1. The document provides background on the ADB's engagement with Burma, including that it has not provided loans or direct assistance since 1986-1987 due to political pressure after a 1988 crackdown. However, the ADB plays a role in facilitating private sector investment in Burma through the Greater Mekong Subregion program and outside of it.
2. One way the ADB is facilitating investment is by promoting regional natural gas integration and trade. It released a strategy in 2009 exploring expanding trade of natural gas via Myanmar, which has significant gas resources. It notes infrastructure is limited but there is potential for increased trade, including controversial projects like the Shwe gas pipeline.
3. Critics argue projects in
Protecting civic space in Kenya IHoughton SMuchai March 2014irunguh
The document summarizes events in Kenya in November 2013 when proposed amendments to the Public Benefits Organizations Act were brought before the National Assembly. The amendments would have significantly restricted civic space and foreign funding for NGOs. Through research, representation, media engagement and public protests, a CSO Reference Group was able to defeat the bill. Key strategies included impact assessments showing the development harm, meetings with MPs, an online petition, and social media campaigns. Narrowly, 83 MPs voted against the bill compared to 73 who voted for it, preserving the independence of Kenya's civil society sector. The conclusion warns that constitutionalism must underpin such progressive laws to prevent future threats to civic freedoms.
Sustainable management of the bay of the bay of bengal large marine ecosystemLashio University
This document provides an overview of Myanmar's coastal and marine environments and resources. It describes the three main coastal zones - Rakhine Coast, Ayeyarwady Delta, and Tanintharyi Coast. These zones contain various ecosystems like mangroves, coral reefs, seagrass beds, and seaweed forests that support important fisheries. However, these environments face threats such as overexploitation, pollution, and development activities. The report identifies priority actions needed to promote sustainable management, including monitoring programs, environmental impact assessments, and conservation of coastal habitats and fisheries.
Global leadership a new framework for a changing worldKaungHtetZawSMU
This document proposes a new framework called the Global Leadership Model (GLM) for developing global leaders. The GLM has four key aspects:
1) It identifies four domains of leadership - transactional, transformational, conscious, and transpersonal - moving beyond prior frameworks focused on tasks and relationships.
2) It incorporates six levels of leadership intelligence beyond just cognitive and emotional intelligence.
3) It connects the four leadership domains to the six levels of intelligence to create a comprehensive framework.
4) It aims to help organizations identify and develop global leaders to succeed in today's complex, interconnected world.
Microfinance in myanmar sector assessment (ifc-cgap) 2013 janKaungHtetZawSMU
This document provides an assessment of Myanmar's microfinance sector in early 2013. It finds that while demand for microfinance is high, the supply is limited with few institutions providing microcredit. The financial sector is small and underdeveloped, dominated by state-owned banks. The regulatory framework for microfinance is still nascent. Recommendations include strengthening the regulatory framework, expanding the supply of microfinance institutions, improving financial infrastructure, and increasing effectiveness of funders. Developing Myanmar's private sector through microfinance could help reduce poverty and boost economic growth.
Myanmar is at a pivotal moment as it transitions to a more open economy and society after decades of isolation and authoritarian rule. The report analyzes Myanmar's economic potential and challenges over the next two decades. It finds that Myanmar has a $200 billion economic opportunity by 2030 if it can address major challenges like low productivity, lack of infrastructure, impending urbanization, and need to reconnect to global trade and investment. Four keys to unlocking this potential are raising productivity, shifting to manufacturing, preparing for urbanization, and reconnecting to global markets. The government and private sector must work to overcome substantial challenges in order to realize Myanmar's economic opportunities.
This document discusses certification and ecolabelling for hotels. It provides information on several certification programs including the EU Flower, Nordic Swan, Green Globe, and EKO HOTEL. The key points are that certification ensures hotels meet environmental standards, benchmarks are established for areas like energy and water use, and benefits include improved corporate image, access to new markets and customers, and reduced operating costs.
Achieving Environmental Sustainability in Myanmar MYO AUNG Myanmar
ADB Economics Working Paper Series
Achieving Environmental Sustainability in Myanmar
David A. Raitzer, Jindra Nuella G. Samson,
and Kee-Yung Nam
No. 467 | December 2015
David A. Raitzer (draitzer@adb.org) is Economist,
Jindra Nuella G. Samson (jsamson@adb.org) is
Senior Economics Officer, and Kee-Yung Nam
(kynam@adb.org) is Principal Economist at the
Economic Research and Regional Cooperation
Department, Asian Development Bank (ADB).
This paper was a background paper for the ADB
Myanmar Country Diagnostics Study.
Protecting civic space in Kenya IHoughton SMuchai March 2014irunguh
The document summarizes events in Kenya in November 2013 when proposed amendments to the Public Benefits Organizations Act were brought before the National Assembly. The amendments would have significantly restricted civic space and foreign funding for NGOs. Through research, representation, media engagement and public protests, a CSO Reference Group was able to defeat the bill. Key strategies included impact assessments showing the development harm, meetings with MPs, an online petition, and social media campaigns. Narrowly, 83 MPs voted against the bill compared to 73 who voted for it, preserving the independence of Kenya's civil society sector. The conclusion warns that constitutionalism must underpin such progressive laws to prevent future threats to civic freedoms.
Sustainable management of the bay of the bay of bengal large marine ecosystemLashio University
This document provides an overview of Myanmar's coastal and marine environments and resources. It describes the three main coastal zones - Rakhine Coast, Ayeyarwady Delta, and Tanintharyi Coast. These zones contain various ecosystems like mangroves, coral reefs, seagrass beds, and seaweed forests that support important fisheries. However, these environments face threats such as overexploitation, pollution, and development activities. The report identifies priority actions needed to promote sustainable management, including monitoring programs, environmental impact assessments, and conservation of coastal habitats and fisheries.
Global leadership a new framework for a changing worldKaungHtetZawSMU
This document proposes a new framework called the Global Leadership Model (GLM) for developing global leaders. The GLM has four key aspects:
1) It identifies four domains of leadership - transactional, transformational, conscious, and transpersonal - moving beyond prior frameworks focused on tasks and relationships.
2) It incorporates six levels of leadership intelligence beyond just cognitive and emotional intelligence.
3) It connects the four leadership domains to the six levels of intelligence to create a comprehensive framework.
4) It aims to help organizations identify and develop global leaders to succeed in today's complex, interconnected world.
Microfinance in myanmar sector assessment (ifc-cgap) 2013 janKaungHtetZawSMU
This document provides an assessment of Myanmar's microfinance sector in early 2013. It finds that while demand for microfinance is high, the supply is limited with few institutions providing microcredit. The financial sector is small and underdeveloped, dominated by state-owned banks. The regulatory framework for microfinance is still nascent. Recommendations include strengthening the regulatory framework, expanding the supply of microfinance institutions, improving financial infrastructure, and increasing effectiveness of funders. Developing Myanmar's private sector through microfinance could help reduce poverty and boost economic growth.
Myanmar is at a pivotal moment as it transitions to a more open economy and society after decades of isolation and authoritarian rule. The report analyzes Myanmar's economic potential and challenges over the next two decades. It finds that Myanmar has a $200 billion economic opportunity by 2030 if it can address major challenges like low productivity, lack of infrastructure, impending urbanization, and need to reconnect to global trade and investment. Four keys to unlocking this potential are raising productivity, shifting to manufacturing, preparing for urbanization, and reconnecting to global markets. The government and private sector must work to overcome substantial challenges in order to realize Myanmar's economic opportunities.
This document discusses certification and ecolabelling for hotels. It provides information on several certification programs including the EU Flower, Nordic Swan, Green Globe, and EKO HOTEL. The key points are that certification ensures hotels meet environmental standards, benchmarks are established for areas like energy and water use, and benefits include improved corporate image, access to new markets and customers, and reduced operating costs.
Achieving Environmental Sustainability in Myanmar MYO AUNG Myanmar
ADB Economics Working Paper Series
Achieving Environmental Sustainability in Myanmar
David A. Raitzer, Jindra Nuella G. Samson,
and Kee-Yung Nam
No. 467 | December 2015
David A. Raitzer (draitzer@adb.org) is Economist,
Jindra Nuella G. Samson (jsamson@adb.org) is
Senior Economics Officer, and Kee-Yung Nam
(kynam@adb.org) is Principal Economist at the
Economic Research and Regional Cooperation
Department, Asian Development Bank (ADB).
This paper was a background paper for the ADB
Myanmar Country Diagnostics Study.
