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Malaysian PM: send Muslim boat people back

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Feb 27, 2009 (AFP), Malaysia’s prime minister has called for Burma’s Muslim boat people to be pushed back if they attempt to land on any Southeast Asian shores in search of asylum, a newspaper said Friday.

Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi also took swipes at Burma and Thailand on the Rohingya issue, which has escalated into a major problem for the region and one of concern internationally.

Thousands of the stateless Rohingya have fled Burma as well as refugee camps in Bangladesh in recent years, but their plight was only highlighted recently when hundreds were believed to have drowned after being pushed out to sea by the Thai military.

"But if we cannot be firm we cannot deal with this problem. We have to be firm at all borders. We have to turn them back," Abdullah said in an interview with the English-language Bangkok Post.

The Malaysian leader arrived at this beach-side resort Friday for the annual summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, a 10-nation bloc that includes Burma.

While the Rohingya issue is not part of the official agenda it appears to be taking up substantial time during sideline discussions at the three-day conference.

Thai Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya said Burma has agreed to take some of the refugees back but gave few details and said the process would be "difficult." The Burma delegation has yet to make a public comment on the issue.

The Rohingyas ‚ not recognized as a distinct ethnicity by Burma’s government and thus denied citizenship ‚ number about 800,000 in that country.

Hundreds of thousands have fled to Bangladesh, Malaysia and the Middle East, and many rights groups have expressed concern that they will be abused if forced to return to Burma.

Burma’s consul general in Hong Kong, Ye Myint Aung, earlier this month described Rohingya people as "ugly as ogres" in a letter to media and diplomats.

Human rights groups have also been highly critical of Thailand for allegedly abusing groups of Rohingya whose rickety boats reached its shores and then towing them out to sea without adequate provisions or fuel for their craft. Thailand has denied the allegations.

Kasit, the Thai foreign minister, said ASEAN would work with Burma and Bangladesh to determine if the tens of thousands of Rohingya scattered around ASEAN countries come from Burma.

Asked about a timeframe he said it would be "difficult" because of the large numbers involved.

"Myanmar [Burma] says they will take them back if it can be proven they are Myanmar people of Bengali origin," Kasit said.

He said the Burmese government recognizes the Bengali, an ethnic minority group found mainly in Bangladesh, as one of the country’s 135 ethnic groups.

But Abdullah expressed frustration in his interview with Burma’s unwillingness to take the boat people back.

"Of course, we know they come from Myanmar. When we ask Myanmar, they ask: ‘Are you sure they are our people? What evidence have you got?’" he said.

ASEAN Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan said work would soon begin "to define the issue with the Myanmar authorities of who these people are, how to refer to them and how to categorize them and how many of them and how we can help them."

Thailand earlier called for a special regional conference on the refugees, who often attempt to land in Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.

No reduction in forced labour, says ILO

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Feb 27, 2009 (DVB), There has been no reduction in the use of forced labour in Burma despite work done by the International Labour Organisation to eradicate it, says ILO's liasion officer in Rangoon, Steve Marshall.

The ILO's Executive Director, Kari Tapiola, is currently in Burma to extend for another year the ILO's cooperation agreement with the Burmese regime.

The agreement stipulates that the government must not harass or arrest people who report forced labour to the ILO or collect information on such practices.

"In terms of the forced labour issue, we continue to receive complaints," said Marshall. "It is running at about the same level. It has not increased dramatically but it has not decreased either."

Tapiola had said in March 2008 that forced labour was continuing in the country, and in some areas was getting worse.

"I do not think the government can deny the existence of forced labour, and we know many forced labour cases are taking place," he said.

"Forced labour by civilian authorities might decline but the use of forced labor by the military is getting worse."

On the cooperation agreement, however, Marshall said it is a mechanism that, in principal, works.

"The important thing is that citizens of Myanmar understand that they have got the right to complain and that if they do complain their complaint will be listened to and will be actioned," he said.

He added, however, that there are still grey areas which the government is exploiting.

"There is, however, the situation where a person who was the facilitator for that complaint has been charged under the law on a different offence not related to the lodgment of the complaint," he said.

