I. Armed Conflict in Kachin State

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

I. Armed Conflict in Kachin State HUMAN RIGHTS “UNTOLD MISERIES” Wartime Abuses and Forced Displacement in Kachin State WATCH “Untold Miseries” Wartime Abuses and Forced Displacement in Burma’s Kachin State Copyright © 2012 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 1-56432-874-0 Cover design by Rafael Jimenez Human Rights Watch is dedicated to protecting the human rights of people around the world. We stand with victims and activists to prevent discrimination, to uphold political freedom, to protect people from inhumane conduct in wartime, and to bring offenders to justice. We investigate and expose human rights violations and hold abusers accountable. We challenge governments and those who hold power to end abusive practices and respect international human rights law. We enlist the public and the international community to support the cause of human rights for all. Human Rights Watch is an international organization with staff in more than 40 countries, and offices in Amsterdam, Beirut, Berlin, Brussels, Chicago, Geneva, Goma, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Moscow, Nairobi, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Tokyo, Toronto, Tunis, Washington DC, and Zurich. For more information, please visit our website: http://www.hrw.org MARCH 2012 1-56432-874-0 “Untold Miseries” Wartime Abuses and Forced Displacement in Burma’s Kachin State Map of Burma ...................................................................................................................... i Detailed Map of Kachin State .............................................................................................. ii Summary and Key Recommendations .................................................................................. 1 I. Armed Conflict in Kachin State ....................................................................................... 22 Brief Political History of the Kachin ........................................................................................ 22 Armed Conflict and Abuse in Kachin State: 1961-1994 ............................................................ 23 Human Rights Abuses Pre-1994 ....................................................................................... 25 Events Preceding Renewed Armed Conflict in 2011 ................................................................. 26 Renewed Armed Conflict in Kachin State: June 2011-Present ................................................... 28 Major Infrastructure Projects in Northern Burma ..................................................................... 29 Taping Hydropower Dam No. 1 ......................................................................................... 29 Myitsone Hydropower Dam ............................................................................................. 30 The Burma-China Oil and Gas Pipelines ........................................................................... 32 II. Burmese Army Abuses in Kachin State .......................................................................... 34 Torture and Forced Labor of Children ..................................................................................... 34 Attacks on Civilians and Civilian Objects ................................................................................ 37 Torture, Beatings, and Other Ill-Treatment .............................................................................. 40 Rape and Sexual Violence ..................................................................................................... 43 Forced Labor ......................................................................................................................... 46 Extrajudicial Killings .............................................................................................................. 50 Destruction of Property ........................................................................................................... 51 Child Soldiers ....................................................................................................................... 54 Antipersonnel Landmines ...................................................................................................... 58 III. Abuses by the Kachin Independence Army ................................................................... 60 Child Soldiers ....................................................................................................................... 60 Landmines ............................................................................................................................ 62 IV. Protecting Internally Displaced Kachin in Burma .......................................................... 64 Plight of Displaced Persons ................................................................................................... 64 Food Security ........................................................................................................................ 65 Humanitarian Access ............................................................................................................. 66 V. International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law ........................................................ 71 VI. Recommendations ........................................................................................................ 77 To the Burmese Government .................................................................................................. 77 To the Burmese Parliament .................................................................................................... 