 signatories the ICC has had a short and difficult history, not least because of the United States’ failure to ratify its founding treaty, with former President George W. Bush even suggesting that he would bomb the Hague if it tried any US service personnel and after stating that the US had no intention of ratifying the treaty the US passed a law that with a few exceptions stated that the US would withhold military aid to any signatory nations of the treaty. Such crimes as war of aggression, under the framework set by the allies at the Nurenberg trials this would be one of the most serious crimes and would carry the death penalty, which some allege the former US leader is guilty of.

Whilst HRW note that; “The June 2010 Kampala Declaration resulting from the Review Conference of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), reiterated the commitment of 111 ICC member states ‘to put an end to impunity for perpetrators of the most serious crimes of international concern.’”

How enforcement of an ‘end to impunity’ will transpire is a major problem whilst the most powerful military; the US enjoys impunity even though prior to his election Obama stated his belief that the US should ratify the treaty. Like many of his assertions, it has failed to materialise. Whilst Burma’s patron and regional power house China, never even pretended to be interested, neither signing nor ratifying the process.

However Roth further noted in the press release that; “Continuing business as usual in Burma will only embolden rights abusers”… “Establishing an international Commission of Inquiry would be an important first step towards bringing abusers to justice and ending impunity in Burma.”

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Joseph Allchin.

My opinion:

I absolutely agree with this. Just encouraging or negotiating vocally will not definitely affect the junta since the junta never cares such things, doing whatever he wants. So, taking actions against the junta by ourselves is the best option.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010


Zarganar protests planned for Edinburgh festival

By GAYATRI LAKSHMIBAI

One of Burma’s most popular comedians, Zarganar, who is serving a 35-year sentence for speaking out against the military regime, will be the focus of protest and publicity at the upcoming Edinburgh festival, the largest cultural festival in the world . Amnesty International, a worldwide human rights group, vows to organise protests throughout the length of the festival beginning on August the 13th to further the cause of his freedom and highlight his plight.

Zargnar is serving his sentence at Myitkina prison in northern Kachin state for criticising the military regime’s inadequate measures in response to 2008’s Cyclone Nargis. The artist is said to be suffering from poor health owing to lack of medical facilities — a normal state of affairs in the country’s prisons.

The 49-year-old, who has been politically active since the 8888 uprising, has been a political prisoner on a number of occasions for openly criticising the military government’s breaches of human rights. Whilst since 2006, Zarganar has faced a ban on performing publicly.

Amnesty International volunteers at the Edinburgh festival will be engaging with a global audience spreading awareness about Zarganar’s case and requesting that they send letters to the Burmese authorities on behalf of the comedian and other political prisoners in the country. An event called ‘Stand up for freedom’ will be organised featuring German comedian Michael Mittermeiser and other renowned comedians from the world over, in line with the protests.

Visitors at the festival will be given the opportunity to take pictures with Zarganar’s, or any other political prisoner’s name written on their palms. These pictures would then make it to the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) to be held in Brussels in October with the aim of adding international pressure on the military junta.

“We believe that Zarganar is a prisoner of conscience who has been imprisoned solely because of expression of his beliefs. He should therefore be immediately and unconditionally released,” Steve Ballinger of Amnesty International told DVB.

Zarganar, an avid football fan, will have a football match dedicated to support his release on August 16. The match between “critics” and “comedians” will witness all players taking to the field wearing jerseys with Zarganar’s picture on them.

Readers who wish to join Amnesty’s cause of demanding the release of Zarganar and/or other political prisoners can log on to www.amnesty.org.uk/zarganar and write directly to the Burmese authorities.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author GAYATRI LAKSHMIBAI.

My opinion:

I'm deeply sorry for Zarganar for being in such a poor condition in the prison. But, I am really proud of him to stand out of oppression for the civilians. We should be grateful of him.

Food related unrest to hit the table?

By Joseph Allchin

The world’s attention has been firmly focused on a smog choked Moscow, where record temperatures have caused the often icy countryside to burn with a litany of wild fires, a predicament that lead the government there to suspend wheat exports to preserve local prices.

Such a move created the steepest rise in wheat prices since 2007/2008 when prices caused riots globally. And this year after temperature records were broken in many countries including Burma, are commodity price fluctuations going to cause social unrest in Burma?

A new report meanwhile has indicated that rising temperatures will have a negative impact on rice yields. The study from the University of California, San Diego, found that rice yields fell when night time temperatures increased. Whilst mildly increased day time temperatures can in fact increase yields the study indicates that night time temperature increases significantly lower yields; a researcher on the study told Reuters that; “we see much more consistently increases in night-time temperature”.

The team included researchers from the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines and the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and studied data from 227 irrigated rice farms in six Asian countries.

Whilst the team also found that several sites for data collection had already witnessed a slower yield increase as the effects of climate change kick in and cut into the increased yields derived from greater human inputs with Reuters indicating that; “the past 25 years have already cut the yield growth rate by 10-20 percent in several locations in the study areas.”

Neighbouring Thailand, a leading exporter of key agricultural commodities such as rice and sugar, witnessed massive rises in prices for key commodities like sugar and eggs, partly due to the harsh dry season, and partly perhaps due to increased speculation in the commodities future markets, globally.

