Saturday, April 24, 2010

New War and Tantamount Danger in Monland

“We want to solve political problems by means of politics, therefore, we entered into a ceasefire and we will demand a political dialogue,” former New Mon State Party’s (NMSP) President Nai Shwe Kyin once said. Unfortunately, he passed away in 2003, and never saw a peaceful political dialogue within either Burma or Mon State; the situation has been worsening since the current military regime, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) forcibly confirmed a military-dominated constitution in May 2008 through a people’s referendum, without international monitoring or thorough debates among Burma’s political parties or the nation’s people.

The Mon people lost the right to self-determination and self-rule after the fall of the Hongsawatoi kingdom in 1757, when it was annexed by the Burmese King Alungphaya. Since then, the Mon people have struggled to retain their rights through both armed struggle and legitimate political movements. The NMSP, which formed in 1958, waged war against the successions of Burmese military regimes based in Rangoon, until agreed to a ceasefire in 1995.

Just recently, after the SPDC declared that it was holding elections in 2010, and announced electoral laws, a political party formation law and a party registration law, the regime began pressuring ceasefire groups to abandon their arms and participate in the elections. Some non-politically motivated ceasefire groups agreed to participate in the elections, despite the fact that the Burmese military’s political representatives have special opportunities, in that they do not need to run in the elections, but will, under the 2008 constitution, automatically win 25% of the seats in both central level and local level parliaments.

Burma’s politically-motivated ceasefire groups do not want to enter into the elections without political warrantees for their people and their armed forces. But the regime has said that they must change their armed forces into “Border Guard Forces” (BGF) or “village militia forces”, and transform their political wings into political parties to run in the elections.

The NMSP has consistently stated that it refuses to participate in the 2010 elections prior to major changes to the 2008 constitution, as it favors the Burmese military’s possession of political power within the country. The NMSP has also argued that it did not want to transform its armed force, the New Mon Liberation Army (NMLA), into a Burmese government-controlled Border Guard Force (BFG) or paramilitary group, without a political dialogue that granted the right of self-determination to the Mon people.

The time of the ceasefire’s existence grows shorter and shorter, as the date of the elections comes closer and closer. The regime is not offering any alternative means of preserving the ceasefire. War could break out at any time during the regime-set 60 day period for political party registration. If registering groups are declared to be illegal political groups, a new war will begin.

Both the Burmese military and various ethnic minority armies have been involved in a decades-long civil war. No one group can win in this war, but the nation’s people continue to suffer. Mon refugees who returned to Burma from Thailand’s refugee camps in 1995, after the ceasefire, will have to flee into Thailand again. Thousands of Mon people will become internally displaced persons (IDPs). Many rural Mon people will lose their livelihoods and their lands after rebuilding their lives during the 15 year ceasefire period.

The UN Assembly, western governments, and ASEAN leaders have demanded that the regime solve political problems through a peaceful dialogue. But the regime has ignored these demands. It planted the seed for a new war with its 2008 constitution, and now the war will break out soon.

Now, Burma’s problem are becoming international problems, as the international community will have to take care of Burmese refugees, help Burmese people with socio-economic programs, etc. Therefore, the international community still has a role to play in stopping this new war within Burma.

Chaung-zone farmers left adrift

By Jaloon Htaw:

Rice farmers from Dayal village, in Mon State’s Chaung-zone Township, are seething after an abortive attempt to repair eroding paddy lands has left them deprived of both farmland and funds.

Residents of the area explained to IMNA that flooding has plagued Chaung-zone Township since the construction of the Salween (Thanlwin) Bridge over the Salween River in Moulmein, completed in 2005. Farmers complained that the bridge’s construction altered river flow, and the redirected water routinely washes silt onto Chaung-zone fields.

Dayal Farmers explained to IMNA that they have petitioned the Chaung-zone Township Peace and Development Council’s (TPDC) Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation for several year to send the village a bulldozer to push silt out of their farmland, and create gravel barriers to protect their lands from further flooding. This year, a small group of farmer took matters into their own hands, and paid for use of a Chaung-zone town bulldozer for a period of 20 days. The vehicle arrived on March 14th of this year, but left again after a mere 4 days of work on March 19th, after the State-level Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation in Naypyidaw ordered that the Chaung-zone TPDC send the vehicle to the site of a similar project on Hinnter Island, south of Balue Kyunn Island, where Dayal village is located.

