China’s Leaders Pledge Support for Economy, Boosting Markets

China will take steps to support its economy, including embattled internet platforms, as risks grow from its COVID-19 outbreaks and conflict in Ukraine, a top decision-making body of the ruling Communist Party said Friday, lifting markets.

The coronavirus and conflict in Ukraine have contributed to economic headwinds in a crucial year for China and President Xi Jinping, who is expected to secure a precedent-breaking third leadership term in the autumn.

Private economists have said Beijing’s target for economic growth of about 5.5% this year will be hard to achieve without significant stimulus, as lockdowns and other tough measures to battle the pandemic create havoc for supply chains.

Friday’s Politburo meeting chaired by Xi said it would support COVID-hit industries and small firms, speed work on infrastructure, and stabilize transport, logistics, and supply chains, according to a statement on the central government’s website.

“We will strengthen macroeconomic policy adjustments to stabilize the economy, and strive to achieve the expected economic and social development goals for the full year,” the statement quoted the Politburo as saying.

Top leaders conceded that efforts to stabilize growth, employment and prices were facing new challenges.

Chinese share prices surged in response to the pledges, particularly internet companies on which authorities clamped down last year, as the Politburo’s pledge to “promote the healthy development of the platform economy” bolstered hopes the worst was over.

Authorities are set to have a meeting with internet majors next month, a person with knowledge of the matter said.

Analysts believe more stimulus measures and some easing of property curbs will be needed to hit the government’s growth target for 2022.

“While these messages are positive, the key is about the specific policies and their implementation,” said Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

“The economy is in trouble, with second quarter GDP growth likely turning negative (year-on-year),” he said. “A significant change of macro policy is necessary to turn the economy around.”

Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura, said he still expected the economy to grow 1.8% in the second quarter and 3.9% in 2022.

COVID-19 jitters

Financial markets have been hit hard over the past two weeks by fears that lockdowns will cause severe damage for China’s economy and derail a global recovery just as many nations rebound from pandemic-led slumps.

The benchmark share index jumped more than 2% Friday, with the tech-focused STAR50 Index surging nearly 5%. Shares of Hong Kong-listed tech firms rose, with the Hang Seng Tech Index up by 10%.

On Tuesday, Xi chaired a meeting that announced a big infrastructure push to boost demand, reinforcing Beijing’s reliance on big-ticket projects to spur growth.

“Senior leaders called for a ‘frontloading’ of policy measures as well as increased support, confirming our view that the authorities will ensure a stable economic and political environment ahead of the 20th party congress later in the year,” ANZ analysts said in a note.

“However, to attain the 5.5% target China may be borrowing from the future and incur more debt.”

Beijing will also back “healthy development” of the property market, fanning hopes that some cities will relax supervision of escrow funds to help ease a liquidity crunch for developers.

But the Politburo said China would stick to a controversial dynamic zero-COVID policy to stamp out disease outbreaks while minimizing the pandemic’s economic impact.

Source: Voice of America

Meaningful Youth Engagement in Water: Partnering with the Youth in Improving Water Security

The youth are our future. They hold in their hands the agency to affect the world’s politics, progress, and reform. Over 50% of global youth (or over 1.1 billion people aged under 30) reside in Asia and the Pacific—a region facing many issues in water scarcity and climate change. If we are to achieve water security and resilience in our region, we must find a way to better engage the youth.

ADB’s Water Sector Group has partnered with ADB’s Youth for Asia to develop a roadmap for Meaningful Youth Engagement in the water sector. The roadmap includes evidence of the effectiveness of youth participation and pathways to achieve it.

Transcript

The youth are our future. They hold in their hands the agency to affect the world’s politics, progress, and reform. Over 50% of global youth (or over 1.1 billion people aged under 30) reside in Asia and the Pacific—a region facing many issues in water scarcity and climate change. If we are to achieve water security and resilience in our region, we must find a way to better engage the youth.

ADB’s Water Sector Group has partnered with ADB’s Youth for Asia to develop a roadmap for Meaningful Youth Engagement in the water sector. The roadmap includes evidence of the effectiveness of youth participation and pathways to achieve it.

Young people must be fundamental partners in improving water security. This means promoting safe and conducive spaces for intergenerational collaboration where youth can co-decide and co-implement decisions affecting their future.

Chanra Nhov

Water Engineer

Provincial Capacity Development Technical Assistance Consultant (PCDTA)

I think having youth as the focal person in the village development committee in the community is the best.

