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Thursday, February 28, 2013
Ongoing Impunity continued Burma army atrocities against Kachin people
Our short film, Ongoing impunity: Atrocities Against the Kachin People, documents interviews with villagers who have suffered human rights violations by the ...
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Harvard plan to restart Irrawaddy dams will not buy peace
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By KDNG
A recent proposal by a Harvard University think-tank to restart the
Irrawaddy-Myitsone dam project in order to “power the peace process” in
Kachin state fails to address the political root causes of the
conflict.
The proposal recommends a new tripartite business agreement to build
the seven Irrawaddy headwater dams, letting the Kachin state government
become a new shareholder together with the Myanmar and Chinese
governments.
It is proposed that the business partnership and “substantial revenues”
granted to the Kachin state government would persuade Kachins to
support the multi-dam project, and “hasten real peace in Kachin and
possibly other states”.
This proposal incorrectly suggests that money is at the root of
opposition to the dams as well as the current conflict. The real root
cause is the Kachin people’s lack of decision-making power under the
previous and current unitary constitutions.
This lack of power has resulted in decades of exploitation of our
natural resources, causing widespread land confiscation, forced
relocation, loss of livelihoods and social problems in Kachin State.
These experiences have taught us that only the political power to manage
and control our own resources will protect our lands and livelihoods,
and ensure that development will benefit local people.
“Business deals are no substitute for political reform,” said KDNG
spokesperson, Ah Nan. “The Kachin conflict can’t be solved by money. We
want self-determination, and the right to decide how our own lands and
rivers are managed.”
The paper suggests that the new deal will also benefit China, as they
will be able to restart the project, and enjoy increased electricity at
“below wholesale prices,” as well as have “enhanced pipeline safety” for
their controversial Shwe gas pipeline.
The paper, funded by the Norwegian government, suggests adding another
multi-national or bi-lateral aid agency as a minor partner in the
Myitsone project. Norway has publicly stated its interest in hydropower
investment in Burma.
The full paper “Powering the Peace Process” can be viewed on http://www.ash.harvard.edu/ash/Home/Programs/Institute-for-Asia/Publications/Journal-Articles-Occasional-Papers
Contact Ah Nan - +66 84 8854 154 kdngchn@gmail.com, www.kdng.org To download : : The full paper “Powering the Peace Process” , English ၊ Burmese To download statement : : English ၊ Burmese |
Religious persecution, rape still evident in Kachin State
by/ Mizzima News
Sixty-six Christian churches have been burnt down in Kachin state since
the conflict erupted in June 2011, according to the Kachin Women’s
Association of Thailand (KWAT), a figure that is backed by
Myitkyina-based Kachin Baptist Convention.
Speaking at a seminar at Chiang Mai University on Friday, Julia Marip of KWAT said that the burning of churches by Myanmar government forces amounts to religious persecution.
Also on Friday, a group of Roman Catholic bishops in Kachin State called for peace.
According to website CatholicCulture, spokesman Bishop Francis Daw Tang of Myitkyina said, “As a church, we walk with our displaced people, watch their lives being destroyed by war, their families fragmented by the depressing life in the displaced camps.”
He accused government forces were waging “unequal warfare” on Christian holy days.
Kwat’s Marip said there are now 100,000 people displaced by the conflict in Kachin State, 60,000 of whom are sheltered at the Sino-Myanmar border or other areas under Kachin rebel control, and 40,000 in areas under government control.
Marip said her organization had continuing evidence of systematic rape by Myanmar troops against Kachin and other ethnic women. She said KWAT had recorded 30 incidents where 64 women or girls had been sexually assaulted in Kachin State since the conflict began.
“But there could be many more cases that we have not been able to document,” she said, explaining that NGOs were unable to make contact with many rural areas and villages under government control.
“Half of those women raped were killed afterward,” she said.
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A UNHCR-supported camp in northern Myanmar for people displaced by conflict in Kachin state. Photo: UNHCR/A. Kirchhof |
Speaking at a seminar at Chiang Mai University on Friday, Julia Marip of KWAT said that the burning of churches by Myanmar government forces amounts to religious persecution.
Also on Friday, a group of Roman Catholic bishops in Kachin State called for peace.
According to website CatholicCulture, spokesman Bishop Francis Daw Tang of Myitkyina said, “As a church, we walk with our displaced people, watch their lives being destroyed by war, their families fragmented by the depressing life in the displaced camps.”
He accused government forces were waging “unequal warfare” on Christian holy days.
