Friday 22 May 2015

'Draconian border policies' embolden human trafficking networks, expert says



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http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/draconian-border-policies-embolden-human-trafficking-networks-expert-says/

Migrants' plight brings out the worst of Thai psyche









It would be an understatement to say Thailand is sitting between a rock and a hard place in dealing with the Rohingya crisis. As first port of call for the human smuggling networks, the country serves as a springboard for the migrants to travel to a third country, most likely Malaysia or Indonesia.


Pressures are piling on the government of Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha to provide shelters, at least temporarily, to the desperate migrants. But the government is reluctant and unwilling to commit itself to hosting such facilities.




Malaysia and Indonesia, in the meantime, are under a different kind of pressure. Being majority-Muslim countries, they are expected to help people of the same faith. But they, too, are wary of the possibility of opening the floodgates for new migrants if they agree to accept the boatloads of migrants now drifting on the seas.



Except for the United States, Western nations, including Australia and New Zealand, have been mostly silent on the issue because they, too, have faced similar dilemmas.


Interestingly though, while urging Thailand to provide shelter to the refugees on humanitarian grounds, the US, through Secretary of State John Kerry, has drawn criticism from both Thai and American citizens. The US's promise to lead international efforts to help the Rohinya is likely to stir more opposition at home but is unlikely to quell scepticism and criticism here in Thailand.


As the Rohingya migration crisis draws out, meanwhile, it is quickly becoming a global crisis of conscience.


In Thailand, this crisis of conscience expresses itself widely on social media. The majority mood is grim, anti-migrant, hostile, and at times heavily tinged with a racist tone.


Reading many of the posts and comments, one could easily become swept along with the hostile mood. For the more humanitarian-minded people, it is downright depressing.


The issue has led to strong disagreements among acquaintances and strangers alike.


While it is a depressing phenomenon, the outpouring of hatred, insults and ill-will towards the Rohingya migrants is sociologically bewildering.


Thailand and its people had always been proud of their Buddhist tradition, steeped in compassion and kindness towards the less fortunate. But recent events have shown that legacy is a thing of the past.



Rohingya Muslim women and children sit in a boat after they were intercepted by the Bangladesh Border Guard in Teknaf, Bangladesh. (EPA photo)



What happened to have turned a once kind and compassionate people into a hard-hearted one?



I admit I have no real insight into the phenomenon. However, the tough economic climate is a contributing factor. Many netizens argue we should help our own first because there are already many poor Thais waiting to be helped. Others cite the economic downturn as a reason the country cannot afford to be humanitarian.


It is reasonable to argue, as some do, that Thailand has done much to provide humanitarian assistance to those in need, including taking in a great number of refugees during the Vietnam War, as well as those escaping oppression in Myanmar. There are reportedly more than 100,000 refugees from Myanmar still living in Thai camps, though funded by international agencies.


For this reason, it is in no position now, economically or socially, to provide assistance to new crops of refugees, especially ones of a religion viewed as prone to causing social conflicts.


I surmise, however, that the root of this lack of compassion goes much deeper. I'm afraid that it is the social system in which we live that has laid a foundation for the cruel transformation of the Thai people's psyche.


This is a system where money is God, where the value of a human being is determined by his or her wealth. So, the lower down you are on the economic rungs, the less of a human being you are. This is a society where injustice is the norm. Everyone competes to be in the position to dictate the lives of others because, once you attain a certain level of wealth or authority, you become almost immune to the repercussions of your actions.


The obscene widening of the income gap, and injustices that led to political unrest over the past decade have helped to stoke the quiet resentment that has been accumulating in the minds of Thai people for quite some time.


Such resentment, long smouldering, has gradually eaten up any compassion left in Thai people's hearts. It is probably responsible for wiping away the famous Thai smiles from our faces, leaving poor imitations of our former selves.


One particular saying that has cropped up increasingly often on social media is indicative of the prevailing mood. When commenting on perceived social injustices, one is wont to say: "It is getting ever harder to live in this country."


Unfortunately, the Rohingya migrants, one of the most desperate people on Earth, have brought out the worst in the Thai people.


Had we been in better economic times or under a more just social system, the Thai people might have expressed their compassion more readily.