BANK INFORMATION CENTER ORGANIZATION MYANMAR
AMPLIFYING LOCAL VOICES TO DEMOCRATIZE DEVELOPMENT
https://burmese.voanews.com/a/4390306.html?ltflags=mailer
ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံမွာလာေရာက္ေထာက္ပံ့တဲ့ ႏုိင္ငံတကာဖံြၿဖိဳးေရးလုပ္ငန္းေတြ အေကာင္အထည္ေဖာ္ေရး ႏိုင္ငံတကာစံႏႈန္းေတြနဲ႔အညီ မွန္ကန္မႈရွိမရွိ ေစာင့္ၾကည့္ဖို႔ ဘယ္ေလာက္အေရးႀကီးပါသလဲ။ ေစာင့္ၾကည့္အရပ္ဖက္အဖြဲ႔အစည္း တခုျဖစ္တဲ့ BIC ျမန္မာတာဝန္ ကိုဝဏၰထြန္းကို ကိုၿငိမ္းခ်မ္း ေတြ႔ဆုံေမးျမန္းထားပါတယ္။
http://www.bankinformationcenter.org/regions/asia/burma/
After a 25 year-long absence, International Financial Institutions (IFIs) returned to Burma in 2012 in support of the country’s political and economic transitions.
http://www.bankinformationcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Understanding-and-Influencing-IMF-Policy-Advice-In-Myanmar.pdf
http://www.bankinformationcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Burma_Resource_Book.pdf
Burma_Resource_Book
Multilateral
Development Banks
and Burma
A Resource Book from the
Bank Information Center
HART Report Large-Scale Developments in Burma Uncovering Trends in Human Righ...Anna Cox
This document summarizes problems with large-scale development projects in Burma, including forced relocation, land confiscation, lack of transparency, and environmental damage. It provides recommendations for the Burmese government, investors, and international community. It also presents four case studies as examples, including destructive dams, special economic zones that involved forced relocation, and a project that caused environmental destruction. The overall trend is of human rights abuses against local communities affected by these projects.
Oxfam America operated an East Asia Regional Office for 20 years, establishing initiatives like catchment management across 6 countries along the Mekong River and supporting innovations in agriculture. The office also engaged in the extractives sector, microfinance through programs like Saving for Change, and policy work. Throughout humanitarian crises, Oxfam America responded while also helping to strengthen civil society by supporting organizations and championing their causes. The office represented Oxfam America through over 600 grants totaling $24 million across 8 countries in the region from 1996 to 2016.
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) was founded in 1966 and is headquartered in Manila, Philippines. The ADB's mission is to promote economic growth, reduce poverty, and improve living standards in Asia and the Pacific region. It provides loans, technical assistance, and grants to its developing member countries for purposes such as improving infrastructure, health, education, and governance. The ADB gets its funding from contributions from member countries as well as bond issues and has 67 total member countries.
Myanmar - Interim strategy note for the period FY13-14 (English)Than Han
This document provides an interim strategy note for World Bank Group engagement in Myanmar from FY13-14. It summarizes the key political, economic, and development challenges facing Myanmar as the country undergoes a triple transition to democratic governance, a market economy, and peace. Recent political reforms have included releasing political prisoners and dialogue with opposition groups. Economic reforms have included floating the exchange rate and tax changes. However, capacity constraints pose risks to further reforms. The interim strategy focuses on supporting this transition through programs that reduce poverty, improve governance, and enable inclusive growth.
CIRUM was established in 2005 but traces its origins back to 1994 through its founders' work with TEW. CIRUM has developed strong grassroots connections through participatory methods used by TEW. It facilitates interaction between grassroots communities and government officials to promote understanding of issues. CIRUM's advocacy style focuses on bringing people and government together rather than representing people. It has faced challenges developing networks with other NGOs due to differences in approaches and sensitivity of land rights issues. CIRUM established the LandNet network to advocate for ethnic minority land rights through community leaders' knowledge and experiences.
The document reviews selected Common Country Assessments (CCAs) and United Nations Development Assistance Frameworks (UNDAFs) to assess how well they address indigenous issues and peoples. It examines CCAs and UNDAFs from 10 countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The review finds that while some of the documents acknowledge indigenous peoples, most do not adequately reflect indigenous perspectives or development challenges. It concludes that greater efforts are needed to integrate indigenous issues and ensure participation of indigenous peoples in developing CCAs and UNDAFs.
Human Development Reports and Indigenous PeopleDr Lendy Spires
The document provides an overview of several Human Development Reports from 2008-2007 that analyze specific countries and regions. It summarizes the key findings regarding indigenous peoples from reports on Asia-Pacific (2008), Cambodia (2007), and Ghana (2007). The Asia-Pacific report discusses how corruption negatively impacts indigenous peoples' access to resources and land rights. The Cambodia report notes challenges indigenous groups face related to poverty, health, education, and land conflicts. It highlights concerns voiced by indigenous peoples. The Ghana report briefly mentions challenges regarding indigenous groups' land tenure and participation in decision-making.
A community guide for indigenous peoples on the 2009 adb safeguard policy sta...Dr Lendy Spires
This document provides a summary of an indigenous peoples' community guide on the Asian Development Bank's (ADB) Safeguard Policy Statement and Accountability Mechanism. It covers several key topics:
1. An overview of the ADB, its projects, and the 2009 Safeguard Policy Statement.
2. Details on the Indigenous Peoples Safeguard Requirements in the SPS, including consultation, social impact assessment, indigenous peoples plans, and grievance redress.
3. The environmental and involuntary resettlement safeguard requirements as they relate to indigenous peoples.
4. Mechanisms for holding the ADB and governments accountable, including the accountability mechanism and country safeguard systems.
5. Guid
The Asian region has experienced the emergence of new MDBs over last few years. For many years, the Asian Development Bank was the only development bank in the region and has been dominated by the Japanese owing to the number of votes it has as compared to other members. However, the newly constituted NDB in 2014 has two key Asian members, India and China. The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) led and initiated by China in 2015, and with a mandate to have at minimum 70% of shares allocated to Asian countries is sure to become another major player to support infrastructure development activities of the region as well as global south. The AIIB and NDB are two separate entities in their operations and constitution even though there are overlaps in memberships of the two banks.
The Centre for Financial Accountability aims to strengthen and improve financial accountability within India by engaging in critical analysis, monitoring and critique of the role of financial institutions – national and international, and their impact on development, human rights and the environment, amongst other areas. For more information visit http://www.cenfa.org Get in touch with us at info@cenfa.org
We also publish Finance Matters, a weekly newsletter on the development finance. The archive can be accessed at http://www.cenfa.org/newsletter-archive/
To subscribe, email us at newsletter@cenfa.org
Beijing+20 Asia Pacific Regional Review Progress Dr Lendy Spires
This document provides a submission from the Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development on progress in the Asia Pacific region since the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action in 1995. It summarizes key issues in several critical areas including women and poverty, violence against women, women's participation in decision-making, women and the economy, and women and the environment. In the critical area of women and poverty, it discusses how policies promoted by international financial institutions like privatization, trade liberalization, and austerity measures have negatively impacted women by increasing their unpaid care work, reducing public services, and making their livelihoods more precarious. It provides examples from countries like the Philippines, Indonesia, and China.
Analysis of institutional capacity of national social protection policy frame...Narith Por
Abstract- Cambodians are still vulnerable. To reverse those conditions, National Social Protection Strategy (N.S.P.S) was developed for the poor and vulnerable people to promote their livelihoods. Royal Government of Cambodia (R.G.C) has paid attention on social assistance. In strategic plans, it highlights on strengthening, and developing social security in collective way, consistent and effectively. With these issues, the government establish national social protection policy framework in order to help all people in particular poor and vulnerable people (M.o.E.F, 2017, p.1). The research aims at reviewing an institutional capacity of government institutions in charge of National Social Protection Framework (N.S.P.P.F) toward its goal achievement” The Department for International Development (D.E.F.I.D) capacity approach is proposed to framework for this institution of government toward its goal achievement. The D.E.F.I.D (2003) cited in Kay & Franks (2003) identifies thee approach for assessing capacities in three level.
The strengths and the weakness of the seven points were identified. Those included Overview of N.S.P.P.F, financial resources, relationship with others, policies and systems, strategies, structures and technical skills and competencies. It was concluded that limitation of budget, lack of data and guideline for implementing the frameworks. Recommendations were identification of People with Disability (P.W.D) data, people close to the poverty line, inclusion of P.W.D, increase in budget and budget decentralization.
The document discusses community development and partnerships. It introduces key concepts like stakeholders and approaches to community development. It outlines the speaker's background working on community projects. The main stakeholders in development are identified as: US government agencies, international organizations, foundations, NGOs, host country NGOs, and local community members. Effective partnerships require understanding community interests and bringing stakeholders to a common agenda to solve locally-defined problems.
The document discusses the role of NGOs in public policy making in India. It notes that while over 1.2 million NGOs operate in India, most are small with few employees. NGOs play a role in social services and influencing policy in areas like poverty alleviation, women's rights, the environment, and disaster management. The government has increasingly recognized NGOs' role but relations can be improved. Research on NGOs is still limited.
MYANMAR-AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS REPORTS 2017MYO AUNG Myanmar
MYANMAR-AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS REPORTS 2017
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/?s=MYANMAR
Myanmar Political Reform: A Slow But Steady Transformation
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/ao-blog-post/myanmars-political-reform-slow/
Achieving Lasting Political Reform in Myanmar
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/news-item/achieving-lasting-political-reform-in-myanmar/
Deafening Silence on Myanmar's Rohingya
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/ao-blog-post/deafening-silence-on-myanmars-rohingya/
Reading Room: War and Peace in the Borderlands of Myanmar
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/ao-blog-post/reading-room-war-and-peace-in-the-borderlands-of-myanmar/
Armed Forces and Democratisation in Myanmar
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/global-wire/armed-forces-and-democratisation-in-myanmar/
Microfinance has positively impacted rural development in Assam. The study analyzed 10 microfinance institutions in Kamrup and Cachar districts of Assam. It found that microfinance has improved standards of living and empowered women by providing loans, savings opportunities, and financial services. However, more government support is still needed to develop infrastructure, train personnel, and support small MFIs in remote areas of Assam. Overall, microfinance has shown potential for reducing poverty but could be more effective with technological innovations to improve access in rural communities.
