Government acknowledges most Japanese favor nuclear-free society

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/government-acknowledges-most-japanese.html [/postlink]


The government said Wednesday in a draft report that public consultations on the future of nuclear power show that most people favor doing away with all reactors.
In formulating a new energy policy following the Fukushima nuclear disaster, the government has held public hearings nationwide, conducted a poll and solicited comments via the Internet and through other means.
People were asked their views on the degree that Japan should rely on nuclear power by 2030.
The options were zero percent, 15 percent or 20 to 25 percent of total power generation, compared with 26 percent for nuclear power in 2010.
The report presented by the government Wednesday at the third meeting to analyze the results of the surveys with a group of experts states: "We can say with certainty that a majority of citizens want to achieve a society that does not rely on nuclear power generation."
However, the report also states: "On the other hand, opinions vary on the speed to realize it."
The report, after being finalized through discussions with the experts, will be submitted to a ministerial meeting in charge of formulating the new energy policy, a government official said.

Honda to set up representative office in Yangon

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/honda-to-set-up-representative-office.html [/postlink]
 
 
Honda Motor Co. will set up a representative office in Yangon, the biggest city in Myanmar, company officials said Wednesday.


The automaker will start out by researching the motorcycle market in Myanmar, where annual sales are expected to rise to 3 million to 4 million units, according to the officials.
Over the medium term, Honda will consider local production of motorcycles, the officials said.
Honda will use the office to study details of the motorcycle market and conditions of public infrastructure.
The firm hopes to start imports and sales of motorcycles through local sales agents by the end of this year, the officials said.
Yamaha Motor Co. is also preparing to open a representative office in Myanmar.
Moves toward democratization are helping boost economic activities in the country.

Ito En expanding

Kyodo
Major soft drink maker Ito En Ltd. said it will set up liaison offices in Myanmar and Vietnam to invest and research in the rapidly growing markets.
Ito En, a top-ranked producer of green-tea products based in Tokyo, will open the offices in Yangon and Hanoi in November with plans to produce beverages for the two markets, a company official said Tuesday.

US paves way for Myanmar president visit

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/us-paves-way-for-myanmar-president-visit.html [/postlink]


US President Barack Obama on Wednesday waived visa restrictions for Myanmar's leader Thein Sein to visit during next month's UN summit in a show of support for reforms in the country.
Obama ordered an exception in a visa ban on Myanmar's leaders to let Thein Sein travel freely during the UN General Assembly. Thein Sein would otherwise have been confined to a narrow area around the UN headquarters in New York.
Obama made the decision "to signal our interest in engaging more closely with him and his government as they continue to undertake reforms," White House national security spokesman Tommy Vietor said.
"Burma's progress in undertaking political and economic reform has been facilitated, to a large degree, by our increasing engagement with key reformers in the government," Vietor said, using Myanmar's former name.
Vietor said that the decision would allow Thein Sein, who took office last year, and reformist ministers to meet with US officials and to gain "a better understanding of democracy and US policy" during the visit.
Thein Sein, a former general, surprised many by releasing political prisoners, relaxing censorship and opening dialogue with the democratic opposition and ethnic minority guerrillas.
The Obama administration, hoping to encourage further reforms, has sent a US ambassador to Myanmar for the first time in more than two decades and has eased restrictions on investment by US companies.
Myanmar's opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is due to visit the United States next month -- a trip that would have been unimaginable a short while ago -- where she will receive the Congressional Gold Medal, a top US honor.
Thein Sein is expected to come to the United States at roughly the same time as Suu Kyi.
Under a 2008 law, the United States bars visas for Myanmar's leaders or military involved in human rights abuses.

Will Burma Army agree to move away from Karen Region?

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/will-burma-army-agree-to-move-away-from.html [/postlink]

By Zin Linn

It took place on January 11, the 19-member peace-talk delegation of Karen National Union left the border town of Myawaddy intended for first official ceasefire talks in Pa-an Town, capital of Karen State, with Burmese government representatives, according to the then media news.
Burma’s Thein Sein government had already expected signing a preliminary truce with the Karen National Union (KNU), one of the world’s oldest rebellions, at peace talks in Januay.
In January peace-talk, the KNU most important delegates are General Mutue Sae Poe, Padoh Saw David Taw, Padoh Saw Ah Toe, Brigadier General Johnny, Lieutenant Colonel Roger Khin, Major Shisho, Major Ei Tha, Padoh Saw Kwe Htoo Win, Padoh Saw Lay Law Hsaw, Padoh Saw Aung Maw Aye, Padoh Saw Shwe Maunn and Padoh Saw Eh Wah.
The KNU delegation had their prearranged talk on January 12 with representatives of the Burmese government in Pa-an, capital of Karen State. Former Railways Minister Aung Min has headed the Union Government’s peace team together with Industry Minister Soe Thein and Immigration Minister Khin Yi as members.
At that time, the KNU talked based-on eleven key points including a demand for the Burmese government to stop military operations in ethnic areas, to start a nationwide ceasefire as soon as possible, to guarantee the human rights and safety of civilians, to build trust, to plan development projects that allow full participation and decision making of local villagers, to immediately stop forced labor and to stop excessive taxation and extortion of villagers.
Then, second important meeting took place on 6 April at the Sedona Hotel in Rangoon. Railways Minister Aung Min, head of Burmese government peace delegation, offered a dinner for the KNU representatives at the Sedona Hotel on 6 April. Before dinner, railways minister Aung Min and the KNU’s secretary Naw Zipporah Sein explained their political position on the peace talk’s procedure and urged all people to work together for peace.
On that occasion, A large contingent of journalists, Karen leaders, other ethnic parties’ leaders, foreign guests and government ministers attended the dinner.
The 6-April peace-talk agreement looked like based on the key points of 12 January peace meeting. Both sides agreed to work gradually for a nationwide break in fighting and bring to end warfare in ethnic areas.
According to the then Associated Press News, the points agreed on 6 April included to work step-by-step for a nationwide cease-fire and end to conflict in ethnic areas; to set up a code of conduct to maintain a cease-fire that guarantees the security of the people; and to draw up plans to resettle internally displaced people and ensure work and food security in their home areas.
At that juncture, the Karen People’s Party (KPP) requests to bring to an end all armed conflicts between the government’s armed forces and Karen ethnic armed troops for the benefit of economic growth in Karen State, according to Mizzima News. However, as said by KPP general secretary Saw Say Wah, even though many schools and roads were built in Karen State, the armed conflicts have harshly affected the development of the region. As development and peace are well related, the state needs to seek attaining a mutual understanding.
On 25 August, the KNU announces that the Government of Burma has unilaterally postponed the third round of ceasefire negotiations between the Parties, previously scheduled for August 27th to 29th in the City of Pa’an in Karen State, according to KNU’s press release on Saturday. It says that the government’s representatives confirmed the postponement verbally.
Then again yesterday, Karen National Union said in a statement that its delegation and the government’s peacemaking team have agreed to meet on September 3 and 4, 2012 in Hpan-an, Karen State. The third round negotiations meeting will focus on the guarantee of safety for civilian and the building of trust progressively at every level of negotiations, the statement says. It also mentions two items that will be mainly thrashed out.
The two items to focus are: (1) The relocations of the Burma Army troops systematically from Karen State and other conflict ridden Karen areas; and (2) The Code of Conduct, which was drafted by the KNU and submitted to the government to negotiate.
KNU expressed its own belief that “the endeavor to achieve a lasting peace after decades of armed conflicts and political disputes will be possible through the participation and support of all concerned parties and stakeholders.”
The Karen rebellion has started on 31 January 1949. The Karen ethnic group initiated the armed struggle with the intention of self-determination ever since. Civil war broke out in Burma a few months in the wake of her independence in 1948 and cannot make a nonviolent solution so far.