“We want to repair our farms because the farms are being eroded all the time. We, all the farmers who are working near the water, requested that the village chairman report [this erosion problem] to the Chaung-zone Township Peace and Development Council (TPDC). A lot of farms are falling down into to the water [destroyed by flooding]. Every year we have reported [the problem] and asked the TPDC to send a bulldozer to us. [We received one this year] but now the bulldozer has gone back [to Chaung-zone town]. They [the bulldozer and TPDC] were supposed to work at repairing [the erosion] for 20 day but they repaired it only for 4 day. Our farms are not finished yet,” said one farmer.

“The total [acreage] of farmland that [was to be] repaired is 100 acres. Almost 10 acres was finished. They only finished one owner’s farm. Also, we have lost money, and we also tired,” he added.

Dayal village contains over 3000 acres of farmland; 300 of those are located along the Salween river shoreline. According to sources in the village, a small party of 8 frustrated farmers took charge of hiring the bulldozer to repair their own farms. The group covered the expenses of the entire transaction, including engine oil and transportation costs for the bulldozer, themselves. Reportedly, each member of the group contributed 100,000 kyat to the project, hoping that they expense would result in cleared, protected, productive farmland; deprived sufficient funds to purchase the use of a second bulldozer, these individuals must now watch helplessly as the upcoming rainy season brings even more destruction to their fields.

“The Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation department from Chaung-zone town wants [more] money. We already reported the issue to the District-level Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation department. They will send [a bulldozer] again after rainy season they said. If it does not arrive [before rainy season], the farms will become like they were before,” said another farmer.

According to a retired Ministry of Agriculture worker, the Burmese government’s Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation has wronged Dayal’s farmers in yet another respect; under Burmese law, the ministry is required to respond to farmers’ needs without demanding payment.

“The farmers are repairing their farms by themselves, the ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation Department does not give them a full amount of help, and also it send the bulldozer to Hinntar island. This is a very bad thing and not fair for the farmers,” he commented.

New Mon State Party announces final “government militia” decision

By IMNA:

The New Mon State Party (NMSP) announced that the party has decided against transforming its armed wing into a Burmese government-run militia, during a press conference held yesterday on the Thai-Burma border. The decision was made by party leaders on April 21st, at an emergency meeting held in southern Mon State.

The meeting was held in response to an April 7th convention with Southeast Command (SEC) Lt. General Ye Myint, where the General threatened that the NMSP’s refusal to acquiesce to the Burmese government’s demands, that the party transform its armed wing, the Mon National Liberation Army (MNLA) into a government-controlled “militia group”, would result in the re-establishment of a “pre-ceasefire relationship” between the Burmese military government and the party.

The NMSP reached a ceasefire agreement with the current military regime, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), in 1995, in order to curb the massive human rights abuses Mon State citizens then suffered at the hands of the SPDC, and to open up political discourse between the 2 groups.

“We have already sent our Executive Committee (EC) members, including Nai Tin Hla, to confirm [our decision] with Southeast Command (SEC) Lt. Gen. Ye Myint, that we will not transform the MNLA into a government militia group,” NMSP spoke-person Nai Chay Mon explained. “Now we are still waiting to hear the government’s response from our representatives,” he added.

Twenty-seven EC members, including nine Central Executive Committee (CEC) members, along with five associated EC members, decided not to accept transforming the MNLA into a Burmese government-run militia, or Border-Guard Force (BGF) during the meeting, Nai Chay Mon explained

A source close to the party claimed that a few EC members, along with CEC member Nai Chan Toi, have decided to resign from the NMSP, although they allegedly are not making this move due to any opposition to the party’s decision to refuse the Burmese government’s militia group offer. However, the NMSP’s spoke-person refused to confirm this information.

He reported that many NMSP members have already moved from their homes in Mon State to other, more “reliable” locations, in anticipation of a violent reaction from the Burmese government. regarding the party’s decision.

“We will try our best to maintain the ceasefire, but if the government forces us to accept their demands, or if the government attacks, we will have to defend ourselves,” Nai Chay Mon explained to IMNA after yesterdays’ press conference.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Tavoy residents prepare for flight

By IMNA:

Residents of the Tavoy District villages of Joha Plrow and Suwanabumi, located in close proximity to New Mon State Party (NMSP) headquarters, informed IMNA today that they are packing up their belongings and fleeing their homes, in order to avoid being victimized by an impending invasion by Burmese military troops.

NMSP leaders have, for the past several days, been occupied by a secret emergency meeting, that was called to discuss an ultimatum issued by State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) officers during an April 7th meeting between the two groups; reportedly, if the NMSP does not acquiesce to the SPDC’s demands that the party become a government-run “people’s militia between April 22nd and April 28th, the party can consider its 1995 ceasefire agreement with the SPDC to be ended.