The meeting minutes summarized a BOG meeting held on June 27, 2007 that focused on security situations and developmental aspects in Nepal, particularly in the Terai region. Key highlights included increased violations by CPN/M and other groups interfering in development programs, deteriorating security conditions restricting staff movement, and political competition and instability continuing to hamper development work. While some improvements were seen, ongoing issues around exclusion, a lack of political consensus, and capacity building needs at the local level were also noted.
Press Release: FEF Statement of Support for the Passage of the Bangsamoro Bas...FEF Philippines
The Foundation for Economic Freedom supports the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) as it believes it can help end decades of civil strife and conflict in the Bangsamoro region of Mindanao and unlock economic opportunities. Peace in the region could boost Mindanao's GDP as the Bangsamoro has abundant natural resources and potential for growth. The new autonomous political entity also has the chance to learn from past failures and craft policies to attract investment. Passing the BBL consistent with Bangsamoro aspirations would strengthen pragmatists in the MILF and help ensure long-term peace and stability needed for development.
This document provides an overview of the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC), the largest non-governmental organization in Bangladesh. It discusses BRAC's establishment in 1972 to aid development in Bangladesh. BRAC now operates various poverty alleviation programs, including microfinance and education, in Bangladesh and other countries, reaching over 110 million people. The document then outlines the student's internship study on BRAC's microfinance activities and poverty eradication programs in Jhenaidah, Bangladesh, including the objectives, methodology, and limitations of the study.
Finding a Way to Overcome Current Economic and Political Quagmires in MyanmarKaungHtetZawSMU
Background
Myanmar faces a choice between maintaining some version of the status quo in which the military holds
sway while allowing some limited forms of democracy or creating a genuine shift to a more open and
inclusive system. This is not just a choice about who gets what share of the national output or even how
fast that output grows, though that is part of the choice. The main choice is between national survival
and unity or weakness and division. Myanmar may end up more like Pakistan than Turkey.1 To avoid
this, it needs a broad coalition of interest groups that support federalism, resource sharing, and taxation
of resources for productive public investment. Such a change requires a fairly elected government and a
stronger rule of law, including protection of minorities and those with wealth, however acquired. The
current path is producing religious tension, very little if any growth (in spite of good intentions and high
reported GDP growth), and ethnic and religious conflicts. The following graphic summarizing Why
Nations Fail, a recent book, illustrates the situation. However, Myanmar is leaning to the left side of the
diagram – closer to failure than success.
Rapid political reforms in Myanmar are driving optimism about its economic prospects, however significant challenges remain. While sanctions are beginning to be lifted following democratic elections, Myanmar's economy remains very small, poor, and underdeveloped compared to its neighbors. Only a few companies have meaningful exposure there. Myanmar faces major hurdles, including weak human capital and institutions, before it could become a sizable investment destination.
BANK INFORMATION CENTER ORGANIZATION MYANMAR
AMPLIFYING LOCAL VOICES TO DEMOCRATIZE DEVELOPMENT
https://burmese.voanews.com/a/4390306.html?ltflags=mailer
ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံမွာလာေရာက္ေထာက္ပံ့တဲ့ ႏုိင္ငံတကာဖံြၿဖိဳးေရးလုပ္ငန္းေတြ အေကာင္အထည္ေဖာ္ေရး ႏိုင္ငံတကာစံႏႈန္းေတြနဲ႔အညီ မွန္ကန္မႈရွိမရွိ ေစာင့္ၾကည့္ဖို႔ ဘယ္ေလာက္အေရးႀကီးပါသလဲ။ ေစာင့္ၾကည့္အရပ္ဖက္အဖြဲ႔အစည္း တခုျဖစ္တဲ့ BIC ျမန္မာတာဝန္ ကိုဝဏၰထြန္းကို ကိုၿငိမ္းခ်မ္း ေတြ႔ဆုံေမးျမန္းထားပါတယ္။
http://www.bankinformationcenter.org/regions/asia/burma/
After a 25 year-long absence, International Financial Institutions (IFIs) returned to Burma in 2012 in support of the country’s political and economic transitions.
http://www.bankinformationcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Understanding-and-Influencing-IMF-Policy-Advice-In-Myanmar.pdf
http://www.bankinformationcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Burma_Resource_Book.pdf
Burma_Resource_Book
Multilateral
Development Banks
and Burma
A Resource Book from the
Bank Information Center
HART Report Large-Scale Developments in Burma Uncovering Trends in Human Righ...Anna Cox
This document summarizes problems with large-scale development projects in Burma, including forced relocation, land confiscation, lack of transparency, and environmental damage. It provides recommendations for the Burmese government, investors, and international community. It also presents four case studies as examples, including destructive dams, special economic zones that involved forced relocation, and a project that caused environmental destruction. The overall trend is of human rights abuses against local communities affected by these projects.
Oxfam America operated an East Asia Regional Office for 20 years, establishing initiatives like catchment management across 6 countries along the Mekong River and supporting innovations in agriculture. The office also engaged in the extractives sector, microfinance through programs like Saving for Change, and policy work. Throughout humanitarian crises, Oxfam America responded while also helping to strengthen civil society by supporting organizations and championing their causes. The office represented Oxfam America through over 600 grants totaling $24 million across 8 countries in the region from 1996 to 2016.
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) was founded in 1966 and is headquartered in Manila, Philippines. The ADB's mission is to promote economic growth, reduce poverty, and improve living standards in Asia and the Pacific region. It provides loans, technical assistance, and grants to its developing member countries for purposes such as improving infrastructure, health, education, and governance. The ADB gets its funding from contributions from member countries as well as bond issues and has 67 total member countries.
Myanmar - Interim strategy note for the period FY13-14 (English)Than Han
This document provides an interim strategy note for World Bank Group engagement in Myanmar from FY13-14. It summarizes the key political, economic, and development challenges facing Myanmar as the country undergoes a triple transition to democratic governance, a market economy, and peace. Recent political reforms have included releasing political prisoners and dialogue with opposition groups. Economic reforms have included floating the exchange rate and tax changes. However, capacity constraints pose risks to further reforms. The interim strategy focuses on supporting this transition through programs that reduce poverty, improve governance, and enable inclusive growth.
CIRUM was established in 2005 but traces its origins back to 1994 through its founders' work with TEW. CIRUM has developed strong grassroots connections through participatory methods used by TEW. It facilitates interaction between grassroots communities and government officials to promote understanding of issues. CIRUM's advocacy style focuses on bringing people and government together rather than representing people. It has faced challenges developing networks with other NGOs due to differences in approaches and sensitivity of land rights issues. CIRUM established the LandNet network to advocate for ethnic minority land rights through community leaders' knowledge and experiences.
The document reviews selected Common Country Assessments (CCAs) and United Nations Development Assistance Frameworks (UNDAFs) to assess how well they address indigenous issues and peoples. It examines CCAs and UNDAFs from 10 countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The review finds that while some of the documents acknowledge indigenous peoples, most do not adequately reflect indigenous perspectives or development challenges. It concludes that greater efforts are needed to integrate indigenous issues and ensure participation of indigenous peoples in developing CCAs and UNDAFs.
Human Development Reports and Indigenous PeopleDr Lendy Spires
The document provides an overview of several Human Development Reports from 2008-2007 that analyze specific countries and regions. It summarizes the key findings regarding indigenous peoples from reports on Asia-Pacific (2008), Cambodia (2007), and Ghana (2007). The Asia-Pacific report discusses how corruption negatively impacts indigenous peoples' access to resources and land rights. The Cambodia report notes challenges indigenous groups face related to poverty, health, education, and land conflicts. It highlights concerns voiced by indigenous peoples. The Ghana report briefly mentions challenges regarding indigenous groups' land tenure and participation in decision-making.
A community guide for indigenous peoples on the 2009 adb safeguard policy sta...Dr Lendy Spires
This document provides a summary of an indigenous peoples' community guide on the Asian Development Bank's (ADB) Safeguard Policy Statement and Accountability Mechanism. It covers several key topics:
1. An overview of the ADB, its projects, and the 2009 Safeguard Policy Statement.
2. Details on the Indigenous Peoples Safeguard Requirements in the SPS, including consultation, social impact assessment, indigenous peoples plans, and grievance redress.
3. The environmental and involuntary resettlement safeguard requirements as they relate to indigenous peoples.
4. Mechanisms for holding the ADB and governments accountable, including the accountability mechanism and country safeguard systems.
5. Guid
The Asian region has experienced the emergence of new MDBs over last few years. For many years, the Asian Development Bank was the only development bank in the region and has been dominated by the Japanese owing to the number of votes it has as compared to other members. However, the newly constituted NDB in 2014 has two key Asian members, India and China. The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) led and initiated by China in 2015, and with a mandate to have at minimum 70% of shares allocated to Asian countries is sure to become another major player to support infrastructure development activities of the region as well as global south. The AIIB and NDB are two separate entities in their operations and constitution even though there are overlaps in memberships of the two banks.