Asia's Most Powerful Women

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/asia-most-powerful-women.html [/postlink]
Asia's Most Powerful Women
Across Asia, women are climbing the ranks, whether it be through business or politics. From China to Singapore, Asia is home to some of the most powerful women in the world.


Across Asia, women are climbing the ranks, whether it be through business or politics. Asia’s high-powered business women have been on FORBES’s radar, with the list of Asia’s 50 Power Business Women in February. However while CEOs like Zhang Xin of Soho China and Chua Sock Koong of SingTel are making waves with their business skills, Asian women shouldn’t be boxed into one base of power. Former business juggernaut Chan Laiwa is now one of the worlds most important artistic investors and cultural diplomats, preserving and presenting China’s red sandalwood art around the world. Yingluck Shinawatra and Aung San Suu Kyi yield political power on an international scale. Sri Mulyani Indrawati and Margaret Chan manage some of the most influential international humanitarian organizations in the world.
From China to Thailand, these women’s power in their countries and beyond are impossible to ignore. Across the board, Asian women more influential than ever in 2012, making up 11 of FORBES’s top 100 most powerful women.

Zhang Xin
Zhang Xin, CEO of Soho China Ltd. (Jerome Favre/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
 

Solina Chau
Solina Chau, founder of the HS Chau Foundation and director of the Li Ka Shing Foundation (Photo by China Photos/Getty Images)
 

Sun Yafang
Sun Yafang, chairwoman of the board of Huawei Technologies (REUTERS/Denis Balibouse)
 

Sri Mulyani Indrawati
Sri Mulyani Indrawati, World Bank Managing Director REUTERS/Jason Reed
 

Ho Ching
Ho Ching, executive director and CEO of Temasek Holdings and wife of Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong (Photo credit should read ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images)
 

Chan Laiwa
Chan Laiwa, Chairwoman of Fu Wah International Group (Photo Bao fan - Imaginechina)
 

Aung San Suu Kyi
Aung San Suu Kyi, Chair and Parliamentarian, National League for Democracy, Burma
 

Cher Wang
Cher Wang, co-founder and chair of HTC (HTC AFP PHOTO / Sam YEH)
 

Margaret Chan
Margaret Chan, WHO Director General, formerly Hong Kong's Director of Health
 

Chua Sock Koong
Chua Sock Koong, CEO of SingTel (Photo by Jonathan Drake/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Yingluck Shinawatra
Yingluck Shinawatra, Thailand's Prime Minister (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Fifteen men and two women were found beheaded in Afghanistan

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/fifteen-men-and-two-women-were-found.html [/postlink]


17 party-goers 'found beheaded' in southern Afghan village

Fifteen men and two women were found beheaded in Afghanistan's southern Helmand province on Monday, punishment meted out by Taliban insurgents for a mixed-sex party with music and dancing, officials said.
The bodies were found in a house near the Musa Qala district, about 75 km (46 miles) north of the provincial capital Lashkar Gah, said district governor Nimatullah, who only goes by one name.
"The victims threw a late-night dance and music party when the Taliban attacked" on Sunday night, Nimatullah told Reuters.
There were no immediate claims of responsibility.
In ultra-conservative Afghanistan, men and women do not usually mingle unless they are related, and parties involving both genders together are rare and highly secretive affairs.
For the Taliban, flirting, open displays of affection and the mixing of men and women are vehemently condemned.
According to witnesses of a major attack that killed 20 near Kabul in June, Taliban gunmen stormed a high-end hotel demanding to know where the "prostitutes and pimps" were.
The Taliban said it launched that attack on Qarga Lake because the hotel was used for "wild parties".
During their five-year reign, which was toppled by US-backed Afghan forces in 2001, sparking the present NATO-led war, the Taliban banned women from voting, most work and leaving their homes unaccompanied by their husband or a male relative.
Though those rights have been painstakingly regained, Afghanistan remains one of the worst places on earth to be a woman. Helmand governor spokesman Daud Ahmadi said a team had been sent to the site of beheadings to investigate.

Myanmar: Asia's next rising star

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/myanmar-asia-next-rising-star.html [/postlink]
 
