PDF - Myanmar Eleven E
Transcription
PDF - Myanmar Eleven E
EPA PE R NATIONAL: SUU KYI AGAINST PR SYSTEM ✪2 First INDEPENDENT English daily www.elevenmyanmar.com TUESDAY, November 11, 2014 INSIDE New land use law ‘incomplete’ NATIONAL The plight of the Rohingya ✪4 BUSINESS South Korean giants plan massive factories ✪5 ASEAN+ EPA Indonesia ‘cannot afford a nationalistic policy’ ✪8 A farmer ploughs his field with his buffalo in front of the towering Buddhist Uppatasanti Pagoda in Nay Pyi Taw. Ah Ngae Htwe MYANMAR ELEVEN CRITICS have attacked the new land use law, saying it fails to reduce the Army’s control and speculation which deprives the majority of Myanmar nationals from land ownership. In a statement released on November 6, the Farmland Investigation Commission criticised that the draft law is a devoid of democratic practices, couldn’t protect the interests of the farmers, and may bring about more complications. “The existing law and new draft include many points regarding centralisation. The General Administration Department will be in charge of matters relating to land. As it is under the control of the Ministry of Home Affairs which is also under the control of the commander-in-chief, the matters are still under the army’s control,” said Nu Nu Aung from the 88 Generation Peace and Open Society. He joined a workshop with the representatives of farmers’ networks from regions and states, community-based organisations and civic organisations during November 1-2. Nu Nu Aung called for a master plan, which would require the merger of various departments under several ministries. At present, the Forest Department manages forest areas, while the Ministry of Agricultural and Irrigation oversees farmland. Urban land development is controlled jointly by the Settlement and Land Record Department, local development affairs committees and the Ministry of Home Affairs’ General Administration Department. Tun Myint Aung from the political group’s farmers affairs department noted that the draft fails to highlight measures to prevent land price speculation. “It’s crucial for any country to have a complete set of land use policy, as it concerns all people,” said Tun Myint Aung. “Our country has experienced many landless issues and this draft law does not take people into consideration. It doesn’t include provisions on land allocation for real low-cost housing development. The government has said such projects are happening all over the country but as we know, the units are beyond the grassroots’ affordability. Only the rich and speculators can afford them.” There are also calls for the effective plan to curb speculation, rising from the turning of farmland into urban development projects. One representative from a civic organisation noted that the government should also take into account the situation in 2040 when the population is expected to reach 100 million. Then, how much land would remain for the future generations, he asked. The draft law contains 10 categories of land. Vacant land is one of them. At a seminar on October 18, Aung Naing, director from the Union Attorney General’s Office, said the state had no reserved land and a lot of land pieces were under the management of government ministries. Myo Thant, a member of 88 Generation’s farmers affairs department, said that the drafting started in 2013 and the draft was available for download nearly two months ago. The draft stipulates public hearing in 18 places. “The issue is too complicated for ordinary people to understand, as all land is under the management of ministries concerned,” Myo Thant said. “More farmland can be confiscated for housing projects or others. I don’t know what they can be, but we will definitely see more development projects. ART&CULTURE Naga festival to be held in two places next year ✪10 NATIONAL 2 MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 Suu Kyi against PR system EFFORTS to introduce the proportional representative (PR) system is aimed at barring the NLD from winning a landslide victory in the upcoming general elections, said Aung San Suu Kyi, chairperson of the National League for Democracy (NLD) at a mass meeting in Loikaw of Kayah State on November 8. “The country has a lot of political parties. Some want to cooperate while others have no desire to cooperate. Some thought that the chance of winning the seats in the 1990 elections was very narrow as there were many democratic parties. The NLD won with a landslide victory in the 1990 elections thanks to people’s rightful thoughts. I strongly believed that my party would also secure such victory in the future,” she added. “PR is a dysfunctional system. I would like to explain why this system should not be installed. The main point is that there is a reason to think that the approval of PR system may hinder the NLD from winning a landslide victory. I am saying about it honestly. Other people may think so like us,” said Aung San Suu Kyi. EMG MYANMAR ELEVEN Suu Kyi is surrounded by a large number of supporters in Kayah State. “I never look down on people. The voting right is only in the hands of people whatever voting system is practised. No need to be anxious about any election system if the people have the right to cast their votes with their own conviction. I would like to send a message to the people. The matters related to the electoral system are being discussed at the parliament. It is not the right time to introduce the PR system. I don’t mean that it is not appropriate in the future. I would like to request those concerned to listen to our voices,” she said. Likewise, it needs to review the views of the representatives who and the political parties that favour the introduction of PR system. Only then, the people can decide who is right and who have good intentions, she added. The Kayah State tour dismissed speculation that ethnic groups are losing faith in Suu Kyi and that her support is declining due to her failure to speak out against fighting in ethnic areas. Large crowds were seen everywhere she went to in the state. It was estimated that tens of thousands attended her rally in Loikaw, the capital city. She met residents from 23 villages who said their major problems involve flooding, severe unemployment and destitution. Suu Kyi promised to bring the issues to respective ministries. “Our National League for Democracy has limited power. We are just a political party. We are not a government administration but we still have many capabilities as we have the strength and trust from the public,” she said. This is the third time Suu Kyi visited Kayah State as NLD leader. New joust over sea dispute expected at Asean AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Yangon Fresh diplomatic sparring over who owns what in the South China Sea is likely to break out this week at a major regional summit in Myanmar, after a year in which China jacked up tensions in the resource-rich waters. Rival claims have gnawed away at ties between Southeast Asian nations including Vietnam and the Philippines and regional powerhouse China, which claims nearly all of the sea, including waters near its smaller neighbours’ shores. The issue has also become a key testing ground for diplomacy between China and the United States, which has cosied up to the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) as part of a wider eastwards foreign policy “pivot”. Leaders including US President