The Centre for Financial Accountability aims to strengthen and improve financial accountability within India by engaging in critical analysis, monitoring and critique of the role of financial institutions – national and international, and their impact on development, human rights and the environment, amongst other areas. For more information visit http://www.cenfa.org Get in touch with us at info@cenfa.org
We also publish Finance Matters, a weekly newsletter on the development finance. The archive can be accessed at http://www.cenfa.org/newsletter-archive/
To subscribe, email us at newsletter@cenfa.org
Beijing+20 Asia Pacific Regional Review Progress Dr Lendy Spires
This document provides a submission from the Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development on progress in the Asia Pacific region since the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action in 1995. It summarizes key issues in several critical areas including women and poverty, violence against women, women's participation in decision-making, women and the economy, and women and the environment. In the critical area of women and poverty, it discusses how policies promoted by international financial institutions like privatization, trade liberalization, and austerity measures have negatively impacted women by increasing their unpaid care work, reducing public services, and making their livelihoods more precarious. It provides examples from countries like the Philippines, Indonesia, and China.
Analysis of institutional capacity of national social protection policy frame...Narith Por
Abstract- Cambodians are still vulnerable. To reverse those conditions, National Social Protection Strategy (N.S.P.S) was developed for the poor and vulnerable people to promote their livelihoods. Royal Government of Cambodia (R.G.C) has paid attention on social assistance. In strategic plans, it highlights on strengthening, and developing social security in collective way, consistent and effectively. With these issues, the government establish national social protection policy framework in order to help all people in particular poor and vulnerable people (M.o.E.F, 2017, p.1). The research aims at reviewing an institutional capacity of government institutions in charge of National Social Protection Framework (N.S.P.P.F) toward its goal achievement” The Department for International Development (D.E.F.I.D) capacity approach is proposed to framework for this institution of government toward its goal achievement. The D.E.F.I.D (2003) cited in Kay & Franks (2003) identifies thee approach for assessing capacities in three level.
The strengths and the weakness of the seven points were identified. Those included Overview of N.S.P.P.F, financial resources, relationship with others, policies and systems, strategies, structures and technical skills and competencies. It was concluded that limitation of budget, lack of data and guideline for implementing the frameworks. Recommendations were identification of People with Disability (P.W.D) data, people close to the poverty line, inclusion of P.W.D, increase in budget and budget decentralization.
The document discusses community development and partnerships. It introduces key concepts like stakeholders and approaches to community development. It outlines the speaker's background working on community projects. The main stakeholders in development are identified as: US government agencies, international organizations, foundations, NGOs, host country NGOs, and local community members. Effective partnerships require understanding community interests and bringing stakeholders to a common agenda to solve locally-defined problems.
The document discusses the role of NGOs in public policy making in India. It notes that while over 1.2 million NGOs operate in India, most are small with few employees. NGOs play a role in social services and influencing policy in areas like poverty alleviation, women's rights, the environment, and disaster management. The government has increasingly recognized NGOs' role but relations can be improved. Research on NGOs is still limited.
MYANMAR-AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS REPORTS 2017MYO AUNG Myanmar
MYANMAR-AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS REPORTS 2017
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/?s=MYANMAR
Myanmar Political Reform: A Slow But Steady Transformation
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/ao-blog-post/myanmars-political-reform-slow/
Achieving Lasting Political Reform in Myanmar
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/news-item/achieving-lasting-political-reform-in-myanmar/
Deafening Silence on Myanmar's Rohingya
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/ao-blog-post/deafening-silence-on-myanmars-rohingya/
Reading Room: War and Peace in the Borderlands of Myanmar
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/ao-blog-post/reading-room-war-and-peace-in-the-borderlands-of-myanmar/
Armed Forces and Democratisation in Myanmar
http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/global-wire/armed-forces-and-democratisation-in-myanmar/
Microfinance has positively impacted rural development in Assam. The study analyzed 10 microfinance institutions in Kamrup and Cachar districts of Assam. It found that microfinance has improved standards of living and empowered women by providing loans, savings opportunities, and financial services. However, more government support is still needed to develop infrastructure, train personnel, and support small MFIs in remote areas of Assam. Overall, microfinance has shown potential for reducing poverty but could be more effective with technological innovations to improve access in rural communities.
The meeting minutes summarized a BOG meeting held on June 27, 2007 that focused on security situations and developmental aspects in Nepal, particularly in the Terai region. Key highlights included increased violations by CPN/M and other groups interfering in development programs, deteriorating security conditions restricting staff movement, and political competition and instability continuing to hamper development work. While some improvements were seen, ongoing issues around exclusion, a lack of political consensus, and capacity building needs at the local level were also noted.
Press Release: FEF Statement of Support for the Passage of the Bangsamoro Bas...FEF Philippines
The Foundation for Economic Freedom supports the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) as it believes it can help end decades of civil strife and conflict in the Bangsamoro region of Mindanao and unlock economic opportunities. Peace in the region could boost Mindanao's GDP as the Bangsamoro has abundant natural resources and potential for growth. The new autonomous political entity also has the chance to learn from past failures and craft policies to attract investment. Passing the BBL consistent with Bangsamoro aspirations would strengthen pragmatists in the MILF and help ensure long-term peace and stability needed for development.
This document provides an overview of the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC), the largest non-governmental organization in Bangladesh. It discusses BRAC's establishment in 1972 to aid development in Bangladesh. BRAC now operates various poverty alleviation programs, including microfinance and education, in Bangladesh and other countries, reaching over 110 million people. The document then outlines the student's internship study on BRAC's microfinance activities and poverty eradication programs in Jhenaidah, Bangladesh, including the objectives, methodology, and limitations of the study.
Finding a Way to Overcome Current Economic and Political Quagmires in MyanmarKaungHtetZawSMU
Background
Myanmar faces a choice between maintaining some version of the status quo in which the military holds
sway while allowing some limited forms of democracy or creating a genuine shift to a more open and
inclusive system. This is not just a choice about who gets what share of the national output or even how
fast that output grows, though that is part of the choice. The main choice is between national survival
and unity or weakness and division. Myanmar may end up more like Pakistan than Turkey.1 To avoid
this, it needs a broad coalition of interest groups that support federalism, resource sharing, and taxation
of resources for productive public investment. Such a change requires a fairly elected government and a
stronger rule of law, including protection of minorities and those with wealth, however acquired. The
current path is producing religious tension, very little if any growth (in spite of good intentions and high
reported GDP growth), and ethnic and religious conflicts. The following graphic summarizing Why
Nations Fail, a recent book, illustrates the situation. However, Myanmar is leaning to the left side of the
diagram – closer to failure than success.
Rapid political reforms in Myanmar are driving optimism about its economic prospects, however significant challenges remain. While sanctions are beginning to be lifted following democratic elections, Myanmar's economy remains very small, poor, and underdeveloped compared to its neighbors. Only a few companies have meaningful exposure there. Myanmar faces major hurdles, including weak human capital and institutions, before it could become a sizable investment destination.
The document provides an overview of Myanmar's economy. Key points include:
1) Myanmar has natural resources like agriculture land, forests, minerals, gas, and gems that form the basis of its economy.
2) The economy is expected to have grown 5.5-5.8% in fiscal year 2011-2012, driven by investment in hydropower, natural gas, oil and commodity exports.
3) GDP composition in 2011 consisted of services (43.6%), agriculture (38.2%), and industry (18.2%), with services overtaking agriculture for the first time.
This document analyzes security and economic relations between China and Myanmar. It discusses how China has emerged as Myanmar's most important foreign partner due to Western sanctions. Trade and investment between the two countries has increased substantially in recent years, though China's influence is sometimes exaggerated. The relationship is complex, as China's central government, regional authorities, businesses, and other actors sometimes have differing interests and approaches regarding Myanmar. While economic ties are strong, Myanmar works to balance relations with China and other countries to maximize its own interests. Security cooperation has also improved but rumors of Chinese military bases in Myanmar remain unfounded. The relationship provides opportunities but also tensions, as China's role impacts other regional countries.
Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) engaged in sugar processing emerged in Myanmar in the late socialist era out of necessity. The growth of these SMEs helped address acute sugar deficits during this time. Originally located in Pyawbwe, these SMEs later clustered in Mandalay as market forces and competition shifted. While SMEs have grown substantially, large private and military companies have recently emerged as major players in the sugar industry. The locations and driving forces affecting Myanmar's sugar SMEs provide insight into the country's economic transformation from central planning to a market system.
This document contains the terms of use and an overview of the Good to Great diagnostic tool developed by Jim Collins. It outlines the four stages of the Good to Great framework: 1) Disciplined People, 2) Disciplined Thought, 3) Disciplined Action, and 4) Building Greatness to Last. It also defines the key concepts within each stage, including Level 5 Leadership, the First Who principle, confronting brutal facts, and establishing a culture of discipline. Users must agree to the terms of use, which specify allowed uses and disclaim liability, before accessing the diagnostic sections of the tool.
This document provides key economic indicators for Myanmar from 1993 to 2010, including:
1. Population growth slowed from 1.8% annually in 1993 to 1.1% in 2010, while urbanization increased steadily from 25.6% to around 33% over the period.
2. Agriculture remained the dominant sector, accounting for around 60% of GDP initially but declining to 36.4% by 2010 as other sectors grew.
3. Private consumption was the largest component of demand, ranging from 88.6% to 78.3% of GDP over the period. Gross capital formation and government consumption gradually increased as a share of GDP.
The document provides an overview of recent developments in emerging East Asian local currency bond markets. It notes that while growth prospects remain robust in emerging East Asia, uncertainties in the eurozone pose risks. Total bonds outstanding in the region grew 7.0% in 4Q11, led by strong corporate bond growth, while government bond growth was more modest. Inflationary pressures have moderated but may rise again with higher commodity prices.
