Week in Review: Myanmar

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Myanmar Eleven   MON, 25 JAN, 2016 1:00

No change in FDI target Myanmar Investment Commission secretary Aung Naing Oo said the body expected US$6 billion (Bt216 billion) in foreign direct investment in the next fiscal year.

The amount shows no change from its target for the 2015-16 fiscal year, which will end on March 31.

From April to December 2015, FDI inflows from 20 countries were more than $5 billion.

Journalist wins award

Myanmar national Htet Khaung Linn was among nine journalists, selected from more than 1,400 registered participants from across the world, awarded the European Commission’s Lorenzo Natali Media Prizes.

The prizes honour those reporting on development issues. The winners’ reports covered topics ranging from the e-waste economy in Ghana to innovative farming methods in slums in Kenya, drug crime in Mexico, and child prostitution in Myanmar.

Htet Khaung Linn’s winning article “Poverty drives Myanmar girls into underage sex work” can be found at http://bit.ly/1ZwLpgH.

CNPC faces disruption

China National Petroleum Corporation’s land fencing in Maday Island, Kyaukphyu township, Rakhine state, was suspended because of protests.

The administrator for Kyaukphyu township, along with CNPC and the Land Records Department, promised 1 million kyat per acre (Bt68,000 per hectare) to each of 12 landowners, but some owners do not want to leave their farm land.

Kyaw Hla, one of the landowners who is also a member of Maday Island Development Committee, said some landowners were threatened to take money and leave. He said he might leave if the compensation were raised to 40 million kyat.

CNPC plans a port and oil-storage tanks on the island, as part of its oil pipeline from Kyaukphyu to Yunnan.

Budget bill approved

The Myanmar Parliament approved the budget bill for the 2016-17 fiscal year, which targets revenue of 17.45 trillion kyat (Bt483 billion) and expenditure of 20.74 trillion kyat.

The fiscal deficit is projected to account for 4.16 per cent of gross domestic product.

The deficit ratio could be 4.66 per cent but for a budget cut worth 625 billion kyat.

Tram link

Myanma Railways reportedly plans to link tram routes to Kyimyindaing and Pazundaung railway stations in the next fiscal year.

Domestic and foreign companies would be invited to bid for the project, designed to promote public transport.

Ethnic MPs win nominations

The National League for Democracy nominated four MPs for Speaker positions in the two parliamentary houses, including three ethnic-minority MPs.

NLD spokesman Nyan Win said Win Khaing Than, an ethnic Karen, and spokesman U Win Myint were nominated for upper and lower house Speaker. The other nominations for deputy Speakers are an ethnic Rakhine from the Arakan National Party and an ethnic Kachin from the incumbent military-backed party.

The vote is set after both houses convene on February 1.

Suu Kyi inspects MP guest houses

National League for Democracy chairwoman Aung San Suu Kyi and lower house Speaker Thura Shwe Mann inspected Nay Pyi Taw’s guest houses, seeking accommodation for MPs who do not live in the city.

They talked with guest-house managers on security measures and availability of rooms.

The MPs are set to arrive in Nay Pyi Taw before January 26 tomorrow.

Expenses are to be billed to Parliament as part of the capital’s municipal budget.

Higher arsenic level

The arsenic level in drinking water in Ayeyawady and Bago regions and Rakhine state has reached dangerours levels, said the Department of Medical Research.

It took samples from 97 wells in Ayeyawady region and found that 29 per cent exceeded the standard level.

Protest anniversary marked

The All Burma Federation of Student Unions for Upper Myanmar marked the one-year anniversary of the march against the National Education Law. The march to Yangon culminated in a crackdown in Letpadan on March 10.

The students joining the commemoration demanded the release of all students still detained, as well as other political prisoners.

On Friday, Myanmar pardoned more than 100 prisoners, including a New Zealander and 34 others jailed on political charges. The move comes after a US envoy urged the quasi-civilian government to free all remaining political prisoners before the new Parliament convenes next month.

Last week, 12 workers protesting for a pay rise in 2015 were indicted for unlawful assembly.

Age restriction on car importers

MP Win Oo submitted a proposal to raise the age restriction on car imports, from 18 to 25.

He said Myanmar had imported around 600,000 cars over the last five years, causing traffic jams and parking problems.

Military appointees

A total of 220 military personnel were appointed as members of regional and state parliaments. On the list of 220 appointees, 203 are from the army, seven are from the air force and 10 are from the navy. The new MPs include one brigadier-general, 14 colonels and 10 lieutenant-colonels.