 
Stephen P. Groff
Just last month I made my first visit to Myanmar, a place Rudyard Kipling referred to as "quite unlike any land you know about". While decades of isolation have helped this century-old observation hold true, on arrival in July I was immediately struck by the vibrancy and a palpable sense of change in the air. The country's immense potential is reflected in the Asian Development Bank's most recent analysis, which shows that Myanmar has the potential to follow Asia's fast growing economies and expand at 7 per cent to 8 per cent if it continues on the path of across-the-board reforms initiated earlier this year.
If Myanmar stays true to these reforms - and I was impressed by the resolve of many officials I met last month - the country should become a middle-income nation, and could more than triple per capita income by 2030.
Half a century ago Myanmar was the pearl of Asia, one of the region's leading economies with a per capita income more than twice that of its neighbour, Thailand. While most other regional economies have skyrocketed since that time, Myanmar has languished, and today has Southeast Asia's lowest per capita gorss domestic product (GDP).
After decades of stagnation, Myanmar has an enormous amount of catching up to do on almost every imaginable front. The recent experiences of Asia's fast-growing economies are instructive. For Myanmar to effectively capitalise on its potential, the country will need to maintain low inflation - under 6 per cent - and better ensure sustainable budgets. It will also need to encourage greater savings, dramatically bolster the skills of its people, invest heavily in infrastructure, modernise its financial sector, foster job creation, and continue with its reform of the foreign exchange regime.
No small order, to be sure, but Myanmar's neighbours have shown dramatic economic transformations are possible in relatively short amounts of time if reforms remain on track.
Nearly everyone I spoke with in July emphasised that maintaining social stability will be crucial as Myanmar embarks on this new course. While economic growth has been the most effective tool for reducing poverty in Asia, it has become less equitable in many fast-growing regional economies in recent decades. As the economy grows it will be essential for the country to ensure that its poorest and most vulnerable share the benefits of Myanmar's growing prosperity. Such inclusiveness will enhance and help maintain growth by strengthening social cohesion and contributing to human capital development.
Investment in education, healthcare and other social services is fundamental for building Myanmar's human capital. Today, one in four primary school children never move on to middle school, limiting their prospects as the country's next generation of workers. Encouragingly, the government has already increased its social sector spending, with the country's nominal education budget doubling for 2012/13. It is critical that this trend continue.
More opportunities also need to be created for people living in rural areas, where 84 per cent of the country's poor reside. NGOs I met last month highlighted that rural isolation is exacerbated by poor access to electricity, water and transportation. Only one in four people have electricity access, and the country's core road network is limited. Bringing rural communities into the fold and providing them with better transportation, electricity, and telecommunications will give Myanmar's poorest a better chance at grasping the opportunities that recent economic reforms can bring.
Myanmar's economic potential is immense given its rich endowments and geographic advantages. To maximise this potential, however, businesspeople I met with stressed the need for more freedom to create jobs and innovate. A further reduction of government ownership and control over certain economic sectors will help level the playing field, spurring competition and bolstering investment.
This is particularly important, as Myanmar is uniquely positioned to tap into Asia's growing economic strength and prosperity. Better connectivity with other South and Southeast Asian nations will also unleash incredible opportunities for trade and commerce.
With the region's consumption expected to reach US$32 trillion by 2030, accounting for 43 per cent of the global total, Myanmar's affluent neighbours offer vast new markets for a country with abundant natural assets, agricultural resources and low-cost manufacturing potential.
Integration with global and regional markets will also help promote accountability, transparency and respect for the rule of law, fostering an enabling environment for business and foreign investment as the nation finds its place in the Asian Century.
Myanmar's growth will not come without risks, and it is important for the country not to repeat the mistakes of other resource-rich developing nations - allowing resource revenues to exacerbate inflation and impact international competitiveness through effects on the exchange rates - a vicious cycle that can hinder the country's development in other productive sectors.
Sound macroeconomic management, economic diversification, greater transparency, the development of capable institutions, and a strong political commitment to equitably distributing benefits will all be needed to ensure Myanmar avoids the "resource curse".
While Kipling's sentiment may still be accurate, there is much Myanmar can learn from its neighbours - lessons that could make the country Asia's next rising star. There will be countless challenges along the way, but if the country makes the right moves at the right times, and maintains its strong commitment to reforms, a more prosperous future undoubtedly awaits Myanmar's people.
The writer is the ADB's Vice-President for East Asia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

Graffiti was unimaginable under Myanmar’s military dictators.

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/graffiti-was-unimaginable-under.html [/postlink]

Graffiti was unimaginable under Myanmar’s military dictators.

But while contention remains over whether the work is street art or vandalism, drawings and messages have been springing up on walls all over the country since the return to civilian rule in 2011.

Two anonymous graffiti artists in the city of Yangon say their work allows them to comment on the state of their country.

“There hasn’t been serious punishment. No artists have been arrested and sent to jail but some artists have had to sign papers saying they won’t do it again,” said one of them.

Another artist said they abide by a strict code.

“We may be regarded as ‘destroyers’ but we don’t do it on schools, churches or other religious buildings. We don’t go after these places. We target places we don’t like,” he said.

Last week, media censorship was abolished as part of democratic reforms.

Although books, news reports and songs no longer need to be cleared, the jury’s still out on whether graffiti will be tolerated.

A middle class may be welling up in Myanmar

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/a-middle-class-may-be-welling-up-in.html [/postlink]
 
Just last month I made my first visit to Myanmar, a place Rudyard Kipling referred to as "quite unlike any land you know about". While decades of isolation have helped this century-old observation hold true, on arrival in July I was immediately struck by the vibrancy and a palpable sense of change in the air.
The country's immense potential is reflected in the Asian Development Bank's most recent analysis, which shows that Myanmar has the potential to follow Asia's fast-growing economies and expand at 7 percent to 8 percent if it continues on the path of across-the-board reforms initiated earlier this year.

If Myanmar stays true to these reforms — and I was impressed by the resolve of many officials I met last month — the country should become a middle-income nation and could more than triple per capita income by 2030.

Half a century ago, Myanmar was the pearl of Asia, one of the region's leading economies with a per capita income more than twice that of its neighbor, Thailand. While most other regional economies have skyrocketed since that time, Myanmar has languished and today has Southeast Asia's lowest per capita GDP.

After decades of stagnation, Myanmar has an enormous amount of catching up to do on almost every imaginable front. The recent experiences of Asia's fast-growing economies are instructive. For Myanmar to effectively capitalize on its potential, the country will need to maintain low inflation — under 6 percent — and better ensure sustainable budgets.

It will also need to encourage greater savings, dramatically bolster the skills of its people, invest heavily in infrastructure, modernize its financial sector, foster job creation and continue with its reform of the foreign exchange regime. No small order, to be sure, but Myanmar's neighbors have shown dramatic economic transformations are possible in relatively short amounts of time if reforms remain on track.

Nearly everyone I spoke with in July emphasized that maintaining social stability will be crucial as Myanmar embarks on this new course. While economic growth has been the most effective tool for reducing poverty in Asia, it has become less equitable in many fast-growing regional economies in recent decades.

As the economy grows it will be essential for the country to ensure that its poorest and most vulnerable share the benefits of Myanmar's growing prosperity. Such inclusiveness will enhance and help maintain growth by strengthening social cohesion and contributing to human capital development.

Investment in education, health care and other social services is fundamental for building Myanmar's human capital. Today, one in four primary school children never move on to middle school, limiting their prospects as the country's next generation of workers.

Encouragingly, the government has already increased its social sector spending, with the country's nominal education budget doubling for 2012-2013. It is crucial that this trend continue.

More opportunities also need to be created for people living in rural areas, where 84 percent of the country's poor reside. The nongovernment organizations I met last month highlighted that rural isolation is exacerbated by poor access to electricity, water and transportation.

Only one in four people have electricity access, and the country's core road network is limited. Bringing rural communities into the fold and providing them with better transportation, electricity and telecommunications will give Myanmar's poorest a better chance at grasping the opportunities that recent economic reforms can bring.

Myanmar's economic potential is immense given its rich endowments and geographic advantages. To maximize this potential, however, the business people I met with stressed the need for more freedom to create jobs and innovate. A further reduction of government ownership and control over certain economic sectors will help level the playing field, spurring competition and bolstering investment.

This is particularly important, as Myanmar is uniquely positioned to tap into Asia's growing economic strength and prosperity. Better connectivity with other South and Southeast Asian nations will also unleash incredible opportunities for trade and commerce.

With the region's consumption expected to reach $32 trillion by 2030, accounting for 43 percent of the global total, Myanmar's affluent neighbors offer vast new markets for a country with abundant natural assets, agricultural resources and low-cost manufacturing potential.

