Can’t spell ‘couple’ without ‘coup’

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, 2022 chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, met with Myanmar military junta chief Sr. Gen. Min Aung Hlaing and vowed to fulfill an ASEAN agreement aimed at resolving Myanmar’s year-old political crisis. Many observers questioned the Cambodian strongman’s qualifications to lead outside efforts to resolve tension sparked by Min Aung Hlaing’s coup in Myanmar, noting that Hun Sen’s 36-year-rule in Phnom Penh has been marked by an armed revolt against elected coalition partners in the 1990s and the systematic destruction of Cambodia’s opposition since 2017.

Rotting fruit, fisticuffs as China border controls hit trade from SE Asian neighbors

Fresh watermelons from Myanmar left to rot. Truckers trapped in long lines getting into fistfights. Trailers full of dragon fruit stuck in Vietnam.

China’s strict border controls imposed to prevent Covid-19 ahead of next month’s Beijing Winter Olympics and keep a lid on an outbreak in Xi’an, a central Chinese city of 13 million people that began a complete lockdown last month, are causing major economic headaches for its neighbors and the workers there who depend on trade for their livelihoods.

Long lines of trucks are a fixture in Myanmar, Laos and Vietnam, leaving the agricultural products the vehicles carry to spoil, raising concern that there won’t be enough fruit to meet demand for the Lunar New Year holiday in late January.

A truck driver listens to phone call at a makeshift parking lot where Vietnamese container trucks are waiting to cross the Vietnam-China border in Lang Son province on Jan. 7, 2022, as thousands of trucks carrying fruit remain stuck after China tightened its border policies. (AFP)
A truck driver listens to phone call at a makeshift parking lot where Vietnamese container trucks are waiting to cross the Vietnam-China border in Lang Son province on Jan. 7, 2022, as thousands of trucks carrying fruit remain stuck after China tightened its border policies. (AFP)

Nearly every day, villagers from the town of Mong Yu in Myanmar wade through a pile of watermelons, looking for a few that are still fresh enough to eat. The cows and buffaloes that join in the feast are much less discriminating.

Either way, the circumstance is bad for the truckers and farmers who depend on the fruit trade to make a living. The daily ritual at a border crossing shows the importance to Myanmar and other Southeast Asian countries of the buying power of Chinese consumers.

The new border restrictions, which require the use of Chinese trucks to carry cargo across the border, have made it almost impossible to deliver the fresh fruit from Myanmar before it spoils, traders said. Truckers have been forced to dump their cargo and now stand to face huge losses.

“It now takes more than 15 days to move fruit from the sales depot here to the gate, and the fruit that has no guarantee for freshness cannot be exported,” Nang Kham Khin, the owner of the Sai Myint Bo Fruit Depot inside trade zone at the border, told RFA’s Myanmar Service.

Watermelons are discarded on January 3, 2022 near the entrance of Mong Yu village near the 105th mile trade zone in Muse, Myanmar near the Chinese border. Credit: Citizen Journalist

Chinese trucks only

Sai Myint Bo said that the cost of export has also increased because Myanmar traders now must hire Chinese truck drivers to move their product across the border.

“Because of the high cost of the trucks and the high tariff rates on the Chinese side, we have to sort the fruit that comes to us, which is why there are so many rejects here,” he said.

The border checkpoint in Muse township had been closed for more than five months due to COVID-19, and it reopened on Nov. 26. But the stricter rules have caused delays.

They are also eating into the pockets of the produce sellers. A 12-wheeler from China rents for more than 6 million kyat (U.S. $3,300), whereas a similarly sized truck from Myanmar costs about 800,000 kyat (U.S. $450). Traders that cannot afford the drastic difference in shipping costs are simply abandoning their fruit at the border, Khun Min Thant, a border trader in Muse, told RFA.

“The fruit farmers want their products to get across as quickly as possible. If you cannot get a truck, you cannot sell your fruit quickly. That’s the problem,” he said.

Vietnamese container trucks wait for a chance to cross the Vietnam-China border in Lang Son province on Jan. 7, 2022. (AFP)
Vietnamese container trucks wait for a chance to cross the Vietnam-China border in Lang Son province on Jan. 7, 2022. (AFP)

To some sellers, the delays are still worth it. Many Myanmar watermelon farmers try for the border because they can get a higher price for their product in China.

“They can only get 1.5 to 2 million kyats for the fruit in Myanmar, but on the Chinese side, the price is much higher,” Kyaw Lin, a fruit trader from Myanmar’s largest city Yangon, told RFA.

