From editor@burmanet.org Thu Oct 17 21:46:41 2002 From: editor@burmanet.org (editor@burmanet.org) Date: Thu, 17 Oct 2002 16:46:41 -0400 (EDT) Subject: BurmaNet News: October 16-17 2002 Message-ID: <30108.207.10.94.131.1034887601.squirrel@webmail.pair.com> October 16-17 2002 Issue # 2016 INSIDE BURMA Irrawaddy: Humanitarian aid benefits junta Business Times Singapore: Jockeying for power in Myanmar DPA: UN envoy in Myanmar to probe rape as ‘weapon of war’ allegations AFP: UN rights envoy to arrive amid rising criticism of junta DRUGS Mizzima: Drug smuggling in Kachin State GUNS AFP: Myanmar rejects Human Rights Watch report on child soldiers Irrawaddy: Forced military training in Tenasserim MONEY Petroleum Economist: Premier backs out Xinhua: Myanmar’s foreign trade down in first half of 2002 Myanmar Times: Ostrich chicks arrive from KL INTERNATIONAL Xinhua: China donates opium-substitute crop seeds to Burma Narinjara: Bangladesh sent its new envoy to Burma ON THE BORDER TV Myanmar: Burma blames Karen National Union for Thai border bombs AFP: More explosions rock Thai-Myanmar border region STATEMENTS/MISCELLANEOUS KNU: Statement on explosions in Myawaddy SDU: Open letter to H.E. Pinheiro __INSIDE BURMA____ Irrawaddy October 17 2002 Humanitarian Aid Benefits Junta By Naw Seng The Burmese junta stands to gain millions of dollars from international donations that will be channeled through the UN and humanitarian agencies based in Burma, charged a recent report released by Altsean-Burma, an alternative Asean organization based in Bangkok. The report, "A Peace of Pie?", focuses on Burma’s humanitarian aid debate and criticizes Rangoon-based UN agencies and International NGOs that it says will become conduits for the junta to funnel millions of dollars directly into their pockets without improving human rights conditions or moving political dialogue forward with opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. The report also says that there is a risk of bribery within these organizations. "Most of the humanitarian agencies (UN as well as INGOs) don’t want to talk about human rights because it means that they have to consider the political implications of their works," says Debbie Stothard, Altsean-Burma coordinator. The report found that for every U S dollar destined for UN agencies in Rangoon, between 40 to 60 cents automatically benefits the regime as UN agencies accept an exchange rate on the dollar lower than the going market rate. "Better governance is the answer to Burma’s humanitarian crisis," said opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in an interview with Altsean-Burma in August. In Burma, some government NGOs (GNGO) operate inside the country but function more as extensions of the military state apparatus than as humanitarian agencies. GNGO members have the authority to promise employment to citizens, to level fines and administer beatings as forms of coercion to expand and enforce membership. "The international NGOs are not doing enough to support the growth of independent NGOs in Burma and we need more independent NGOs," Stothard says. Humanitarian aid is sorely needed in Burma. But the political stagnation since Suu Kyi was released from house arrest in May and the continued spending on military at the expense of education and other humanitarian concerns, leads many to believe that the time is not yet right to resume humanitarian assistance. Recently, Britain decided to donate 15 million dollars to combat HIV/AIDS via UN agencies and, in October, Japan granted 764 million yen (US $6.1 million) for an anti-desertification program and student scholarships. There are currently 30 INGOs and two Red Cross organizations operating in Burma. [Ed. Note: “Peace of Pie” can be viewed at http://www.ibiblio.org/obl/docs/peaceofpie.htm http://www.ibiblio.org/obl/docs/peaceofpie.doc ] ________ Business Times Singapore October 17 2002 Jockeying for power in Myanmar By Harish Mehta WHAT should one make of the sentences of death by hanging of the son-in-law of former Myanmar dictator Ne Win and his three grandsons? Was there really a coup attempt? For one thing, it means General Than Shwe, the current strongman of Myanmar, wants to become an even stronger man, if that were possible. But he has to keep looking over his shoulder at other members of the ruling troika: vice-chairman Maung Aye and first secretary Khin Nyunt. It also means that the former strongman, ex-dictator General Ne Win, variously said to be either 92 or 94 years old, is apparently still capable of mustering a rabble of dissenters. And all these questions arise only because Gen Ne Win's family has lost no opportunity to enrich themselves. As their wealth grew, they developed political ambitions as well. But strongmen rulers do not tolerate dissent well (and sometimes not at all). Gen Than Shwe did what the political science textbooks