Reports of Burmese battalions gathering on the NMSP’s Tavoy District border have already prompted residents of the area to flee before the release of the decision; the NMSP’s meeting has been slated to end today. Now Tavoy residents living near the NMSP’s headquarters, further inside the region, report that they plane to follow suit, to avoid being caught in a potential SPDC attack upon the site.

“Now people in our village are packing up their property to avoid the SPDC soldiers, if they come to our place. This is because we heard that the SPDC’s troops will come to this area soon. Some people have gone already to safe places, where their relatives live. If the situation gets worse, we are ready to move from here [this village],” a Joha Plrow resident reported.

A bus driver who normally earns his living driving on the Tavoy District road stretching between the village of Panapone and Ye Town, informed IMNA that he has ceased working as a bus driver and has fled to the Thai Burma border, after reportedly viewing a contingent of SPDC troops in the village of Ye Chung Pyar, a Tavoy District village under NMSP control. This source explained to IMNA that the number of buses crossing Tavoy District has dropped dramatically over the past week; 50 buses are scheduled to traverse the area each day, but this driver claims that only 5 are currently in operation.

“Now I have stopped driving my truck in that area. I dare not drive any more. I am afraid of the SPDC troops. If they [SPDC troops] see me with the truck, they may seize my truck, or maybe they will force me to bring them where they want [forced portering]. Not only I stopped driving my truck here. Many truck owner have stopped, like me”, he explained.

A bus driver from the village of Suwanabumi pointed to an incident that occurred on January 10th of this year, when SPDC Light Infantry Battalion (LIB) No. 282 entered the village, located less than 10 miles from the NMSP’s central headquarters. The sources who spoke to IMNA for its January coverage reported that the battalion, which entered the village on a purported search for bandits, left the area after merely 3 hours without harassing residents. However, this bus driver explained to IMNA that Suwanabumi’s residents were alarmed by the incident, and that many are preparing to flee the area in the event that a second visit from the battalion will this time result in violence.

All Mon Region Democracy Party announces official party roster, commences election registration process

By Akka:
According to a party spokesperson, the All Mon Region Democracy Party (AMRDP), formed by a 5 member break-off group from original 15 member “Working Committee” on March 30th, has added an additional 10 members to its ranks, and has already begun the process of registering itself to run under its new name in the 2010 elections.

“Two committee members left for Naypyitaw this morning to register the 15 committee members with the government. If the government approves all of the members, we can move on to the next step of the registration process, electing two leaders from among the fifteen committee member; but if not [if the government does not approve the roster] we will have to replace them and register again” he said.

The 15 committee members include Nai Nwe Soe, Nai Janu (Nai Ngwe Thein), Nai Seik, and Nai Baya Aung Moe, prominent members of Mon State’s political scene.

“We want to fight for ethnic minority rights under the law [through legal political processes], while other groups may want to approach [the issue] a different way. We will also try to have only one Mon party to represent the Mon region,” the AMRDP spokesperson explained.

According to this spokesperson, the AMRDP was officially named and founded during an April 7, 2010 meeting, and aims to represent Mon State and other ethnic minority groups living in Mon-controlled regions. The party hopes to increase the political and cultural rights accorded to ethnic minorities, and to aid in Burma’s transformation into a democratic state.

In IMNA’s April 20th interview with New Mon State Party (NSMP) spokesman Nai Chay Mon, the spokesman refused to comment on the party’s desire to run in the 2010 elections, claiming that the party wished to remain neutral on the subject; the NMSP has repeatedly refused to register for the 2010 elections, as registration involves supporting the 2008 constitution, which the NMSP has publicly criticized on multiple occasions.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Burmese battalions gather on NMSP territory border before April 22nd deadline

IMNA

April 21, 2010

Two Burmese battalions have moved to set up bases in Tenasserim Division, in close proximity to the border of the New Mon State Party’s territory in (NMSP) Tavoy District.

This section of Tavoy District makes up the southernmost region of the territory accorded to the NMSP in its 1995 ceasefire agreement with the currently Burmese military regime, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC).

Sources in the area identified the 2 battalions as Light Infantry Battalion (LIB) No. 282 and other battalion. The groups moved into the region on Saturday and Monday, respectively, and have set up their artillery forces near the Tavoy District village of Snee Dein.

A witness explained, “at least 25 soldiers arrived at Snee Dein village on Saturday, and on Monday more arrived.”