Many of the watermelon exporters are Chinese traders who invested in Myanmar over the last year and they own brokerage houses near the border that pays farmers to grow the fruit for them.

The backup at the border gates total more than 500 watermelon trucks trying to unload their cargo in the Muse fruit depot, Kyaw Lin said.

Zaw Min Tun, deputy information minister and spokesman for Myanmar’s military government, told RFA that efforts were being made to eliminate the delays.

“COVID regulations will not be relaxed by the Chinese side,” he said.

“China is helping truck drivers and exporters speed up the testing of the virus for their products,” said Zaw Min Tun. “I am sure we will be able to do it faster in the future, despite the limitations.”

RFA attempted to contact officials at Myanmar’s  Ministry of Commerce over the phone but were unable to reach them. RFA also contacted the Chinese Embassy in Yangon by email, but received no response.

RFA attempted to contact officials at Myanmar’s Ministry of Commerce over the phone but were unable to reach them. RFA also contacted the Chinese Embassy in Yangon by email, but received no response.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin defended tough controls as an essential part of China’s “strategic victory in the fight against COVID-19 at home” that would ensure a safe Winter Olympics in February.

“China adopts necessary COVID-19 protocols in light of the global COVID-19 situation with a responsible attitude toward the life and health of Chinese and foreign citizens. China’s huge food consumer market is open to all countries,” he told a news conference in Beijing on Tuesday,, saying he did not have details on specific border closure problems.

Line cutters spark brawl

Farmers and truckers in Myanmar aren’t the only ones being affected by tighter controls on China’s 3,900-km (2,400-mile) land border with Southeast Asia.

Long truck lines in Laos led to a fist fight at the Boten border gate in Luang Namtha province on Tuesday, after a Chinese truck driver cut in front of a Lao truck driver while both were queuing to enter a waiting area on the border to China.

“The rules do not allow drivers to cut in front of other drivers, but the Chinese driver cut in front of the Lao driver,” a Lao driver who witnessed the incident told RFA’s Lao Service.

“The Lao driver got angry and grabbed a stone and threw it at the Chinese truck, then the Chinese driver stopped the truck and came out to look at the damage. Then he hit the Lao driver in the head,” he said.

The source noted that fights between Lao and Chinese drivers occur often because many of the workers at the processing gate are Chinese and show preferential treatment to the drivers from China.

Trucks wait in Boten, Laos, at the Laos-China border in Dec. 2021. (RFA)
Trucks wait in Boten, Laos, at the Laos-China border in Dec. 2021. (RFA)

Another Lao truck driver said that the Chinese drivers use this privilege to cut in line, infuriating the Lao drivers, but tensions were higher than normal.

“This time, because there are so many trucks lined up, everybody wants to go first,” the second Lao truck driver said.

The lines extend from Boten for about 20-30 kilometers (12-18 miles), passing through Nateui village, a resident of the village told RFA.

“Everywhere we go it’s hard for even motorcycles or cars to maneuver with all the trucks lining up for the gate to China,” the villager said.

“Officials are trying hard, but the drivers are all cutting in front of each other to get in first,” said the villager.

An official from Luang Namtha told RFA that the local government is attempting to solve the backup.

“All the related sectors are cooperating with each other to solve the problem. In the future we will have shipping containers sent via rail,” the official said.

The recently completed Laos-China high speed railway between Vientiane and Boten is expected to be a much cheaper shipping alternative to trucking, and shipments of rail cargo has already begun, the official said.

But before cargo trains start rolling in earnest, only 150 trucks can pass through the Boten gate in either direction each day, while there are 350 trucks waiting on each side, and the lines are expected to grow longer.

The trucks must be sprayed three times to stop the spread of COVID-19 within 20 minutes of crossing the border, and the gate is only open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., excluding holidays.

RFA previously reported lines as long as 1,000 trucks, extending 45 kilometers (28 miles) into neighboring Oudomxay province.

vn fist1.jpg
This file photo shows fighting between Lao and Chinese truck drivers near the Boten gate in Laos, on the border with China on Jan. 4, 2022. Credit: Citizen Journalist

Contaminated fruit

Chinese authorities shut down supermarkets in nine cities in the southeastern provinces of Zhejiang and Jiangxi after traces of COVID-19 were found in dragon fruit imported from Vietnam, the South China Morning Post reported Thursday.

The discovery comes after China already placed a ban on Vietnamese dragon fruit from Dec. 29 to Jan. 26, when COVID-19 was detected the imported fruit in the last week of December.

The Vietnamese Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development said that traders could have trouble selling 300,000 tons of dragon fruit produced for the upcoming Lunar New Year, a major holiday in China which falls on Feb. 1.