Integration with global and regional markets will also help promote accountability, transparency and respect for the rule of law, fostering an enabling environment for business and foreign investment as the nation finds its place in the Asian Century.

Myanmar's growth will not come without risks, and it is important for the country not to repeat the mistakes of other resource-rich developing nations — allowing resource revenues to exacerbate inflation and impact international competitiveness through effects on exchange rates — a vicious cycle that can hinder the country's development in other productive sectors.

Sound macroeconomic management, economic diversification, greater transparency, the development of capable institutions and a strong political commitment to equitably distributing benefits will all be needed to ensure Myanmar avoids the "resource curse."

While Kipling's sentiment may still be accurate, there is much Myanmar can learn from its neighbors — lessons that could make the country Asia's next rising star.

There will be countless challenges along the way, but if the country makes the right moves at the right times and maintains its strong commitment to reforms, a more prosperous future undoubtedly awaits Myanmar's people.

Stephen P. Groff is the Asian Development Bank's vice president for East Asia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

Burma floods drive tens of thousands from their homes

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/burma-floods-drive-tens-of-thousands.html [/postlink]
Burmese men walk in the rain in Rangoon. Annual monsoon rains often cause flooding in the country's southern delta region. Photograph: Ed Giles/Getty Images

Worst monsoon flooding in years submerges hundreds of thousands of hectares of rice fields, causing 85,000 to flee

    At least 85,000 people in Burma have fled their homes as the worst monsoon flooding in years submerged hundreds of thousands of hectares of rice fields, a government relief official has said.
Heavy rains over the last few weeks caused the inundation, which primarily affected the country's southern delta region, said Soe Tun, a member of the government's emergency response team, on Saturday.
Around 70,000 people have been displaced in the delta and are being housed at 219 emergency relief centres set up at schools and monasteries, he said. Another 15,000 people have been displaced elsewhere in the country, and more than 240,000 hectares (600,000 acres) of rice fields have been swamped, he said.
Annual monsoon rains often cause flooding in the region, and this year's are the heaviest since 2004, Soe Tun said. The delta region was devastated in 2008 by Cyclone Nargis, which killed about 130,000 people and destroyed more than 800,000 homes and buildings.
No casualties have been confirmed during the recent floods, which have affected 200,000 people nationwide, Soe Tun said. Some families who have not fled have moved to the upper floors of their dwellings.
Local newspapers have reported that heavy rains and flooding also damaged bridges, homes and rail lines.

Body of Japanese journalist slain while covering Syria civil war returns home from Turkey

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/body-of-japanese-journalist-slain-while.html [/postlink]


Her coffin was unloaded from a Turkish Airlines aircraft as the pilot and crew saluted her, and airport officials observed a moment of silence.

Yamamoto’s two sisters, as well as colleague Kazutaka Sato, were aboard the same flight from Istanbul.
Yamamoto and Sato, both with independent TV news provider The Japan Press, were traveling with the Free Syrian Army in the northwestern city of Aleppo on Monday when Yamamoto was fatally wounded in crossfire between rebels and government forces.
The Committee to Protect Journalists said that at least 16 journalists have been killed since November while covering Syria, making it the most dangerous place in the world for journalists. Activists say Syria’s conflict has killed more than 20,000 people since March 2011.
Yamamoto’s two sisters remained silent as they walked past a crowd of reporters at Tokyo’s Narita International Airport.
At a news conference at the airport, Sato said it was a long journey back home.
“She was shot in Syria, crossed the borders and now brought back to Japan - I think she gave it her all to get here,” he said.
Sato said the 45-year-old’s body will be handed over to Japanese police for an autopsy for further investigation, before a wake and a funeral are held.


 The Associated Press

Mingalabar Myanmar!

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/mingalabar-myanmar.html [/postlink]


