Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict
Individual Documents
Description:
"In 2018, Burmese government
troops stepped up their war in
Kachin State, further driving out
indigenous populations and expanding control over the area’s
rich natural resources and strategic
trading routes. The fiercest offensive
was fought in northwest Kachin
State’s Hugawng Valley, to secure
the historic Ledo Road linking India
and China, which is part of China’s
Belt and Road Initiative, and to seize
hugely lucrative amber mines.
Kachin State amber is a global
treasure: it is the only type in the
world formed during the age of the
dinosaurs. “Blood amber” is the
Chinese name of the extremely rare,
deep red variety of the gem found
only in the Hugawng Valley – a
name which resonates grimly with
local residents who have been driven
out by the recent offensive.
The amber mining boom began
in 2010, due to demand from the
Chinese market, causing tens of
thousands of migrant miners from
across Burma to flock to the region.
In 2015, discovery of a 99-millionyear-old feathered dinosaur tail in
Hugawng Valley amber further
fuelled the trade..."
Source/publisher:
"Kachin Development Networking Group (KDNG)"
Date of publication:
2019-08-19
Date of entry/update:
2019-09-10
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Kachin State, Kachin (economic, social, cultural, political), Peace processes, ceasefires and ceasefire talks (websites, documents, reports and studies), Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict
Language:
Format :
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Size:
17.21 MB 1.33 MB
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Sub-title:
While national attention remains focused on the Myitsone dam, Frontier visits one of the six other mega-dams north of the Ayeyarwady River confluence that could resume if conflict between the Tatmadaw and Kachin Independence Organisation is resolved.
Description:
"This story was supported by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.
The fuel station is bigger and more modern than anything I’ve seen in Kachin State. It’s also completely abandoned.
A fuel nozzle lies on the cracked, overgrown concrete, its hose trailing across the ground to a dispenser that has been reduced to a skeleton. Above the dispensers is a steel frame that would once have held up a roof. The adjacent concrete office is a mess of rubbish and broken glass. Gaping doorways let in the dull monsoon light.
The fuel station was built to supply construction vehicles on the 3,400-megawatt Chipwi hydropower project on the N’Mai River. The dam would be the second largest in a cascade of seven that a Chinese-Myanmar joint venture, Upstream Ayeyawady Confluence Basin Hydropower Co Ltd, plans to build on the upper reaches of the Ayeyarwady River in Kachin State.
Work began in December 2010 with a targeted completion date of 2020. Just six months later, fighting erupted between the Kachin Independence Organisation and the Tatmadaw, ending a 17-year ceasefire. In April 2012, soldiers of the Kachin Independence Army, the KIO’s armed wing, pushed into the area of the dam project and captured it from a Tatmadaw-aligned Border Guard Force. Fearing for their lives, hundreds of Chinese workers fled for safety in nearby Chipwi town, and the developer was forced to suspend work..."
Source/publisher:
"Frontier Myanmar"
Date of entry/update:
2019-08-12
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Dams and other projects on the Irrawaddy and its tributories, Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict, Burma's economic relations with China, Chinese investment
Language:
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Description:
KEY FINDINGS:
1.
The prolonged Kachin conflict is a
major obstacle to Myanmar?s national
reconciliation and a challenging test
for the democratization process.
2.
The KIO and the Myanmar
government differ on the priority
between the cease-fire and the political
dialogue. Without addressing this
difference, the nationwide peace
accord proposed by the government
will most likely lack the KIO?s
participation.
3.
The disagreements on terms have
hindered a formal cease-fire. In addition, the existing economic interest groups profiting from the armed
conflict have further undermined the
prospect for progress.
4.
China intervened in the Kachin negotiations in 2013 to protect its national
interests. A crucial motivation was a
concern about the ?internationalization” of the Kachin issue and the potential US role along the Chinese border.
5.
Despite domestic and external
pressure, the US has refrained from
playing a formal and active role in the
Kachin conflict. The need to balance
the impact on domestic politics in
Myanmar and US-China relations are
factors in US policy.
6.A
The US has attempted to discuss
various options of cooperation with
China on the Kachin issue. So far,
such attempts have not been accepted
by China.
Yun Sun
Source/publisher:
Stimson Center (Great Powers and the Changing Myanmar - Issue Brief No. 2)
Date of publication:
2014-01-00
Date of entry/update:
2014-01-23
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
China-Burma-US relations, China-Burma relations, Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict, Armed conflict in Kachin State - general articles
Language:
English
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Description:
"Burma Partnership is pleased to announce the launch of a new documentary film today to coincide with the International Day of Peace. The film, entitled ?Guns, Briefcases and Inequality: The Neglected War in Kachin State,? demonstrates the need for the government of Burma to engage in meaningful political dialogue with all ethnic nationalities on equal terms, including discussing amendments to the 2008 Constitution. These are necessary in order to address the underlying causes of armed conflict: self-determination, the lack of ethnic rights, and inequality, and to move towards lasting peace throughout the country.