Essential Tools for Modern PR Business .pptxPragencyuk
Discover the essential tools and strategies for modern PR business success. Learn how to craft compelling news releases, leverage press release sites and news wires, stay updated with PR news, and integrate effective PR practices to enhance your brand's visibility and credibility. Elevate your PR efforts with our comprehensive guide.
El Puerto de Algeciras continúa un año más como el más eficiente del continente europeo y vuelve a situarse en el “top ten” mundial, según el informe The Container Port Performance Index 2023 (CPPI), elaborado por el Banco Mundial y la consultora S&P Global.
El informe CPPI utiliza dos enfoques metodológicos diferentes para calcular la clasificación del índice: uno administrativo o técnico y otro estadístico, basado en análisis factorial (FA). Según los autores, esta dualidad pretende asegurar una clasificación que refleje con precisión el rendimiento real del puerto, a la vez que sea estadísticamente sólida. En esta edición del informe CPPI 2023, se han empleado los mismos enfoques metodológicos y se ha aplicado un método de agregación de clasificaciones para combinar los resultados de ambos enfoques y obtener una clasificación agregada.
04062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
An astonishing, first-of-its-kind, report by the NYT assessing damage in Ukraine. Even if the war ends tomorrow, in many places there will be nothing to go back to.
Acolyte Episodes review (TV series) The Acolyte. Learn about the influence of the program on the Star Wars world, as well as new characters and story twists.
Here is Gabe Whitley's response to my defamation lawsuit for him calling me a rapist and perjurer in court documents.
You have to read it to believe it, but after you read it, you won't believe it. And I included eight examples of defamatory statements/
1. The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes 1
The ADB in Burma:
Behind the Scenes
by S. Bourne
2. 2 The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes
Thanks to Burma Rivers Network, Shwe Gas,
Arakan Oil Watch, the Karen Environmental Social
Action Network and Earth Rights International and
other individuals for their contribution to this report.
Cover photo: Villagers fleeing from a village close
to the Tasang dam site, Shan State Shan Sapawa
Environmental Organization.
(Photo taken by Shan Sapawa)
Inside cover photo: Salween River,
Thai-Burma border
(Photo taken by S. Bourne)
Copyright by the NGO Forum on ADB
April 2011
Printed in the Philippines
An on-line edition of this publication is available at
www.forum.adb.org
85-A Masikap Extension
Brgy. Central, Diliman
Quezon City 1101 Philippines
T + 632 436 1858
F + 632 921 4412
secretariat@forum-adb.org
info@forum-adb.org
www.forum-adb.org
The NGO Forum on ADB is an Asian-led network
of civil society organizations and community
groups that has been monitoring policies, projects
and programs of the Asian Development Bank.
The Forum does not accept funds or any other
grants from the ADB.
Printed on 100% recycled paper using soya-based ink.
3. The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes 1
The ADB in Burma:
Behind the Scenes
by S. Bourne
5. The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes 1
The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes
Introduction
Burma (Myanmari) became a member of the Asian Development Bank Other activities the ADB has been involved in include International
(ADB) in 1973. The ADB has, however, not provided any loans or direct Monetary Fund economic policy reviews in Burma, support for the
technical assistance to Burma since 1986-1987, purportedly in response to Myanmar Environmental Performance Assessment, and support for relief
internal political pressure from shareholders after the brutal crackdown by and reconstruction after Cyclone Nargis through ASEAN as part of the
the Burmese military on pro-democracy protesters in 1988. Burma has a Tripartite Core Group (ASEAN, UN and Burmese Government). There are
substantial debt to the ADB and is currently in arrears. Between 1973 and some beneficial aspects of these activities but they are limited by the political
1986-87 Burma received loans of US $530 million, and owes the ADB US context.
$325 million.1 2
This paper recommends that until the people of Burma can meaningfully
In 2007, in response to a petition from civil society groups in the region, the participate in development decisions, preconditions for responsible
ADB states that they are very attentive to the political and security situation investment are in place, and adverse impacts can be mitigated, then the
in which they operate, and that they have not provided bilateral loans or ADB should refrain from any form of new engagement with Burma. If they
technical assistance to Burma for almost twenty years, but that they do provide do engage (i.e., fund, facilitate, administer) in Burma, the ADB must follow
regional technical assistance for GMS meetings. What the ADB position fails the International Financial Corporation’s “Sustainability Framework”iii and
to address is the major role that the ADB has played and continues to play adhere to their own safeguard policies, including safeguards on Involuntary
in facilitating and mobilizing private sector investment in Burma through Resettlement, Environment and Indigenous People, as well as the ADB’s
the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) economic cooperation program,ii Accountability Mechanism and Public Communications Policy.
and also facilitating private investment in Burma outside this program. The
1. Current Political
majority of these projects are in contested ethnic territories and have occurred
without informed public participation, and have already had, or will result in
Context: Burma.
environmental and human rights repercussions.
In 1989, the government in Burma changed the official name of the country from the Union of
i
Burma to the Union of Myanmar. In 2010, in the lead up to the November elections, the name The military junta, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), was
was officially changed to the Republic of the Union of Myanmar. formally dissolved on 30 March 2011, after Burma’s elections in November
2010. Judicial and executive powers were transferred to the new nominally
The GMS program comprises Cambodia, the People’s Republic of China, Lao People’s
ii
Democratic Republic, Myanmar, Thailand, and Viet Nam. For more information visit: http://
www.adb.org/gms/
iii
See http://www.ifc.org/ifcext/policyreview.nsf/Content/AboutFramework
6. 2 The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes
civilian government. However, little has changed in terms of governance, parties won 25% of seats in 4 ethnic state legislatures.vi There is speculation
with the same military elites and business affiliates holding top positions.3 that there may be some space to influence environment, development and
The military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party won 76.5 humanitarian policies in these areas. However, open debate of key political
% of parliamentary seats.4 Than Shwe, who oversaw chronic economic issues such as political prisoners and ethnic rights is unlikely given the strict
mismanagement and widespread human rights abuses, has retired as parliamentary controls and the fact that there has been no real shift in terms
military leader; however, many believe he will retain influence on national of power politics. This was demonstrated by the parliament’s recent rejection
affairs from behind the scenes.5 The US State Department has dismissed of a proposal for the government to build stronger relationships with the
the transfer of power from military to civilian figures as ‘immaterial.’6 country’s ethnic nationalities.11
The parliament is under strict control, with questions and proposals to
government ministers having to be submitted to the speaker’s office 10 and The country lacks fundamental tenants of a democratic state, including
15 days in advance, respectively, for vetting.7 The political structure as set the rule of law, freedom of expression, free media and basic human rights.
out in the 2008 Constitution also includes a Permanent Military Institution Decades-long civil war continues in border areas, most prominently with
– the “National Defense and Security Council” (NDSC) -- which has veto the Shan State Army-South and the Karen National Union. The election did
power on all security decisions (the majority of positions in the NDSC are nothing to defuse Burma’s state of conflict.12 Post-election Burma saw the
military positions). Pro-democracy activists regard the NDSC as effectively escalation of tensions in both Karen and Shan states.
a rebranding of the SPDC.8 9
Sean Turnell, a Burma-focused economist from Macquarie University,
The election process itself was unfair and undemocratic, fell well short of Australia, explains that Burma lacks basic market institutions such as the rule
international standards, and participation in ethnic areas was excluded on a of law and sound property rights, and operates according to a set of parallel
large scale.iv Aung San Suu Kyi’s party, the National League for Democracy, rules set by the state and economic elites such as “arbitrary procedures
boycotted the election. In addition, electoral laws prohibited long-standing for dispute settlement; nepotistic patron-client relationships between the
opponents of the regime from registering parties, and some voters in rural military, state and business; and extralegal allocations of natural resource
areas and state employees were coerced into voting for the military-backed concessions.” 13 Post-election, the country still lacks sound economic policy,
USDP.10 Many opposition parties saw it as an opportunity for gaining more the rule of law and sound property rights, and there are no rules to regulate
political space.v A handful of seats were won by opposition parties in the investment or protect the rights of local communities (i.e., benefit-sharing,
national parliament and people’s parliament at the regional level; ethnic access to information, meaningful participation in decision-making on
development decisions).
iv
The government subdued ethnic political parties by disenfranchising residents in 300
Sanctions
villages in several townships in Kachin, Karenni, Mon and Shan States and four townships
in the Wa’s self-administered division. Saw Yang Naing and Lawi Weng “EC Afraid of Los-
ing Poll in Ethnic Areas” http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=19498, Irrawaddy, 05 In his inaugural speech to parliament, Prime Minister Thein Sein called for
October 2010. the lifting of Western sanctions.14 This followed a call by ASEAN in January
Saw Yang Naing and Lawi Weng “EC Afraid of Losing Poll in Ethnic Areas” http://www. 2011 for the ‘removal or easing of sanctions.15 The EU, US, Australia,
irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=19498, Irrawaddy, 05 October 2010. New Zealand and other countries currently have sanctions policies against
Burma.