Barack Obama, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will gather in Naypyidaw for the two-day Asean summit from Wednesday which also takes in an expanded list of dignitaries for the East Asian Summit. When he meets Asean leaders Obama “will highlight US leadership in addressing maritime territorial disputes,” according to National Security Advisor Susan Rice. Other security issues, such as countering the rise of selfproclaimed Islamic State and the Ebola epidemic, will also be on the table, she added. Beijing has been accused of aggression after boosting naval patrols in waters contested with the Philippines and positioning an oil rig in seas disputed with Vietnam in May, sparking deadly anti-Chinese riots. It has given ground on lowlevel talks with Asean towards a multilateral, binding code of conduct to governing the seas. But analysts and diplomats are sceptical of a tangible deal, as China prefers bilateral talks with its smaller neighbours, allowing it to exert its massive economic and political leverage in a region dependent on Chinese trade. “I don’t see any breakthrough in Nay Pyi Taw or anytime soon,” one Southeast Asian diplomat told AFP ahead of the summit. “Let’s face the reality that it’s a complex issue and in addition, Asean is dealing with China, a major Asian and world power.” “Some rabbit might be pulled out of the hat to impress the end of year summit meetings, but nothing substantial has occurred or is likely to occur,” Southeast Asia expert Carl Thayer. While China singes relations, the US has moved in to bolster its alliances. Obama, who arrives in Myanmar from a major Beijing summit, will meet Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung in Nay Nyi Taw. The meeting comes after a US agreement to partially ease a 40-year ban on arms sales to its one-time war foe, citing some “modest” progress in human rights. In April, Washington also signed a defence pact with the Philippines, which is outraged that China has effectively taken over the contested Scarborough Shoal. That deal will eventually allow thousands of US troops to be stationed in the country. But American efforts to make friends have irked China, which insists it is seeking its own amicable resolution to disputes in its neighbourhood. “So the region is condemned to a complex game of diplomatic and military competition for the next few decades at least,” said Bill Hayton the author of “The South China Sea - the struggle for power in Asia”. MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 3 National 4 Yangon plans $20m auto traffic light control system A new traffic light control system worth US$20 million will be installed in Yangon, according to Yangon City Development Committee (YCDC)’s Roads and Bridges Department. The system will feed data from 75 road points in the city to the control centre and traffic lights will be controlled accordingly to the condition at each intersection. The government wants to deal with traffic congestion in three or six months, said an officer from the department. Traffic lights are installed at 170 points in the city area. Initially, the city planned to install a control system this month which would cover 10 intersections, with financial aid from Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). A automatic control system was recently installed at the busy 8-mile junction area and it could reduce traffic congestion by 25 per cent, the officer said. Traffic authorities will also take action against law violators. YCDC is also seeking contractors for two high-rise car parking buildings, to reduce the number of vehicles on the road. The Ministry of Commerce is reportedly in discussion with JICA, Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the World Bank, seeking financial aid for the construction of car parking lots and high-rise car parking buildings in Yangon, Nationwide ceasefire deal The Pa-O National Liberation Organisation (PNLO) is going to petition the Nationwide Ceasefire Coordination Team (NCCT) to adopt mutually agreed points by which ethnic armed associations will have to abide within the nationwide ceasefire deal, Khun Myint Tun, chairman of the PNLO, said. “The government and the concerned organisations need to respect the points mutually agreed upon. The remaining ceasefire organisations must abide by mutual respect. This point needs to be signed, adding it to the nationwide ceasefire deal,” the chairman of the PNLO said on November 8. “Now, we have a problem of territory issue. All parties involved in the truce agreement including the government must deal with the problem (territory dispute) urgently so that the truce negotiations can continue,” Khun Myint Tun said. Clashes broke out between the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) and the PNLO in the latter’s controlled area in early October causing territory dispute between both sides. The Union Peacemaking Work Committee (UPWC) and the NCCT are still negotiating the nationwide ceasefire deal in order to finalise it. It is likely to hold the next round of negotiations at the end of November. The plight of the Rohingya Myanmar ethnic Rohingya Muslims in Japan stage a rally outside of the Myanmar embassy in Tokyo on November 4. AFP NEWS DIGEST MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 AGENCIES MUSLIM Rohingya from Myanmar are experiencing hard time, as Thailand is pushing some boat people back out to sea while Myanmar has rejected a request from Bangladesh to immediately begin accepting back Muslim refugees living in camps across the border. “President Thein Sein said that Myanmar stands ready to receive the refugees from Bangladesh by our four rules,” presidential spokesman Ye Htut said on Facebook, referring to rules for citizenship that include proof that both parents were Myanmar citizens. Bangladesh is trying to restart a repatriation process that stalled in 2005 to return Rohingya Muslims who have fled Myanmar during the past two decades. But the Myanmar government and the mostly Buddhist ethnic community of the western frontier state of Rakhine reject the Muslim group’s claim to citizenship, and refer to them as “Bengalis.” Thein Sein and Bangladesh President Abdul Hamid met in Beijing on Sunday ahead of an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting. “He (Thein Sein) said that it’s impossible to receive them back urgently,” Ye Htut said. Rohingya do not qualify for full Myanmar citizenship by birth as their ethnic identity is not recognised under the country’s 1982 citizenship law. Myanmar has agreed to receive more than 2,000 refugees from Bangladesh whose claims have been verified, although the government has disputed Bangladeshi announcements calling the refugees Rohingya. There are more than 200,000 Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, including about 30,000 who are documented and staying in two official camps in Cox’s Bazar, according to the UN Refugee Agency and the Refugee Relief and Rehabilitation Commission in Bangladesh. In another development, a large number of Rohingya have fled Myanmar recently. “On average around 900 people left by boat from the middle of last month. We saw a major maritime exodus of nearly 10,000 people,” said Chris Lewa of the Arakan Project, a Rohingya advocacy group, adding that increasing desperation was one reason for the departures. Around 259 people were found at sea on Saturday and