say he would do: crack down on Gen Ne Win's family. And so four of them were sentenced to death. By making an example of them, the message goes to the generals, brigadiers and colonels in the ruling junta: don't mess with Gen Than Shwe. The 'ruling strongman versus ex-strongman' drama had been simmering on the back burner for several years in the economically-devastated country and would have gone on but for the fact that Gen Ne Win and his supporters started baiting Gen Than Shwe. So, just a few days before the sentences were handed down, the National Unity Party (NUP) - a political reincarnation of Gen Ne Win's Burma Socialist Programme Party that ruled till 1988 - suddenly came out with stinging criticism of the ruling military junta for mishandling the economy. Everything the party said was, of course, true - that people are suffering from rising consumer prices and inflation, and that life is generally miserable. Of course, the irony is that Myanmar was one of South-east Asia's most dynamic economies in the 1950s, and it was Gen Ne Win's very rule that turned it into an economic disaster. By the time the present junta had worked on the economy, the country had become a basket case. But the NUP went too far in calling for the emergence of a constitutionally elected government to solve the country's political and economic problems. Gen Than Shwe found the criticism from Gen Ne Win's supporters just too hard to swallow. On top of that, he was fed up with the bad behaviour of Gen Ne Win's family members, many of whom were involved in murky business partnerships with military officers in the ruling junta. Many of those deals broke one law or the other, and everyone involved ought to have been charged a long time ago. But they were tolerated. The latest provocation was just too much to bear. That Gen Ne Win should again be attempting to exercise power through the NUP, while his children incite some junta officers to rebellion, was, in Gen Than Shwe's eyes, more than any mortal strongman could bear. So thus it was that on Sept 26, a court in Yangon sentenced Gen Ne Win's son-in-law Aye Zaw Win, 54, and the latter's three sons - Aye Ne Win, Kyaw Ne Win, and Zwe Ne Win, all in their 20s - to death by hanging for high treason. They were accused of attempting to recruit senior military officers to stage a coup earlier this year. Aye Zaw Win is the husband of Sandar Win, the wealthy favourite daughter of Gen Ne Win. He is thought to be mainly interested in making money; but Sandar is known to harbour political ambitions, and may have even seen a role for herself in promoting her father's questionable legacy. So her husband may have paid a price for her ambitions. The junta then turned on its own unruly ranks. Four senior military officers, including two regional commanders, were sacked for their involvement with the Ne Win clan. With the threat from the Ne Win clan and their political supporters neutralised, Gen Than Shwe now controls power unmolested. But his problems are not over. Jockeying for power continues within the ruling troika, along with vice-chairman Maung Aye and first secretary Khin Nyunt. Gen Khin Nyunt is Ne Win's protege and is seen as a rival to Gen Maung Aye. Moreover, Gen Khin Nyunt was the man who personally held endless rounds of talks with National League for Democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, and he is believed to be leaning towards a settlement with her more than his troika colleagues. With Ms Suu Kyi demanding greater democracy, and rivalries running through the ranks of the junta, Yangon is not a place a strongman can sleep easy at night. ______ Deutsche Presse-Agentur October 17 2002 U.N. envoy in Myanmar to probe rape as 'weapon of war' allegations United Nations special rapporteur on human rights, Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, arrives in Myanmar (Burma) on Thursday to investigate allegations of mass rape by the junta's soldiers. Pinheiro will visit the Shan state between October 22 and October 24 to probe accusations the Myanmar military used rape against ethnic minorities fighting for autonomy in the region. The allegations were made in a June report by the Shan Women's Action Network and the Shan Human Rights Foundation, two Thailand-based rights groups. The groups detailed mass rapes involving at least 625 girls and women by Myanmar's soldiers in the Shan state. The report accused the junta of condoning the use of rape as a "weapon of war" against civilians. Myanmar's military junta welcomed the U.N. investigation, saying in a statement, "the government of Myanmar stands in solidarity with the civilized world community against rape of any kind, most especially as an instrument of government policy of war". "We will cooperate fully with him (Pinheiro), so that he may report on these outrageous allegations of human rights abuses," spokesman