Kwat’s Marip said there are now 100,000 people displaced by the conflict in Kachin State, 60,000 of whom are sheltered at the Sino-Myanmar border or other areas under Kachin rebel control, and 40,000 in areas under government control.
Marip said her organization had continuing evidence of systematic rape by Myanmar troops against Kachin and other ethnic women. She said KWAT had recorded 30 incidents where 64 women or girls had been sexually assaulted in Kachin State since the conflict began.
“But there could be many more cases that we have not been able to document,” she said, explaining that NGOs were unable to make contact with many rural areas and villages under government control.
“Half of those women raped were killed afterward,” she said.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Myanmar’s rulers are deceiving the world
The Gulf News
ျမန္မာအစိုးရမွ ကမာၻၾကီးကို လွည္႔ဖ်ားေနျခင္း
Myanmar’s rulers are deceiving the world
Token reform measures are a smokecreen to divert attention from the issues of minorities and rights.
Hasty praise, international oversell and overreaction to the so-called efforts by the junta to create an aura of stability in Myanmar, is actually blurring the bigger picture that exists in the country.
It is time the international community took a close-up view of the plight of the minorities and serious human rights abuses that are being committed there.
By opening up the economy, allowing human rights icon Aung San Suu Kyi to contest a by-election, freeing political prisoners and relaxing media censorship laws, the military seems to have shown its reformist face in a bid to win international acceptance and praise. The truth is, however, the opposite.
Nothing has changed in Myanmar as far as ground realities are concerned. The sectarian violence against the Rohingya Muslims in the state of Rakhine is evident of this point. What is being carried out against this minority is ethnic cleansing, which alarmingly is still ongoing.
Tragically, even a national idol like Suu Kyi has not leveraged her domestic and expanding global reputation to restrict the problem. She continues to sit on the fence in a bid to placate the military.
Status quo is not the answer. Democratic reforms do not arrive overnight, but there must be ample proof that wheels have been set in motion.
The current manoeuvrings seem to be a smokescreen by the junta to mislead the world.
ဂိုလ္ရွယ္ေလးမွ ျပန္လည္ေ၀ငွပါသည္
ျမန္မာအစိုးရမွ ကမာၻၾကီးကို လွည္႔ဖ်ားေနျခင္း
Myanmar’s rulers are deceiving the world
Token reform measures are a smokecreen to divert attention from the issues of minorities and rights.
Hasty praise, international oversell and overreaction to the so-called efforts by the junta to create an aura of stability in Myanmar, is actually blurring the bigger picture that exists in the country.
It is time the international community took a close-up view of the plight of the minorities and serious human rights abuses that are being committed there.
By opening up the economy, allowing human rights icon Aung San Suu Kyi to contest a by-election, freeing political prisoners and relaxing media censorship laws, the military seems to have shown its reformist face in a bid to win international acceptance and praise. The truth is, however, the opposite.
Nothing has changed in Myanmar as far as ground realities are concerned. The sectarian violence against the Rohingya Muslims in the state of Rakhine is evident of this point. What is being carried out against this minority is ethnic cleansing, which alarmingly is still ongoing.
Tragically, even a national idol like Suu Kyi has not leveraged her domestic and expanding global reputation to restrict the problem. She continues to sit on the fence in a bid to placate the military.
Status quo is not the answer. Democratic reforms do not arrive overnight, but there must be ample proof that wheels have been set in motion.
The current manoeuvrings seem to be a smokescreen by the junta to mislead the world.
ဂိုလ္ရွယ္ေလးမွ ျပန္လည္ေ၀ငွပါသည္
By: Maha Mingyi
Army shells KIO positions near Lajayang amid talks
Lachid Kachin's photo.
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Beginning at 1 PM Monday, as representatives of Burma's government met with senior members of the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) in the Chinese border city of Ruili, government forces stationed at Lajayang shelled nearby KIO positions, according to witnesses in the area.
During the KIO's 17 year ceasefire with Burma's government the KIO operated a major checkpoint at Laja Yang located less than 6KM from Laiza. Beginning in December Burma's army heavily bombed KIO positions at Laja Yang until the outposts fell.
The fact that the army has continued to shell KIO positions even as peace talks were taking place did little to alleviate Kachin concerns that the government is unwilling to reign in the the army. The talks ended with both sides agreeing to meet again but no major breakthroughs came out of the meeting.
Following the meeting's conclusion Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying was reported in Chinese state-controlled media saying his government was pleased that the two sides were able to sit down together for talks. The talks were formally observed by Chinese government officials, the first such time that they have done so since the fighting began in Kachin state in June 2011.
