Friday, 23 November 2012 14:30 KNG News - Kachin News Group
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An Arizona congressman has stated that the Burma army has committed human rights violations against the ethnic Kachin.
“The
atrocities committed against the Kachin by the Burma Army may amount to
war crimes or crimes against humanity” said Trent Franks, co-chairman
of the International Religious Freedom Caucus. The conservative
Republican lawmaker's comments appeared in an opinion piece published by
the Washington Times newspaper last Monday.
Franks's
article highlighting the ongoing conflict in Kachin state coincided
with US President Barak Obama's historic visit to Burma this week. “The
plight of the Kachin is often overlooked by the international community,
and humanitarian conditions are seriously deteriorating in Kachin State
and in the Kachin refugee camps,” he wrote.
While
noting the series of reforms put in place by Thein Sein's nominally
civilian government Franks called for continued vigilance. The US “must
be careful to take no action that could be interpreted as endorsement of
any misconduct or human rights lapses by the Burmese government or
President Thein Sein, particularly while the Burmese government is still
dominated by a military with a very brutal past”.
Franks also called on President Obama to continue to advocate for the rights of Burma's ethnic minorities. “With the additional credibility and validation that a presidential visit gives to the Burmese government, specific reform agenda items should be on the table, including the cessation of violence against the Kachin, Rohingya and other minority groups”.
Franks also called on President Obama to continue to advocate for the rights of Burma's ethnic minorities. “With the additional credibility and validation that a presidential visit gives to the Burmese government, specific reform agenda items should be on the table, including the cessation of violence against the Kachin, Rohingya and other minority groups”.
Franks's
article appeared the same day a group of Kachin environmentalists and
farmers handed members of Obama's entourage a petition to cease all
funding to the Hukaung (or Hugawng) in western Kachin State. The
government considers the area to be tiger reserve even though it’s
doubtful there are any more tigers left.
The
Hukaung valley also includes large-scale plantations operated by
cronies of the previous military regime. Critics charge that the reserve
is serving as a fig leaf to mask the environmental destructive
agricultural and mining practices of crony controlled firms most notably
the Yuzana Corporation. The firm is accused of illegally seizing more
than 200,000 acres from farmers in 2006.
Since
the reserve's creation in 2001, the US federal government's Fish and
Wildlife Service (FWS) has spent nearly $400,000 supporting efforts of
the New York based Wildlife Conservation Society. This has included a
$59,077 grant from FWS to support “anti-poaching patrols” in 2010. The
patrols have been a source of controversy as the anti-poaching units
have been granted the authority to shoot at sight any suspected poachers
in the valley.
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