Sales of dragon fruit in 2021 reached almost $1 billion, said Le Than Hoa, the deputy director general of MARD’s Agro Processing and Market Development Authority.

Truck drivers eat lunch at the makeshift parking lot near the Vietnam-China border in Lang Son province on Jan. 7, 2022. (AFP)
Truck drivers eat lunch at the makeshift parking lot near the Vietnam-China border in Lang Son province on Jan. 7, 2022. (AFP)

The farm ministry is advising farmers and businesses in the northern Vietnamese provinces of Quang Ninh and Lang Son to stop exports to China coming out of these provinces.

Local media reported that as of Thursday around 3,000 Vietnamese trucks which were waiting to cross the border into China, most of which were carrying agricultural goods. An estimated 1,700 were said to be carrying dragon fruit, jack fruit, mango, and watermelon.

The ministry advised businesses and farmers to find measures to export agri-products via railway, by sea and also promote local consumption.

The Vietnamese Trade Ministry on Jan. 2 asked Chinese authorities in Guangxi, the region bordering Vietnam, to take urgent measures to ease congestion.

Guangxi authorities responded saying they would allow more time for customs clearance and alert higher authorities, local media reported.

Translated by Khin Maung Nyane, Sidney Khotpanya and Thi Chau. Written in English by Eugene Whong.

VinFast taps HERE to accelerate in-car navigation for its smart electric cars

VinFast VF 9

VinFast VF 9

  • HERE Navigation provides VinFast with a highly customizable and upgradeable navigation experience throughout the life cycle of its smart electric cars
  • HERE SDK offers users a seamless driving experience via VinFast’s mobile application

CES 2022 / Singapore – VinFast, Vietnam’s leading manufacturer of premium automobiles and the first Vietnamese automotive brand to launch in global markets, today announced that its first three smart electric car models VF e34, VF 8, and VF 9 will be deploying HERE Navigation, a one-stop navigation application, for its connected in-vehicle navigation experience. VinFast will also be integrating HERE’s software development kit (SDK) into its dedicated smartphone mobile application to deliver a seamless and smart driving experience.

HERE Navigation will offer VinFast’s Electric Vehicles (EVs) drivers a peace of mind by providing multi-stop route planning based on the charge level of the car, as well as automatic addition of charging stops should drivers decide to make a re-route, all powered by the HERE EV Charge Points Point of Interest (POIs) and application programming interface (API). With daily updates to the EV Charge Points POIs, global coverage and up-to-date availability information of EV Charge Points, drivers will be reassured to always stay charged and drive efficiently with routes planned for the EV’s maximized range.

HERE Navigation further enables VinFast to take advantage of the navigation as a service model provided by HERE to achieve a simplified infotainment supply chain and development process. This enables the Vietnamese automaker to update and upgrade its navigation offerings with new features and services throughout the vehicle’s life cycle. The benefit of doing so includes lowering costs and improving scalability, allowing VinFast to deliver a unique In-Vehicle-Infotainment (IVI) system and having an edge over its competition.

VinFast EV drivers will enjoy a rich and embedded experience that includes online and offline search and routing, traffic information, active lane assistance, and turn-by-turn voice guidance that allows drivers to stay focused while driving. With HERE SDK integrated into VinFast’s mobile application, users can leverage advanced location services at their fingertips to support their journeys.

“In the era of connected vehicle, it’s important for us to remain competitive by being agile and flexible with our offerings,” said Hong Sang Bae, Chief Technology Officer at VinFast. “The services put forth by HERE are outstanding and they offer one of the most customizable, reliable, and accurate navigation systems for electric vehicles. Not only are these services cost-effective and highly scalable, they provide our drivers with an upgraded overall navigation and driving experience. Thanks to the collaboration with HERE, we are able to carry out our mission to offer one of the best intelligent mobility experiences to our customers.”

Abhijit Sengupta, Director and Head of Business for Southeast Asia and India at HERE Technologies said, “VinFast has been making impressive headway in the Southeast Asia automotive industry, and are continuing to do so globally. We’re proud that they have chosen our services for their first smart electric vehicle line-up. End-users can expect to be greeted with a unique IVI system that can also be connected to their mobile phones, providing a truly connected driving experience.”

The VF e34 electric cars are now available in Vietnam. A handover ceremony for the first batch of the cars to its customers was held in December 2021, at VinFast’s manufacturing complex, located in Hai Phong, Vietnam.