After decades of international boycotts and sanctions, the April elections in Myanmar brought not just hopes of democracy and investment but also a surge in travelers once reluctant to journey to this amazing land.
GO NOW!
If you want to see Myanmar at its best, don't put off your trip, Yes, it is the rainy season but you really don't want to wait until the international tourists start turning out in their droves, checking in at the same hotels and guesthouses as you and causing accommodation prices to skyrocket. And if you've already planned a year-end trip, book your hotel now! The country needs more time to build up its tourism infrastructure to cope with the fast-growing demand.
VISA FIRST!
Another reason why tourist arrivals are up has to do with the hassle-free visa processes. The Myanmar Embassy on Bangkok's North Sathorn Road offers a smooth, same-day visa service. Simply deliver your visa application with two photos and 1,260 baht (US$40) to the counter between 9am to noon and you can collect your passport between 3.30 and 4.30pm. If you are not on a rush, a next-day visa is 1,000 baht, two days 810 baht. A tourist visa is good for a 28-day stay. (US$1 = 31.4 baht)
Since June, a visa-on-arrival for business purposes is available for 27 nationalities including the 10 ASEAN members plus India, Japan, South Korea, China, Australia, France, Germany, UK and US. The fee is $50 for a 70-day stay. A tourist visa for ASEAN members only is possible for a $40 fee. Business visitors should check outwww.MyanmarVisa.com.
FLYING HIGH
When Yangon Mingaladon Airport was first built in 1947, it was regarded the best in Southeast Asia. In the 1960s, it was the aviation hub of the region and frequented by major airlines like Pan-Am, KLM, Air France and BOAC (now British airways).
After years of decay, Yangon International Airport has a sparkling new terminal and welcomes flights from all over Asia. Airlines include Myanmar Airways, Thai Airways, Bangkok Airways, AirAsia, SilkAir and Jetstar Asia, Malaysia Airlines, Vietnam Airlines and various Chinese companies. Korean Air, ANA and Qatar Airways are starting services soon and AirAsia is launching a Bangkok to Mandalay flight in October.
CASH-ONLY ECONOMY
The economic sanctions are gradually being lifted but there are still no ATMs and traveler cheques and credit cards are not generally accepted even in Yangon. The US dollars is widely used and often preferred to the kyat and while black-market exchange rates were the norm two years ago, today everyone can access the standard exchange rate at official exchange counters at airports and banks. Exchange counters at Yangon Airport close at 3.30pm so travelers arriving on afternoon flights should head to the exchange booths at Bogyoke Market or downtown Yangon. Most hotels or guesthouses in the city also offer exchange services though the rate is slightly lower.
Myanmarese don't like creased or dirty dollars bills and even the slightest tear, mark, fold or dirt can lead to a bill being refused or a poor exchange rate. When buying the US bills before you trip, tell the bank you need flawless dollar bills only. The staff at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport's exchange booths know the situation and will prepare pristine bills in a long envelope for you to avoid creases.
TRAVEL WELL
November to February promises to be another busy tourist so visitors need to book in accommodation well in advance through leading websites. Be prepared to pay at least double what it says in the latest guidebook, even for a backpacker place at the bottom end of the market.
The easiest way to get around a big city like Yangon is by taxi. Most taxis are old cars and have neither meters nor air conditioning. Prices are negotiable, usually between 1,000-2,000 kyat a trip for travelling within the city centre, and about $7-10 from the airport to the city centre.
There are no McDonalds or Starbucks but you can feast on mohinga (rice noodle) in fish soup everywhere on the street or at Indian thali and biryani restaurants. Venture into Yangon's Chinatown at night and you'll find the grilled fish hard to resist.
First timers usually visit Yangon, Bagan, Mandalay and Inle Lake while repeat travelers prefer to go off the beaten track and explore Mrauk-U or the islands in the south.
Whatever destination you choose, Myanmar guarantees an awesome experience!
Away from the politics of Nay Pyi Taw, the Myanmarese are joyous, light-hearted and fun-loving folks. Like the rest of us, they love a good time and celebrates their festivals with families and friends. Here's what you can enjoy and when.
NAT FESTIVAL
August, Mandalay
The Nat is a spirit, a demanding spirit. In Taung Pyone, a small village 20km north of Mandalay, the locals celebrate August with the Nat Festival. Spiritual as it is entertaining, the festival brings mediums and visitors to the Nat pavilions. Flowers, cash and alcohol are offered in order to appease the spirits while the mediums take turns to amuse them with folk music and dances.
PHAUNG DAW OO PAGODA FESTIVAL
October, Inle Lake
Inle Lake, in Shan State is famous for leg-rowed boats, and the Shan row them in the highest of spirits during Phaung Daw Festival. The annual rite sees a colorful procession of leg-rowed boats tugging the golden barges of Buddha images. Leg-rowed boat races are held throughout the festival.
THE THADINGYUT (FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS)
October, throughout Myanmar
Marking the end of the Buddhist Lent, the Festival of Lights is celebrated across Myanmar. Pagodas, houses, public buildings, parks, and monuments are all illuminated with jars of candles
KYAIKHTIYO PAGODA FESTIVAL
November, Mon State
Perched over the cliff rock of Mt Kyaikhiyo is the boulder of Golden Pagoda - a well-known Buddhist pilgrimage site. The rock seems to defy gravity, as it perpetually appears to be on the verge of rolling down the hill. Legend has it that it held by strand of hair of the Buddha. In late November, devotees offer 9,999 candles and flowers to celebrate the pagoda. Folk dances, music and puppets add color and rhythm.
MT POPA NAT SPIRIT FESTIVAL
December, Bagan
Like mother hen guarding her children, Popa Taungkalat monastery sits atop of 1518-metre volcano peak overlooking the farmland around Irrawaddy River, southeast of Bagan. This is the home of Nats, and thousands of folks appease the demanding ghosts with entertainment.
NAGA NEW YEAR'S FESTIVAL
January, Sagaing Division
Tribal dances and exotic dresses draw intrepid travelers to the high ranges in Myanmar's Northwest for Naga New Year's Festival. For three days, the Naga gather around Kham-Ti districts. Fierce warriors in their bright and exotic dress, they perform tribal sports and dances, as rice wine and roasted meat accompany the beating of drums.
ANANDA PAGODA FESTIVAL
January, Bagan
Pagoda and bullock-carts are a signature of Bagan and the Ananda Pagoda Festival offers spectacular scenes of bullock-carts loaded with offerings rolling through the fields. Traditional performances and jokers take turns to entertain.

China Watches Burma's Censorship Reforms

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Rapidly reforming Burma's decision to ease media censorship is being met with caution in neighboring China, where government officials have been adamant in maintaining their tight control over the flow of information.

Burma announced Monday that local media will no longer be required to submit stories for review to state censors before publication, ending a key component of its long-reviled censorship policy.

The news received a mixed reaction from China's state-controlled newspapers. The People's Daily, the flagship paper of China's Communist Party, ran a fairly neutral account of the story, even quoting a Burmese journalist praising the move as historic.

But the party's Global Times paper was more negative, publishing an editorial saying China should not follow what it called the "uncertain" reform model of Burma, which is also known as Myanmar.

"China should follow the trend of the times and look at the practical situation of the nation, rather than being perplexed and even letting backwater [backwards] countries such as Myanmar and Vietnam become our idols," the editorial said.

Some have wondered whether China, which has undergone its own gradual reform process in the past three decades, would be inspired to speed up its reforms as its long-time ally Burma has done.

But independent Beijing-based China analyst Bill Bishop says Beijing likely does not feel pressured to keep up with its fast-moving neighbor, knowing its own media landscape is much more sophisticated.

"Burma is a much smaller country and a much simpler country in a lot of respects," says Bishop. "There is really not much Internet in Burma, so the information environment is extremely different and much more complex in China."

But Bishop says Beijing's current policy of blocking any online material it deems objectionable does seem unsustainable, partly because it is increasingly unpopular with the Chinese public.

"If you are a participant on Chinese social media, you know censorship is going on, and it is regularly mocked and criticized quite vociferously." says Bishop, who points out that the Chinese Internet was buzzing with conversation on the Burma issue.

"People on Weibo [social media site] were making unfavorable comparisons between China, Burma, and North Korea, and joking that North Korea would open up their media before China. I think that's a bit extreme, but it just shows that people do know what's going on and I think that kind of knowledge becomes very corrosive," said Bishop.

But even though Chinese censorship may be unpopular, observers say it is unclear whether Beijing intends to follow Burma's example and take steps to open up its own media.

The beginning of cyber warfare?

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 Hackers and other individuals trained in software programming and exploiting the intricacies of computer networks are the primary executors of these attacks. These individuals often operate under the auspices and possibly the support of nation-state
actors.

“Cyberspace is the new warfront. As August 15 was approaching, Pakistani hacker attacked Indian sites,”


A day after Union home secretary RK Singh said that the bulk of rumours of imminent attacks on northeastern people for the killings of Muslims in Assam originated from Pakistan, experts said that this could be Pune’s first brush with cyber warfare. They also fear that all this is an indication of a major form of subversive warfare in the future.