78 To the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of Burma ...................................................... 79 To the National Human Rights Commission ............................................................................ 79 To the Kachin Independence Organization ............................................................................. 80 To International Humanitarian Agencies and the Donor Community ........................................ 81 To the UN Country Team and Burma-based UN Agencies ......................................................... 81 To the International Labour Organization ............................................................................... 81 To the Governments of Australia, China, Russia, United States, European Union, and Japan, and ASEAN Member States ........................................................................................................... 82 Acknowledgements .......................................................................................................... 83 Map of Burma I HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH | MARCH 2012 Summary and Key Recommendations Human Rights Watch | March 2012 A displaced Kachin mother of three, 45, recuperates from an injury from a KIA antipersonnel mine in a hospital in Maijayang. She and her husband were injured on December 19, 2011, unaware that mines had been planted on their farm. © 2012 Ryan Roco “UNTOLD MISERIES” Wartime Abuses and Forced Displacement in Burma’s Kachin State They pointed the knife against my stomach and they put it on my brother’s throat.... We were asked repeatedly where the KIA [Kachin Independence Army] is and in which house the weapons are hidden, and then the soldier said, “If you don’t show us and don’t give us the answers then you will be killed and your hands will be cut off.” And then we were tied up. —“Mung A.,” 16, tortured and forced to porter with his 14-year-old brother on the front lines in Kachin State, November 2011 Soldiers would come and take the women and bring them from tent to tent. We were so afraid and we couldn’t watch the whole night. The next morning, the women couldn’t walk right. They seemed like they were in pain. They walked hunched over. And they were crying. —“M. Seng,” 23, forced to porter on the front lines for 19 days, November 2011 In his March 2011 inauguration speech, Burmese President Thein Sein emphasized the importance of ending Burma’s several ethnic armed conflicts, declaring that more than 60 years of ethnic warfare in Burma were due to “dogmatism, sectarian strife, and racism.” Burma’s ethnic minorities had, he said, experienced “the hell of untold miseries.” 4 “Untold Miseries” An IDP camp known as Border Post 8, where approximately 2,000 displaced people fled in November 2011 when the Burmese army attacked their villages and razed homes. At an elevation of 2,300 meters, residents endure temperatures as low as -1 degrees Celsius and have received no humanitarian aid. © 2011 Ryan Roco /Partners Relief & Development Human Rights Watch | March 2012 5 Crops planted by internally displaced Kachin outside their makeshift camp in Maijayang. Food is inadequate as the Burmese authorities have largely hindered humanitarian access to the camps in Maijayang. © 2011 Leah Roco /Partners Relief & Development 6 “Untold Miseries” Despite his words, the miseries continue for the ethnic KIA soldiers on the frontlines in the KIA's eastern division. minority Kachin population in Burma’s northern Kachin State. © 2012 Ryan Roco After 17 years of a ceasefire in Kachin State, the Burmese armed forces launched offensive military operations in June 2011 against the rebel Kachin Independence Army (KIA), leading to a humanitarian crisis affecting tens of thousands of events on the ground and have conducted follow-up research civilians, against whom the Burmese army is committing through March 2012. serious abuses. Military operations by both sides have Kachin
Recommended publications
  • Appendix – D Model Villages with Rice Husk Gas Engine
    APPENDIX – D MODEL VILLAGES WITH RICE HUSK GAS ENGINE APPENDIX D-1 Project Examples 1 (1/3) Development Plan Appendix D-1 Project Examples 1: Rice Husk Gas Engine Electrification in Younetalin Village Plans were prepared to electrify villages with rice husk gas engine in Ayeyarwaddi Division headed by Area Commander. Younetalin Village was the first to be electrified in accordance with the plans. The scheme at Younetalin village was completed quite quickly. It was conceived in January 2001 and the committee was formed then. The scheme commenced operation on 15 2001 April and therefore took barely 3 months to arrange the funding and building. The project feature is as follows (as of Nov 2002): Nippon Koei / IEEJ The Study on Introduction of Renewable Energies Volume 5 in Rural Areas in Myanmar Development Plans APPENDIX D-1 Project Examples 1 (2/3) Basic Village Feature Household 1,100 households Industry and product 6 rice mills, BCS, Video/Karaoke Shops Paddy (Cultivation field is 250 ares), fruits processing, rice noodle processing) Public facilities Primary school, monastery, state high school, etc. Project Cost and Fund Capital cost K9,600,000 (K580,000 for engine and generator, K3,800,000 for distribution lines) Collection of fund From K20,000 up to K40,000 was collected according to the financial condition of each house. Difference between the amount raised by the villagers and the capital cost of was K4,000,000. It was covered by loan from the Area Commander of the Division with 2 % interest per month. Unit and Fuel Spec of unit Engine :140 hp, Hino 12 cylinder diesel engine Generator : 135 kVA Model : RH-14 Rice husk ¾ 12 baskets per hour is consumed consumption ¾ 6 rice mills powered by diesel generator.