were arrested for illegal entry. Authorities in Thailand’s Kapoe district said it was unclear whether any of the group were Rohingya but interviews with some of the group showed they were heading for Malaysia to find work or, in the women’s’ cases, join their husbands. The 259 will be put back on boats and sent back to Myanmar, said Police Colonel Sanya Prakobphol, head of Kapoe district police. “They are Muslims from Myanmar ... They are illegal migrants,” Sanya told Reuters by telephone. “If they come in then we must push them back ... once they have crossed the sea border into Myanmar then that’s considered pushing them back. What they do next is their problem.” Tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims have fled Myanmar’s Rakhine state since 2012, when violent clashes with ethnic Rakhine Buddhists killed hundreds and made about 140,000 homeless. Many were Rohingya, who now often live in apartheid-like conditions and have little or no access to jobs, schools or healthcare. The boats often sail from Myanmar and Bangladesh to Thailand where, as Reuters reported last year, human trafficking-gangs hold thousands of boat people in brutal jungle camps until relatives pay ransoms to secure their release. Testimonies from Bangladeshi and Rohingya survivors in an October Reuters Special Report provided evidence of a dramatic shift in human-trafficking tactics. Sanya said the 259 people were currently being held at a community hall and that his team were “looking after them like relatives” but that they would soon be put back on boats. “Who will feed them? I’m struggling day to day to feedthem,” said Sanya. “No country wants an outsider to come in to their house.” Thailand was downgraded in June to the lowest category in the US State Department’s annual ranking of the world’s worst human-trafficking centres, putting it in the same category as North Korea and the Central African Republic. The same month, the Thai military vowed to “prevent and suppress human trafficking”, after having seized power from an elected government on May 22. Slain reporter Par Gyi’s funeral held in Yangon MYANMAR ELEVEN The body of freelance journalist Aung Kyaw Naing also called Par Gyi, was brought from Mon State to Yangon and laid to rest in a tomb at Yay Way cemetery on Friday. His body was conveyed to Yangon after being exhumed from a shallow grave in a field in Kyaikmaraw Township in Mon State on November 5. More than 500 people, including Buddhist monks and members of political and social organisations, attended the funeral of the slain reporter. Along the route from Mawlamyine Hospital to the Yangon city, Par Gyi’s body was flanked by members from township branches of the opposition National League for Democracy and social organisations and political activists for the safety and convenience of the body conveying. “In Mawlamyine, eight monks tried to stop us carrying the dead body as they thought it was unholiness for the town. When we were about to leave Bago, three monks tried to stop us,” said Naw Ohn Hla from Democracy and Peace Myanmar Women Network, who joined the procession. “How we will continue to react to the murder of Ko Par Gyi, we are still discussing. His wife Ma Than Dar is poor health.” The funeral was also attended NLD’s patron Tin Oo and members, local and foreign correspondents. NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi, political parties and civic organisations sent wreaths. While the funeral was taking place, the attendants chanted slogans calling for justice of Par Gyi’s death and action against murderers. The wife of Par Gyi sent a complaint to Kyaikaraw Township Police Station in Mon State on October 19 saying her husband had been missing since September 30. The military released a statement on October 23, confirming the death and saying Par Gyi had been shot after seizing a weapon from a soldier in an attempt to escape. According to the army’s report, Par Gyi had been buried about 800 meters from the southern part of Shwewarchaung village. KYAT EXCHANGE Buy Sell US $ 1,012 1,023 Euro ¤ 1,255 1,273 782 793 BUSINESS South Korean giants plan massive factories Aye Myat Mon, Thet Htar MYANMAR ELEVEN South Korea’s business groups – Hu-Chems and Taekwang– are planning joint investment of US$600 million to construct factories on 173 acres of land to produce business and consumer products in Thilawa special economic zone. They said the projects will create 500 jobs for locals. The construction of the factories will start next year and is expected to take one year for completion. Singapore $ Source: KBZ Bank A factory will start manufacturing chemicals and related products for hospital use, businesses and other consumer products, which will be sold in the domestic market as well as exported. The area will also house a fertiliser production 5 MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 facility. The Taekwang and Hu-Chems group said it would invest US$100 million in Myanmar to set up a 85-acre shoe factory in an industrial zone near the Hanthawaddy International Airport in Bago. China’s domestic issues blamed for illegal timber trade MYANMAR ELEVEN SPIN LAUNCHED Chevrolet has recently launched its latest model “Spin” at its new 3S centre in Yangon. A global subcompact seven-seater MPV (Multipurpose Vehicle), Spin is designed to offer space, comfort, versatility, efficiency and superior ride and handling in an edgy, contemporary and muscular design package. The Spin is affordable, in terms of price and ownership cost – an important consideration for an emerging market like Myanmar. Combined FDI to Myanmar reached US$49 billion MYANMAR ELEVEN Myanmar’s aggregate foreign investment has exceeded US$49 billion, including over US$3 billion approved in this year, according to the Directorate of Investment and Companies Administration. The agency, which keeps track on foreign direct investment (FDI), the investment value as of September 30, 2014, rose by US$3.68 billion from US$46.22 billion as of March 31, 2014. This year, investors from 17 foreign countries asked permissions to invest in Myanmar including China, Thailand, Singapore, Britain, Korea, Malaysia, the Netherlands, India, Japan, the Philippines, Canada, Libya, Brunei, Luxembourg, Sweden and Samoa. Among the countries that sought investment permissions, Singapore made the highest investment value in Myanmar, followed by China, Thailand, Britain, the Netherlands and Canada. Since the foreign invest- ment law was effective, foreign countries have been allowed to invest in many business sectors such as energy, petroleum and natural gas, production, mining, transportation and communication, hotels and tourism, real estate, livestock and fisheries, agriculture, industrial zone, construction and other service sectors. Among them, the energy sector sees the most foreign investment interest. If foreign-based companies want to invest in Myanmar, they have to register their companies first at the Directorate of Investment and Companies Administration and then propose the Myanmar Investment Commission the type of business they want to invest in. The Myanmar Investment Commission will approve the proposals and give permissions to the foreign companies based on the recommendation and scrutiny from related regional and state governments and related ministries and organisations. China is failing to control the illegal timber trade despite