On the list submitted to the Election Commission, 13 military personnel were appointed to the Kachin state parliament, five for Kayah state, six for Kayin State, six for Chin state, seven for Taninthayi region, 19 for Bago region, 17 for Magway region, 19 for Mandalay region, eight for Mon state, 12 for Rakhine state, 31 for Yangon region, 34 for Shan state and 18 for Ayeyawady region.

No show for some candidates

Only 14 out of 34 candidates for Yangon Region Parliament who failed to submit election expenses during Myanmar’s general election in November appeared before the Union Election Commission.

The UEC will rule on whether they were qualified on February 4, while the verdict for those who failed to appear will be issued on February 5.

A total of 52 new MPs for the lower house, 30 for the upper house, 122 for regional and state parliaments and three ethnic representatives failed to submit expenses.

Only Suu Kyi speaks for party: NLD

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Eleven Myanmar   SUN, 24 JAN, 2016 5:36 PM

YANGON – The National League for Democracy said only its chairwoman Aung San Suu Kyi could make announcements on policy and transitional affairs.

Its statement stressed the delicate nature of transitional politics and said Suu Kyi was handling the process with great care.

During the week, Nyan Win, an executive committee member, told AFP that four MPs were nominated for Lower House Speaker and Upper House Speaker, including three ethnic MPs.

Subsequently, Suu Kyi on January 21 refused to answer questions on the appointments.

Win Htein of the NLD central executive committee said: “We will not answer every question. We regard every matter seriously. Suu Kyi does nothing carelessly. We will announce the speakers and vice-speakers after seeking approval from the CEC. We asked Nyan Win why he did it. We emphasise that appointments must represent the interests of ethnic groups and promote national reconciliation. We will issue an announcement at the opportune time.”

Snow envelops northern mountains in Vietnam

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Viet Nam News   SUN, 24 JAN, 2016 5:17 PM

LAO CAI – Snow fell in many areas across the northern mountainous region as a strong cold spell envelops almost half of the country since yesterday.

Snow blanketed Sa Pa resort city in the northern mountainous province of Lao Cai today and temperatures plunged to minus 5 degree C yesterday night, the lowest for many years. The temperature at Sa Pa was measured at 0 degree C this morning.

Local elderly people said this is the biggest snowfall they ever saw for many years.

Freezing temperatures were also reported in other areas, such as minus 0.4 degree C in Tam Dao (Phu Tho Province), minus 0.2 degree C in Dong Van (Ha Giang province) and minus 4 degree C in Mau Son Mountain (Lang Son province).

Tens of kilometres on national road 4D on the section from O Quy Ho Pass (Sa Pa district) to Tam Duong District (Lai Chau Province) have been covered with snow and 1cm of ice, posing danger to traffic.

Local residents in Nam Bung and Tu Le communes, Van Chan District, Yen Bai Province, were surprised to see snow fall for the first time in the area. Snow was also seen in higher areas, including Khau Pha Pass in Mu Cang Chai District, Suoi Giang Commune in Van Chan and Hat Luu and Tram Tau communes in Tram Tau District.

In Hanoi, the highest temperature today is forecast from 7 to 10 degree C.

The cold spell has expanded as far as the south central localities, bringing rain to most areas along the central coast.

Court hands out 6-month term for army chief insult

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Eleven Myanmar   SAT, 23 JAN, 2016 5:11 PM

YANGON – The Hlaing Township judge has sentenced Khun Ja Lee, who was charged under Section 66(D) of the Telecommunication Act, to six months in prison for defaming the commander-in-chief.

Khun Ja Lee was arrested in Yangon in October last year for allegedly sharing a photo of a man in traditional Kachin dress stepping on a portrait of Senior General Min Aung Hlaing.

The judge said Khun Ja Lee’s act contravened cultural ethics, defaming the military chief.

Khun Khun Ja Lee could have been jailed for three years but he was suffering from asthma and was therefore given a more lenient term, the court said.

“It is injustice. This Telecommunications Act does not have by-laws yet and isn’t finished. I don’t want anyone to be handled like me,” Khun Khun Ja Lee said.

EU, US and UK envoys and human rights activists observed the trial.

“The verdict was anticipated. In December, Chaw Sandi Tun, a member of the National League for Democracy, was sentenced to six months in jail for defamation for uploading a photo to Facebookthat compared the colour of the army’s new uniforms to that of a sarong worn by NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi. It is not justice. Insufficient evidence was given,” Sabe Phyu, wife of Khun Khun Ja Lee, said.

Khun Ja Lee has already served three months of his sentence.

Vietnam welcomes its first surrogate baby

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Viet Nam News   SAT, 23 JAN, 2016 1:00 AM

HANOI – Vietnam’s first surrogate baby was born in the morning of January 22 at the Ha Noi-based Central Maternity Hospital.