Hla Min said. "We believe an unbiased report from Mr. Pinheiro and the United Nations will affirm what we have been saying all along: these accusations are false." During his visit, Pinheiro will meet with State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) first secretary General Khin Nyunt, Foreign Minister U Win Aung and Home Minister U Khin Maung Win. After his return to Yangon on October 25, he will discuss his findings with a number of government officials concerned with human rights before embarking on a visit of Thayarwaddy prison, 100 kilometres north of Yangon, where human rights organisations allege political prisoners are being detained. Before departing Myanmar on October 28, Pinheiro is scheduled to meet opposition leader and Nobel Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. ____ Agence France-Presse October 17 2002 UN rights envoy to arrive in Myanmar amid rising criticism of junta UN human rights envoy Paulo Sergio Pinheiro was due to arrive in Myanmar Thursday on an 11-day mission that comes after a series of damning human rights allegations have been levelled against the junta. During his fourth trip to Myanmar, the Brazilian academic is expected to investigate the claims as well as meet with democracy campaigner Aung San Suu Kyi and top junta leaders. In the latest report to attack the regime's rights record, the US-based watchdog Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Tuesday it believed that more than a fifth of the soldiers serving in Myanmar's army could be under the age of 18. Its investigation found that children as young as 11 were being forcibly recruited into the national army where they were made to participate in human rights abuses. And in July, two Thai-based rights organisations representing the Shan ethnic minority released a report claiming the military used rape as a weapon of war against their people. Myanmar's government has repeatedly denied the rape allegations and said this week that it had invited Pinheiro to make an "independent review" of the claims. Earlier Thursday it also rejected the HRW report which drew on interviews with more than three dozen current and former child soldiers. "The government of Myanmar refutes the claims made by the HRW and furthermore finds it very difficult to understand on what basis it is making such claims saying that 20 percent of the national army is made up with underage (people)," the junta said in a statement. Pinheiro, who is to arrive in the Myanmar capital late Thursday, is scheduled to make a three-day visit to Shan state beginning on October 22. The Shan Women's Action Network (SWAN) which helped compile the rape report said Thursday that it welcomed Pinheiro's plans to visit Shan state but had little faith it would improve the situation there. "We are not expecting too much from his visit because we doubt that he could really find out the right persons to inquire," said the group's spokeswoman Hseng Noung. "The mission was at the invitation of Yangon's military regime and they will show him only what they want." Hseng Noung said that according to its sources in Shan state, Myanmar authorities had already taken steps to cover up the truth in many areas where major human rights and sexual abuses were taking place. Forced relocations of villagers in affected regions had taken place and residents were forced to sign documents saying that people in the area had experienced no problems with local authorities or soldiers, she said. In a report to the UN General Assembly released Monday, Pinheiro said the "recent mellowing on the political front" in Myanmar was not enough to improve the human rights situation. He urged the UN to get ready to help with the transition to democracy, saying: "The present delicate situation... needs to be handled with great care and generosity on the part of those who wish the people of Myanmar well." Pinheiro is due to leave Yangon on October 28. No date has been set for a meeting with Aung San Suu Kyi, who was released in May from 19 months under house arrest. ___DRUGS____ Mizzima News 15 October 2002 Drugs smuggling in Kachin State By Thun Nain According to local reports, the smuggling of drugs in Kachin State -especially in a large cities like Hupin, Moe Kong, Phakant and Myitkyina - is steadily on the rise. According to local information, drugs are traded illegally at five different locations in Hupin, at ten locations in Moe Kong, and at six locations in Myitkhina. In Phakant too drugs are easily available. Reportedly, the retail price for one bottle of Penicillin in Myitkyina ranges between 40,000 and 50,000 Kyats, while in Moe Kong one would have to pay 8,000 and in Hupin 10,000. Not only have local authorities failed to eradicate the illegal selling of drugs effectively; in many cases they are actively involved. Some drug smugglers, already arrested, pay