Cyber warfare refers to politically motivated hacking to conduct sabotage and espionage. It is a form of information warfare sometimes seen as analogous to conventional warfare although this analogy is controversial for both its accuracy and its political motivation.
Hackers and other individuals trained in software programming and exploiting the intricacies of computer networks are the primary executors of these attacks. These individuals often operate under the auspices and possibly the support of nation-state
actors.
Talking to DNA, security expert Niranjan Reddy, founder and chief technology officer of NetConclave Systems and a member of Indian Cyber Police, said, “Bullets are being replaced with bytes.”
“Cyberspace is the new warfront. As August 15 was approaching, Pakistani hacker attacked Indian sites,” he added.
Reddy said that underground hacking groups had carried out systematic attacks on 100 sites, especially government ones in the past.
Cyberspace, according to Reddy, is now the new battle ground for Kashmir as hackers are finding new means to demand emancipation of Kashmir by attacking various websites. These kinds of attacks can disable official websites and networks, disrupt or disable essential services, steal or alter classified data and cripple financial systems among many other possibilities.
Rohit Srivastwa, expert on cyber security, told DNA, “The use of technology is used in spreading wrong messages. Earlier, people communicated inflammatory sentiments though emails and telephones. Now, the modus operandi has changed.”
“They are circulating video clips which can move rapidly and create panic among the people at large. This cannot be ceased by the government by just banning bulk SMSes or MMSes. Efforts should be taken to thwart such processes from the beginning,” he added.
Deepak Shikarpur, chairman of the IT Committee of Mahratta Chamber of Commerce Industries and Agriculture, said, “Yes, it is the initial stage of cyber warfare and the issue is not just limited to Pune. It is a threat to the entire country.
“A decade ago, the national conference of Indian Science Congress took place in Pune. It was a big event as the prime minister and other dignitaries were part of it. Just before the event, its website was hacked and it took two days to restore the entire thing. Problem does not lie with technology alone. It’s the intention of those trying to misuse it,” he said.
“Our Information Technology Act is very strong, but we need to have a fast track court so that the conviction rate in such kind of cases increases,” he added.
“We cannot link the current issues with cyber warfare as they are more technical. However, whatever has taken place recently is a new way of utilising the social media. Earlier, brainwashing was done verbally. Now, people are playing with the technology,” an officer of the cyber cell said.

It is really shocking to learn that officials from the Ministry of Home Affairs have identified over 100 websites on which false and morphed images were posted from Pakistan to incite people in India and create communal tension. India should take up the matter with their counterparts in Pakistan at the highest level to see that online terror is stamped out.

Apropos of ‘Communal upheaval in India has Pakistani signature again’ (August 19), it is indeed shocking that morphed images and photographs of people (who had lost their lives in cyclones and earthquakes) which were circulated as victims of violence in Myanmar and Assam in several websites emanated from Pakistan to whip up communal passion. This is not at all surprising because 26/11 handler Abu Jundal has revealed that several jehadi groups are operating in Pakistan with the sole aim of dismembering our country on the lines of what had happened to Pakistan in 1971. Our northeast, being geographically distant from the centre of administration, provides them with an ideal piece of land for meddling with impunity. If this is taken up at the secretary level, our neighbour will be ready with their stock reply. We have been unnecessarily too soft with them and this has been taken as our weakness.

It is really shocking to learn that officials from the Ministry of Home Affairs have identified over 100 websites on which false and morphed images were posted from Pakistan to incite people in India and create communal tension. India should take up the matter with their counterparts in Pakistan at the highest level to see that online terror is stamped out. Pakistan too should stop indulging in such activities so that peace between the neighbours is not affected. The social networking sites too have a responsibility in blocking such objectionable matter.

Burma announces end to media censorship

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/burma-announces-end-to-media-censorship.html [/postlink]


The government in Burma says it is abolishing media censorship.
The information ministry made the announcement on its website this morning that censorship of all local publications will cease.
Many publications had already been freed from the scrutiny of the censors, but from today political and religious journals will join them.
The move is part of the wider process of reform in Burma, which until recently was ruled by a hardline military junta.
Newspapers and even song lyrics were heavily scrutinised before being allowed to be published.
Burma is also drafting a new media law, but concerns have been raised that a council formed to regulate the press until the law is passed is expected to perform the role of the censorship board.

War by other means

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/war-by-other-means.html [/postlink]

Union home secretary R.K. Singh was careful on Saturday not to blame official Pakistan when he said Indian investigations had revealed there were more than 100 portals in Pakistan that had uploaded morphed content with misleading texts designed to incite Muslim communities to retaliate and avenge themselves for atrocities on fellow Muslims in Burma and Assam in India.

Creating panic, fear, and frustration — essentially a feeling of helplessness and instability — among large sections of the population have been for centuries acknowledged tools of war, typically pursued through the propaganda arms of government agencies or their armed forces. Even so, Union home secretary R.K. Singh was careful on Saturday not to blame official Pakistan when he said Indian investigations had revealed there were more than 100 portals in Pakistan that had uploaded morphed content with misleading texts designed to incite Muslim communities to retaliate and avenge themselves for atrocities on fellow Muslims in Burma and Assam in India. It is this that led to the spate of the issuance of thousands of group SMSes and MMSes which caused the recent flight of people belonging to the Northeast from India’s southern metropolises, especially Bengaluru, besides provocative demonstrations and calls for hostile action in Uttar Pradesh.
It was entirely predictable, though, that when home minister Sushilkumar Shinde did raise the matter with Pakistan’s Rehman Malik on Sunday, that Islamabad would deny the whole thing. Such a shortsighted approach on its part can’t help quicken the pace towards normalisation of relations. A country seeking genuinely friendly ties with a neighbour should be able to lend a helping hand in nabbing offending parties, even if these are private individuals or hate institutions, of which there is no dearth in Pakistan. Any Indian accomplices of the Pakistani mischief-makers must of course be treated as agents provocateur and dealt with as such.

Myanmar: Ban welcomes commission probing violence in Rakhine state

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17 August 2012 –
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomes today’s establishment, by President Thein Sein of Myanmar, of a 27-member Commission to investigate the recent violence in the country’s state of Rakhine, according to his spokesperson. “This Commission is comprised of a representative cross-section of national figures in the country,” Mr. Ban’s spokesperson said in a statement. “It could make important contributions to restoring peace and harmony in the state and in creating a conducive environment for a more inclusive way forward to tackle the underlying causes of the violence, including the condition of the Muslim communities in Rakhine.”
Recent tensions between Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims in the western state of Rakhine left at least a dozen civilians dead and hundreds of homes destroyed, as well as at least 64,000 people displaced.
Mr. Ban’s spokesperson added that the Commission will “be integral to any reconciliation process” and the United Nations is ready to provide assistance in a “constructive spirit to Myanmar's reform and reconciliation efforts, and to help that country overcome its imminent challenges.”

the outbreak of all violence around the world was after Friday prayers,

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/the-outbreak-of-all-violence-around.html [/postlink]

Just two days before the Eid festival, a section of Muslims resorted to vandalism and arson after offering Friday prayers in several parts of UP to register their protest against the violence in Assam and Myanmar.
The Jamiat Ulema had organised the protests, which led to violence
in Lucknow, Kanpur and Allahabad.
In Lucknow, at least 15 people were injured, including five photojournalists, while more than nine vehicles were damaged.
In Kanpur, hooligans attacked a cycle market and ransacked several shops. In Allahabad, more than 24 shops were looted and nearly 200 vehicles were damaged. Even though the state intelligence agencies had sent out alerts about the outbreak of violence after Friday prayers, the district authorities in these cities failed to react to the simmering tensions in the community.
Additional DG (intelligence) OP Singh said instructions were issued to ensure proper security and added that the situation in these cities and elsewhere in UP was now under control.