    [Show full text]
  • Inside Trained to Torture
    TRAINED TO TORTURE Systematic war crimes by the Burma Army in Ta’ang areas of northern Shan State (March 2011 - March 2016) z f; kifu mi GHeftDyfkefwt By Ta'ang Women's Organization (TWO) ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We would like to express special thanks to all the victims and the communities who contributed their voices and evidence for the report by sharing their testimonies and also giving their time and energy to inform this report. Special thanks extended to the Burma Relief Center (BRC) for their financial support and supporting the volunteer to edit the translation of this report. We would like to thank all the individuals and organizations who assisted us with valuable input in the process of producing the “Trained to Torture” report, including friends who drawing maps for the report and layout and also the Palaung people as a whole for generously helping us access grassroots area which provided us with invaluable information for this report. TABLE OF CONTENTS Summary 1 Methodology 4 Background 5 Burma Army expansion and spread of conflict in Ta’ang areas 7 Continued reliance on local militia to “divide and rule” 9 Ta’ang exclusion from the peace process 11 Analysis of human rights violations by the Burma Army in Ta’ang areas (March 2011 - March 2016) 12 • Torture 14 - Torture and killing of Ta’ang prisoners of war 16 - Torture by government-allied militia 17 • Extrajudicial killing of civilians 18 • Sexual violence 19 • Shelling, shooting at civilian targets 20 • Forced portering, use of civilians as human shields 22 • Looting and deliberate
    [Show full text]
  • REGLUGERÐ Um Þvingunaraðgerðir Varðandi Mjanmar (Búrma)
    Nr. 911 26. október 2009 REGLUGERÐ um þvingunaraðgerðir varðandi Mjanmar (Búrma). 1. gr. Almenn ákvæði. Með reglugerð þessari eru sett ákvæði um þvingunaraðgerðir varðandi Mjanmar sem íslensk stjórnvöld hafa ákveðið að framfylgja á grundvelli yfirlýsingar ríkisstjórna aðildarríkja Evrópu- sambandsins og Fríverslunarsamtaka Evrópu um pólitísk skoðanaskipti, sem er hluti samningsins um Evrópska efnahagssvæðið, sbr. lög nr. 2/1993. Þvingunaraðgerðir Evrópusambandsins varðandi Mjanmar byggja á sameiginlegri afstöðu ráðs Evrópusambandsins 2006/318/CFSP frá 27. apríl 2006 ásamt síðari breytingum, uppfærslum og viðbótum: sameiginleg afstaða 2007/750/CFSP, 2008/349/CFSP, 2009/351/CFSP og 2009/615/CFSP. Gerðir Evrópusambandsins, þ.m.t. uppfærðir listar yfir aðila og hluti sem þvingunaraðgerðir beinast að eða varða, eftir því sem við á, eru birtar á vefsetri þess (http://ec.europa.eu/external_relations/cfsp/sanctions/index_en.htm). Ákvæði reglugerðar nr. 119/2009 um framkvæmd alþjóðlegra þvingunaraðgerða skulu gilda um framkvæmd reglugerðar þessarar. 2. gr. Vopnasölubann. Vopnasölubann skal gilda gagnvart Mjanmar, sbr. 1. og 2. gr. 2006/318/CFSP og síðari breyt- ingar, uppfærslur og viðbætur. 3. gr. Viðskiptabann. Bannað er að selja, útvega, yfirfæra eða flytja út búnað eða tækni til fyrirtækja í Mjanmar sem stunda eftirgreindan iðnað ef sá búnaður eða tækni tengist starfsemi þeirra: a) skógarhögg og timburvinnslu, b) námuvinnslu gulls, tins, járns, kopars, volframs, silfurs, kola, blýs, mangans, nikkels og sinks, c) námuvinnslu og vinnslu eðal- eða hálfeðalsteina, þ.m.t. demanta, rúbínsteina, saffíra, jaði- steina og smaragða. Bannað er að kaupa, flytja inn eða flytja til landsins eftirgreindar vörur frá Mjanmar: a) trjáboli, timbur og timburvörur, b) gull, tin, járn, kopar, volfram, silfur, kol, blý, mangan, nikkel og sink, c) eðal- eða hálfeðalsteina, þ.m.t.
    [Show full text]
  • The Union Report the Union Report : Census Report Volume 2 Census Report Volume 2
    THE REPUBLIC OF THE UNION OF MYANMAR The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census The Union Report The Union Report : Census Report Volume 2 Volume Report : Census The Union Report Census Report Volume 2 Department of Population Ministry of Immigration and Population May 2015 The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census The Union Report Census Report Volume 2 For more information contact: Department of Population Ministry of Immigration and Population Office No. 48 Nay Pyi Taw Tel: +95 67 431 062 www.dop.gov.mm May, 2015 Figure 1: Map of Myanmar by State, Region and District Census Report Volume 2 (Union) i Foreword The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census (2014 MPHC) was conducted from 29th March to 10th April 2014 on a de facto basis. The successful planning and implementation of the census activities, followed by the timely release of the provisional results in August 2014 and now the main results in May 2015, is a clear testimony of the Government’s resolve to publish all information collected from respondents in accordance with the Population and Housing Census Law No. 19 of 2013. It is my hope that the main census results will be interpreted correctly and will effectively inform the planning and decision-making processes in our quest for national development. The census structures put in place, including the Central Census Commission, Census Committees and Offices at all administrative levels and the International Technical Advisory Board (ITAB), a group of 15 experts from different countries and institutions involved in censuses and statistics internationally, provided the requisite administrative and technical inputs for the implementation of the census.