their way out - if they can afford it. It appears that although the military authorities know of the locations of illegal drug sales, they conveniently forget this knowledge, given appropriate payment. As a result of official complicity, drug smuggling increases. As do the number of drug addicts and AIDS patients. ____GUNS_____ Agence France-Presse October 17 2002 Myanmar rejects Human Rights Watch report on child soldiers Myanmar's military regime on Thursday rejected as a smear campaign a report which said that more than a fifth of the soldiers serving in its national army could be children under the age of 18. The report released Tuesday by the US-based watchdog Human Rights Watch (HRW) found that children as young as 11 were being forcibly recruited into the army where they were made to participate in human rights abuses. "The report is just another example of attempts to tarnish the image of Myanmar and the Myanmar Tatmadaw (military) in the eyes of the international community," the foreign ministry said in a statement. "It is no accident that the report appeared on the eve of the visit by a high-ranking UN official and at a time the UN General Assembly is starting to consider human rights questions," it said. UN special rapporteur on human rights, Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, is due to arrive here late Thursday for an 11-day visit -- his fourth to the country. The government has asked the Brazilian academic to investigate allegations made in another report released in July which said the military used rape as a weapon of war against the Shan ethnic minority. Myanmar's government has repeatedly denied the allegations contained in a study prepared by two Thai-based Shan rights organisations which detailed the assault of 625 girls and women, mostly between 1996 and 2001. According to the HRW report, army recruiters focus on boys at train and bus stations and markets, threatening them with jail if they fail to join up. The boys are given no opportunity to contact their families, and are sent to camps where they undergo weapons training and are routinely beaten and brutally punished if they try to escape. The foreign ministry statement said that it was against Myanmar's laws to draft men under the age of 18 and that "this regulation is strictly enforced" "Myanmar has a purely voluntary army and those entering the military service do so at their own free will," it said. "There is neither a draft system nor forced conscription in the country." Myanmar's army has doubled in size since 1988, and with an estimated 350,000 soldiers, it is now one of the largest in Southeast Asia. Human Rights Watch said estimates put the number of conscripts under the age of 18 at more than 70,000. The report claims to be the most comprehensive study of its kind and drew on interviews with more than three dozen current and former child soldiers. __________ Irrawaddy October 17 2002 Forced Military Training in Tenasserim By Ko Thet Young villagers in Tenasserim Township, Tenasserim Division have been forced to attend military training sessions with Battlion 561, according to a spokesperson of the All Burma Students’ Democratic Front (ABSDF). "Coastal Regional Command ordered the training," said the ABSDF spokesperson. "After the training, three villagers from each village were forced to join the army while villages had to provide 4,000 kyat for each villager who joined the army." The source added that families of those who joined the army were exempt from providing financial support. The training course lasted six months. Also, school teachers, anti-insurgent associations and members of the Union Solidarity and Development Association (USDA) also had to attend the training, but were not required to join the army. The ABSDF source said that in August alone, nearly three-dozen villagers, ranging from ages 13 and up, fled to the Thai-Burma border to escape the training. Included in this group were three high school girls and two junior high school girls. If caught by the authorities, escaping villagers will receive jail sentences of about four years, the source added. ____MONEY____ Petroleum Economist October 17 2002 MYANMAR (BURMA); PREMIER BACKS OUT. Premier Oil is pulling out of the country, it said last month, as part of a wider restructuring that effectively puts the UK independent up for sale. The move triggered celebrations by human-rights activists, who have lobbied against the company's involvement in the country, which is ruled by a military dictatorship, since Premier signed a gas-exploration agreement there in 1990. The restructuring also ends the shareholdings in Premier of Malaysia's Petronas and the US' Amerada Hess, which each owned 25%. Premier's chairman, David John, says the $670m group restructuring would leave the firm "better balanced to deliver shareholder value". Through a series of