repeated requests from Myanmar, said the Union Minister of Environmental Conservation and Forestry Win Tun. Fear of Chinese unemployment and the demand for raw materials are preventing action, he added. “I have requested that the minister of State Forestry Administration of China and the regional government of Yunnan Province ban the illegal import of Myanmar’s timber. Also, I have asked the Chinese Ambassador to Myanmar to end the illicit timber trade using maps and photos as evidence,” he said. “Although the Central Government of China does not seem to support the illicit trade, the Yunnan administration prioritises its people’s employment and the supply of raw materials,” he said. Timber from Myanmar is being illegally traded to other neighbouring countries but illicit exports to Thailand are much lower than those to China. There is a furniture trade in Ruili, the Myanmar-China border city, valued at millions of yuan. Logs from Myanmar are vital to China where logging is banned, according to Ruili residents. A lot of illegal traders from China came to Myanmar from June 2011 when conflict between the Myanmar military and Kachin Independence Army started. However, after three years of deforestation in Myanmar, fewer Chinese vehicles are coming to Myanmar to carry logs back to China. Business 6 MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam to review progress in Triangle Area VIETIANE TIMES Laos will host a summit meeting to review progress on the Cambodia-LaosVietnam Development Triangle Area (CLV-DTA), scheduled to take place in Vientiane on November 24-25. This month’s summit was agreed to at the last CLVDTA Summit, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, when Laos was appointed to host the 8th meeting of the grouping. The three countries will meet to review their development successes in the Triangle Area and to discuss future cooperation. It is envisaged that the Triangle Area will continue to be developed on a basis of cooperation, with funds to be mobilised from development partners for use in implementing various projects and the master plan for socio-economic development in the region from 2010-2020. The Lao Ministry of Foreign Affairs, other ministries and the provincial authorities of Champassak, Xekong, Saravan and Attapeu – which are part of the Triangle Area - are now preparing for the summit meeting. Work concerning security, protocol, vehicle provision, and venue preparation is set for completion on schedule. The Cambodia-LaosVietnam Development Triangle Area was established in 1999 and initially involved seven provinces that shared borders in the triangle area between the three countries. The Triangle Area now covers 13 provinces and an area of 144,600 square kilometres, with a combined population of 6.7 million. The grouping holds summit meetings biennially, with each of the three countries taking it in turn to host the event. US$577 million jade export in 2014-2015 fiscal year MYANMAR ELEVEN Myanmar recorded US$577 million in gem sales during the 2014-2015 fiscal year, US$94 million less than that of the same period of last fiscal year. Jade is mainly exported to China, Hong Kong and India and also there are sales of jade jew- ellries through gems emporiums held in foreign countries. Japan also purchases Myanmar jade. According to Lower House Parliament meeting on March 10, 2014, percentage of tax on jade, ruby, sapphire, diamond, emerald, and other precious gems has increased to 30 per cent. In 2010-2011 fiscal year, more than US$2204 million worth of jade was exported, 2011-2012 fiscal year– over US$34 million, 2012-2013 – over US$297 million, and 2013-2014 fiscal year – over US$1011 million. In 20112012 fiscal year, about 47,603 tons of jade were mined, 20122013 fiscal year – 21,032 tons, and from April to June 2014 – Lao hydro firm plans Thai issue Somluck Srimalee THE NATION Laotian hydropower company EDL-Generation plans to invest US$1 billion (US$32.70 bilion) between 2015 and 2020 to boost production capacity from 881 megawatts to 2,272MW. To raise 6.5 billion baht of that, EDL-Gen will issue debentures in Thailand’s capital market next month. The debentures will have tenors of five to 10 years with interest rates of 5-5.5 per cent per annum, the company’s deputy managing director and chief financial officer, Dr Bounsalong Southidara, told a news conference last week. The plan is to double annual revenue by 2020, he said. “We will be the first firm in Laos to issue debentures in Thailand’s capital market,” Bounsalong said. “We are also studying issuing debentures in Laos’ capital market and other countries in Asean such as Singapore and Malaysia, once the capital market opens up after the Asean Economic Community becomes effective in 2015.” Twin Pine Consulting managing director Adisorn Singhsacha, EDL-Gen’s financial adviser, said the debenture issue would be separated into two or three lots with tenors between five and 10 years. This will depend on market demand. EDL-Gen is a major private hydroelectric power generator in Laos. The company has total production capacity of 881MW, of which 397MW is sold to Electricite du Laos (EDL), which in turn sells power to the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand (Egat). EDL-Gen has registered capital of 4.9 trillion kip, 75 per cent held by EDL, 5.8 per cent by Ratch-Lao Services Co, and 4.31 per cent by RH International (Singapore) Corporation as of September 29. Ratch-Lao Services and RH International (Singapore) are subsidiaries of Ratchaburi Electricity Generating Holding. EDL-Gen recorded revenue of 1.32 trillion kip and net profit of 971.74 billion kip last year. In the first half of this year, it reported revenue of 502.41 billion kip and net profit of 326.98 billion kip. The company is one of three listed on the Lao Securities Exchange (LSX) and accounts for about 80 per cent of the total market capitalisation of the exchange. Bounsalong said that after issuing debentures worth Bt6.5 billion in Thailand’s capital market, the company’s debt-toequity ratio would increase from 0.2:1 to 0.4:1. This would leave room to issue debentures in other capital markets, including Thailand’s, to support its $1-billion 2015-20 investment plan. “If we issued debentures totalling $1 billion, our debt-to- about 3,443 tons, according to the Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development. At the emporium held in Nay Pyi Taw from October 16 to 19 this year, over 6,000 lots of gems and jade were sold with open tender system, according to Myanmar Gems Emporium Central Committee. equity ratio would still be lower than 2:1,” he said. Associate Prof Dethphouvang Moularat, chairman and CEO of the LSX, said this would be the first time a private Laotian firm has raised funds in Thailand’s capital market. “EDL-Gen is one of the listed com-panies in the Lao Securities Exchange that has enough financial strength to raise capital in this region,” he said. The debenture issue is awaiting approval from the Public Debt Management Office of the Thai Finance Ministry. Once it gets that, the company will make a filing to Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission for its approval. EDL-Gen expects the process will be complete this month and it will be able to issue the debentures in December, Adisorn said. Earlier, Twin Pine Consulting appointed three banks as joint lead arrangers for the debenture