DALA, Myanmar (AP) — Just after dawn, plainclothes Myanmar naval
officers entered a wooden shack and roused a young rice farmer from his
sleep. They marched him to their nearby barracks and locked him up
without explanation.
By the time The Khaw Lu Maw was released, the shack that had
been his lifelong home was gone, his belongings scattered amid the
debris. One by one, other homes in the riverside community of Dala were
bulldozed. Residents had farmed the land for generations, but the navy
took it over this year to expand a base.
"They want to show us they're the ones with the power," he said, his eyes welling with tears. "That they can do what they want."
Recent
political reforms have won Myanmar widespread praise and the lifting of
international sanctions, but for farmers who happen to be in the way of
military or business plans, land rights have improved little since a
half-century era of military rule ended in 2011. It is a recipe for
strife in a country where 70 percent of the labor force depends on
agriculture, and where foreign investors, often working with current or
former military officials, are scrambling to build roads, factories,
power plants, bridges and industrial-sized plantations.
The
government has made it tougher in some cases for land to be seized from
farmers, and has formed a commission to handle land confiscation issues.
But that has not helped many farmers, like those in Dala, who have been
working land that was formally taken from them years ago under the old
junta. Rising prospects for foreign investment are inspiring many owners
to take possession and evict the farmers.
Though the new
government has intervened at times, it often does not, and it has even
passed laws that have been used against those attempting to resist.
Legal
experts in Myanmar said a new law on peaceful assemblies is being used
regularly to arrest, try and imprison people who stand up against land
grabs by the rich and powerful. In addition, recent legislation has
given the government the authority to seize land in the name of
"national interest."
"The problem is, when the government tries
to address a hot-button issue," said Murray Hiebert of the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, "officials simultaneously introduce
reformist policies as well as ways to retreat to the behavior of the
old days."
Other experts say that after 50 years of military
administration, those drafting the laws continue to be driven by
security concerns.
The most high-profile case has been in the
northwest's Sagaing region, where thousands have joined protests over
plans to give 8,000 acres of farmland to an expanding Chinese-run copper
mine, a joint venture with a Myanmar military-run conglomerate.
Arrests
have been common. Naw Ohn Hla, who started fighting injustice during
the days of dictatorship, was hauled away for the 10th time in as many
years in August while seeking permission to protest the mine.
She
was sentenced to two years in prison for disrupting public tranquility,
said her lawyer, Robert San Aung. That is an old law, but she's also
awaiting charges under the peaceful assembly law that was adopted last
year.
The two pieces of legislation are being used together
against farmers and activists protesting land grabs and other
grievances, according to the Assistance Association for Political
Prisoners, a nonprofit organization staffed by former political
prisoners in Myanmar, also known as Burma. It said that as of last
month, 29 people had been sentenced and 125 others were still awaiting
trial or expressing their views in peaceful demonstrations.
President
Thein Sein has said land reform is one of Myanmar's most pressing
issues. The country went from being a relatively wealthy Asian country
to one of the continent's poorest under the military junta. Much of that
former wealth came from rice exports, which plummeted as land rights
weakened.
Farmers officially lost property rights in the junta's
early years, but were allowed to continue working the land as long as
they paid taxes. In the last decade of dictatorship, land was regularly
taken with little or no compensation for economic projects, industrial
zones and military bases.
source: USN
http://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2013/10/11/myanmar-farmers-find-little-relief-from-land-grabs
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