The short documentary film also highlights how development projects and natural resource management are exacerbating armed conflict and human rights violations in ethnic areas, without adequate means to justice for the people.
The film was written and directed by Daniel Quinlan. It features interviews with Kachin internally displaced persons (IDPs), civil society and community-based organizations, leaders of ethnic non-state armed groups and advocates for human rights and democracy in Burma"
Source/publisher:
Burma Partnership
Date of publication:
2013-09-21
Date of entry/update:
2013-09-21
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Armed conflict, adminstration, development and investment, Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict, Armed conflict in Kachin State - displacement and the humanitarian situation
Language:
English
more
Description:
Deep in the wilds of northern Myanmar?s Kachin state a brutal civil war has intensified over the past year between government forces and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA).
People & Power sent filmmakers Jason Motlagh and Steve Sapienza to Myanmar (formerly Burma) to investigate why the conflict rages on, despite the political reforms in the south that have impressed Western governments and investors now lining up to stake their claim in the resource-rich Asian nation.
Jason Motlagh, Steve Sapienza
Source/publisher:
People & Power (Al Jazeera)
Date of publication:
2012-10-04
Date of entry/update:
2012-10-08
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict, Armed conflict in Kachin State - displacement and the humanitarian situation, Armed conflict in Kachin State - hostilities, Gold mining and trade
Language:
English, Burmese, Kachin, (English subtitles
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Description:
?When Burmese President Thein Sein took office in March 2011, he said that over 60 years of armed conflict have put Burma?s
ethnic populations through ?the hell of untold miseries.? Just three months later, the Burmese armed forces resumed military
operations against the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), leading to serious abuses and a humanitarian crisis affecting tens of
thousands of ethnic Kachin civilians.
?Untold Miseries?: Wartime Abuses and Forced Displacement in Kachin State is based on over 100 interviews in Burma?s Kachin
State and China?s Yunnan province. It details how the Burmese army has killed and tortured civilians, raped women, planted
antipersonnel landmines, and used forced labor on the front lines, including children as young as 14-years-old. Soldiers have
attacked villages, razed homes, and pillaged properties. Burmese authorities have failed to authorize a serious relief effort in
KIA-controlled areas, where most of the 75,000 displaced men, women, and children have sought refuge. The KIA has also been
responsible for serious abuses, including using child soldiers and antipersonnel landmines.
Human Rights Watch calls on the Burmese government to support an independent international mechanism to investigate
violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by all parties to Burma?s ethnic armed conflicts. The government
should also provide United Nations and humanitarian agencies unhindered access to all internally displaced populations, and
make a long-term commitment with humanitarian agencies to authorize relief to populations in need.?
Source/publisher:
Human Rights Watch
Date of publication:
2012-03-19
Date of entry/update:
2012-03-20
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Internal displacement/forced migration of Kachin, Armed conflict in Kachin State - displacement and the humanitarian situation, Armed conflict in Kachin State - hostilities, Armed conflict in Kachin State - human rights violations, Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict, Discrimination against the Kachin, Discrimination/violence against women: reports of violations in Burma, Armed conflict, adminstration, development and investment, Burmese refugees in China
Language:
English
Format :
pdf
Size:
1.72 MB
Local URL:
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Description:
Text of the open letter sent to Chinese President Hu Jintao, in which the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) asks China to stop the planned Mali Nmai Concluence (Myitsone) Dam Project to be built in Burma?s northern Kachin state, warning that the controversial project could lead to civil war
Source/publisher:
Kachin Independence Organization (KIO)
Date of publication:
2011-03-16
Date of entry/update:
2011-05-21
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Dams and other projects on rivers in Burma/Myanmar (countrywide), Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict, Dams and other projects on the Irrawaddy and its tributories
Language:
English
Format :
pdf
Size:
877.53 KB
Local URL:
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Description:
"Burma and China prepare to build seven hydroelectric dams in Kachin State that will not provide the people of Burma with jobs, security or even electricity
Large-scale hydroelectric dams have long been decried for the immense damage they do to the environment and rural communities. Not everyone agrees, however, that the problems associated with mega-dams outweigh their benefits. After all, say pragmatists, dams are a reliable supply of electricity, without which no country can hope to survive in the modern world.
(Illustration: Harn lay / The irrawaddy)
But in Burma, such arguments fall flat. Not only do massive dam-building projects take an especially high toll on people?s lives—besides destroying villages and the environment, they result in intensifying human rights abuses and make diseases such as malaria more prevalent—they also come without a payoff for the general population.
At the end of the day, the electricity they generate—the only benefit the Burmese people can expect to get from them—remains as scarce as ever..."
David Paquette
Source/publisher:
"The Irrawaddy" Vol. 18, No. 4
Date of publication:
2010-04-00
Date of entry/update:
2010-04-19
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Armed conflict in Kachin State - economic factors associated with the conflict, Business and Human Rights (Burma/Myanmar-related), Dams and other projects on rivers in Burma/Myanmar (countrywide), Dams and other projects on the Irrawaddy and its tributories
Language:
English
more