Wasant Techawongtham is former news editor, Bangkok Post.






http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/migrants-plight-brings-out-the-worst-of-thai-psyche/

Rohingya tragedy


THE tragedy that has been unfolding in the Andaman Sea has only been turned into a spectacle of even more distressing proportions given that it is occurring just out of sight of some of the world's finest beach resorts: boats carrying thousands upon thousands of Rohingya Muslim migrants, mostly from Myanmar but also from Bangladesh, have been subjected to a deadly match between Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand. Floundering on the high seas and in many cases abandoned by their crew of human traffickers, these vessels carry people that are sick, hungry and urgently in need of rescue — but the three countries mentioned above, that are in a position to provide immediate succour, have been towing the boats out of their own territorial waters to effectively make them somebody else's problem. On board the boats, meanwhile, desperate conditions prevail, with deaths when vessels capsize, people thrown overboard in fights over dwindling food and water supplies, and sickness and starvation. Thankfully, on Wednesday, Malaysia and Indonesia finally capitulated and offered shelter to 7,000 of these people; yet both countries made clear that the assistance was temporary and that they would take no more. Thailand remains flint-hearted, but it has said that it will not, at least, force boats back out to sea.

If this is a humanitarian catastrophe for which the behaviour of the three Southeast Asian neighbours has drawn censure, what can be said of the irresponsible stance taken by Myanmar? It has denied any role in the crisis and did not join a meeting of regional foreign ministers on Wednesday where the deal to provide temporary shelter was struck. Yet the reality is that the Rohingya community has for generations been persecuted here, denied recognition, land rights, and subjected to forced labour. While these people feel they have no option but to flee by whatever dangerous means are available to them, the situation is a blot on the world's conscience. Ways need to be found to convince Myanmar to recognise and address the problem.

Published in Dawn, May 22nd, 2015

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http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/rohingya-tragedy/

Bangladesh thanks PH for asylum offer














A Bangladeshi diplomat on Thursday expressed his government's gratitude to the Philippines for its willingness to take in the Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh and Burma (Myanmar) who have been adrift at sea for weeks after being turned away by other countries.



Bangladeshi Ambassador to the Philippines retired Maj. Gen. John Gomes told reporters the Philippine statement on welcoming the migrants adrift in the Andaman Sea and the Strait of Malacca should they make it to Philippine shores was met with great appreciation in his country.



"It was breaking news in Bangladesh and we were overwhelmed with all kinds of telephone calls from our government, including our foreign minister. We contacted the Philippine government and we expressed our thanks," Gomes said.



Nice gesture



The Philippine offer was "a very nice gesture," he added.



Because of the country's positive response to the plight of the Rohingya and Bangladeshis, Gomes said, other Southeast Asian countries that had refused the migrants refuge were forced to rethink their policy.



"As a result of the Philippines coming forward, we now [see that] Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia have decided to do what the Philippines has done, and we are indeed very grateful for this," he said.



News reports said Malaysia and Indonesia had both agreed to give temporary refuge to the migrants. Thailand will provide humanitarian assistance and will no longer turn boats away.



The Rohingya minority, fleeing persecution by radical Buddhists in Myanmar after escaping poverty in Bangladesh, are stranded at sea without food or water after being abandoned by their human traffickers. Poor Bangladeshis are reportedly among them.



Gomes said that if the refugees, who are really too far away, do make it to Philippine shores, "definitely the Bangladeshi government will cooperate with the Philippine government."



But why stop there?



After expressing willingness to accept the Rohingya, the Philippines should take the next step and rescue them at sea.



The National Union of Peoples' Lawyers (NUPL), an organization of human rights lawyers, stressed Thursday the urgency of bringing the refugees to land.



'Compelling imperative'



"Over and above all the legal niceties, political considerations and tedious administrative protocol, is the compelling imperative to immediately rescue, give succor and bring in the Rohingya boat people with dispatch on cogent humanitarian reasons," NUPL secretary general Edre Olalia said.



"Time is of the essence," he added.



Justice Secretary Leila de Lima had earlier expressed the Philippines' willingness to take in the Rohingya should they drift to the country to honor obligations in international treaties pertaining to refugees and stateless people.



Olalia said the Philippines should "exercise compassion" for the refugees, who are victims of human trafficking and persecution.



Unwanted elsewhere



Thousands of people belonging to the Rohingya Muslim minority have been stranded at sea, escaping persecution in Burma, which for decades has been driving them away.



Human traffickers who have been shipping them to camps in Thailand abandoned them at sea, with no food or water.



Olalia said the refugees, unwanted in other territories, should be accepted even without travel documents and be provided basic needs upon arrival in the Philippines.



"They should not be mandatorily required to undergo the tedious process of submitting documents or any proof of their identity or origin which they may not have, given the circumstances," Olalia said.






http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/bangladesh-thanks-ph-for-asylum-offer/

DVB Bulletin: 21 May 2015


On tonight's bulletin:


  • US willing to take 'leading role' in solving migrant crisis

  • Burmese baby kidnapped in Mae Sot

  • 150 USDP members resign in land grab protest

  • Water shortage, disenty strikes central Burma

You can watch DVB Bulletin every weeknight on DVB TV after the eight o'clock news.





http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/dvb-bulletin-21-may-2015/

Govt Defends Plan to Ramp-Up Reliance on Coal



































Residents in Mon State attend a protest against a proposed coal power plant on May 5, 2015. (Photo: Tin Htet Paing / The Irrawaddy)

Residents in Mon State attend a protest against a proposed coal power plant on May 5, 2015. (Photo: Tin Htet Paing / The Irrawaddy)













RANGOON — The government intends to push ahead with plans to increase Burma's reliance on coal-fired power plants to 33 percent of the country's total generating capacity by 2030, according to a deputy minister from the Ministry of Electric Power.