Islands row picks at WWII political scab

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/islands-row-picks-at-wwii-political-scab.html [/postlink]


Japan has detained 14 Chinese activists who evaded the coast guard to land on a tiny group of contested islands in the East China Sea.
Controversy over the islands has been blamed on potential oil and reserves in the region and on fishing resources, but actually originated with the end of World War II, the International Herald Tribune reported.
The islands are claimed by Japan, China and Taiwan, with each nation calling them by different names. To Japan, they are the Sensaku. To China, they are the Diaoyu.
The activists, who had sailed from Hong Kong, slipped onto the islands Wednesday and planted the Chinese and Taiwanese flags, setting off the latest controversy. However, the issue of who owns the islands dates back to 1945 when Japan surrendered to Allied powers. The treaties it signed set up post-war conditions that Tokyo would have to live by, but left unsettled smaller matters such as who controlled the islands that lie between Japan and China.
Japan is in a similar dispute with South Korea over the Dokdo islands, or Takeshima as they are known in Japan, another thorny leftover from the war.
"The sense of victimization at the hands of the Japanese remains a powerful sense of identity," said Daniel C. Sneider, associate director for research at the Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center at Stanford University. "In Korea the feeling is: 'We were the victims, and that's it.' "
South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak visited the Dokdo islands last week, setting off a three-way diplomatic row. Japan recalled its ambassador from Seoul, while a state-run Chinese newspaper, the People's Daily, said relations between Japan and China were now at "the freezing point."

'Don't misuse pictures to provoke tension,' CTA appeals

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/misuse-pictures-to-provoke-tension-cta.html [/postlink]
CTA

The exile Tibetan administration has expressed concerns over the misuse of photographs showing Tibetans to provoke conflict between the Buddhist and Muslim communities.

Following reports of recent clashes between Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, certain sections of the media as well as social websites have portrayed photographs involving Tibetans to misinform the public and to lead a hate campaign.

The recent ethnic clashes in the Indian northeastern state of Assam have raised further tensions.

The Dharamshala based Central Tibetan Administration in a release yesterday said it was “deeply disturbed and concerned” over the circulation of a misleading photograph in some section of the media showing Tibetan monks.

The release noted that many websites in the Muslim countries, especially Pakistan have used a photograph of Tibetan monks standing in front of a pile of dead bodies in their reports on the clashes in Myanmar.

“This photo of Tibetan monks was actually taken during their relief work in Kyegudo (Yushul), eastern Tibet, after a devastating earthquake hit the region on 14 April 2010,” CTA clarified. “The Tibetan monks extended remarkable service in the rescue and relief operations at the time.”

The release said that a particular website in Pakistan which was carrying the picture removed it after CTA pointed out the factual and misleading error.

“But the photo is still in circulation, as some Muslims carrying the photo during their recent protest in Mumbai on 11 August 2012, appeared in Zee News, a leading news channel in India,” the exile Tibetan administration noted.

“We strongly appeal to the media across the world not to use this photo, which is being circulated by miscreants to provoke conflict between the Buddhist and Muslim communities.”

There have been increased concerns over the safety of Tibetans, especially in cities, after a Tibetan youth was stabbed in the south Indian city of Mysore yesterday evening.

Reports say that the youth in out of danger but the real motive of the attack, right in the centre of the city, is not fully known.

Police suspect the assailants may have attacked the Tibetan youth thinking that he is from northeast India.
http://farazahmed.com/muslims-killing-in-burma-and-our-social-media-islamic-parties-1010.aspx

New reform balance in Myanmar

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After a drawn-out selection process, Myanmar's military parliamentarians have appointed Admiral Nyan Tun as the country's new vice president, a choice that may help to consolidate President Thein Sein's position and signal a shift in the military's position on his ambitious reform agenda.

The highly anticipated appointment came after the disqualification of the previous frontrunner, Myint Swe, a perceived hardliner aligned with the previous junta's senior leaders, and amid widespread speculation about whether the next vice president would strengthen or weaken the hand of reformers in government.

Over a month behind schedule, Nyan Tun's appointment was announced on Wednesday by the National Assembly. Following constitutional requirements that the president and two vicepresidents must be civilians, Nyan Tun resigned his military commission before being sworn into office the same day. He was nominated by military representatives who represent 25% of parliament and was approved by Armed Forces Commander Vice Senior General Min Aung Hlaing.

General consensus on the nominated candidate must then be given by the National Defense and Security Council, which is headed by the president and composed of the speakers of both houses of parliament, key ministers and the commanders and deputy commanders of the armed forces.

Yangon Division Chief Minister and former Lt General Myint Swe was initially chosen in July but was dropped from consideration after it was revealed that his son had taken citizenship in Australia. Myanmar's 2008 Constitution expressly forbids Myanmar citizens whose relatives or spouses hold foreign citizenship from becoming president or vice president.

Ironically, the rule was initially viewed by the opposition and independent Myanmar watchers as a legal ploy to keep opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi from ever holding high office due to her marriage to now deceased British citizen Michael Aris. Suu Kyi was elected to parliament earlier this year after spending nearly 16 of the past 21 years under house arrest.

The senior post became vacant after the resignation of Tin Aung Myint Oo for "health reasons" on July 1. The former general was reportedly suffering from throat cancer, but many observers perceived his resignation was forced due to his opposition to Thein Sein's reform efforts. Tin Aung Myint Oo was widely viewed as the leader of a hardline faction of former and current military officers opposed to reform and known for corruption.

His resignation also notably came in the wake of statements by senior government leaders calling for top officials to work to promote democratic reforms and better serve the interests of the people. Both Thein Sein and the Speaker of the Lower House, Shwe Mann, had made recent statements about reining in government corruption.

Tin Aung Myint Oo's resignation and Nyan Tun's appointment also coincide with an expected cabinet reshuffle that many observers believe will aim to strengthen Thein Sein's reformist camp by expelling ministers and deputy ministers who are perceived as not adequately supporting reform.

Moderate choice
Myanmar's new first vice president, 58-year-old Nyan Tun, joined the military as part of the 16th intake at the Defense Services Academy and graduated in the 1970s. There is little public information on his subsequent military career besides a brief stint in the 1980s with the Directorate of Defense Services Intelligence, the former military intelligence office, and his attendance at the elite National Defense College.

In June 2008, he replaced Vice Admiral Soe Thein as navy chief. At the time, Soe Thein's removal was believed to be motivated by his mishandling of the 2008 Cyclone Nargis disaster, particularly his failure to mobilize a naval response to American and French warships that floated near the country's coast.

The US and French vessels had ostensibly come to offer aid but the previous military regime, fearing the humanitarian offer could be a pretext for a military invasion, declined the offer even as millions of its citizens had been displaced by the killer storm. Promoted to vice admiral in 2010 and admiral in 2012, Nyan Tun remained commander-in-chief of the navy until his appointment as vice president.