Media contacts
HERE Technologies
Camy Cheng
+65 9088 4127
Camy.cheng@here.com

VinFast
Tobias Nguyen
v.trongnh4@vingroup.net

About HERE Technologies
HERE, a location data and technology platform, moves people, businesses and cities forward by harnessing the power of location. By leveraging our open platform, we empower our customers to achieve better outcomes – from helping a city manage its infrastructure or a business optimize its assets to guiding drivers to their destination safely. To learn more about HERE, please visit www.here.com and http://360.here.com.

About Vingroup and VinFast
VinFast – a member of Vingroup – envisioned to drive the movement of global smart electric vehicle revolution. Established in 2017, VinFast owns a state-of-the-art automotive manufacturing complex with globally leading scalability that boasts up to 90% automation in Hai Phong, Vietnam.

Strongly committed to the mission for a sustainable future for everyone, VinFast constantly innovates to bring high-quality products, advanced smart services, seamless customer experiences, and pricing strategy for all to inspire global customers to jointly create a future of smart mobility and a sustainable planet. Learn more at: https://vinfastauto.com.

Established in 1993, Vingroup is one of the leading private conglomerates in the region, with a total capitalization of $35 billion USD from three publicly traded companies (as of November 4, 2021). Vingroup currently focuses on three main areas: Technology and Industry, Services and Social Enterprise. Learn more at: https://www.vingroup.net/en.

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Global Gate Capital Acquires Multifamily Asset in Atlanta

NEW YORK, Jan. 07, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Global Gate Capital has acquired Walton Ashwood, a 160-unit Class A multifamily asset in the Perimeter Center submarket of Atlanta, Georgia, one of the city’s top employment markets. The property, which has been re-branded to Westmount Ashwood, is located at 1000 Ashwood Parkway and features an outdoor pool deck, resident lounge, complimentary coffee bar, fitness center, grilling stations, outdoor fire pit with seating areas, two dog parks, bike storage, on-site dry cleaning and valet trash pickup.

Westmount Ashwood’s excellent location within Perimeter Center is in close proximity to Interstate 285 as well as four MARTA rail stations providing convenient regional connectivity and access to downtown Atlanta and Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. The property is walkable to an abundance of retail and dining options including Super Target, Walmart Supercenter and a newly constructed Publix. Perimeter Mall is also located nearby with over 150 retailers.

The new ownership intends to make improvements to the common areas and amenities as well as renovate the unit interiors with new appliances, quartz countertops, kitchen backsplashes, updated cabinetry, upgraded lighting, vinyl plank flooring, keyless entry locks, and smart thermostats. Westmount Realty Capital will act as operating partner and will be supported by Greystar for property management. Debt financing for the project was provided by CIBC Inc.

Rudy Sayegh, CEO of Global Gate Capital, said: “We are pleased to complete this transaction which represents our 6th US multifamily investment this year. We have been investing in US multifamily since 2014 and are excited to continue to grow our portfolio.”

Philip Tager, Head of US Real Estate at Global Gate Capital, said: “We are delighted to be making our second multifamily investment in Atlanta this year, a market Global Gate is keen to invest more in. Investing in sunbelt states across the southeast and southwest is integral to Global Gate’s investment strategy.”

Global Gate Capital is an investment and wealth management firm that invests in multiple asset classes including real estate, private equity, credit, and listed securities. Global Gate has been investing in real estate since its inception and has deployed significant AUM in the asset class. With offices in Geneva, London, New York and Dubai, Global Gate has grown its assets under management to over $4.5B since its founding in 2013.

Media Contact:

Philip Tager, Managing Director

Global Gate Capital US, Inc.

philip.tager@globalgatecapital.com

This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com.

Can’t spell ‘couple’ without ‘coup’

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, 2022 chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, met with Myanmar military junta chief Sr. Gen. Min Aung Hlaing and vowed to fulfill an ASEAN agreement aimed at resolving Myanmar’s year-old political crisis. Many observers questioned the Cambodian strongman’s qualifications to lead outside efforts to resolve tension sparked by Min Aung Hlaing’s coup in Myanmar, noting that Hun Sen’s 36-year-rule in Phnom Penh has been marked by an armed revolt against elected coalition partners in the 1990s and the systematic destruction of Cambodia’s opposition since 2017.

Radio Free Asia Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036

Hun Sen, as ASEAN Chair, Breaks the Ice in Myanmar

PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA — While Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen put the Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ Five-Point Consensus for peace in Myanmar back on the regional agenda during his two-day visit to the country, analysts said any agreement is unlikely to end the bloodshed that has engulfed the country since last February’s coup.