issue. These are Standard Chartered Bank (Thai), Bank of Ayudhya and TMB. ASEAN+ 7 MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 Asia-Pacific leaders call for fast trade deal Xi calls on Japan for trust building CHINA DAILY AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Beijing US President Barack Obama and other Asia-Pacific leaders called Monday for a deal to be reached “as soon as possible” on a proposed free-trade agreement, which has added to China-US discord, at a regional summit in Beijing. Obama and leaders from 11 other Pacific Rim countries including Japan, Canada, Australia and Mexico instructed negotiators to build on “significant progress” and push toward a conclusion of difficult talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) free-trade idea. “With the end coming into focus, we have instructed our REUTERS US President Barack Obama speaks at the at the Apec CEO Summit in Beijing. ministers and negotiators to make concluding this agreement a top priority ... to reap the real and substantial benefits of the TPP agreement as soon as possible,” a statement said. The TPP countries met on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit hosted this year by Beijing. Washington has for years pushed the TTP, which proposes a loosening of trade restrictions, but notably excludes the world’s second-largest ecocomy China. But the talks have become bogged down amid resistance from some prospective members wary of opening up domestic markets, notably Japan. Obama said he was “seeing Dengue’s spread flies under the radar amid Ebola scare AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Kuala Lumpur One of the most familiar sounds in Malaysia’s capital is the approaching drone of a fumigation fogger spewing thick white plumes of insecticide, part of so-far futile efforts to arrest a spiralling dengue fever outbreak. Malaysia is among several countries across Asia and Latin America grappling with a mosquito-borne virus that is proving tough to eradicate as it infects millions. While the Ebola threat has captured headlines, the World Health Organization (WHO) warns that dengue -- while far less lethal -- has become one of the fastest-growing global health threats, contracted by 50-100 million people each year. “The increase in dengue incidence and severity of the outbreaks is a global phenomenon, with a 30-fold increase over the past five decades,” said Ahmed Jamsheed Mohamed, a doctor in the WHO’s Southeast Asia office, adding that eradication is “not seen as feasible in the near future”. The disease is transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito and causes debilitating flu-like symptoms, headaches, rashes and severe muscle and joint pains that earned its original name “breakbone fever”. In serious cases, internal bleeding, organ damage and death can occur. momentum building”, in remarks to reporters. But a US official who spoke on condition of anonymity said: “This is not an agreement which is about to get signed. This will take a period of time to finish off some of the difficult issues.” China wants the 21-member APEC meeting to endorse a stronger commitment to the Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP) idea, a longer-term concept for the entire region that would build on the TPP and other free-trade initiatives. US Trade Representative Michael Froman told reporters in Beijing on Sunday that FTAAP was a “long-term aspiration”. TPP, meanwhile, was “the major focus” of US economic policy toward the Asia-Pacific, he stressed. Some Chinese analysts and state media have framed the TPP as an attempt to check Beijing’s growing economic clout, allegations Washington dismisses. Russian President Vladimir Putin, who also is attending APEC, said in an interview last week that TPP was designed to benefit the United States. He added that Russia and China’s absence in the scheme “will not promote the establishment of effective trade and economic cooperation”. Facing Western sanctions over Russia’s policies toward Ukraine, Putin has aggressively sought closer trade ties with China. Peacekeepers in quarantine though test negative for Ebola REUTERS Manila More than 100 Philippine peacekeepers returning from almost a year in Liberia will be put in quarantine on an isolated island on arrival this week to check for Ebola, the military said on Monday, adding there were fears how the public might react. The 21-day quarantine, on a navyrun island at the mouth of Manila Bay, was in line with World Health Organisation protocols and with government’s drive to remain Ebola free, military chief General Gregorio Catapang said. The death toll from the Ebola epidemic has risen to 4,950out of 13,241 cases in the three worst-hit countries of West Africa, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, WHO said on Friday, calling for widespread rigorous controls to halt its spread. “Our peacekeepers belong to no-risk category of the Ebola infection,” Catapang told a news conference at the main army base in Manila, two days before the arrival of 108 soldiers, 24police and jail wardens from Monrovia. “Our troops have no direct contact with any Ebola victim. Their work is concentrated inside the force headquarters of theUnited Nations mission in Liberia.” The UN peacekeeping force in Liberia was set up in 2003 to support a civil war ceasefire. Catapang said the Filipino peacekeepers had undergone thorough medical screening by the United Chinese President Xi Jinping called on Japan to honour its official remorse about wartime history and embark on trustbuilding measures in a meeting with Japanese Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at the Great Hall of the People on Monday. The meeting, at Japan’s request, took place a day after Abe arrived in Beijing to attend the 22nd Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) Economic Leaders’ Meeting, from Monday to Tuesday. Relations chilled over the Diaoyu Islands in September 2012 and this was the first time the leaders met in a scheduled setting. Xi pointed out that “the right and wrong behind serious obstacles in the China-Japan relationship in the past two years is clear”. Only by honouring past official commitments and standing by the Murayama Statement can Japan develop a friendly and visionary relationship with its Asian neighbours, Xi said. In response, Abe said:”The ruling Japanese administration will continue honouring the views regarding historical issues held by previous administrations.” China and Japan on Friday offered a preliminary sign of thaw in relations by agreeing on the four-point Principled Agreement on Handling and Improving Bilateral Relations. They also agreed to gradually resume political, diplomatic and security dialogue through various channels. Abe said Japan is willing to implement the four-point consensus, and “properly handle the relevant issues”. Nations. The quarantine was a further precaution imposed by the Philippines, the largest group to be isolated in the current Ebola crisis, he said. The peacekeepers will arrive at an air base in Manila on Wednesday and travel by bus to a naval base south of Manila andbe transported by ship to Caballo island, a naval facility usedby the Americans during World War Two. Families and friends would be brought to the air base but not allowed contact, army Major-General Domingo Tutaan said. The military was worried about how the public would