"China would like congratulate the two parties on the achievements that have been made on significant issues including cease-fire and peace talks, and hopes they will fulfill their commitments and maintain contact," Hua told a press briefing in Beijing.
(KNG)
UN chief urges KIO and Burma govt work for peace as some fighting continues
Martue Hpauda and 5 other friends shared Lachid Kachin's photo.
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Following peace talks between Burma's military and the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) in China on Monday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on both sides to “continue their efforts towards genuine and sustainable peace in Kachin”.
The Secretary General noted the joint announcement issued by both sides following the peace talks which outlined a mutually agreed “framework for de-escalation of the violent conflict”. Ban added that he hoped “that the latest developments would result in a silencing of the guns in Myanmar for the first time since its independence.”
Despite the goodwill generated by the recent peace talks sporadic fighting continues throughout Kachin and part of north western Shan states. Yesterday afternoon the army and KIO troops exchanged gunfire for more than 2 hours in the Kutkai district near the Huhpyet to Jahkrai road. Meanwhile in eastern Kachin state the Burma army attacked a KIO post at Law Hkawng near Chipwe.
Ban Ki-moon's Special Adviser on Burma Vijay Nambiar was in Kachin state earlier this week where he visited internally displaced person's camps near Myitkyina the Kachin state capital. While in Kachin state Nambiar also met “civil society groups and other stakeholders”, according to the UN announcement.
Shortly after Nambiar completed his visit a presidential spokesperson told reporters that the UN would soon be allowed to resume aid shipments to non-government controlled parts of Kachin state. From April until June last year UN relief teams were allowed to make aid shipments to refugee camps in Mai Ja Yang, the KIO's second largest town. After June the UN has prevented from making any more deliveries to non-government controlled parts of Kachin state for “safety reasons”.
(KNG)
Friday, February 1, 2013
U THEIN SEIN GOVERNMENT VIOLATED THE LAWS ASSOCIATED WITH KIA
On the 28 January, the government owned newspaper released the news that a civilian died and three motor cycles were destroyed from the bomb blast committed by the KIA .
One of the civilians exposed that the news was fabricated with false
evidence. Therefore, on January 31 st, the government owned newspaper
had to release an apology paper.
“There can be mistakes but there can be two types of mistakes. These are
accidental or intentional mistakes. It can be an intentional mistake
since it is related to the country. The most responsible person for this
mistake is the editor”, the experienced writer, U Hpo Thaw Kya said
which was released in the Mizzima news on the 31 st January, 2013. In
reality, the editor is second most responsible person. In this case,
Thein Sein Government is the most responsible because they made this
mistake intentionally.
It is well known in the whole country including the world that Thein
Sein government invaded massively the KIO control area around Lai Za,
which is the KIA Head Quarter. As the experienced journalist, U Hpo Thaw
Kya pointed out, it is obvious that the government intentionally makes
this mistake in relation to the national affair and the KIA.
The picture of the dead person and the motor cycle incidence are not
matched together. It is obvious that the picture of the dead person is
taken from one place and the pictures of the motorcycles incidence were
taken from another source and combined them together. This fabrication
of fake news clearly shows that the government intentionally wants to
destroy the dignity of Kachin Independent Army (KIA). Not only did the
Thein Sein Government army violate the laws themselves, the government
also fabricated the news so that the public will have the bad impression
on the KIA. The government is violating article (499) for defamation.
“Whoever, by words either spoken or intended to be read, or by signs or
by visible representations, makes or publishes any imputation
concerning any person intending to harm, or knowing or having reason to
believe that such imputation will harm, the reputation of such person,
is said, except in the cases hereinafter expected, to defame that
person.”
This fabrication of fake news by the Thein Sein Government not only
affects the peace building process and ethnic unity in the country but
also the reputation of KIA.
For detail information, please contact
U Am Naw Mein (Lawyer), (95) (0) 947 60 66 86
Date: 31st January 2013
Original article from Legal Aid Network by U Am Naw Mein (Lawyer)
Translated by Kachin Women’s Association Thailand
Labels:
English version (Kachin News)
By: http://jinghpawkasa.blogspot.com/2013/02/u-thein-sein-government-violated-laws.html
NaHpaw Hkawn Tawng raped by Burma Army
photo by FB-shawnglam shiga+++click on
Taken at between Dabak and Nhkrang Village
Tanai Based Infantry Batallion raped and killed Nahpaw Hkawn Tawng besides Myitkyina-Bhamo Hwy near Dabak Village