This witness also reported that villagers from Snee Dein and the surrounding area in Tavoy District, have begun packing up their belongings. Threats of a potential end to 1995 ceasefire treaty, following the release of the NMSP’s final decision regarding its acceptance or refusal of the SPDC’s Border Guard Force (BGF) or people’s militia offer, has many preparing to flee the region.

On April 19th, IMNA published news of an April 7th meeting between NMSP leaders and Southeast Command Lieutenant General Ye Myint, where the latter reportedly threatened that a refusal of the SPDC’s people’s militia or BGF offer would result in the return of a “pre-ceasefire” relationship between the two groups. The General reportedly gave the party a deadline of April 22nd to make its decision.

In an interview with IMNA published yesterday, NMSP spokesman Nai Chay Mon explained that party members are waiting for direction from their leaders, who are currently holding an emergency meeting in southern Mon State to discuss their response to Gen. Ye Myint’s ultimatum.

LIB No 282 is based in Yebyu Township, Tenasserim Division under the management of the Coastal Regional Command, in Tennasserim Division. LIB 675 is, according to the Human Right’s Foundation of Monland (HURFOM), has been documented as a “baseless” battalion.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Interview with New Mon State Party about emergency meeting of the party


According to New Mon State Party (NMSP) spokesperson Nai Chay Mon during an interview with IMNA reporter Loa Htaw, party leaders have gathered at their headquarters in southern Mon State for an emergency meeting.

NMSP leaders must decide whether they will accept the Burmese government’s demands that the party to transform the Mon National Liberation Army (MNLA) into a Burmese-government controlled militia group or Border Guard Force (BGF). According to Nai Chay Mon, the NMSP leaders met with Southeast Command Lt. Gen. Ye Myint on April 7, when he gave the party a deadline of April 22nd to confirm its decision.

Loa Htaw: Could you please tell the Mon people about the NMSP’s current situation?

Nai Chay Mon: Currently the New Mon State Party has been asked by Southeast Command Lt.Gen. Ye Myint to accept the transformation of the MNLA into a militia group. The NMSP leaders, led by Vice President Nai Rot Sa, Join Secretary Nai Chan Toi and CEC Nai Tala Nyi met with Lt. Gen Ye Myint on April 7th, and he asked the party’s leaders to confirm their decision by a deadline of April 22.

Loa Htaw: What is the emergency meeting about at the NMSP’s head-quarters?

Nai Chay Mon: The main agenda is to decide whether the NMSP should accept the government’s demands or not. Currently, all the Central Executive Committee party leaders are holding the meeting about this issue.

Loa Htaw: What will happen if NMSP decides not to form a militia group? Will the the relationship between the NMSP and the SPDC return to the way they were before the cease-fire agreement?

Nai Chay Mon: We cannot say anything yet about whether the political situation will become like it was before the cease-fire agreement or not. The NMSP and other ethnic groups signed cease-fire agreements to solve political problems, and both the Burmese government and the NMSP must take time to find a solution, step by step.

Loa Htaw: The NMSP has stated several times that it will not participate in the 2010 elections, or transform its armed wing into a militia group. Why does the Burmese government want confirmation of these decisions again?

Nai Chay Mon: Before, the government asked the NMSP to accept the Border-Guard Force agreement, but now they changed the word into militia group.

Loa Htaw: What is the difference between a Border-Guard Force and a militia group?

Nai Chay Mon: A Border-Guard Force means that the force will include SPDC soldiers, but a militia group may not involve the government’s soldiers, according to our experience.

Loa Htaw: How do plan to deal with other Mon parties, such as All Region Mon Democracy Party, who are planning to run in the 2010 elections?

Nai Chay Mon: We do not want to comment on other Mon parties, or if they want to form new Mon parties and run in the elections. We do not oppose or support them. But the 2010 election is based on the 2008 constitution, which we do not approve of.

Loa Htaw: Some have said that the Mon people and other ethnic groups should have their ethnic political parties join in the elections to represent their groups’ voices. What do you think?

Nai Chay Mon: We should not view the election at a surface level . We have to consider the 2008 constitution carefully, and how it will benefit the Mon people and all Burmese citizens. Otherwise, we will face the effects of the constitution, which does not give any ethnic rights to the Mon people or other ethnic people.

Loa Htaw: What do you want to tell the Mon people, regarding both the upcoming elections, and the pressure from the government to accept an agreement to transform the MNLA into a militia group?

Nai Chay Mon: We want to tell the Mon people that MNLA still exists, and we want the Mon people to support the MNLA and NMSP, whatever the decisions the party makes.