Transaction Search Form: please type in any of the fields below.
Date: November 25, 2024 Mon
Time: 8:20 pm
Time: 8:20 pm
Results for myanmar
2 results foundAuthor: International Crisis Group Title: Fire and Ice: Conflict and Drugs in Myanmar's Shan State Summary: Myanmar's Shan State has emerged as one of the largest global centres for the production of crystal methamphetamine ("ice"). Large quantities of the drug, with a street value of tens of billions of dollars, are seized each year in Myanmar, neighbouring countries and across the Asia-Pacific. Production takes place in safe havens in Shan State held by militias and other paramilitary units allied with the Myanmar military, as well as in enclaves controlled by non-state armed groups. The trade in ice, along with amphetamine tablets and heroin, has become so large and profitable that it dwarfs the formal economy of Shan State, lies at the heart of its political economy, fuels criminality and corruption and hinders efforts to end the state's long-running ethnic conflicts. Myanmar's government should stop prosecuting users and small-scale sellers and work with its neighbours to disrupt the major networks and groups profiting from the trade. The military should better constrain pro-government militias and paramilitaries involved in the drugs trade, with an eye to their eventual demobilisation. The growing drugs trade in Shan State is in part a legacy of the area's ethnic conflicts. For decades, the Myanmar military has struck ceasefire deals with armed groups and established pro-government militias. Such groups act semi-autonomously and enjoy considerable leeway to pursue criminal activities. Indeed, conditions in parts of Shan State are ideal for large-scale drug production, which requires a kind of predictable insecurity: production facilities can be hidden from law enforcement and other prying eyes but insulated from disruptive violence. Tackling the drug trade presents a complex policy challenge involving security, law enforcement, political and public health aspects. But if the drugs trade is partly a symptom of Shan State's conflicts, it is also an obstacle to sustainably ending them. The trade, which now dwarfs legitimate business activities, creates a political economy inimical to peace and security. It generates revenue for armed groups of all stripes. Militias and other armed actors that control areas of production and trafficking routes have a disincentive to demobilise, given that weapons, territorial control and the absence of state institutions are essential to those revenues. The trade attracts transnational criminal groups and requires bribing officials for protection, support or to turn a blind eye, which allows a culture of payoffs and graft to flourish and adds to the grievances of ethnic minority communities that underpin the seventy-year old civil war. Myanmar's military, which has ultimate authority over militias and paramilitaries and profits from their activities, can only justify the existence of such groups in the context of the broader ethnic conflict in the state - so the military also has less incentive to end that conflict. Tackling the drug trade presents a complex policy challenge involving security, law enforcement, political and public health aspects. An integrated approach that addresses all of these areas will be needed to effectively address it: - Myanmar's government should redouble its drug control efforts, ending prosecutions of small-time dealers and users and refocusing on organised crime and corruption associated with the trade. The president should instruct and empower the Anti-Corruption Commission to prioritise this. - At the community level, the government should focus more on education and harm reduction, in line with its February 2018 National Drug Control Policy. It should work with relevant donors and international agencies to invest in education and harm reduction initiatives geared specifically toward the particular dangers of crystal meth use. Although crystal meth is currently not widely used in Myanmar, that is likely to change given the huge scale of production. - Myanmar's military should rethink the conflict management approaches it has employed for decades. In particular, it should exert greater control over - and ultimately disarm and disband - allied militias and paramilitary forces that are among the key players in the drug business. The impunity that these groups enjoy, and the requirement that they mostly fund themselves, has pushed them to engage in lucrative illicit activities. - The military should also investigate and take concerted action to end drug-related corruption within its ranks, focusing on senior officers who facilitate or turn a blind eye to the trade. - Myanmar's neighbours should stop illicit flows of precursors, the chemicals used to manufacture drugs, into Shan State. As the main source of such chemicals, China has a particular responsibility to end this trade taking place