Serey Chheut

School Director

Prey Pdao Primary School

Youth is fundamental to the community’s development.

Developed through intergenerational dialogue with water stakeholders, the roadmap sets out five objectives in support of a water-secure Asia and the Pacific that empowers its youth to work with governments and local communities.

For each objective, the roadmap draws a set of actions to influence policy, projects, and program design. It also seeks to generate and share knowledge to deepen the understanding of the youth perspective, and provide a voice for young people in influencing change.

Seizana Pen

Youth Wash Coordinator

Cambodia

My name is Seizana Pen; I am Cambodian. I got the opportunity to work as a Youth WASH coordinator in ADB’s rural water supply and sanitation project. I am here because I believe that every young person can contribute to achieving a vision of water supply and sanitation for all. I am here to bring out and implement the novel ideas that youth have; I believe youth has the potential and will to contribute and youth can change mindsets in communities.

Sengchan Kongmany

Chomcheng Village, Long District, Luang Namtha Province

Hello everyone, construction of the water supply treatment plant in Long district has now been completed. It started its operations on 4 March 2021 to supply clean and safe water to all people in Long district.”

Mafalda Pinto

Water Resources (Young Professional)

Asian Development Bank

If we want to bring and sustain innovation, digitalization, climate resilience and inclusiveness to our water projects and programs, then we need to build the right cadre within our water entities on the ground.

Christian Walder

Water Supply And Sanitation Specialist

Asian Development Bank

A starting point will be to assess how inclusive your water entity is and prepare a roadmap. Together we can achieve water security and resilience in our Asia and the Pacific region, by involving the majority citizens of tomorrow, our youth.

Source: Asian Development Bank

China-Solomon Islands Deal Tests US Approach to ‘Free and Open’ Asia

In a December speech, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken described Washington’s vision for Asia – or what U.S. officials have come to call the “free and open Indo-Pacific.”

“When we say that we want a free and open Indo-Pacific … we mean that on a state level, that individual countries will be able to choose their own path and their own partners,” Blinken said.

When discussing their Asia strategy, U.S. officials like Blinken frequently focus on the plight of smaller countries, saying they should be free to make their own decisions, especially in the face of rising Chinese coercion.

But what happens when a small Asian country chooses closer ties with China? That’s what happened this month, when the Solomon Islands, a tiny island chain in the South Pacific, announced it had signed a security pact with Beijing.

When a draft of the agreement leaked in late March, alarm bells sounded in Washington. The United States quickly announced it would send a senior delegation to the Solomons, a rare step for a country of only about 700,000 people.

But the U.S. delegation, which included top White House Asia official Kurt Campbell, arrived too late to persuade the Solomons to drop the deal, which by then had already been confirmed by officials in both Beijing and Honiara.

Neither country has disclosed the details of the security pact, but the draft deal, which is believed to mirror the final agreement, said if both sides agreed, Chinese warships could dock on the islands and that Beijing could send forces to help maintain “social order.”

The United States and its regional allies fear the deal could pave the way for China to establish a permanent military presence. The concern is perhaps most acute in Australia, which is only about a three-hour flight from the Solomons.

When a draft of the agreement leaked in late March, alarm bells sounded in Washington. The United States quickly announced it would send a senior delegation to the Solomons, a rare step for a country of only about 700,000 people.

But the U.S. delegation, which included top White House Asia official Kurt Campbell, arrived too late to persuade the Solomons to drop the deal, which by then had already been confirmed by officials in both Beijing and Honiara.

Neither country has disclosed the details of the security pact, but the draft deal, which is believed to mirror the final agreement, said if both sides agreed, Chinese warships could dock on the islands and that Beijing could send forces to help maintain “social order.”

The United States and its regional allies fear the deal could pave the way for China to establish a permanent military presence. The concern is perhaps most acute in Australia, which is only about a three-hour flight from the Solomons.

“We have respect for the Solomon Islands’ sovereignty. The Solomon Islands will make its own decisions. But we tried to be clear how those decisions may implicate American national interests,” said Daniel Kritenbrink, assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, who was part of the U.S. delegation.

It is a tricky situation for the United States, which wants to protect its interests but does not want to be seen as violating principles, such as noncoercion, which lie at the heart of its stated approach to Asia. Some analysts in the region say the United States is failing in this regard.