v
“many opposition parties that took part.. were participating not out of any misguided sense
that the polls would be credible, but because of the important structural shifts the elections In four ethnic state regional parliaments (Chin, Kayin, Rakhine and Shan), ethnic parties have
vi
should bring: a generational transition within the military leadership, an array of new consti- more than 25% of the seats allowing them to call special sessions of the legislature or initiate
tutional and political structures, and some space to openly debate political issues.” Transna- impeachment proceedings against local public officials. Burma News International, Election
tional Institute, “A Changing Ethnic Landscape: Analysis of Burma’s 2010 Polls,” Burma Policy Report 2010: Myanmar (Burma), Chiang Mai, Thailand 2011, http://www.nd-burma.org/hr-reports/
Briefing No 4. December 2010. other-report/item/39-election-report-2010.html
7. The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes 3
These include sanctions on trade with state-owned companies, freezing of
some firm’s assets, and barriers to loans and some aid.16 In February 2011, the 3. Details of ADB Activities
National League for Democracy reaffirmed its stance that economic sanctions
should not be lifted until the new government has demonstrated progress
3.1. Facilitating Private Sector Investment
and change towards real democracy and human rights.17 There is growing 3.1.1 Private Sector Investment Through the
critique about the effectiveness of sanctions given the easy circumvention
of the sanctions by the government’s close relationships with neighboring GMS Program
countries in the region. Trade is booming with its close neighbors, most
significantly China.18 Foreign Direct Investment is concentrated in the Promotion of Regional Natural Gas integration
energy and extractive industries19 and the majority of investment in resource
extraction comes from countries within the region – most significantly China, In 2009, the ADB released a discussion draft energy strategy for the Greater
India, Thailand, and also including Malaysia, Singapore, Japan, Vietnam and Mekong Subregion entitled “Building a Sustainable Future: The Greater
Korea. The majority of Burma’s income comes from sale of natural resources. Mekong Subregion.” The study concludes that energy integration for all
Large-scale energy and extraction projects are largely located in the border forms of energy, including gas, is the least-cost solution to meeting the energy
regions where ethnic ceasefire and non-ceasefire groups operate. These demand in the region. This is the first GMS energy strategy to include natural
projects often result in increased militarization, widespread human rights gas. It is the first priority area, and the action plan is to “explore possibilities
abuses, land confiscation, environmental damage and loss of resource-based to expand GMS trade in natural gas” by preparing national sector plans for
livelihoods. Recently, there has been a heightened interest from countries natural gas (Cambodia, Myanmar, Vietnam); coordinating with other regional
in the region for more investment opportunities, raising concerns amongst programs such as ASEAN, and starting to prepare a GMS natural gas master
civil society organizations about the social, environmental and human rights plan.22
impacts and the possibility of an increase in conflict.
The document states that “(t)he GMS does not currently have a coordinated
policy framework to enable cooperation in the production and distribution
2. The ADB Position on Burma of natural gas… (however) potential future gas projects are currently being
discussed by the countries involved. Discussions of the ASEAN relating to
In a written response to a civil society petition submitted to the ADB President natural gas pipelines have mainly focused on links with countries outside the
in 2007, the ADB states that the “ADB is very attentive to the political and GMS, and plans for the trans-ASEAN pipeline exclude new links within the
security situation in all countries which it conducts operations…. In the GMS. However, as the use of natural gas in the GMS increases over the long
particular case of Myanmar, ADB does not provide lending or technical term, a more coordinated regional approach to policy and interconnection
assistance bilaterally to the country and has not done so for almost twenty may be warranted.”23 The document notes that and that “(a)t present, gas
years… ADB has drawn up regional technical assistance to facilitate GMS transportation infrastructure within the GMS is quite limited. However,
meetings and events for all GMS countries, including Myanmar.”20 there is large potential for expanding gas trade in the subregion. Individual
projects for developing pipelines and other relevant infrastructure have been
What this statement fails to mention is the ADB’s role in the mobilization and identified.”24
facilitation of private investment in a country where there are decades-long
civil wars and widespread human rights abuses. As a major source of gas in the region, Burma is included in the model. It
is noted that “at present, Myanmar is the only GMS exporter…”.25 Current
It is unclear what the ADB position is now in a post-election Burma; bilateral trade with Thailand is then mentioned, “ongoing bilateral trade
however, if it follows that of ASEAN countries who are asking for the lifting between Thailand and Myanmar is supported by Thailand’s well-established
of sanctions and are looking to increase investment post-election, then it is framework for importing natural gas to fulfill its electricity generation
in contradiction to the statement that the ADB is “very attentive [Emphasis requirements,”26 and then the document outlines in detail the controversial
added] to the political and security situation in all countries which it conducts Shwe gas project:
operations.”21
8. 4 The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes
In January 2007, China National Petroleum Corporation signed violation so far is land confiscation and forced or coerced evictions. Families
production contracts with Myanmar’s Ministry of Energy to allow have been stripped of their means of subsistence - their land - with little or
crude oil and natural gas exploration projects in three deep-water no compensation, making them instantly more vulnerable to the trappings of
blocks off the western Myanmar coast. As a result, the PRCs poverty and abuse in the militarized state.”33 In one case cited in the report, a
three state-owned oil producers – China National Offshore Oil local man was arrested, beaten and imprisoned for six months for attending
Corporation, China National Petroleum Corporation, and China community-level meetings discussing the project.34 Export of natural gas is the
Petroleum and Chemical Corporation – are all implementing oil and most lucrative industry in Burma, currently accounting for 12.5% of Burma’s
gas exploration projects in Myanmar coastal waters. A feasibility GDP. 35 However, revenues from the project are likely to do nothing for the
study by China National Petroleum Corporation and Myanmar Oil country’s development but remain outside the national budget in offshore
and Gas for construction of a gas pipeline to Yunnan is also being bank accounts of military rulers, and the political and economic elite.36 At
prepared. Reportedly, the pipeline will be capable of transporting 170 the same time, the majority of people in Burma lack energy for electricity or
bcm of natural gas per year in the next 30 years. While a timetable cooking.37 As Smith notes, “unsurprisingly, in a multitude of interviews, not
for completing the construction is not available in the public domain, one villager expressed support for the pipelines.”38
the PRC reportedly plans to invest over $1 billion in the 2380-km
gas pipeline that will run from Myanmar to Kunming.27 Biofuels in Burma
In including these projects in the regional approach to interconnection, the An assessment of biofuels in Burma (2009) promotes the development of a
ADB is promoting two projects which are documented to have widespread long-term biofuel strategy with a focus on jatropha. A report entitled “Status
human rights and environmental impacts. The current gas pipeline which and Potential for the Development of Biofuels and Rural Renewable Energy
exports gas to Thailand was constructed in the 1990s and resulted in a range in Myanmar” was developed as part of the Strategic Framework for Biofuel
of human rights abuses including militarization, forced relocation without Development in the Greater Mekong Subregion, which promotes bio-fuels as
compensation, forced labor and forced portering, sexual violence, and land a solution to energy deficiency in the GMS.
confiscation. The US-based company (Unocal) managing the project at
that time in partnership with France-based Total and the Burmese military The assessment recommends that jatropha is a good candidate for biodiesel
regime, faced lawsuits for complicity in human rights abuses. In early 2006, production as it is already a well-established crop in Burma and fits with
Chevron (which absorbed Unocal) agreed to multi-million dollar settlements, several government initiatives. The assessment notes that the past four years
but human rights abuses are ongoing and were documented in late 2009.28 have seen a dramatic increase in the area of jatropha under cultivation and the
government claims to have addressed food security conflicts by restricting
The Shwe Gas project is projected to earn at least US $1 billion a year for the cultivation to road sides, farm boundaries and village edges.39
regime for the next 30 years.29 Plans for onshore and offshore natural gas and
oil production, construction of a 2800-km pipeline corridor to accommodate This is however untrue. Myanmar is pursuing energy security at the expense
dual oil and gas pipelines, and the development of a deep sea port are now of food security, human rights and environmental concerns. A report by
underway.30 The pipelines will stretch from Western Burma to Yunnan the Ethnic Community Development Forum entitled “Biofuel by Decree:
Province, China and are led by the China National Petroleum Corporation Unmasking Burma’s Bioenergy Fiasco” (2008) documents a nationwide
(CNPC) and Daewoo International (Korea).31 A recent report entitled “The crop campaign to plant five million acres with Jatropha curcas for biodiesel
Burma-China Pipelines: Human Rights Violations, Applicable Law and production which was launched in December 2005. Each state and division
Revenue Secrecy” by Earth Rights international documents widespread land was ordered to plant 500,000 acres of the industrial crop. The report states
confiscation, and cases of forced labor, arbitrary arrest, detention and torture, that “(s)ince 2006, all sectors of Burma’s society have been forced to divert
and violations of indigenous rights connected to pipeline construction.32 funds, farmlands and labor to growing jatropha. Teachers, school children,
A senior consultant at ERI, Matthew Smith states that “the most common farmers, nurses, and civil servants have been directed to spend working
9. The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes 5
hours along roadsides, at schools, hospitals, offices, religious compounds, flowing river in Southeast Asia. On Burma’s section of the Salween River,
and on farmlands formerly producing rice.”40 The report documents how the seven dams are currently proposed. The proposed Salween dams are all
campaign resulted in forced labor and land confiscation. Plantations of up to located in conflict areas where military fighting still takes place. The dam is
2,500 acres have ignored local climate and soil conditions, and been planted a very important source of power for the Mekong Power Grid as it will have
haphazardly. There were reports of crop failure ranging from 25-75%. the highest energy capacity of all the dams in Southeast Asia. The dam will
Interviews reveal that people have been fined, arrested, and threatened with submerge 870km2 of land in Shan State. Between 1996 and 1998, decades of
death for not meeting quotas, damage to plants, defying orders, or criticism military conflict in the area resulted in the forced relocation of 60,000 people
of the campaign.41 Over eight hundred “jatropha refugees” have already fled in the dam area and areas adjacent to the dam.47 The main investors for the
to Thailand from southern Shan State alone.42 Tasang Dam are EGAT International (Thailand) and the Three Gorges Group
Corporation (China).