react to the peacekeepers’ return, he told Reuters. To avoid panic, they would not be required to wear masks and protective gear when they arrive. The Health Ministry has trained hundreds of medical workers and prepared at least 22 hospitals across the country to handle Ebola cases in case the disease reaches the Philippines. ASEAN+ 8 MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 AFP Indonesia ‘cannot afford a nationalistic policy’ Muslim groups led by Front Pembela Islam (FPI) or Islamic Defenders Front march towards Jakarta parliament building, to prevent acting Jakarta governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama from taking office because of his ethnicity and religion. THE STAR INDONESIA simply cannot afford to make major policy changes that would negatively impact foreign direct investment flows in the country, opines Fauzi Ichsan, a key economic adviser to newly elected president Joko “Jokowi” Widodo. Fauzi, who was in Kuala Lumpur for a luncheon talk to share his views about the promised changes Jokowi is to bring to Indonesia, said this in an interview with StarBiz. He was responding to a question about the perennial concerns Malaysian investors in the banking and plantations sectors in Indonesia face, namely politicians that continue to seek to pass nationalistic laws that seek to not only limit foreign owner- Wedding studios in focus as investors eye nuptials VIENTIANE TIMES Wedding studios in Laos are becoming increasingly popular among new Lao couples as they seek to record their most precious moments leading up to and after exchanging nuptials. With many weddings traditionally held in the weeks and months following the end of Buddhist Lent, now is an especially busy time for the studios as they continue to grow in popularity. Wedding photo shoots can be seen taking place with increasing regularity at numerous important outdoor sites in Vientiane. Focus studio, one of Vientiane’s private wedding studios, specialises in coming up with creative ideas to develop this kind of activity into a profit making business. “Firstly, I think about what is going to be popular for clients. We did some shoots for our relatives’ wedding photos and our work attracted a huge interest in society circles. And that’s the start of shooting activity,” said the owner of Focus studio Somphavan Bualapheth. She told Vientiane Times that there seem to be more and more wedding studios in the capital these days and that it is becoming an increasingly popular activity among newlyweds and husbands and wives to be. “Some investors who have enough money to expand their businesses will offer not only the photo shooting services. They also have wedding attire for rent and some other more interesting choices,” she said. Currently the Focus studio offers services to clients ranging in cost from more than 1 million kip up to 5 million kip, depending on the variations of products and services chosen by customers. Vientiane has a lot of choices for outdoor shootings, including That Luang, Patouxay monument, Hor Phakeo, Vat Sisaket and the 450 Year Road. Somphavan said her shooting team can be available only on weekends because they are also engaged in other activities during the week but it will soon be available seven days as more staff come on board. ship in investments but to also force existing investors to divest their stakes in strategic sectors such as banking. But Fauzi, who is also managing director and senior economist at Standard Chartered Bank Indonesia, explained that there were always nationalistic forces in any country that raised concerns about foreign ownership in strategic sectors. “Nowadays we can see the number of studios is increasing in Vientiane, which includes both domestic and foreign studios. That is quite competitive and many studios need to improve their services and offer better quality products,” she said, adding that her studio will need to be improved as well. “It appears several foreign studios also offer customers with pre-wedding shootings at both indoor and outdoor locations. They have also used more modern devices in their photo decor,” Somphavan said. One of newest Chinese owned studios, Aviva Wedding Photo Agency, recently opened in Vientiane, aiming to provide customers with more choices and more attractive backdrops for their pre-wedding photos. The studio is also set to offer a wide range of pre-wedding suits, make up services and outdoor shoots at various locations in Vientiane. A representative of the studio said that Aviva Wedding Photo Agency is the second branch in Vientiane after the first one was unveiled at Thongkhankham village in Chanthabouly district last year. “We’ve seen more customers over the past year. That is the reason we decided to open this second branch,” he said. However, when seen in a macro economic context, there are signs that countries like Indonesia cannot afford to do anything that would jeopardise foreign investment into the country. “Indonesia is running a current account deficit. In 2011, it had a US$2 billion surplus due to record high commodity prices, with commodities making up the bulk of exports. However with the subsequent collapse of commodity prices, the current account shifted from a surplus in 2011 to a deficit of US$24 billion in 2012 and to US$28 billion in 2013. The deficit is going to be around US$25 billion this year.” He added: “When you run a current account deficit, you need foreign investment. And next year, things could be more challenging, when the US will begin hiking short-term interest rates, following the move taken to end its quantitative easing programme. “This will make it difficult for countries with current account deficits like Indonesia as funding costs in the US becomes more expensive. “So a country like Indonesia cannot afford to have a nationalistic or protectionist policies.” He said that while Jokowi would have to contend with nationalist pressures to limit foreign investment or control in the banking sector, the president’s pledge to his voters is to accelerate growth in the country to 7 per cent a year. And to realise such rapid growth, there needed to be rapid investment and consumption growth, Fauzi said. “To realise that you need rapid credit growth of about 30 per cent every year. This in turn means that for every five years, the Tier 1 capital of Indonesia banks will have to be doubled. Jokowi’s stance is simply this: If local capital is not adequate to recapitalise the banking system, then Indonesia must be open to foreign capital in order to support the economic growth he has promised. This is why, in the long run, I don’t believe that the nationalist pressures and sentiments would actually result in any forced divestment of foreign holdings in Indonesian banks.” He also pointed out the weaknesses in the Indonesian parliament’s previous plans to pass laws that would seek to have all branches of foreign banks to be locally incorporated and to have a forced divestment of foreign ownership in Indonesian to a cap of 40 per cent. On the first rule of local institutionalistion of foreign banks, Fauzi said: “This could be legally questionable, as it would be against the principles of ‘grand fathering’ under the WTO (World Trade Organisation).” On the forced divestment attempt, he said: “To some people, this constitutes an attempt of nationalisation of the banking sector. Furthermore, local investors