    [Show full text]
  • State Peace and Development Council Chairman Senior General Than Shwe Accepts Credentials of Ambassador of Spain
    Established 1914 Volume XIII, Number 116 6th Waxing of Wagaung 1367 ME Wednesday, 10 August, 2005 Four political objectives Four economic objectives Four social objectives * Stability of the State, community peace * Development of agriculture as the base and all-round * Uplift of the morale and morality of and tranquillity, prevalence of law and development of other sectors of the economy as well the entire nation order * Proper evolution of the market-oriented economic * Uplift of national prestige and integ- * National reconsolidation system rity and preservation and safeguard- * Emergence of a new enduring State * Development of the economy inviting participation in ing of cultural heritage and national Constitution terms of technical know-how and investments from character * Building of a new modern developed sources inside the country and abroad * Uplift of dynamism of patriotic spirit nation in accord with the new State * The initiative to shape the national economy must be kept * Uplift of health, fitness and education Constitution in the hands of the State and the national peoples standards of the entire nation State Peace and Development Council Chairman Senior General Than Shwe accepts credentials of Ambassador of Spain YANGON, 9 Aug— Mr Juan Deputy Ministers for Foreign Af- Manuel Lopez Nadal, newly ac- fairs U Kyaw Thu and U Maung credited Ambassador of Spain to Myint and Director-General Thura the Union of Myanmar, presented U Aung Htet of the Protocol his credentials to Senior General Department. Than Shwe, Chairman of the MNA State Peace and Development Council of the Union of Senior General Than Shwe Myanmar, at Zeyathiri Beikman, accepts credentials of newly- Konmyinttha, at 10 am today.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census SHAN STATE, KYAUKME DISTRICT Namtu Township Report
    THE REPUBLIC OF THE UNION OF MYANMAR The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census SHAN STATE, KYAUKME DISTRICT Namtu Township Report Department of Population Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population October 2017 The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Shan State, Kyaukme District Namtu Township Report Department of Population Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population Office No.48 Nay Pyi Taw Tel: +95 67 431062 www.dop.gov.mm October 2017 Figure 1 : Map of Shan State, showing the townships Namtu Township Figures at a Glance 1 Total Population 50,423 2 Population males 24,448 (48.5%) Population females 25,975 (51.5%) Percentage of urban population 26.4% Area (Km2) 1,689.0 3 Population density (per Km2) 29.9 persons Median age 25.8 years Number of wards 2 Number of village tracts 21 Number of private households 11,641 Percentage of female headed households 27.5% Mean household size 4.2 persons 4 Percentage of population by age group Children (0 – 14 years) 32.6% Economically productive (15 – 64 years) 62.3% Elderly population (65+ years) 5.1% Dependency ratios Total dependency ratio 60.5 Child dependency ratio 52.3 Old dependency ratio 8.2 Ageing index 15.6 Sex ratio (males per 100 females) 94 Literacy rate (persons aged 15 and over) 67.5% Male 71.8% Female 63.7% People with disability Number Per cent Any form of disability 3,082 6.1 Walking 1,035 2.1 Seeing 1,374 2.7 Hearing 1,137 2.3 Remembering 976 1.9 Type of Identity Card (persons aged 10 and over) Number Per cent Citizenship Scrutiny 28,204 71.4 Associate Scrutiny
    [Show full text]
  • Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2005 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 8, 2006
    Burma Page 1 of 24 2005 Human Rights Report Released | Daily Press Briefing | Other News... Burma Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2005 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 8, 2006 Since 1962, Burma, with an estimated population of more than 52 million, has been ruled by a succession of highly authoritarian military regimes dominated by the majority Burman ethnic group. The current controlling military regime, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), led by Senior General Than Shwe, is the country's de facto government, with subordinate Peace and Development Councils ruling by decree at the division, state, city, township, ward, and village levels. In 1990 prodemocracy parties won more