Aung Than Oo, the deputy minister, said on Wednesday that due to projected steady growth in electricity consumption over the next 15 years, plans for several coal-fired power plants throughout the country should not be shelved, defying calls from environmentalists to consider a greener alternative energy future.


"Coal-fired power plants that use clean-coal technology should not be abolished while natural gas, wind power, solar energy and hydro-power electricity projects must be implemented to produce more electricity for the benefit of the public and state," he told Parliament in response to a question submitted by a lawmaker.


Lower House parliamentarian Tin Tin Ye from Tenasserim Division had asked the deputy minister whether plans to build multiple coal-fired power plants in the region would be canceled amid public opposition to the projects.


At least four coal-fired power plants are planned in Tenasserim Division, with feasibility studies currently underway, according to the Ministry of Electric Power. All of them would dwarf the division's only existing coal-fired power facility, an 8-megawatt plant in Kawthaung at Burma's southern tip. The largest proposed plant would produce more than 2,600 MW of electricity.


The Kawthaung plant, according to Tin Tin Ye, has already had negative health impacts on people living nearby.


None of the power generated in Burma's southernmost territory draws from or supplies the country's national grid, while offshore exploration of natural gas is widespread in the region.


Burma's current energy mix sees 69 percent of electricity generated from hydro-power sources, 29 percent from natural gas and just 2 percent from coal.


Power generating capacity nationwide stands at just 2,400 MW currently, and the ministry expects that Burma's demand for electricity will increase 13 to 15 percent annually over the next several years as more rural areas are connected to the national grid and economic growth brings increasingly energy-hungry cities and special economic zones.


"As a result of relying mainly on hydropower, the country faces an unstable and inadequate electricity supply every year," he said. "While only 30 percent of households can use electricity and 70 percent await [the ability] to use it."


According to a National Electricity Master Plan drafted by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and a Japanese consultancy, the suggested mix for the 23,594 MW of generating capacity that Burma is forecast to require in 2030-31 is 38 percent from hydropower, 33 percent from coal, 20 percent from natural gas and 9 percent from renewable energy sources.


Tin Tin Ye, a lawmaker with the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) party, cast doubt on government claims that the coal-fired plants in the pipeline would be genuinely "clean."


"No one can give guarantees on clean-coal technology. Clean-coal is very expensive," she said on Wednesday.


Environmentalist Win Myo Thu said relying on clean-coal was akin to "breathing with someone else's nose," with Burma's own deposits of the carbon fuel not sufficient for the ambitious expansion of coal-fired power generation.


"We don't believe in coal-fired power plants. Firstly because we have to buy coal from others [countries] to run the plant. This is something we shouldn't do," he said.


Win Myo Thu said Burma was headed in the wrong direction by trying to increase the number of coal-fired power plants in the country, in turn producing more carbon while, globally, countries are discussing ways to reduce their carbon emissions.


"People will be worried; although the ministry makes clean [coal] claims, that same electric ministry is struggling to solve [basic] problems like electric shocks from wires. Will the public believe the ministry will take responsibility if the clean-coal turns out to be dirty?"


A total of 18 coal-fired power plant projects have been planned in Burma's Sagaing, Irrawaddy, Rangoon and Tenasserim divisions, and the states of Shan and Mon, according to Thant Zin, coordinator of the Dawei Development Association.


He warned that the long-term health and environmental costs of so-called clean-coal were still unknown.


"Academics are still arguing over clean-coal today. In Japan, clean-coal technology doesn't mean pollutants are not produced," Thant Zin.


"In the long term, it is best not to use coal."













Related Posts:



















http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/govt-defends-plan-to-ramp-up-reliance-on-coal/

Thursday 21 May 2015

Top Asian News at 2:00 pm GMT




YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Four Malaysian navy ships began searching the seas for stranded boat people Thursday in the first official rescue operation since desperate migrants started washing onto Southeast Asia's shores, and a formerly reluctant Myanmar agreed to attend a regional meeting aimed at easing the crisis. Thousands of Rohingya Muslims and Bangladeshis are believed to be trapped on boats with little food or water — some after being pushed back by the navies of at least three countries — and the international community has warned that time to save them is running out.

