Bias and bribery in Lae Kyi civil cases
February 17, 2013
HURFOM: In 2012, the secretary of Lae Kyi Village in Yebyu Township adjudicated and settled three local disputes. It is common practice at the village level for administrators to determine legal cases, and in Lae Kyi, the responsibility for arbitration was handed to the village’s second-in-command, Secretary U Naing Oo. However, villagers alleged that in each of last year’s settlements, only the parties that paid bribes won the cases, even when evidence indicated they were complicit in wrongdoing. U Naing Oo reportedly received between 100,000 and 200,000 kyat per trial, and residents expressed concern that local level injustice continues despite the larger movement toward democracy in Burma. Read more
Chapel controversy in Kwey Wan Village
February 13, 2013
HURFOM: In 1993, residents contributed their own savings to build a Buddhist chapel in Kwey Wan, a village of about 1,000 households located in Mudon Township of Burma’s southern Mon State. The center has since been used for Mon language classes in summer and as a hub for community activities and prayer throughout the year. It came as no surprise last month then, when Village Administrator U Soe Naing proposed converting the chapel into his administrative office, that the announcement was met with immediate disapproval. Read more
Plantation owners along pipeline project await compensation
February 10, 2013
HURFOM: In late 2012, HURFOM began documenting and reporting on restoration efforts being undertaken along a 12-year-old gas pipeline originating near Kanbauk in Tenasserim Region and ending in Myaing Kalay, Karen State. Certain portions are being dug up and repaired, while others are being moved across streets or fields to straighten the trajectory of the line. The original pipeline was constructed parallel to the Ye to Moulmein railway, but updated segments are often being laid closer to the Ye to Mudon motorway. Read more
Illegal wireless access and local corruption underscore telecommunication challenges
February 8, 2013
HURFOM: High atop Dey Byu Mountain in an area controlled by the New Mon State Party, the predominant ethnic Mon resistance group, a solitary transmitter picks up wireless signals from Thai cellular broadcast towers across the nearby border. For several years, this single receiver and the “cellular repeater” devices connected to it have provided the majority of area residents with cheap wireless phone service. Read more
Investment law and people’s rights in Burma
February 1, 2013
Burma, also known as Myanmar, is opening to democracy. A key factor in achieving a smooth democratization process is economic growth, but growth that relates exclusively to increased foreign investment and freer markets will not adequately alter the country’s socioeconomic landscape. Burma requires investment that reaches across a wide range of sectors and benefits the millions of people who continue to live in poverty. Read more
Infrastructure projects signal reform and reservations on the border
February 1, 2013
Infrastructure brings hope and fears to Eastern Burma
In the past few months, two remarkable infrastructure projects have been planned for the areas extending north and west of the town of Three Pagodas Pass on the Thai-Burmese border. The first entails rejuvenating a road that has been used as little more than a hunter’s footpath for over 60 years and connects the border crossing to Kyainnseikyi, a town 53 miles north. The other project is part of a high-profile proposal announced by Railway Minister U Aung Min on May 15 to reconstruct a more than 60-mile section of the “Death Railway,” a World War II-era rail line stretching 170 miles from Thanbyuzayat in Burma to Ratchaburi Province, Thailand. Read more
Administrative appointments disappoint in Kaw Taung
February 1, 2013
HUFROM: New central government policies established in 2012 were designed to grant greater authority to local communities when choosing their leaders. However, in Kaw Taung in the Tenasserim Region of southern Burma, residents are criticizing a recent round of appointments by city authorities that returned almost all previous village administrators to their posts, despite overwhelming public disapproval. Locals are asking whether the authorities acted in contradiction to the law, and are seeking to amend and protest the selection process. Read more
Tracking the dangerous drug trade
January 11, 2013
The New Mon State Party (NMSP)’s new anti-drug awareness campaign recently reported confiscating 393 tablets of methamphetamine, locally known as Yaba, or “madness drug” in Thai.
The group intercepted alleged drug trafficker Mehm Ah Pout (called Mg Yaung Naing in Burmese), a 23-year-old from Waekharou Village, with 17 tablets of methamphetamine near the military cemetery in Thanbyuzayat Township on December 18. Mehm Ah Pout’s testimony resulted in an arrest the following day of another young man from Waekharou, 28-year-old Mehm Ah Beat (Mg Aung Myit in Burmese), who was also charged with drug trafficking after being found with 376 Yaba tablets. Read more
Four cases of “pink card” bribery
January 9, 2013
HURFOM: Numerous reports coming from citizens of Burma, also called Myanmar, highlight definite improvements in many people’s lives, especially relating to freedom of mobility and reduced corruption. However, over the past three weeks, residents of Ye and Mudon Townships in Mon State allege that bribery remains a common feature of the process to obtain national identification (ID) cards, locally known as “pink cards.” Read more
Local people concerned about gas pipeline renovation
January 7, 2013
HURFOM: More than ten years ago, the construction of the 180-mile Yadana gas pipeline across the length of the southern peninsula of Burma, also called Myanmar, drew widespread condemnation for massive human rights violations. Branching off that controversial pipeline is a longer but lesser known gas line originating near Kanbauk in Tenasserim Region and ending in Myaing Kalay, Karen State. During its construction, over 2,400 acres of land were seized, for which villagers received little or no compensation. Read more