than 80 percent of the seats in a generally free and fair parliamentary election, but the junta refused to recognize the results. Twice during the year, the SPDC convened the National Convention (NC) as part of its purported "Seven-Step Road Map to Democracy." The NC, designed to produce a new constitution, excluded the largest opposition parties and did not allow free debate. The military government totally controlled the country's armed forces, excluding a few active insurgent groups. The government's human rights record worsened during the year, and the government continued to commit numerous serious abuses. The following human rights abuses were reported: abridgement of the right to change the government extrajudicial killings, including custodial deaths disappearances rape, torture, and beatings of
    [Show full text]
  • THE STATE of LOCAL GOVERNANCE: TRENDS in KACHIN Photo Credits
    Local Governance Mapping THE STATE OF LOCAL GOVERNANCE: TRENDS IN KACHIN Photo credits Mike Adair Emilie Röell Myanmar Survey Research A photo record of the UNDP Governance Mapping Trip for Kachin State. Travel to Tanai, Putao, Momauk and Myitkyina townships from Jan 6 to Jan 23, 2015 is available here: http://tinyurl.com/Kachin-Trip-2015 The views expressed in this publication are those of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views of UNDP. Local Governance Mapping THE STATE OF LOCAL GOVERNANCE: TRENDS IN KACHIN UNDP MYANMAR Table of Contents Acknowledgements II Acronyms III Executive Summary 1 1. Introduction 5 2. Kachin State 7 2.1 Kachin geography 9 2.2 Population distribution 10 2.3 Socio-economic dimensions 11 2.4 Some historical perspectives 13 2.5 Current security situation 18 2.6 State institutions 18 3. Methodology 24 3.1 Objectives of mapping 25 3.2 Mapping tools 25 3.3 Selected townships in Kachin 26 4. Governance at the front line – Findings on participation, responsiveness and accountability for service provision 27 4.1 Introduction to the townships 28 4.1.1 Overarching development priorities 33 4.1.2 Safety and security perceptions 34 4.1.3 Citizens’ views on overall improvements 36 4.1.4 Service Provider’s and people’s views on improvements and challenges in selected basic services 37 4.1.5 Issues pertaining to access services 54 4.2 Development planning and participation 57 4.2.1 Development committees 58 4.2.2 Planning and use of development funds 61 4.2.3 Challenges to township planning and participatory development 65 4.3 Information, transparency and accountability 67 4.3.1 Information at township level 67 4.3.2 TDSCs and TMACs as accountability mechanisms 69 4.3.3 WA/VTAs and W/VTSDCs 70 4.3.4 Grievances and disputes 75 4.3.5 Citizens’ awareness and freedom to express 78 4.3.6 Role of civil society organisations 81 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Current Ethnic Issues (Kachin & Shan)
    Current Ethnic Issues (Kachin & Shan) Report By Foreign Affairs United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC) Date: 7th July, 2011 “Current Kachin Conflict & list of Internally Displaced People” 1) On June, 8th 2011 KIA arrested 3 servicemen of Burma Army Light Infantry Battalion 437 (Including 2 officers) who covertly entered into KIO’s restricted area to gather intelligence. At 5:00 pm, Burma Army soldiers stormed into KIO liaison office in Sang Gang Village and arbitrarily arrested Liaison officer Lance Corporal Chyang Ying. 2) On June 9th at 7:00am, 200 Burma Army soldiers marched into Sang Gang Post unannounced and started shooting at KIA troops. KIA shot back and fire fight lasted close to three hours. 3 Burma Army soldiers killed and 6 injured. And, 2 KIA soldiers injured. KIA negotiated with the Northern Command Burma Army to exchange 3 Burma Army captives for all of KIA servicemen captured in the past years and also Liaison Officer Chyang Ying. Burma Army replied that all other captives have been forwarded to the courts since we are the government that is governed by the rule of law. However, we still have Chyang Ying in our custody, and if desired he could be exchanged for the 3 captives in your custody. 3) On June 10th 2011, in good faith, KIA obliged to their request, and release the 2 officers and 1 private. When Chyang Ying was to be returned, five Burma Army soldiers carried his corpse to bring back his dead body. The Liaison Officer was inhumanely tortured and brutally beaten during interrogation and laid under the sun on the front lawn of the Burma Army post.