would not be able to absorb the divestment stakes. And that is why I would not worry too much about these issues, especially under the new leadership.” On the plantation sector, Fauzi raised an interesting point: that many of the large Indonesian parties invested in plantations in Indonesia can themselves be seen to be foreign investors as their holding companies are listed in other countries such as Singapore. “So these parties are investing as foreign direct investors. Hence, they too could be affected in any rule changes with regard to foreign ownership of plantations in Indonesia.” Fauzi also expressed confidence that Jokowi would be successful in implementing his plans to cut red tape, raise fuel prices and introduce a national health card. 9 ASEAN+ REUTERS MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 A woman prays at the “Ruriden”, a cemetery that uses high-powered LED lights to illuminate over 2,000 Buddha statues carved in crystals, in downtown Tokyo. Japan’s market for funerals, graves and anything related to the afterlife is still very much alive. Asean banks on long road to financial integration THE NATION FINANCIAL integration within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) is progressing, but the process won’t be entirely smooth, said Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services in a report published today, titled “Asean Financial Integration: The Long Road To Bank Consolidation.” Full integration could spur the emergence of major banks that can compete with large banks outside the region, in our view. Better economies of scale would also make financial systems within the region more efficient. Along with the improvement of financial infrastructure in each country, Standard & Poor’s believes the integration will make the banking sectors more resilient to external shocks. “We don’t expect the integration to be entirely smooth because, as countries liberalise their banking industries, competition will intensify--trends that not all local players welcome,” said Standard & Poor’s credit analyst Chris Lee. “Integration will also increase the risk of contagion and spillover effects within the region; when one system gets in trouble, it will affect other systems too. In addition, the varying pace of iberalisation and divergent regulatory frameworks among Asean countries complicate the industry’s consolidation.” Asean Economic Community (AEC), which is scheduled to take effect in 2015, is expected to liberalise the flow of goods, services, investment, capital, and skilled labor between the countries. Greater intra-ASEAN trade could encourage banks to expand regionally to better serve their clients. Central bank governors have endorsed the Asean Banking Integration Framework (ABIF)to achieve multilateral liberalization in the banking sector by 2020. This will pave the way for future integration of the Asean banks, New VN export zone attracts nearly $2bn VIET NAM NEWS Can Tho Export processing zones (EPZs) and industrial zones (IZs) in this Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta city have attracted 214 projects worth about US$1.92 billion. Baodautu.vn quoted the latest figures of the Can Tho EPZs and IZs Authority and revealed that projects worth $853 million or 45 per cent of total capital registered in the city to date have so far been implemented. Included are 23 foreign- invested projects worth $204 million with a disbursed capital of more than $171 million. The remainder, worth about $1.72 billion, were from domestic investors, and 39.7 per cent of the capital has so far been implemented. From 2001 to 2009, the EPZs and IZs had witnessed a stronger influx of investment compared with previous periods at $320 million, $689 million and $268 million, respectively. It slowed down recently because of global and domestic economic difficulties. and banks are already preparing to leverage the opportunities from increased trade flows in the region. The major banks in Malaysia and Singapore have been the most active in expanding regionally. Thai banks are also expanding, although they are focusing more on the Greater Mekong subregion. Indonesian and Philippines banks, on the other hand, are playing defense and strengthening their domestic networks. According to Standard & Poor’s, banks in Asean are mostly small by global standards and don’t have the scale and footprint to compete effectively with global behemoths. In particular, the fragmented banking systems in some countries, such as Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam, have a large number of small financial institutions with weaker financial profiles than their global peers. These systems would find it difficult to compete if the larger banks join the fray. “In our view, Asean’s financial Experts said that with its geographical advantage as the centre of the Mekong Delta region and a base of the country’s key projects such as Can Tho International Airport, Can Tho Port and O Mon Thermal Power Plant, the city remained an attractive destination for investors. To attract more investments, local authorities said, the city was accelerating infrastructure construction at its IZs, developing raw material supply areas and improving the quality of human resources. Vo Thanh Hung, head of the Authority, said Can Tho planned to expand and upgrade a number of IZs in line with a master plan aimed at increasing the locality’s total industrial area to 2.267ha and paving the way for the city to become an industrial hub in the Cuu Long Delta region by 2025. system still has a way to go to meet its goal of integration by 2020. The uneven pace of financial liberalisation in different countries, along with significant divergence in regulatory frameworks, could complicate crossborder mergers,” Lee said. Standard & Poor’s believes national regulators will proceed with gradual financial liberalisation and ensure that domestic banks are strong enough to compete before they allow for full liberalisation. Stumbling blocks to liberalisation and integration remain. Acquisition costs have been a significant obstacle in many deals. Characteristics that are specific to certain countries, such as strong family ownership of the banking sector in the Philippines and strong labor unions in Malaysia, also make industry consolidation more difficult. The rating agency viewed that Asean banks would continue growing their loan books prudently in the next few quarters, considering the higher capital requirement under Basel III and generally improving discipline in loan underwriting. “We believe asset quality will remain a major risk factor in Asean banks’ credit profiles. Tighter monetary policy in the US and a subsequent increase of interest rates could trigger similar hikes in Asean markets. Households and companies with heavier debt-servicing burdens will be more vulnerable to such shocks,” Lee said. Foreign carriers keen on MAS pilots THE STAR Foreign airlines have started courting pilots from Malaysia Airlines (MAS) following reports that the national carrier will undergo a restructuring exercise. MAS head, flight operations, Captain Kamarudin Kamilin said among the airlines included Etihad Airways, Qatar Airways, Emirates Airline, Sri Lankan Airlines, Korean Air and Lion Air. He said there were also countless airlines based in China and Taiwan which had shown strong interest to hire MAS pilots. “Even without the restructuring