The baby girl, weighing 3.6kg, was born at 7.25am by C-section to a 38-year-old woman from the northern Ninh Binh Province.

The happy mother said she had been trying to have a baby for the last 16 years.

This is the first surrogate baby to be born in Vietnam, a year after local hospitals were granted permission to use surrogacy technologies.

Ever since the technology has been made available, hospitals have received more than 100 applications for the procedure, Deputy Minister of Health Nguyen Viet Tien said.

Vietnam’s Law on Marriage and Family allows close relatives to become surrogate mothers.

Surrogacy is permitted only in cases where the woman, for health reasons, is physically incapable of having children.

Eligible surrogate mothers must be between the ages of 21 and 40 and be physically healthy. They must already have at least one child. If she is married, she must also have her husband’s approval before participating in the surrogacy case.

At present, three hospitals — the Central Maternity Hospital, the Tu Du Hospital in HCM City and the Hue-based Central Hospital — meet the technical requirements for taking up surrogacy cases.

Of the 60 patients approved by the Central Maternity Hospital, doctors have taken up 46 cases. The rate of success at the hospital was 50 per cent, Tien said.

Tu Du Hospital doctors have taken up 19 cases out of a total 33 patients who meet the requirements.

Meanwhile, Hue Central Hospital doctors have not yet carried out surrogacy procedures due to technical reasons.

Indonesians who join ISIS risk losing citizenship

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Francis Chan
The Straits Times   FRI, 22 JAN, 2016 4:17 PM

JAKARTA – Indonesians who join the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) risk losing their citizenship and could be barred from ever returning to their homeland, said the country’s security czar, Luhut Pandjaitan.

The Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs said the move is part of a wider effort to prevent a repeat of the recent attack in downtown Jakarta.

“We will take away their passports, so they will never be allowed back into Indonesia,” he said yesterday. He was speaking to The Straits Times at Kemenkopolhukam, his office in Central Jakarta, exactly a week after the siege by four ISIS loyalists on Jan 14.

Indonesia has responded swiftly since the siege on the busy intersection along the Thamrin boulevard, which left eight dead, including the four militants who mounted the brazen attack.

Two off-duty police officers, reinforced by more of their uniformed counterparts, managed to neutralise the terrorists within 11 minutes after the first bomb went off.

Updates from the police in recent days indicated that there were at least six explosions that day. A suicide bomber ignited the first blast outside a Starbucks cafe just off Jalan M.H. Thamrin.

Another militant was killed when the homemade bomb he was carrying went off outside a police post nearby – killing two bystanders as well. Investigators are still trying to determine if that was also a suicide attack. An off-duty cop gunned down one of the remaining terrorists as he was trying to set off a bomb, while the fourth died when a bomb he was carrying exploded, possibly prematurely.

At least 13 suspects were rounded up by the Indonesian National Police’s counter-terrorism unit, Detachment 88, within days. Six are confirmed to have had direct knowledge of the siege beforehand.

Luhut praised the security forces for their swift, professional handling of the crisis and vowed that they will continue to do whatever it takes to improve on responding to such attacks. “We are working very hard on the ground mapping out terrorists’ activities so that we can be successful in containing them,” he said.

“However, like in the United States or everywhere else, no one can guarantee that they will be immune from any threats. But I can assure you that we can respond decisively and very quickly if (another attack) happens in Indonesia.”

Luhut is a former army general in the Komando Pasukan Khusus, Indonesia’s special forces. He is also the founding commander of Detasemen 81, the country’s first counter-terrorism unit.

He has since traded his guns for politics and is now involved at the highest level in President Joko Widodo’s government and deals with key issues such as last year’s transboundary haze crisis and the emerging threat from extremists.

Following the attack on Jakarta, Joko has been under pressure to beef up Indonesia’s anti-terror laws. Earlier this week, his government and the legislature agreed to draw up new legal guidelines to strengthen the country’s counter- terrorism efforts.

These include granting the National Intelligence Agency the authority to make arrests and allowing the national police to temporarily detain suspects for preventive and investigative purposes. Current laws allow the police to hold terror suspects for seven days.

Luhut said the first revision will allow security agencies to arrest “potential terrorists” and detain them for a longer time as a pre- emptive action. The second bans Indonesians who become foreign fighters from returning home.

Atmadji Sumarkidjo, a senior aide to Luhut at Kemenkopolhukam, explained that the country’s citizenship laws today stipulate that any Indonesian who joins a foreign country’s military will lose his citizenship. But officials have been debating whether the law applies to ISIS, which has a military and controls territory in Syria and Iraq but is not internationally recognised as a country.