Tasang Dam
Te ‘Asia Highway’
The GMS Mekong Power Grid is promoted under the ‘Regional Power
Interconnection and Power Trade Arrangements,’ a flagship program of the The ‘East-West Economic Corridor’ (EWEC) (or ‘Asia Highway’) is a
ADB GMS program which states its main objective as follows: “the goal of plan to establish a land route connecting the Indian Ocean and the South
cooperation in energy is to promote a commercially-based energy system that China Sea through Burma, Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam. If completed, it
reliably and competitively supplies electricity to all areas of the subregion in will be the first transportation corridor running the entire width of mainland
a manner that minimizes environmental and social costs.”43 The plan which Southeast Asia with a total distance of 1450 kilometers.48 The majority of
was first proposed in 1994 consists of a series of hydropower schemes in Laos, the infrastructure has been completed aside from ports in both Vietnam and
Burma, Cambodia and Yunnan Province, China, which will export electricity Burma, and a 40-kilometer stretch of road through an area in Karen State
to Thailand and Vietnam. A regional transmission grid will be built to connect where there are ongoing human rights abuses.49 If the road is built, it will
these schemes and the total cost for transmission and generation is estimated provide increased access to the area for the Burmese military to conflict areas
by the ADB to cost US $43 billion.44 45 Research by International Rivers in Karen. The road would also threaten a protected area in the Western Forest
demonstrates that environmental and social costs have not been minimized: complex. The Western Forest Complex includes the Kayah-Karen Montane
Rain Forests, which extend south into the Tenasserim (Tanintharyi) Division.
…so far the planning process has been poor with no participation The region contains mainland Southeast Asia’s largest remaining tropical and
by civil society groups, and little consideration of the impact of sub-tropical moist broadleaf forests. To help protect these species, the World
the dams on the environment or livelihoods. Both national and Wildlife Fund has added the Kayah-Karen Forests to its list of the planet’s
regional electricity planning processes to date have failed to meet 200 most important eco-regions.50 This is in contradiction with the GMS
international standards. As a result, electricity demand, in particular Environment Program which aims to “embed environment dimensions in the
in Thailand and Vietnam where much of the dams’ electricity will GMS economic program,” and “integrate and synergize poverty reduction
be consumed, is over-estimated and the potential contribution that and biodiversity conservation.”51
renewable and decentralized energy, energy efficiency and demand
side management could make, is not fully pursued. 46 Another part of the EWEC is a border economic zone (BEZ) planned to be
established in Mae Sot in Thailand opposite Myawaddy in Karen State where
The ADB promotes and supports the plan through hosting regular regional a special economic zone is to be created. In 2007, the Thai government was
meetings between governments, funding studies, and financing several reviewing its plan. However, in October 2010, the Thai government again
transmission lines. While not directly funded by the ADB, the master plan approved the development of a zone along the border and the construction of
includes the Tasang Dam in Shan state. The Tasang Dam (7,110 MW) is the a second bridge in Mae Sot, opposite Myawaddy. In late March 2011, there
largest of the seven proposed dams on the Salween River, the longest free- was news that the Thai cabinet was expected to decide in mid-April on the
10. 6 The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes
establishment of a 5,000-rai Thai-Burmese special economic zone in Mae Contract Farming
Sot. The Commerce Ministry is also seeking to hire experts to design an
industrial estate and advise on land utilization, a logistics park, distribution A regional economic cooperation strategy which ADB helped design and
centre and bonded warehouse. The industry minister said the government support paved the way for a plan for Thai contract farmers to manage and
wanted to get the special economic zone operating as soon as possible in cultivate more than 7 million hectares of land in Burma for plantations
order to expand trade and investment. Border trade via Mae Sot was valued including sugarcane, oil palm, cassava, beans and rubber.58 The MOU was
at 25 billion baht in 2010, with a projection of 10% growth this year.52 under the Ayeyawady-Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy
(ACMECS), an economic cooperation framework between Cambodia, Laos,
However, recent conflict in Myawaddy may delay activities. Leading up to the Burma, Thailand and Vietnam that was launched in 2004 and led by Thailand
elections, the government applied heavy pressure on ethnic ceasefire groups under the Thaksin government. A memorandum of understanding signed in
to transform into border guard forces (BGF). Fighting broke out between December 2005 designated four areas in Karen and Mon States. The key
the SPDC armed forces and DKBA Brigade 5 – a breakaway faction of the drivers were the Thai government and agribusiness. However, in 2010, The
DKBAvii that refused to transform into a BGF -- in Myawaddy and Three Ministry of Agriculture told Focus on the Global Southviii that Burma was
Pagodas Pass in the wake of the elections in early November 2010, forcing the least successful among the 3 neighboring countries because the Burmese
thousands to flee across the border into Thailand. Approximately 30,000 government did not want Thai traders to trade with ethnic groups along the
refugees have fled across the border into Thailand since the elections.53 border and so did not facilitate the issuing of Certificates of Origin for them.
The investors mentioned in an ACEMECS report (in Thai) were in fact
3.1.2 Facilitating Private Sector
mostly small and medium traders that have already been trading across the
border in Tak and Kanchunaburi. The 0 tariff did benefit them and so did the
legalization of ongoing trade. However, the largest new investor was a sugar
Investment Outside the company that invested in growing sugarcane on 6000 rai of land.59
GMS Program 4. Technical Assistance
BIMSTEC
The ADB provides no bilateral technical assistance to Burma; however the
The ADB is involved in the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral ADB funds the participation of Burma’s military generals in GMS-related
Technical and Economic Cooperation (BIMSTEC) which consists of activities and projects, including regional meetings and workshops through
Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Burma, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Thailand. The their Regional Technical Assistance Grants (RETAs).60
extent of assistance from the ADB to Burma as part of this program is
not clear.54 However Burma is currently the focal point for the energy and From 1 January 1968 to 31 December 2009, consultants were involved in
agriculture committees. 55 Furthermore, the 13th Ministerial Meeting of 20,087 contracts for ADB TA projects worth $2.52 billion. During the same
BIMSTEC was held in the new capital of Burma, Naypidaw, on 22 January period, consultants from Myanmar were involved in 23 contracts for ADB TA
2011. Interestingly, at the meeting, the members reiterated an agreement “to projects worth $1.28 million.61
promote utilization of natural gas as clean energy source … and called for
more cooperation among the Member Countries to promote governmental
and private investment in natural gas infrastructure.”56 At present, the ADB
Focus on the Global South is a program of progressive development policy research and
viii
continues to liaise/consult with BIMSTEC for possible future activities.57
practice that works on regional and global policy analysis, micro-macro linking and advocacy
work (www.focusweb.org).
The DKBA broke away from the Karen National Liberation Army, the armed wing of the
vii
Karen National Union and signed a ceasefire with the Burmese military in 1995.
11. The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes 7
5. Reviewing Economic Policies Environmental Performance Assessment
In 2006, the Myanmar Environmental Performance Assessment was published
Staff from the ADB have joined “Article IV Consultations” conducted by the as part of a broader program called the National Performance Assessment
International Monetary Fund. IMF Article IV consultations reviewed a range and Strategic Environment Framework of Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS)
of economic policies in its member countries. The last consultation in Burma supported by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and the
was held on January 2011 and the ADB stated that they were involved as an ADB.
observer.62
The report was done in collaboration with the National Commission for
6. Other ADB Activities Environmental Affairs and national environmental organizations in Burma,
as well as other international organizations, including the Institute of Global
Environmental Strategies and the National Institute for Environmental Studies
Cyclone Nargis of Japan. The Myanmar EPA provides some valuable baseline data covering
forest resources, biodiversity, land degradation, management of water
In May 2008, Cyclone Nargis left 140,000 people dead and destroyed the resources, waste management, air pollution and climate change. 68 However,
homes and livelihoods of two million more.63 The ADB and World Bank gave in the EPA there is no mention of the many environmental concerns in Burma
support for relief and reconstruction after Cyclone Nargis through ASEAN, related to large-scale development projects (i.e., mines, large dams, large
which was a member of the Tripartite Core Group (TCG). The TCG was scale commercial agriculture, pipeline construction). The report also does
set up by ASEAN, the UN, and the Burmese government to coordinate not mention the traditional natural resource management systems practiced
needs assessments and receive aid from donors. The ADB sent a number by ethnic people throughout the country, which have traditionally supported
of experts to contribute to technical assistance needed for the initial needs their lives and ensured that resources were not depleted.