BANGKOK (AP) — The decision by Indonesia and Malaysia to give temporary shelter to thousands of migrants stranded at sea appears to have defused a potential Southeast Asian humanitarian catastrophe, but the root causes of the crisis remain. Here's a look at still-unanswered questions surrounding the Rohingya Muslim migrants who are persecuted at home in Myanmar and have found scant welcome anywhere else. ___

A bipartisan group of 23 U.S. lawmakers is urging the Obama administration to prevent Southeast Asian seas from becoming a "graveyard" for thousands of Rohingya boat people. The lawmakers made the appeal in a letter to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry late Wednesday, ahead of discussions on the crisis between Myanmar's government and the No. 2 ranking U.S. diplomat, Anthony Blinken, in Naypyitaw, Myanmar's capital.

BEIJING (AP) — China said Thursday it is entitled to keep watch over airspace and seas surrounding artificial islands it created in the disputed waters of the South China Sea, following a reported exchange in which its navy warned off a U.S. surveillance plane. The comments came as the Chinese air force announced its latest offshore training exercises in the western Pacific as part of efforts to boost its combat preparedness. An air force spokesman said that followed an initial offshore drill held last month and future such exercises would likely be planned.

WASHINGTON (AP) — If President Barack Obama or his predecessor thought fighting a war with coalition partners was hard, they might consider Osama bin Laden's frustrations. Among documents gathered from his compound in Pakistan after U.S. Navy SEALs stormed the building and shot him to death is a lengthy complaint by the al-Qaida leader about working with Arabs, Uzbeks, Turks, "Russians of all kinds," Germans and others in his global jihad.

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Australia's warmer climate and higher wages have long lured droves of New Zealanders across the Tasman Sea with the aim of making a better life in the "lucky country." But with Australia's economy stumbling and New Zealand's improving, the trend has begun to reverse.

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Cambodia has accepted the first four people under the agreement it made with Australia nine months ago to take in asylum-seekers rejected for residency there, an official said Thursday. Prime Minister Hun Sen signed an endorsement letter Wednesday and the two countries are now discussing when the four will arrive in Cambodia, said Gen. Khieu Sopheak, spokesman of Cambodia's Interior Ministry.

BEIJING (AP) — At least 15 people have been killed and thousands more forced from their homes by flooding in southern and central China and more rain has been forecast for coming days, officials said Thursday. Authorities said that Jiangxi province has been hardest hit, with eight people killed and 65,000 displaced. Just to the south, the Guangxi region suffered five deaths with six other people listed as missing.

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Australia plans to strip citizenship from Australian-born children of immigrants who become Islamic State fighters in its crackdown on homegrown jihadis, a minister said on Thursday. The government wants to change the Citizenship Act to make fighting for Islamic State in Syria and Iraq a reason for losing citizenship, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton said.

TOKYO (AP) — The fishing town of Taiji will not stop its dolphin hunts, the mayor said Thursday, after Japan's aquariums decided to stop buying captured dolphins under international pressure sparked by cruelty concerns. "We are hunting under the permission of the Japanese government and prefecture, and so we will continue to protect our fishermen and the methods. We will not quit," said Kazutaka Sangen, mayor of the small town in central Japan.

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea said Thursday it has confirmed three cases of a respiratory virus that has killed hundreds of people in the Middle East. A 76-year-old man was diagnosed Thursday with Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan (AP) — The Central Asian country of Kyrgyzstan has ratified a measure to join the Eurasian Economic Union, a Russia-led trade bloc. President Almazbek Atambayev on Thursday signed the ratification law. The country's entry must then be approved by the parliaments of the other members — Russia, Kazakhstan, Armenia and Belarus.

BEIJING (AP) — A Chinese television drama got pulled off the air following a public outcry over a plot in which a hidden grenade is pulled from a woman's crotch during an amorous scene. The country's regulating agency — the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television — also began to review the TV drama "Let's Beat the Devils," which tells about Chinese people's resistance to Japanese invaders, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

BEIJING (AP) — A court on Thursday sentenced two young men to up to five months in jail for dangerous driving after they crashed a Lamborghini and a Ferrari in a late-night race through Beijing. The crash involving two luxury cars attracted much attention from the Chinese public, who speculated about the men's family backgrounds and how they could drive such expensive cars.

SRINAGAR, India (AP) — Hundreds of government forces with automatic weapons patrolled the streets of Indian Kashmir's main city to stop a rally by separatists to mark the anniversaries of the assassinations of two Kashmiri leaders. The two, Mirwaiz Mohammed Farooq and Abdul Gani Lone, had supported Kashmir's right to vote on whether it should be independent or governed either by India or Pakistan, nuclear-armed nations that have fought two wars since 1947 over its control. The Himalayan territory is currently split by a heavily militarized line of control between India and Pakistan.



http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/top-asian-news-at-200-pm-gmt/