The third revision facilitates the prosecution of citizens with links to ISIS or other terror groups.

“We want to strengthen the powers of the police and other security agencies so they can pre-empt terror activities here,” said Luhut.

New Zealander among 34 political prisoners pardoned in Myanmar

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FRI, 22 JAN, 2016 3:19 PM

YANGON – Myanmar pardoned more than 100 prisoners Friday, including a New Zealander and 34 others jailed on political charges, officials said, days before a historic political transition that will see Aung San Suu Kyi’s pro-democracy party take power.

The move comes after a US envoy urged the quasi-civilian government last week to free all remaining political prisoners before the new parliament convenes next month.

“Altogether 102 prisoners including a foreign prisoner, a New Zealand national who was serving his sentence were released,” presidential spokesperson Zaw Htay wrote on his official Facebook account.

Outgoing President Thein Sein, a former general, has overseen Myanmar’s transition from nearly five decades of junta rule that ended in 2011, releasing political prisoners at key moments in the reform process.

That transition culminated with landmark elections held in November that saw the party of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi — who the junta kept under house arrest for 15 years — win a thumping majority.

Friday’s pardon included at least 34 prisoners of conscience, said Ye Aung, a representative of the Former Political Prisoners Support Group.

Among those pardoned was Philip Blackwood, 32, a New Zealander sentenced to two years in prison last March for insulting religion by using an image of a Buddha wearing headphones to promote a cheap drinks night at the Yangon bar where he worked.

His jailing was condemned by rights groups and read as a worrying sign of surging Buddhist nationalism in Myanmar, which has seen anti-Muslim riots and persecution of the country’s troubledRohingya population.

Presidential spokesperson Zaw Htay said the pardon was signed to mark an ongoing peace conference hosted in north-western Myanmar by a top Buddhist monk, Sitagu Sayadaw, who has strong links to the hardline Ma Ba Tha Buddhist nationalist movement.

“The release was aimed to mark the World Buddhist Peace Conference where the president is currently attending,” he told AFP, without elaborating.

Though many of Myanmar’s hundreds of political dissidents were jailed during repressive junta rule, scores of activists have also been thrown behind bars under Thein Sein’s watch.

Last March authorities launched a violent crackdown on a student-led education protest in the town of Letpadan, some two hours north of Yangon.

Around 60 young activists remain in prison following that episode and face trial accused of stirring unrest.

Prior to Friday’s pardon, a total of 537 political prisoners were being held in Myanmar prisons , according to a report by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), an NGO that monitors jailed dissidents in Myanmar.

Min Min, a land activist released from Yangon’s Insein prison this morning, told AFP that he worries about the others still behind bars.

“We want all political prisoners to be freed,” he said. “There are many more political prisoners inside prison.”

– AFP

Shan ethnic armies clash

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Yangon – At least 10 clashes have broken out recently between the Restoration Counsel for Shan State (RCSS) and Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), says RCSS spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Sai Mein.

He said in the latest clash the TNLA attacked RCSS troops on January 19 in Totsan village tract in Kyaukme Township.

The two armies also clashed on January 18 in Kyaukme and Thepaw, he said.

“We’ve never started a fight until now. And we never take them as our enemy. But they ambushed us at least 10 times. Since the first attack, we asked them why. We also based in this region. We demanded a meeting. But no reply returned and fighting has continued,” said Sai Mein.

At a meeting last December of the United Nationalities Federal Council, the RCSS asked the TNLA to release detained civilians and why it had attacked but received no response, said Sai Mein.

“The nationwide ceasefire agreement was signed between armed groups and the government. But there is no agreement between the groups themselves. But there were no big problems between the groups and they’re not each other’s enemies. We have no plan to fight each other. But we don’t see the agreement as a cause for conflict between us,” said Sai Mein.

Civic freedoms at stake under terrorism law revisions: Activists

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Callistasia Anggun Wijaya
The Jakarta Post   THU, 21 JAN, 2016 1:17 PM

JAKARTA – Human rights activists slam the government’s plan to revise terrorism laws to expand the authority of the State Intelligence Agency (BIN) because it may allow abuse of power and harm civil freedoms.

In the wake of an attack that struck the capital city on Jan. 14, BIN chief Sutiyoso has asked the government to give his agency wider authority to preemptively arrest and detain people suspected to be terrorists.

“Such a suggestion may harm Indonesian citizens. It will allow BIN to arrest and detain anyone under the assumption [that person is] threatening national security,” Wahyu Wagiman, the executive director of the Institute for Policy Research and Advocacy (ELSAM), told thejakartapost.com on Wednesday.