In Burma the military government is ever wary of such fluctuations after almost being deposed twice after fuel price protests morphed into huge, popular expressions of discontent.

As a result the government has limited opportunities to export, similar to the ‘emergency’ measures taken by the Russian government recently, a move which induced a 50% surge in wheat prices within days. In Burma such moves come without offering any financial inducements to increase production or assist in efficiency, on the contrary as economist Professor Sean Turnell of Australia’s Maquarie Institute told DVB;

“It has the reverse affect in the long term because all you are doing is destroying the incentive structure to produce the stuff, but the government always just fixes on that short term; rice prices going up, that’s gonna get people on the street”.

“so fearful are they of rising rice prices and bringing people out onto the streets that as soon as there is a slight increase they tend to clamp down on whatever liberalising measures they have brought in; allowing people to export and so on, choke it off, keep the rice inside, keep the price down.”

The military government have presided over a terrific collapse in Burma’s status as a rice producer. During the colonial period the country was the largest exporter of rice on the planet. It now exports less than 1/8 of that which neighbour Thailand does.

“They [the military government] just insist on buying it at a low price and because they don’t provide credit or any sort of support for critical inputs or so on, what tends to happen is that production is really low, quality is low, yields per hectare are really low” Turnell adds.

The need therefore to maintain prices for political ends can be a double bind for agriculturalists and traders as artificially low prices make these people vulnerable to instances such as poor weather conditions that have been witnessed this year. Bare in mind that 70% of Burma’s work force are employed in agriculture.

This therefore adds, as Turnell suggests to food insecurity. For whilst greater liberalisation can lead to price fluctuations, competitive pricings also naturally reflect supply and demand and incentivise farmers to produce more, which then can create surplus’ with which to either export or to store in order that food prices may be maintained when adverse weather conditions play havoc with crops and subsequent pricing.

The fragile food security issue was highlighted this week as reports from Rangoon suggested that the closure of the Thai border crossings had induced a sharp rise in prices for basic commodities that are often imported from Thailand. A housewife in Rangoon told DVB that prices of Thai-made food products have gone up significantly – the price of a 1.5 litre bottle of cooking-oil which previously stood at 2800 Kyat (US$ 2.80) has now gone up to 4000 Kyat (US$ 4) and a pack of biscuits at 1400 Kyat (US$1.40) previously is now 1900 Kyat (US$ 1.90).

The country’s economy is relatively shielded from global commodity fluctuations being so isolated. It is not however isolated from the effects of global climate change or the ravages of hunger, amongst either pure consumers or those agriculturalists ravaged economically by the government who provide no credit and have destroyed agricultural unions effectively crippling a massive chunk of the Burmese economy.

Whilst the utter lack of foresight or long term planning means that the gradual change in climate will most likely reduce harvests year on year. Without government involvement to mitigate the effects of a harsher climate, the number of those experiencing food insecurity will grow from the current estimate of 1 in 10 living below the food poverty line and 1 in 3 children considered chronically malnourished.

Burma has the capacity to feed its people and export, it is in a privileged position in this respect, yet food insecurity looks like a spectre that not only ruins the lives of millions in Burma now, but looks set to be a serious cause of social unrest in years to come.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author, Joseph Allchin.

My opinion:

I'm sorry for the civilians who are in need of food for survival. The government never cares the civilians. It is really disgusting of the junta. I do wish that Daw Su could get the authority and help the civilians.


USDP ‘blackmailing’ their way to electoral success

By Khin Hnin Htet

The military government’s proxy political party the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) are encouraging people to become members by blackmail and enticements in Rangoon and Mandalay, according to locals.

A resident in Mandalay told DVB that the USDP in the capital of central of Burma, Mandalay were coercing waiters, originally from other towns, at restaurants to join the party.

“Most [the waiters] are from other towns so they need to have guest-registrations to live and work in Mandalay. They were pressured via employers to join the USDP if they want the registration,” said the resident under condition of anonymity.

He said illegal two-digit and three-digit lottery sellers were also being blackmailed to join the party or else face criminal charges, adding that they were asked to sign ‘already-filled out’ party membership forms.

The USDP is headed by current Prime Minister Thein Sein and was formed out of the controversial military based ‘mass movement’ called the Union Solidarity Defense Association (USDA) . It gained notoriety after its alleged involvement in 2003s Depayin Massacre, in which at least 70 National League for Democracy (NLD) members were killed by a well-coordinated and well-armed mob. It was reformed as a political party earlier in the year to contest the upcoming elections, but has been dogged by allegations of foul play using its millitary backing and subsequent financial muscle to attract voters, including last month’s revelation that it was offering potential members low rate loans.

Locals in the former capital, Rangoon, meanwhile said the USDP members were going from door-to-door in suburban townships including Seik Khanaungto and Dala, persuading people over the age of 18 to join them with free USDP membership cards which they promised could give them more freedom to travel around the country and help them find jobs as well as less difficulty in guest registrations (by law residents are required to register any overnight guests with their local council).

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author, Khin Hnin Htet.

My opinion:

Though USDA is doing horribly bad things, their ideas should be said "pretty good" in trying to win the election. But, one thing becomes pretty clear. Whenever a person related to the junta is there, there will be no justice and freedom. It should be known since the junta said the election will be held that there will be no justice and freedom.