The consensus calls for an immediate cessation of violence, constructive dialogue among all the parties, mediation to be facilitated by an envoy of ASEAN’s chair with the assistance of the secretary-general, humanitarian assistance and a visit by the special envoy to Myanmar.

A communique issued after Hun Sen’s meeting reaffirmed the consensus. Cambodian Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn told reporters “If Myanmar is in the midst of a civil war crisis, as we are concerned, it will have a devastating effect on our region, a bad reputation on ASEAN as well as ASEAN unity, so helping Myanmar is like helping ASEAN.”

Cambodia is this year’s ASEAN chair and Hun Sen’s visit, which started Friday, is the first state visit by a foreign leader to Myanmar since the coup after ASEAN failed to enforce the consensus.

Bradley Murg, distinguished senior research fellow at the Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, said the process to date had been a failure, as shown by the continuing violence, but Hun Sen had created an opportunity to move the crisis out of its existing stalemate.

“The joint statement between both governments ticked the boxes, all of them, regarding the Five-Point Consensus,” he said following Hun Sen’s meeting with junta leader General Min Aung Hlaing.

“Now what that ultimately means, we’re not going to know immediately. We’re going to initially wait until the ASEAN foreign ministers retreat and see how this plays out and the reaction from the various ASEAN capitals,” he said.

The planned January 18-19 retreat in the northern Cambodian town of Siem Reap is an informal gathering of foreign ministers from the 10 ASEAN countries and is used to discuss issues facing the bloc.

Failure to enforce the consensus resulted in Min Aung Hlaing being denied entry to the October ASEAN summit and the ASEAN-China summit the next month.

Ou Virak, president of the Cambodian research group Future Forum, said Hun Sen got what he had asked for, and that included an extension by the military of a cease-fire agreement with ethnic groups until the end of this year.

However, Hun Sen did not meet with Aung San Suu Kyi, the jailed de facto leader of the former elected government.

That was a sticking point during the two-day visit, which was sharply criticized by human rights groups as legitimizing the military leadership and as a tool for Hun Sen to deflect criticism from his own human rights record and a harsh crackdown on dissent at home.

However, Ou Virak, said the meeting “seems to suggest” that the ASEAN special envoy, Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn, would eventually be allowed to negotiate with Suu Kyi and her supporters.

“It will be interesting and important to see whether Aung San Suu Kyi and the opposition will be involved and invited to take part in a credible way. I think that’s the only way to make an effort in Myanmar legitimate.

“I would be very shocked and surprised if Cambodia would just accept not being able to meet with Aung San Suu Kyi,” Ou Virak said.

The visit was met with rowdy protests across Myanmar and by the diaspora abroad as Min Aung Hlaing rolled out the red carpet and an honor guard for Hun Sen.

Most ASEAN states have condemned the coup and the ensuing crisis, which has claimed more than 1,400 lives, including the massacre of more than 30 people in Kayah state on Christmas Eve while intensive attacks in Karen state continued throughout December.

The group ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights also accused Hun Sen of threatening cohesion among its 10 members by “going rogue” in an attempt to bring Myanmar back into the ASEAN fold.

Carl Thayer, emeritus professor at Australia’s University of New South Wales, said the visit went against ASEAN policy, but as Hun Sen occupies the chair, he has “a sort of leeway” to act.

“To me there was a deeper agenda,” he said, noting Cambodia’s poor track record on human rights.

“But yes, ASEAN’s under pressure and he’s just picked up the mantle and he’s broken the ice. I mean he’s gone there, that’s just been done and there’s nothing ASEAN can do to turn it back,” he said. “He’s established the basis for a dialogue.”

Thayer also echoed Murg’s sentiments, saying the real test will arrive when ASEAN ministers begin their annual summits and whether or not Myanmar leaders will be allowed to attend, including possible meetings in Washington between ASEAN heads of state and U.S. President Joe Biden.

That meeting was expected to be held later this month but is yet to be confirmed.

Phil Robertson deputy director of the Asia division at Human Rights Watch, said Hun Sen was using Myanmar to deflect his own international criticism, which has intensified in recent years with the court dissolution of the opposition Cambodian National Rescue Party.

That enabled Hun Sen’s long ruling Cambodian People’s Party to win every seat contested at elections in 2018 and since then hundreds of CNRP supporters have been arrested and jailed alongside journalists, environmentalists and civil society activists.

“He [Hun Sen] wants to be left alone, he wants to be able to continue his dictatorial rule and if he has to use Myanmar as the foil, then, you know, that’s one of the perks of being the ASEAN chair,” Robertson said.

Source: Voice of America