Under Indonesian Law, only the National Police have the authority to arrest people suspected to be connected to acts of terrorism. Police are allowed to arrest suspected terrorists for seven days for investigation.

In the planned revisions of the 2003 and 2013 laws on terrorism prevention and eradication, the government is considering allowing the police to detain suspicious people for up to two weeks.

If BIN is given the authority to arrest, Wahyu fears that the suspected citizens would face difficulties in proving themselves innocent before the courts because BIN’s verification process is different from that of other law enforcement bodies.

The discussions of the revisions began after Jan. 14’s terrorist attack on Jakarta’s main street of Jl. MH Thamrin that left eight people dead, including four of the terrorists, and left 25 people injured.

Critics fear the revisions could bring back the New Order regime when Indonesians were subject to a draconian anti-subversion law passed in 1963 under the dictatorship of then president Soeharto. The law was often abused to silence political activists and critics of the government. It was revoked under the administration of president BJ Habibie following the downfall of Soeharto in 1998.

Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence (Kontras) chairman Haris Azhar also criticized BIN’s request and urged the agency to strengthen its intelligence cooperation with the police instead.

He said arresting suspected terrorists must also be carried out carefully with evidence by highly skilled law enforcement officers.

“That is to prevent any false arrest that may happen to anyone suspected to be a terrorist,” Haris said.

For example, he said, Indonesian people returning home from Syria could not all be suspected without valid evidence.

The chairman of the human rights advocacy group Setara Institute, Hendardi, also expressed similar concerns as he believed the current laws on terrorism were enough to handle terrorism issues in the country. He said the revision was a reactive step taken by the government and would only spoil BIN.

Separately, Jakarta Police chief Ins. Gen. Tito Karnavian also implied he disapproved of the idea of widening BIN’s authority.

He said that under the current law enforcement practices of the police, the rights of people suspected to be terrorists could still be respected.

“With another approach, such as through intelligence and the military, human rights are likely to be violated,” Tito said on Wednesday.

Keeping the police as the only law enforcers able to arrest suspected terrorists and bring them to court would help combat terrorism, he claimed.

“Bringing the suspected terrorists to court can simplify the issues. The public will see terrorists as common criminals, not as notable people,” he said.

Ambitious VN congress aims high

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The Nation   THU, 21 JAN, 2016 1:00 AM

BANGKOK – Communist party convenes today, comes up with a five-year plan on economic growth, industrialisation

Despite having the highest growth rate in Southeast Asia, Vietnam’s ruling Communist Party at its 12th congress, which will officially convene today, has set a higher ambition for economic expansion and industrialisation for the next five years.

The Communist Party called the congress this week until January 28 to set a new socio-economic plan as well as cast new set of leadership to run the country for the next five years.

Ruling the country according to Marxist-Leninist principles since its independence in 1945, the Communist Party will maintain a so-called “socialist democracy” in its governance. The party managed to unify the country after the Vietnam War in 1975 and underwent radical reforms to have an open economy under the Doi Moi programme since 1986.

The congress, aiming to strengthen party-building in a clean, strong, leadership capacity as well as building a strong political system, said the new five-year plan will be implemented until 2020.

The party will promote comprehensive and synchronised renovation work; rapid economic development, sustainability, building the foundation for quickly bringing the country into a modern and industrialised one, it said.

The party will “firmly safeguard the independence, sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity of the motherland, protect the party, the state, the people and the socialist regime”, the draft said.

Changing of personnel will be seen at the end of the congress next week. Power struggle was going on between two camps led by the current party chief Nguyen Phu Trong and Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung.

The party aims to have economic growth rate average at 6.5 to 7 per cent per year for the next five years. By 2020, per capita GDP of about US$3,200-$3,500 the proportion of industry and services in GDP over 85 per cent; total social investment capital by five-year average of about 32-34 per cent of GDP, according to the plan.

On the social front, the party set a target to have the proportion of agricultural workers in the total labour force of about 35 to 40 per cent and unemployment rate in urban areas less than 4 per cent by 2020, it said.

On the environment, 95 per cent of the urban population, 90 per cent of the rural population have access to clean water and sanitation, while 80 to 85 per cent of hazardous waste and 95 to 100 per cent of medical waste is treated; and forest coverage rate has reached 44 to 45 per cent, it said. Vietnam’s economy grew 6.68 per cent last year, highest over the past five years and better than the government’s forecast.

As many as 1,510 delegates representing over 4.5 million Vietnamese Communist Party members attended the 12th national party congress.