transactions, Premier's net indebtedness will be reduced by over GBP 200m ($310m), he adds, and will allow "the company to pursue its refocused strategy of exploration and commercial deal-making". It is said that the company would now welcome a bid. In cancelling the shareholdings of Amerada and Petronas, Premier agreed to transfer its interest in the Yetagun gas project to Petronas; a 15% interest in the Natuna Sea block A, in Indonesia, to Petronas; and a 23% interest in Natuna to Amerada. As part of the deal, Petronas is to assume and repay, at completion, Premier's Yetagun project debt of $152m and make a cash payment to Premier of $207m. Amerada will pay Premier $17m. The company says the restructuring will reduce its pro forma net debt from GBP 204m to GBP 111m and slash its gearing from 98% to 39%. Premier's average production will fall from 50,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day (boe/d) to 30,000-35,000 boe/d. Brushing aside the financial argument for restructuring, activists claim they have forced the company from the country. But Charles Jamieson, Premier's chief executive, insists it is a "purely commercial decision". Premier executives privately maintain that the company's presence had a positive influence on the country, particularly in helping to secure the release of James Mawdsley, a UK campaigner jailed for handing out human-rights leaflets. Pro-democracy activists do not share this view. Human-rights groups also claim Premier's exit from the country will discourage investment there by other firms in the future. TotalFinaElf (operator and 31.24%), the US' Unocal (28.26%), Thailand's PTT Exploration & Production (25.5%) and state-owned Myanma Oil & Gas Enterprise (15%) are developing the 5 trillion cubic feet Yadana gasfield. _______ Xinhua News Agency October 17 2002 Myanmar's foreign trade down in first half of 2002 YANGON, Oct. 17 (Xinhua) --Myanmar's foreign trade went down by 14.72 percent, registering 2,471.87 million US dollars in the first six months of 2002 compared with the same period of last year, according to the latest figures released by the Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development. Of the total, imports amounted to 1,018.89 million dollars, down 35.64 percent, while exports were valued at 1,452.98 million dollars, up 10.45 percent. It stood a favorable balance of trade during the six-month period of 2002 with 434.09 million dollars. It is the first time to have struck such a balance of foreign trade since the present government took office in late 1988. During the firs half of 2002, the import value of consumer goods, intermediate goods and capital goods respectively accounted for 43.69 percent, 32.97 percent and 23.34 percent of the total imports. Over the period also, Myanmar's private sector took up 890.53 million dollars or 87.4 percent of the total import value, while it made up 769.8 million dollars or 52.98 percent of the total export value. The rest of the percentage of the imports and exports were held by the government sector. The statistics also show that Myanmar's income from customs duties earned 379.43 million dollars, down by 25 percent compared with the same period of last year. The import customs duties, obtained mainly through normal trade, took up 373.37 million dollars or 98.4 percent of the total with the rest fetched through border trade. _____ Myanmar Times October 14-20 2002 Ostrich chicks arrive from KL A SHIPMENT of 20 ostrich chicks arrived in Yangon last week for a pilot breeding project involving the Myanma Farms Enterprise and a Malaysian health food company. The two-month-old chicks arrived by plane from Kuala Lumpur and were taken to the MFE’s farm at Bago, about 50 miles north of Yangon, where they will be raised for use as breeding stock. The chicks were provided by the Kuala Lumpur-based company, PSSM, under an agreement with the MFE for a breeding project which could lead to large-scale commercial production of the birds. However, PSSM director Mr Casey Teh told Myanmar Times last month that it should be possible to say after six months whether commercial production was feasible. The project comes amid growing demand for ostrich meat, skin and eggs in the world market. ____INTERNATIONAL_____ Xinhua News Agency October 17 2002 CHINA DONATES OPIUM-SUBSTITUTE CROP SEEDS TO BURMA China has donated agricultural crop seeds to the authorities of Kokang, Shan State Special Region-1 of Myanmar Burma , to help substitute for the region's poppy cultivation under the Myanmar-China drug control programme. According to a report of Myanmar's Central Committee for Drug Abuse Control available here Thursday 17 October , the donation, made by the National Narcotic Control Committee (NNCC) of China on Tuesday in Laukkai of Kokang region, included 11 tons of potato, 600 kg of China lablab bean and 400 kg of green peas. Attending