Mon 14 May 2007
Filed under: International, News
An international aid group warned on Monday that the environmental damage caused by the Burmese government’s development projects would lead to the further displacement of rural communities.
In its latest report, “Human tide: The real migration crisis,†UK-based Christian Aid warned that Burma’s state-sponsored development projects would add to the number of displaced people in the world, expected to number at least one billion by the year 2050. Urgent action was needed, the report said.
The report said massive displacement was expected to result from the government’s planned constructions of dams and other large-scale development projects, including palm oil plantations.
“These are just extreme examples of the ‘development displacement’ that experts say accounts for up to 105 million displaced people at any given time,†the report said.
Burma has begun to build several dams on the Salween River in eastern Burma, over the objections of conservation groups, who say the projects will cause environmental devastation.
In late April, a grassroots conservation organization, the Karen Human Rights Group, charged that the military regime in Burma had used development programs as part of a strategy to expand its military control and to further abuse villagers in Karen State.
The Christian Aid report said international moves to cut CO2 gas emissions through the substitution of bio fuels for oil would bring hardship to Burmese villagers because government plans to cultivate castor and jatropha would involve land confiscation and rural development.
“The problem is that this potential bonanza for biofuel producers will require vast tracts of land for plantations, leading to the forced ejection of yet more peasant farmers,†said the report.