illegally across its south-western border. It should also use its influence over the Wa and Mongla armed groups controlling enclaves on the Chinese border to end their involvement in the drug trade and other criminal activities. Targeting the major players in the drug trade will not be easy and comes with risks of pushback, perhaps violent, from those involved. But the alternative - allowing parts of Shan State to continue to be a safe haven for this large-scale criminal enterprise - will see closer links between local armed actors, corrupt officials in Myanmar and the region, and transnational criminal organisations. The more such a system becomes entrenched, and the greater the profits it generates, the harder it will be to dislodge and the longer conflicts in that area are likely to persist. The people of Shan State, and Myanmar as a whole, will pay the highest price. Details: Brussels, Belgium: International Crisis Group, 2019. 36p. Source: Internet Resource: Accessed March 9, 2019 at: https://www.crisisgroup.org/asia/south-east-asia/myanmar/299-fire-and-ice-conflict-and-drugs-myanmars-shan-state Year: 2019 Country: Asia URL: https://d2071andvip0wj.cloudfront.net/299-fire-and-ice.pdf Shelf Number: 154750 Keywords: CorruptionCrystal MethDrug DealingDrug TradeDrug TraffickingIceMethamphetamineMyanmarShan State |
Author: International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) Title: No Stone Unturned: Q&A on Accountability for Crimes in Myanmar Summary: The release of the report by the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission (FFM) on Myanmar on 27 August 2018 marked a pivotal moment in the establishment of the facts concerning crimes committed in recent years in Myanmar's Rakhine, Shan, and Kachin States. Overwhelming evidence collected by the FFM points to the commission of "the gravest crimes" against civilians by Myanmar's military ('Tatmadaw') and police forces. It is now of crucial importance that the process of ensuring accountability for these crimes moves forward through the pursuit of the following key steps: 1) consolidating evidence; 2) carrying out prosecutions; and 3) supporting any established international accountability mechanism and enabling it to deliver justice to the victims. These three steps must be pursued without delay through simultaneous actions taken by three key United Nations (UN) bodies, namely the Human Rights Council, the General Assembly, and the Security Council, as well as by the international community as a whole. The Human Rights Council and the General Assembly should promptly set up an International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM). The IIIM is a dedicated body responsible for collecting, preserving, and analyzing evidence that will be used by prosecutors in national and international tribunals that will assert their jurisdiction over crimes committed in Myanmar. At the same time, the Security Council should refer the situation of Myanmar to the International Criminal Court (ICC) and commit to providing concrete support to, and cooperation with, the ICC in order to ensure that prosecutions are carried out without delay in relation to all crimes within the ICC's jurisdiction and in all parts of the country. In addition, the international community should fully support the possible ICC investigations and prosecutions following the court's decision on 6 September 2018. ICC Pre-Trial judges ruled that the ICC may exercise its jurisdiction over the alleged deportation of Rohingya from Myanmar to Bangladesh and other international crimes, provided part of these crimes occurred on the territory of Bangladesh, a State Party to the Rome Statute of the ICC. Only with the political will, financial support, and cooperation of the international community will international accountability mechanisms be able to effectively deliver justice to the victims and ensure that those who bear the greatest responsibility are held accountable. In addition, in States that recognize the principle of extra-territorial jurisdiction and in which the legal system allows its implementation, national authorities should open investigations and initiate prosecutions of Myanmar individuals accused of committing international crimes in Myanmar. This document provides answers to the most pressing questions concerning the issue of accountability for crimes in Myanmar and seeks to help understand the intricacies of international justice mechanisms and how they can be applied to the situation in Myanmar. Details: Paris, France: International Federation for Human Rights, 2018. 20p. Source: Internet Resource: Accessed May 28, 2019 at: https://www.fidh.org/en/region/asia/burma/new-report-urges-international-action-on-accountability-for-crimes Year: 2018 Country: Burma URL: https://www.fidh.org/IMG/pdf/fidh_-_no_stone_unturned_-_q_a_on_accountability_for_crimes_in_myanmar_.pdf Shelf Number: 156050 Keywords: Burma Genocide Human Rights Mass Killings Myanmar |