"We are very concerned that there may in fact be an indirect link to his working on that complaint."

On Saturday Tapiola will visit the ILO project in the delta. The project, according to Marshall, is designed as a best practice in employment to show that small-scale infrastructure work can be done without the use of forced labour.

Reporting by Htet Aung Kyaw

Crackdown on illegal Burmese migrants

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Feb 27, 2009 (DVB), About 600 people have been arrested in Mae Sot over the last two days during a crackdown by Thai authorities on illegal Burmese migrants in the border town.

A Mae Sot resident said that Thai authorities were making surprise early-morning raids on migrant-populated parts of the town.

One illegal Burmese migrant, who escaped arrest by fleeing into nearby farmlands when her neighbourhood was raided at around 5am yesterday, said the Thai police were quite aggressive with the operation.

"A lot of people were arrested in their living quarters," he said. "The police officers broke open their doors and beat up those who tried to flee."

"I managed to escape by running into nearby fields."

Migrant right activists in Mae Sot said those who were arrested were being detained in three different places in town and they were likely to be sent back to Kyauk Kyi Lone immigration detention camp in Myawaddy border town on the Burmese side.

Meanwhile, Burmese residents in Mae Sot have said some businesses in town had been halted as their Burmese employees were unable to come to work due to the crackdown.

Reporting by Ahunt Phone Myat

Myawaddy TV to publish daily newspaper

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Feb 27, 2009 (DVB), State-run Myawaddy TV is recruiting around 40 journalists in preparation for the publication of a newspaper called Myawaddy Daily, according to a weekly journal editor.

Myawaddy TV is run by the military's Information and Public Relations department. Veteran journalist Ludhu Sein Win said:

"We had to read the government papers before the journals emerged.

"When the journals emerged we read news not included in the government papers. If this newspaper emerges, we will be able to read articles not written in government papers."

By definition, newspapers are state-run, whereas journals are private-owned, although are still censored by the government.

"Although they are called journals, journals of this day and age are like weekly newspapers," said Ludhu Sein Win.

"There is no reason to be higher than that. If the paper is the government’s mouthpiece, I have nothing new to say."

It was not possible to contact Myawaddy TV for comments as to when the paper is going to be launched and what topics would be covered.

Reporting by Ahunt Phone Myat

Authorities charge farmers for aid-donated fertiliser

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Feb 27, 2009 (DVB), Township authorities have been demanding money from farmers in Bogalay, Irrawaddy division, for fertilisers freely distributed by a charity called International Development Enterprise.

IDE distributed two bags of ‘Paleh’ (Pearl) fertilisers to each farmer in Nyinaung village tract for free, a farmer said.

"IDE gave fertilisers to 300 farmers. The village chair and secretary collected them, gave two bags each to farmers, and charged 1500 from each farmer."

The situation is the same at nearby Thitbyuchaung village group and surrounding areas, the farmer claimed. Farmers said it would be better for donors to give aid directly into their hands in the future.

Reporting by Naw Say Paw

Eine Mae villagers pressured not to host NLD members

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Feb 26, 2009 (DVB), Authorities in Eine Mae, Irrawaddy division, have pressured local villagers not to provide accommodation for National League for Democracy members, accusing the group of a plotting bomb attacks in the region.

Aung Din, the NLD chair in Mayanpin village, was chastised after he let youth wing member Htin Kyaw Linn from Eine Mae stay at his house when he visited the village.

Local authorities questioned Aung Din and warned him he would be punished if fail to inform them of such activities in the future, said Eine Mae NLD chair Maung Maung Gyi.

"The township's deputy police chief Min Thu Khine told Aung Din not to let Htin Kyaw Linn stay at his house again, saying they can't risk having bombings in the township," said Maung Maung Gyi.

"He warned Aung Din that he would be punished if he failed to let them know when NLD members visit the village again," he said.

"The government authorities are trying to create divisions between us and the people by calling us bomb plotters , they are basically defaming us."

Some other party members said Eine Mae's local police chief Sein Win had recently told officials from villages in the region during a community meeting to inform the police station of any visits made to their villages by NLD members.

Reporting by Ahunt Phone Myat

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