Some analysts believe the choice of Nyan Tun may indicate a shift in the military's political position. While there were other military candidates to choose from based on seniority and connections within the armed forces, especially the army, most of them had public image problems internationally related to their roles in the previous ruling junta.

Among the apparent frontrunners who were ultimately overlooked was Minister of Home Affairs Gen Ko Ko and chairman of the Union Election Commission retired Lt General Tin Aye. Both men have been implicated for alleged human-rights abuses by troops under their command while fighting insurgents in Karen State. In his role as Chief of Military Ordnance until resigning in April 2010, Tin Aye was also a key player in securing military hardware from North Korea, procurements that have earned the diplomatic ire of the United States.

Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces Vice Senior General Soe Win was also apparently tipped for the post. Close to former army commander and the previous junta's second-ranking official Vice Senior General Maung Aye, Soe Win's tenure as commander of the Northern Command in Kachin State was tainted by corruption allegations. In his current position, he is partly responsible for the ongoing fight against the insurgent Kachin Independence Organization, a counter-insurgency campaign that has been attended by human rights abuses.

Even Thein Sein's supposed favorite, Lt General Hla Htay Win, the current Armed Forces Joint Chief of Staff, is known for his dubious past. He was a former commander of the key Yangon-based Light Infantry Division 11 and later the Yangon Regional Command, both of which are responsible for security in the former capital. During the 2007 monk-led "Saffron Revolution", Hla Htay Win was a key commander in suppressing the protests - although there were rumors at the time that he had resisted orders to open fire on the protestors.

Myint Swe, the former frontrunner for the post, was contentious due to his role in the arrests of former intelligence chief Khin Nyunt and former dictator General Ne Win. He was also head of military intelligence for a spell and later commander of Bureau of Special Operations 5, which oversaw security for Yangon and the capital at Naypyidaw. In this role, he also oversaw the bloody crackdown on the 2007 demonstrations. Myint Swe's initial selection, later thwarted by his son's citizenship issues, was motivated in part by his apparent ability to straddle the line between hardliner and reformer camps.

Comparative clean hands
Nyan Tun, on the other hand, hails from the navy, a much smaller and far less controversial segment of Myanmar's armed forces. The navy has played only a small part in the various counterinsurgency operations against ethnic and communist insurgents since the 1950s, when most of the rebels were pushed away from coastal regions and major waterways.

The navy has long been sidelined by the army and its leaders have often been mistrusted by the army's top brass. During the 1988 pro-democracy demonstrations against military rule, many navy personnel from around Yangon joined the demonstrations, which were later bloodily suppressed. The majority of the military members who defected after the crackdown were from the navy.

The navy was restructured after 1988 and in recent years has significantly upgraded its capabilities through increased budgets, allowing it to expand with newly sourced vessels, weapons systems and equipment. Still, like the air force, it remains very much a lesser service compared with the army. Its officers are widely seen as less hardline politically and most have not served on the front lines against insurgents - both negative points to army officers who see frontline service as a badge of pride.

The navy also does not carry the same stigma of human-rights abuses and corruption as the army. Although there are recent reports compiled by exile-run human-rights groups of land confiscation and extortion by naval units, proportionally they are believed to have impacted on a far smaller portion of the population, largely confined to the coastal regions in Rakhine and Mon States and Tenasserim Division, than army-backed land grabs.

Nyan Tun's appointment thus studiously avoids the possible image problems in the international eye that could be associated with an army officer. Analysts note that Nyan Tun does not have a reputation for corruption, nor does he have a record of human-rights abuses. As a member of a branch of the armed forces noted for its past support for political change, his appointment may signal a strengthening of the government's reformist camp. Unlike his predecessor, Nyan Tun also has a measure of international exposure, mostly to neighboring countries and on naval business.

His relationship with the military, however, will be closely watched. Although he is believed to be loyal to armed forces commander Vice Senior General Min Aung Hlaing and close to Senior General Than Shwe, he does not have personal close ties to the army and significantly is not a former field commander.

As a navy serviceman, he does not have direct access to any particular strong clique within the army, from where most of the country's political power still resides. There is already initial speculation about how willing he will be to safeguard the military's - and especially the army's - prerogatives. His handling of these issues will no doubt impact on the amount of respect and deference given to him by military leaders and their appointed representatives in parliament.

Nyan Tun's appointment also raises speculation about how much residual control Than Shwe retains over the military and the country's fast-evolving political process. Although Nyan Tun is believed to be close to the former junta strongman, Than Shwe likely could have pushed Myint Swe through despite the citizenship controversy of his son or championed the cause of one of the other more controversial, hardline army officers.

Instead, Than Shwe and other military leaders have seemingly opted for a compromise choice in Nyan Tun. It all points towards grudging, if not tentative, military support for Thein Sein's widely lauded reform efforts.

Brian McCartan is a freelance journalist. He may be reached at bpmccartan1@gmail.com.

7.3 quake rattles Japan

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/73-quake-rattles-japan.html [/postlink]
A MAGNITUDE 7.3 earthquake has struck wide areas of northern and north-eastern Japan, the Meteorological Agency says.
No immediate casualties or damage were reported and no tsunami warning was issued.
The quake occurred at 12.01pm (1301 AEST) on Tuesday with its epicentre off Japan's northern island of Hokkaido at a depth of 590km, the agency said.
On March 11, 2011, a magnitude 9.0 quake and tsunami hit north-eastern Japan, leaving nearly 19,000 people dead or missing.

Education: Netherlands steps up cooperation with Burma

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/08/education-netherlands-steps-up.html [/postlink]


Now that Burma is making reforms and European Union sanctions have been suspended, the Netherlands is stepping up its cooperation with Burma. Burmese, Dutch and other companies can now use Dutch programmes to stimulate the Burmese economy, and Burmese can apply to the Netherlands Fellowships Programme (NFP) for student grants.

In Burma 32% of the population lives under the poverty level, but the country has enormous economic potential. The Netherlands has thus decided to give Burma access to several programmes to promote private sector development: the Private Sector Investment Programme (PSI), the Centre for the Promotion of Imports from Developing Countries (CBI), the Netherlands Management Cooperation Programme (PUM), the Entrepreneurial Development Bank (FMO) and the fund for public-private partnership in the area of food security.

Student grants
‘After decades of international isolation, the Burmese government and society lack knowledge and know-how,’ said development minister Ben Knapen. ‘The Netherlands is helping, to begin with, in the fields of water, logistics and food security. Student grants will help the Burmese acquire knowledge in the Netherlands that can be crucial for their country’s development.’

Foreign minister Uri Rosenthal added, ‘Burma is going through a historic transition. It is vital for its people to be able to benefit from the reforms as quickly and tangibly as possible.’

Natural disasters
The Netherlands is closely following progress with the reforms. In the past its only contributions to Burma were humanitarian aid in response to natural disasters and support for Burmese human rights defenders and refugee camps in Thailand.

Source: Government of the Netherlands
 
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