the donation ceremony were NNCC Deputy Secretary-General Wan Gan and Deputy Director-General of the Myanmar Police Force Brig-Gen Zaw Win. According to the report, the NNCC has also conducted short-term courses on agricultural methods two times for farmers in the region. Since the 1990s, China has strengthened effective cooperation with Myanmar, and through labour force, capital and technical assistance, it helped Myanmar grow agricultural and economic crops to replace poppy in northern Myanmar, pushing the socio-economic development of the region. According to incomplete statistics, China's Yunnan Province has injected more than 300m yuan (about 36m US dollars), cultivating 25,000 ha of various opium-substitute crops in northern Myanmar and sending experts to the area to have trained nearly 1,000 Myanmar agricultural technicians. _______ Narinjara News October 16 2002 Bangladesh sent its new envoy to Burma Dhaka, 16 October 2002: The newly appointed Ambassador of Bangladesh to Burma A.B Manjoor Rahim presented his credentials to Senior General Than Shwe, Chairman of the State Peace and Development Council and Head of State of Myanmar yesterday, according to today’ the independent. While presenting his credentials, he conveyed to the senior General the greeting from President Professor Dr. Iajuddin Ahmed and Prime Minister Begum Khaleda Zia. The new Bangladesh envoy said the government headed by Prime Minister Begum Khaleda Zia was keen to further develop the existing relations with its neighbouring countries. He said he would work for furthering the existing close relations between Myanmar and Bangladesh. Reciprocating the sentiment, Senior General Than Shwe appreciated Bangladesh’s initiate towards fostering relationship with its neighbours. He praised the success achieved in socio-economic, micro credit programs, women empowerment and female education in Bangladesh. The Senior General Than Shwe also appreciated Bangladesh’s positive contribution towards regional peace and development. He assured the new ambassador of Bangladesh of all possible help and assistant during his tenure in Myanmar. ___ON THE BORDER____ TV Myanmar October 17 2002 BURMA BLAMES KAREN NATIONAL UNION FOR THAI BORDER BOMBS The government has been striving on all fronts to establish a modern and developed nation. However, the KNU Karen National Union terrorist insurgents have been engaged in destructive activities aimed at disturbing local peace and tranquillity in villages and causing death, injury, and fear among innocent citizens. They have also been consistently committing acts of terrorism and brutal murders. At the time of reopening of Myanmar Burma -Thai border checkpoints, the KNU terrorist insurgents carried out acts of sabotage in Myawaddy with the aim of causing death, injury, and fear among the innocent people. Two time bombs were set off at 1040 on 15 October and at 0605 on 16 October. Authorities concerned discovered in time a US-made M-16 A-1 anti-personnel mine set up with a remote control near No 3 Middle School in No 3 Ward in Myawaddy at 0700 on 16 October. There were no casualties and loss of property from the bomb explosions. Similarly, at 0730 on 15 October, KNU terrorist insurgents launched a mine attack at a car carrying a monk from Thamanya Aung (Theikdi Shin) Monastery as it was leaving Kawkareik for Myawaddy, destroying the vehicle. It has been learned that the KNU terrorist insurgents plotted and carried out these attacks on 15 October at the time of reopening of Myanmar-Thai border checkpoints to cause death, injury, and fear among the people, to disrupt border trade, and to undermine normalization of Myanmar-Thai relations. _______ Agence France-Presse October 17 2002 More explosions rock Thai-Myanmar border region Another two explosions have rocked the Thai-Myanmar border area, the latest in a series detonated since Myanmar reopened its checkpoints this week, Thai authorities said Thursday. Immigration officials at the Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge in Thailand's Mae Sot district said two blasts occurred 15 kilometres (nine miles) into Myanmar's Myawaddy province on Wednesday evening. The officials told reporters there were no reports of casualties from the latest explosions, but Myanmar vendors said three Myanmar soldiers were killed and several were injured. Myanmar slammed its border checkpoints shut in May after bloody clashes between its troops and another ethnic militia. They were reopened on Tuesday after intensive diplomacy between the neighbours defused the row. Earlier on Wednesday a small bomb went off in Myawaddy town near a pier controlled by the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA), a militia group aligned with the Myanmar army. Another device fitted with a timer was found undetonated nearby. No one has claimed responsibility for the bombings, or