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8-14 August: Diverse Groups Raise Concerns About Development Projects on the Irrawaddy River

August 15, 2011

On 12 August, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi met with the regime’s minister of social welfare, relief, and resettlement, Aung Kyi, in Rangoon for the second time in less than a month. After the meeting the two issued a joint statement noting that they had agreed to cooperate and “to work in reciprocal basis by avoiding the contradicting attitudes.” However, it is clear that Daw Suu intends to continue to operate independently on behalf of the people of Burma, even where doing so contradicts the position of the regime. Just two days after the 12 August meeting Daw Suu defied the regime, traveling outside of Rangoon to meet supporters in Pegu and neighbouring Thanatpin despite the regime’s warning that such a trip could trigger “riots.”

Additionally, the day before her meeting with Aung Kyi, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi issued a letter expressing her opinion on one of the most contentious issues currently facing Burma, the issue of development projects, in particular dams along the Irrawaddy River. Daw Suu wrote that, “Today, the Irrawaddy is under threat” and argued that, “Ecological change to the Irrawaddy would impact all those whose lives are linked to the great river, from the ethnic peoples in the northernmost state of our country to the rice-growing communities of the delta.”

Days before Daw Suu’s appeal, the state-run newspaper, New Light of Myanmar, claimed that the Myitsone dam project at the source of the Irrawaddy River would have no negative impacts on the river. However, countless environmental organizations and ethnic groups have documented the detrimental effects that this project will have on the environment and on people’s livelihoods. In its most recent report, the Burma Environmental Working Group stated that, “As a result of dam-building hundreds of thousands of people will be left without their land, homes and livelihoods, and become internally displaced or migrate to neighboring countries…The dams will also decrease food security through their negative impact on fisheries and river bank farms…Many of the dams in Burma threaten internationally-recognized biodiversity yet almost none of the sites have been assessed for environmental impacts.” Last month, the Burma Rivers Network released an analysis of the environmental impact assessment conducted by China Power Investment Corporation, the state-owned company constructing the Myitsone dam. The assessment presented information regarding the impacts of the dam project on livelihoods, public health, safety and biodiversity of the area, and ultimately recommended that construction of the dam should be avoided. However, the assessment’s findings were brushed aside and construction has continued.

At a commemoration of the 23rd anniversary of Burma’s 1988 uprising in Bangkok, Hkawng Seng Pan of the Kachin Women’s Association Thailand said that, “These dams, including the Myitsone Dam on the Irrawaddy River will have very damaging social and environmental impacts, but local communities have not been consulted and have been unable to get information about the projects.” It is clear that dams have already had extremely damaging consequences for the Kachin people as the fighting which erupted in June, breaking a decades long ceasefire, has been attributed to the regime’s desire to gain control of the areas around the Taping and Shweli Dams. Speaking at the same event, Maw Bu Myar of the Karenni National Women’s Organization expressed similar sentiments stating that the “Karenni people already had a bitter experience with Lawpita, the first large-scale hydropower project ever built in Burma. What the Karenni people received from this hydropower dam was the arrival of thousands of Burmese troops, further forced relocation, forced labor, the destruction of biodiversity, threats to the indigenous people, water shortage, and extensive laying of landmine. And still 80% of Karenni population has no access to electricity today. This is why the Karenni people have serious concerns about the new proposed dams.”

Many of these groups have called for a halt to the construction of projects such as the Myitsone dam until thorough impact assessments have been conducted and made public, precautions are in place to ensure that there will not be negative impacts on the environment and people’s livelihoods, and local communities are able to participate in decision making processes.

In her letter, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi similarly expressed concern about these projects and appealed “to environmental experts, to conservationists and to lovers of nature, peace and harmony everywhere to join us in a campaign to create a worldwide awareness of the dangers threatening one of the most important rivers of Asia. Together we can find solutions to problems, ecological, economic, technical, and political, related to the Irrawaddy.”