    [Show full text]
  • Political Monitor No.6
    Euro-Burma Office 1 – 7 March 2014 Political Monitor 2014 POLITICAL MONITOR NO.6 OFFICIAL MEDIA PRESIDENT THEIN SEIN RECEIVES NORWEGIAN FOREIGN MINISTER President Thein Sein received Norwegian Foreign Minister Borge Brende in Nay Pyi Taw on 2 March and discussed Norwegian assistance in internal peace making process and further cooperation in hydropower sector, oil and natural gas production, human resources development and environ- mental conservation.1 ETHNIC LEADERS MEET SPEAKERS OF UPPER AND LOWER HOUSES IN NAPYITAW Ethnic leaders from “Wa” Special Region 2, Mongla Special Region (4) and Shan State Progressive Party (SSPP) held separate meetings on 3 March during a recent visit to Naypyitaw with Speaker of Pyidaungsu Hluttaw and Pyithu Hluttaw Thura Shwe Mann and Amyotha Hluttaw Speaker Khin Aung Myint, where they discussed the upcoming national census as well as the on-going national reconciliation peace process.2 NATIONAL RACE PEACE GROUPS AND POLITICAL PARTIES READY TO COOPERATE IN CENSUS TAKING PROCESS Vice-Chairman of the Union Peace-making Working Committee Thein Zaw and Minister for Immigration and Population Khin Yi held a meeting with the delegates from national race peace groups and political parties for nation-wide census taking process in Nay Pyi Taw on 3 March. Vice- Chairman Thein Zaw clarified the purpose of census taking process and Minister Khin Yi reiterated the importance of conducting the national census and stressed the need for people’s cooperation and urged them to cooperate fully with officials in the process. The Central Census Committee issued an announcement on 28 February that stated that according to the request of national people and the agreement of local authorities, the census will be taken as of the first week of March in Putao District of Kachin State, Shan State (North) Special Region (2) and Shan State (East) Special Region (4).
    [Show full text]
  • System of Impunity
    SYSTEM OF IMPUNITY Nationwide Patterns of Sexual Violence by the Military Regime’s Army and Authorities in Burma The Women’s League of Burma (WLB) September 2004 Women’s League of Burma The Women’s League of Burma (WLB) is an umbrella organisation comprising 11 women’s organisations of different ethnic backgrounds from Burma. WLB was founded on 9th December, 1999. Its mission is to work for women’s empowerment and advancement of the status of women, and to work for the increased participation of women in all spheres of society in the democracy movement, and in peace and national reconciliation processes through capacity building, advocacy, research and documentation. Aims • To work for the empowerment and development of women. • To encourage women’s participation in decision-making in all spheres of life. • To enable women to participate effectively in the movement for peace, democracy and national reconciliation. By working together, and encouraging cooperation between the different groups, the Women’s League of Burma hopes to build trust, solidarity and mutual understanding among women of all nationalities in Burma. The 11 member organisations are listed on the inside back cover of this report. Contact address: Women's League of Burma ( WLB) P O Box 413, G P O Chiangmai 50000 Thailand [email protected] www.womenorfburma.org Table of Contents Page Number Acknowledgements Acronyms Map 1 Map of Burma: States & Divisions Map 2 Locations of Sexual Violence Documented in this Report Executive Summary .................................................................................. 1 Methodology .............................................................................................. 3 Background Over four decades of military rule ............................................... 3 Continuing civil war ....................................................................... 4 Increased militarization .................................................................... 5 Systematic sexual violence in Burma ..............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Fact Book of Political Parties in Myanmar
    Myanmar Development Research (MDR) (Present) Enlightened Myanmar Research (EMR) Wing (3), Room (A-305) Thitsar Garden Housing. 3 Street , 8 Quarter. South Okkalarpa Township. Yangon, Myanmar +951 562439 Acknowledgement of Myanmar Development Research This edition of the “Fact Book of Political Parties in Myanmar (2010-2012)” is the first published collection of facts and information of political parties which legally registered at the Union Election Commission since the pre-election period of Myanmar’s milestone 2010 election and the post-election period of the 2012 by-elections. This publication is also an important milestone for Myanmar Development Research (MDR) as it is the organization’s first project that was conducted directly in response to the needs of civil society and different stakeholders who have been putting efforts in the process of the political transition of Myanmar towards a peaceful and developed democratic society. We would like to thank our supporters who made this project possible and those who worked hard from the beginning to the end of publication and launching ceremony. In particular: (1) Heinrich B�ll Stiftung (Southeast Asia) for their support of the project and for providing funding to publish “Fact Book of Political Parties in Myanmar (2010-2012)”. (2) Party leaders, the elected MPs, record keepers of the 56 parties in this book who lent their valuable time to contribute to the project, given the limited time frame and other challenges such as technical and communication problems. (3) The Chairperson of the Union Election Commission and all the members of the Commission for their advice and contributions.
    [Show full text]