assessment in cyclone-affected areas. The TCG released the resulting ‘Post-
7. Tavoy Deep Sea Port
Nargis Joint Assessment’ (PONJA) report in July 2008 which claimed to
be a comprehensive assessment of the situation in the areas affected by the
cyclone.64 Based on the report, the UN issued a call to the international donor
community to make contributions of US $1 billion for recovery work in On November 2nd 2010, five days before the elections in Burma, Thailand’s
Burma over a three-year period.65 largest construction company Italian-Thai Development signed a framework
agreement with the Burmese government to develop a deep-sea port,
Civil society groups based in the Thai-Burmese border raised concerns that industrial estate and road link to Thailand. The project is part of the South-
while the PONJA report detailed the impact of the cyclone and resulting South economic corridor linking the proposed deep-sea port to Thailand and
recovery needs in many sectors and cyclone-affected areas, it was not Malaysia. The development of the project is supported by the five countries
comprehensive or objective as the government limited the scope and (Cambodia, Laos, Burma, Thailand and Vietnam) under the Ayeyawady-
assessment of the report.66 These groups published a report entitled ‘Post- Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy (ACMECS) which is,
Nargis Analysis: The Other Side of the Story,’ which recognizes the goodwill as mentioned earlier, an economic cooperation program that the ADB helped
of the international community in making its assessment as the main guiding to set up.69 The project is worth US $8.6 billion and includes a road link
document for international assistance. However, the report highlights issues through a conflict area in Tennasserim division (where the Karen National
not covered in the PONJA report such as evidence that the SPDC in some Liberation Armyix (KNLA) operates), to Kanchunaburi in eastern Thailand.70
cases ‘actively interfered with the distribution of aid to survivors; diverted The project, if it goes ahead, will also have serious environmental impacts;
donated goods for their own use or for resale; arrested local volunteers who however, full finance has not yet been secured.
were working to bury the dead; and required villagers to perform forced
labor.’67 ix
The KNLA is the armed wing of the Karen National Union.
12. 8 The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes
There is no evidence that the ADB is involved directly, although allegedly
they may have helped to facilitate it informally. The seaport is part of the GMS
South South Economic Corridor and a grandiose powerpoint presentation by
9. RECOMMENDATIONS
Italian –Thai uses GMS economic corridor language.71 However, while the Until the people of Burma can meaningfully participate in development
GMS program was started almost entirely by the ADB -- it is one of the decisions, preconditions for responsible investment are in place, and adverse
most influential economic cooperation programs guiding investment and impacts can be mitigated, then the ADB should refrain from any form of new
development in the Mekong -- the expansion of the program has increased engagement with Burma.
the influence of other actors such as Mekong governments, other international
financial institutions, academics and competing regional bodies (e.g., the If they do engage (i.e., fund, facilitate, administer) in Burma, the ADB must
Association of Southeast Asian Nations - ASEAN) on the program.72 follow the International Financial Corporation’s ‘Sustainability Framework,’,
and adhere to apply their own environmental and social safeguard policies,
8. CONCLUSION when they do engage, including safeguards on Involuntary Resettlement,
Environment and Indigenous People, as well as the ADB’s Accountability
Mechanism and Public Communications Policy.
Burma still lacks sound economic policy, and the state is unwilling to reconcile
with ethnic armed groups. Foreign direct investment in Burma is concentrated If the ADB is involved in any future national development planning for
in energy and extractive sectors and often results in militarization, displacement Burma, they must make sure it is based on proper needs assessments and a
and human rights abuses in ethnic areas. The facilitation and mobilization of participatory consultation process which ensures that it furthers the interest
private investment is having and will continue to have a major impact on the of the people.
environment and communities, particularly in ethnic areas where the majority
of natural resources remain. Current foreign investment is not reducing
poverty but reinforcing the current power structures, and the vast majority of
citizens in Burma are excluded from the benefits of development.
Until the people of Burma can meaningfully participate in development
decisions, preconditions for responsible investment are in place, and adverse
impacts can be mitigated, then the ADB should refrain from any form of new
engagement with Burma. If they do engage (i.e., fund, facilitate, administer)
in Burma, the ADB must follow the International Financial Corporation’s
‘Sustainability Framework,’ and adhere to their own environmental and
social safeguard policies, including safeguards on Involuntary Resettlement,
Environment and Indigenous People, as well as the ADB’s Accountability
Mechanism and Public Communications Policy.
13. The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes 9
Endnotes
1
Yuki Akimoto, “Poised to Engage: The ADB in Burma,” in Focus Asien,Vol. 14
Voice of America, “US Dismisses Governmental Chang in Burma as
34 Asienhaus, 2009. Immaterial,” 30 March 2011, http://www.voanews.com/english/news/
2
Sean Turnell, “Burma’s Economy 2010: A Fresh Look at Some Elemental asia/US-Dismisses-Governmental-Change-in-Burma-as-Immaterial-
Issues,” Burma Economic Watch, Macquarie University, September 2010. 118959249.html
3
President’s Inaugural Speech Fails to Inspire Hope in Burma’s New 15
BBC News, “ASEAN says Burma sanctions should be dropped,” 17 January
“Democracy,” Burma Partnership, Weekly Highlights, 28 March – 3 April. 2011, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12203719
4
Maw Maw San, “USDP Claims Massive Win”, Myanmar Times, http:// 16
BBC News, “ASEAN says Burma sanctions should be dropped,” 17 January
www.mmtimes.com/2010/news/549/news54901.html, 15 – 21 November 2011, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12203719
2011. 17
Mizzima,”Do Not Lift Economic Sanctions:NLD,” 10 February 2011,
5
Elizabeth Hughes, “Departing Strongman of Burma Unlikely to Fully http://www.mizzima.com/news/inside-burma/4866-do-not-lift-economic-
Relinquish Power,” 05 April 2011 http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ sanctions-nld.html
news/world/departing-strongman-of-burma-than-shwe-unlikely-to-fully- 18
Mizzima news, “Austrian Business Delegation Visited Burma,” 28 March
relinquish-power/story-e6frg6so-1226033586103 2011,http://www.mizzima.com/news/world/5072-austrian-business-
6
Voice of America, “US Dismisses Governmental Chang in Burma as delegation-visited-burma.html
Immaterial,” 30 March 2011, http://www.voanews.com/english/news/ 19
Sean Turnell, “Burma’s Economy 2010: A Fresh Look at Some Elemental
asia/US-Dismisses-Governmental-Change-in-Burma-as-Immaterial- Issues,” Burma Economic Watch, Macquarie University, September 2010.
118959249.html 20
Asian Development Bank, letter, “Responses to issues raised in the civil
7
Kyaw Kyaw, “Life Behind Parliaments Stonewalls,” Democratic Voice of society petition,” July 23 2007.
Burma, 4 April 2011. http://www.dvb.no/analysis/life-behind-parliaments- 21
Asian Development Bank, letter, “Responses to issues raised in the civil
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8
Burma Partnership, “History Repeats Itself in Burma – Dictatorship 22
Asian Development Bank, Building a Sustainable Energy Future: The
Rebrands Itself Again,” 30 March 2011 http://www.burmapartnership. Greater Mekong Subregion, ADB, Philippines, 2009, p xxiv.
org/2011/03/history-repeats-itself-in-burma-%E2%80%93-dictatorship- 23
Asian Development Bank, Building a Sustainable Energy Future: The
rebrands-itself-again/ Greater Mekong Subregion, ADB, Philippines, 2009, p. 62.
9
Democratic Voice of Burma, “Major Flaws in the 2008 Constitution,” http:// 24
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12 April 2011. 25
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10
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Chiang Mai, Thailand 2011, http://www.nd-burma.org/hr-reports/other- 26
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report/item/39-election-report-2010.html Greater Mekong Subregion, ADB, Philippines, 2009, p 62.
11
Ahunt Phone Myant, “Parliament Snubs Ethnic Harmony Bill,” Democratic 27
Asian Development Bank, Building a Sustainable Energy Future: The
Voice of Burma, 28 March 2011, http://www.dvb.no/news/parliament- Greater Mekong Subregion, ADB, Philippines, 2009, p 62.
snubs-ethnic-harmony-bill/14991 28
Shwe Gas, 2011.
12
Transnational Institute, “A Changing Ethnic Landscape: Analysis of 29
Shwe Gas Movement, Corridor of Power: China’s Trans-Burma Oil and
Burma’s 2010 Polls,” Burma Policy Briefing No 4. December 2010. Gas Piplelines, September 2009.
13
Sean Turnell, “Burma’s Economy 2010: A Fresh Look at Some Elemental 30
Shwe Gas, 2011.
Issues,” Burma Economic Watch, Macquarie University, September 2010.
14. 10 The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes
31
Matthew F. Smith, “Bad Business for Burma,” International Herald Tribune, 47
Shan SAPAWA, Environmental Organization. "Roots and Resilience:
4 April 2011. Tasang Dam Threatens War-Torn Shan Communities," 2009, http://www.
32
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April 2011. 49
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33
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4 April 2011. 50
http://www.earthrights.org/publication/east-west-economic-corridor
34
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35
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37
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39
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40
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43
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45
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15. The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes 11
62
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63
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oxfam.org.au/resources/filestore/originals/OAus-
CitizensGuideMekong-1108.pdf
16. 12 The ADB in Burma: Behind the Scenes
85-A Masikap Extension
Brgy. Central, Diliman
Quezon City 1101 Philippines
T + 632 436 1858
F + 632 921 4412
secretariat@forum-adb.org
info@forum-adb.org
www.forum-adb.org
The NGO Forum on ADB is an Asian-led network of civil society
organizations and community groups that has been monitoring
policies, projects and programs of the Asian Development Bank.
The Forum does not accept funds or any other grants from the ADB.
Salween River, Thai-Burma border (Photo taken by S. Bourne)