News Highlights

Defying authorities warnings, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi makes her first political trip outside Rangoon since she was freed from house arrest

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi urges the governments of China and Burma to reassess Myitsone Dam Project in Kachin State and for people to work together to protect the Irrawaddy River

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and Minister Aung Kyi issue statement outlining four agreements to avoid conflicting views and to work on a reciprocal basis

Regime’s newly-formed public relations team holds its first press conference in Naypyidaw; Information Minister Kyaw Hsan urges Daw  Aung San Suu Kyi  to officially register the NLD as a political party, announces that Tomás Ojea Quintana, UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Burma, will return to the country

Inside Burma

Mergui Township NLD Chairman sentenced to four months in jail over a conflict with two young men

State-run media publishes an open letter from 23 MPs supporting the regime’s efforts for peace and warning all parties against disunity in the struggle to end ethnic conflicts

Kachin Independence Organization says it will accept ceasefire agreement only if it is offered to all alliances under the United Nationalities Federation Council

Community based organizations claim that the regime has not offered any assistance to thousands of refugees in Myitkyina, Kachin State

Shan State Army – South says it is ready for ceasefire negotiation with Naypyidaw

Burma Army makes unusual distribution of 50 bags of rice to war victims in Kehsi Mensi Township, southern Shan State

New Mon State Party leader says Mon State Chief Minister has requested peace talks

Regime plans to withdraw Foreign Exchange Certificates from the market

Jailed Democratic Voice of Burma reporter, Sithu Zeya, faces further charges

Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited illegally detains dozens of farmers in Irrawaddy Region who could not repay their agricultural loans

Farmers file complaints to the International Labour Organisation after Kaung Htet Company seizes 400 acres of farm land in Tenasserim Division

Dam releases water without warning in Tikegyi Township, Rangoon Region, destroying 250 houses and displacing 2,000 people displaced (Burmese)

Regional

Thai authorities arrest 55 people from Burma for illegally trying to enter Thailand after they were found on a boat near Ranong in southern Thailand

ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Myanmar Caucus expresses its strong opposition to Burma’s bid to chair ASEAN in 2014

Burma sells 160,000 bags of low-quality rice to North Korea

International

US State Department spokesperson says Burma must abide by the conditions and rules if it expects to receive assistance from the International Monetary Fund

Thirteen women senators in the United States call on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to take action over reports of rape in Burma and to pursue the establishment of a UN commission of Inquiry

Latest from the Blog

Letter of support for Burma on 8888 Anniversary from Belarusian Association of Journalists
By Belarusian Association of Journalists

The Spirit of the 1988 Uprising Lives On – Activists Call for UN Commission of Inquiry
By Burma Partnership

Actions

500 residents sign a complaint letter to President Thein Sein to protest against the appointment of the new ward administrator in North Okkalapa Township, Rangoon

Members of Generation Wave put up 150 large posters calling for release of political prisoners in Rangoon and other towns

About 2,000 people launch a protest against the demolition of a Burmese monastery in Bodh Gaya, India

Opinion

EU Should Negotiate Against the Regime, Not Itself
The Irrawaddy

Burma pursues the old divide-and-rule policy tackling ethnic issue
By Zin Linn
Asian Correspondent

The long wait for a ceasefire
By Wai Moe
The Irrawaddy

Statements and Press Releases

Letter to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about rape as a weapon of war and UN Commission of Inquiry in Burma
By 13 Women Senators from the United States

မိခင္ ဧရာဝတီျမစ္ၾကီး ထာဝရ ရွင္သန္ေစေရး ျမန္မာတမ်ဳိးသားလံုးအေရး
By 88 Generation Students

Human Rights Commissioner of Thailand expresses support for a Commission of Inquiry in Burma
By Burma Partnership

Open letter of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi to save the Irrawaddy River
By Daw Aung San Suu Kyi

Lithuanian foreign minister talks to Burma opposition leader and expresses support for democratic forces
By Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Lithuania

Rohingyas call on EU to support a UN Commission of Inquiry on Burma
By National Democratic Party for Human Rights (In Exile), Arakan Rohingya National Organisation, Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK, Burmese Rohingya Association in Japan, Rohingya Community in Norway, and Rohingya League for Democracy in Burma

Over 30,000 displaced by Burma Army attacks face humanitarian crisis in Northern Shan State
By Shan Women’s Action Network and Shan Human Rights Foundation

Reports

Village heads negotiate with Tatmadaw, armed groups to forestall human rights threats amid continued conflict in Dooplaya District
By Karen Human Rights Group

Burma’s Weekly Political News Summary (081/2011) (Burmese)
By Network for Democracy and Development

This post is in: Weekly Highlights