another explosion that occurred Tuesday morning at a market 2.5 kilometres (1.5 miles) from the Thai border in the same area. Myanmar authorities have stepped up security checks and deployed an extra 100 soldiers to patrol public areas such as markets, temples, schools and hospitals, the local vendors said. Thai police in Mae Sot, the twin settlement facing Myawaddy, said they had already stepped up security after the weekend blasts in the Indonesian resort of Bali, in line with a plan to increase precuations at all Thai tourist sites. Both Thai and Myanmar nationals were crossing the bridge normally Thursday, despite the unrest. ___STATEMENTS/MISCELLANEOUS____ Karen National Union October 17 2002 KNU Statement on Explosions in Myawaddy 1. We, the KNU, have learned that two explosions occurred in Myawaddy, a border town in Kawkareik District of Karen State, opposite Tak Province of Thailand, on October 15 and 16, 2002. 2. October 15 was the date on which the Thai-Burma friendship-bridge was reopened for border crossing, after closure for five months. We view the reopening of border crossing as beneficial to the peoples of both Thailand and Burma, and we have no policy against it. 3. We would like to categorically state that the two explosions have nothing to do with us, the KNU. We have no doubt that it was the work of one of the factions in the SPDC, which would lose by reopening of the border crossing or which wanted to hurl allegations against the ethnic and democratic opposition groups in order to tarnish their image. 4. Factions in the SPDC are involved in high-paying illegal activities, directly or indirectly, such drug smuggling, consumer goods smuggling, gambling, human trafficking and extortion of traders and legitimate businesses. Each faction is controlled by a head at the highest level of the SPDC hierarchy. Each faction tries to keep out of the way of the other, but a clash of interest and show of force occur at times at the lower levels. 5. A clash of interest at high levels normally leads to elimination of the opposing faction or leader. A case in point is the elimination the SPDC 2nd Secretary Gen. Tin U or the elimination of Ne Win's son-in-law. As the economic condition is getting worse, we may expect more clashes among the various factions. 6. In conclusion, we would like to affirm that we, the KNU, always bear in mind the interest of the peoples of Thailand and Burma and we have no policy to harm in anyway the good relations between the two countries. ______ SHAN DEMOCRATIC UNION (SDU) October 17 2002 OPEN LETTER TO H.E. PINHEIRO H.E. Paulo Sergio Pinheiro Special Investigator for Burma UN Commission on Human Rights Your Excellency The SDU-Shan Democratic Union welcomes your visit to Burma. We are also aware that the ruling Burmese junta, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), will attempt to use Your Excellency's visit to bolster its blanket denial of the rapes in the Shan State. It will take you to villages and will get villagers to deny that rapes have taken place. Regarding this, as a Shan leader, Khun Tun Oo said in a radio interview that it is certain that nobody will dare to talk about the rape cases because they will be in trouble if they do so. We hope and believe that Your Excellency will keep in mind the helplessness of the people -- the ordinary folks -- in the face of a government that does not govern, a government that represses, harasses, and brutally intimidates the people on a daily basis. Your Excellency is no doubt clearly aware that the SPDC does not rule with the consent of the people and holds on to power by coercion and harsh repression alone. It believes in holding onto power in perpetuity and at all cost. Aware of the SPDC's unpopularity and its inability to govern well and to the benefit of the country -- that the SPDC state is a failed state -- the international community, including the United Nations, have urged the SPDC to make peace with its population or citizens, and to negotiate with the democratic opposition led by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and the ethnic nationalities. The opposition, including the ethnic nationalities, are prepared to negotiate in good faith with the SPDC, whatever its crimes, if the SPDC is willing to become part of the solution. It is hoped that Your Excellency will let it be known to the SPDC that it is time, to quote Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, for a quick change in Burma, and that the current "failed state" status quo is damaging to the country and in reality benefits no one. It is time to move on. We pray that Your Excellency will be firm with the SPDC, and as a high U.N. official, charged with investigating human rights abuses in Burma, will not let the people down. Shan Democratic Union Contact: Sai Wansai E-mail: s.wansai@onlinehome.de Website: www.shanland.org