plan in the pipeline, our experienced pilots have been sought after by many foreign airlines for years,’’ Kamarudin told StarBiz on the sidelines of the signing of a memorandum of understanding between MAS and University of Tun Hussien Onn Malaysia (UTHM) at its main campus. Kamarudin said most of the MAS pilots hired by foreign airlines were those who had been working for at least eight years and already clocked more than 2,000 flying hours. He said there were now 1,466 pilots working with MAS and added that the airline needed at least 500 new pilots. Asked whether the restructuring plans to be announced probably July next year would see some existing pilots axed, Kamarudin said it depended on the business structure of the new company. Kamarudin said on average MAS trained 100 new pilots yearly and spend about 150,000 ringgit (US$45,084) each to train them for about eight months flying the Boeing 737800. ARTS&CULTURE NAGA FESTIVAL 10 MYANMAR ELEVEN, Tuesday, November 11, 2014 Rare masterpieces at ‘Fragrance of Myanmar’ IN THE PLANNING EMG Naga races seen at last year’s New Year festival. Visitors admire the rare paintings at the ‘Fragrance of Myanmar’ exhibition. MYANMAR ELEVEN The traditional Naga New Year festival for next year will be held in Khanti and Layshi, according to the Naga traditional cultural committee. Numerous Naga tribes are spread throughout the northwestern hills of Myanmar. Most of them are from Chin State, but many can be found in such places as Khanti, Layshi, Lahel and Nanyun in Sagaing Division. Usually held in January rotationally in Lahe, Layshi, Khanti and Nanyun, the Naga New Year festival brings all Naga tribes of the entire region together to celebrate their harvest and pray for a good new year. During the festival, they also make plans for the coming year and discuss how to overcome difficulties. They come together to pray for abundant crops and domestic animals and to have good weather. “In previous years, the festival was held in only one place. But for 2015, we will hold the ceremony in two places simultaneously. The government sponsored ceremony y will be held in Layshi and the Naga tribes will hold their ceremony in Khanti from January 14 to 16. In the past, we had to hold this ceremony sponsored by the state. Now in the open era, I think Naga tribes should celebrate their own ceremony with Naga spirit. Then only, the Naga can value its ethnicity,” said Shu Maung, an official from the Naga traditional cultural committee. He added that in the olden days, Naga New Year festivals were held depending on its location, climate and harvesting time. Formerly headhunters pre- Thai soap ‘Wanida’ on Myanmar TV MYANMAR ELEVEN Popular Thai soap “Wanida” looks set to expand cross-border cultural exchanges between Thailand and Myanmar with its episodes dubbed in Myanmar airing on weekdays since November 3 on Myanmar’s Channel 7. “This is the first foreign TV series that is being presented by Forever BEC-Tero with Myanmar dubbing instead of subtitles,” said Soe Thura, Forever BEC-TERO’s country manager, adding: “We selected this drama because we are working together with a Thai company and this soap was quite popular in Thailand. We plan to release more foreign TV series with local dubbing features in the future.” Starring Jesadaporn Pholdee serving the heads of their enemies as trophies, the Naga tribes are expert craftsmen. Each tribe has a different way of constructing their huts. A common practice among all the tribes is decorating the entrances of their dwellings with the heads of buffaloes. The Naga people love color and this is evident in their shawls and headgear. The designs on the costumes are unique to each tribe. Folk songs and dances are essential ingredients of the traditional Naga culture and it is through oral tradition that folk tales and songs are kept alive. Naga folk songs are both romantic and historical, with songs narrating the stories of famous ancestors and incidents. There are also seasonal songs which describe various activities done in a particular season. and Taksaorn Paksukcharoen, “Wanida” relates the romance between a debt-ridden army major and the daughter of his creditor who plans their arranged marriage to repay his debt. Local dubbing is provided by actor Ye Myint Lay and his crew, radio presenters from Mandalay FM and students from the University of Culture. Wanida picked up Best Drama, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress and Best Artistic Direction at the Golden Television Awards in 2010. The TV series also won Best International Drama at the Tokyo Drama Awards in 2011. Rare artworks by renowned Myanmar artists were on display at the “Fragrance of Myanmar” exhibition, which wrapped up last Saturday at Yangon Gallery. On display were 94 paintings by 16 famous artists including Ngwe Kine, Kin Maung (Bank), Wathonn and Khin Maung Yin. “I wanted to stage this exhibition because my collection has grown bigger and bigger and I wanted to show them to my friends. I try to get across the message that Myanmar paint- ings are among the valuable inheritances of the Myanmar people,” said art collector Thein Win who has been collecting the featured paintings over the past 20 years. Among the paintings on display, 20 were put up for sale while the rest were for display only. “This is a great opportunity to see the rare artworks by artists who led the Myanmar art movement together,” said Maung Maung Hla Myint, chairman of the Myanmar Traditional Artists and Artisans Association. Rain puts a damper on Pyin Oo Lwin fire balloon fest MYANMAR ELEVEN release 60 daytime balloons, 25 Sein Nar Pan (diamond earpiece) balloons/lanterns lit with candles and 18 Nya Mee Kyi (night fireworks) balloons loaded with firecrackers. But most of these didn’t get off the ground due to the unstopping This year’s Pyin Oo Lwin Fire Balloon Festival, which was part of the Tazaungdaing Festival, was beset by heavy rain, which continued for most of the festival. The fire balloon festival ran from November 3 to 7 at the Maha Ant Htoo Kan Thar Pagoda in Pyin Oo Lwin, a hill resort near Mandalay. “It was not festive like in the previous years when the sky was clear. But this year, it kept raining during the competition,” said a cameratoting reveller. The opening ceremony of the Pyin Oo “In the past, it Lwin Fire Balloon Festival. was crowded on the downpour. opening day and became even “We only had a clear sky on more crowded on the full the opening day and it rained moon day. The festive mood for the rest of the days so we carried on for the rest of the were not able to keep up with festival. This year, it rained on the schedule. Some of the the full moon day and other contestants had to wait for the days so it wasn’t that festive. rain to stop before releasing But some people came to their balloons while others had watch the festival on the night to release them on the followof the full moon day while caring day,” said an official from rying their umbrellas and the Tazaungdaing Fire Balloon there were also those who Festival Supervising managed to release some balCommittee. loons,” he added. The Pyin Oo Lwin Fire During the opening ceremoBalloon Festival is the second ny, up to 1,200 fire balloons largest balloon festival in were released by different Myanmar after the one in teams. In the days that folTaunggyi. lowed, they were hoping to EMG EMG MYANMAR ELEVEN Yangon