“They’ve issued a coercive threat. And it’s public and it’s obvious and it’s on White House letterhead,” said Van Jackson, a former Pentagon official who teaches at New Zealand’s Victoria University of Wellington. “We want them to do what we want them to do, I mean, how much clearer can it be?”

Geopolitical rivalry

Although the Solomon Islands has emerged as a strategic battleground between the United States and China, it is far from the only location where the rivalry is playing out.

Under President Xi Jinping, China has steadily expanded its military presence beyond its shores, most notably in the South China Sea, where it has created military outposts over the objections of its neighbors, who have overlapping territorial claims with China.

But as of now, China has established only a single overseas military base – a naval facility in the East African country of Djibouti. And although China is also reportedly considering a base in Equatorial Guinea on Africa’s west coast, Beijing is not close to challenging the global military influence of the United States, which maintains a network of more than 700 bases in more than 70 countries.

Should China be trusted?

But there are reasons not to trust China’s long-term intentions in the region, according to many observers – especially in Australia, where officials have pointed to Xi’s 2015 promise to not militarize the artificial islands it had created in the South China Sea.

“President Xi looked [former U.S.] President [Barack] Obama in the eye and said that the 20 points of reclaimed islands on the South China Sea would not be militarized. Today they are militarized,” Australian Defense Minister Peter Dutton said in a recent interview.

Even in the Solomon Islands, some fear the consequences of inviting security forces from an increasingly authoritarian government that does not embrace democratic values.

“China has a totally different system of government. Solomon Islands is not familiar with that system,” said Matthew Cooper Wale, the Solomon Islands opposition leader who opposes the security pact.

“Such distinctions are not merely theoretical. When it comes to national security, they will affect how and what training is conducted, how arrests are done, the manner in which courts function, the extent to which individual rights can be expressed, and ultimately, how the rule of law is perceived,” Wale said in a recent editorial.

Local tensions

Another concern is that the presence of Chinese security forces could exacerbate the Solomons’ ethnic and political tensions, which as recently as November led to demonstrations and riots that attempted to oust Sogavare’s government.

Much of that civil unrest was related to the Solomon Islands’ 2019 decision to recognize China instead of Taiwan. The government of Malaita, the Solomons’ most populous province that has long felt neglected, opposed that decision. It refused to accept any aid from Beijing and demanded a referendum on independence.

Under a bilateral agreement, Australian forces were sent to quell the November unrest. They remain in the Solomons. If tensions were to again worsen and Chinese troops also were dispatched, some analysts warn that two separate powers could be present in the same country, each with an interest in supporting different sides of the conflict.

“What will we do if that turns out to be a civil war where under one arrangement – the Australian treaty with the Solomon Islands – a democratic government calls on Australia to intervene in a civil disturbance that might be supported by China? You just can’t have two security forces in the same country,” said Richard Herr, a law professor at the University of Tasmania in Australia.

Anna Powles, a Pacific security expert at New Zealand’s Massey University, agreed. “If the Solomon Islands governments collapsed, which force would have supremacy? You would essentially have two command control lines operating. A huge scope for miscommunication and accidents,” she said.

Despite the risks, Sogavare has decided on a framework to welcome Chinese forces – a move he said would “diversify” his country’s security. And the U.S. has little power to stop it, barring a major shift in approach that looks beyond the military dimension for a sustained period of time, some analysts warn.

“The U.S. has been absent from the region for a long time,” said Powles, who thinks Washington should spend more time building relationships in the Solomons, as well as offering major health development programs and infrastructure items.

“I don’t think it’s too late,” she said. “This deal is about the immediate for Sogavare. But it means the type of smart diplomacy we haven’t seen yet.”

Source: Voice of America

Effective third-sector actors in aid on the Thailand-Myanmar border

In the cold and dark winter nights, refugees sleep beside the Moei river with no shelter or blankets. Their only resources are donations from regional civil society organisations (CSOs)*: *Myanmar migrant-based community-based organisations (CBOs) in Thailand, Karen region-based CSOs and some Thailand CSOs. Thailand CSOs are sanctioned by the Royal Thai Army, and cooperate with Myanmar’s revolutionary forces such as the KNLA, People’s Defense Force (PDF), and select forces within the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA). The international community, on the other hand, has had no concrete plan to help Myanmar refugees and residents struggling with the effects of Tatmadaw attacks in southern Myanmar.

As conflict broke out between the Myanmar Tatmadaw (military) and Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) forces in “peace township” Lay Kay Kaw in December 15, 2021, serious artillery shootings and air strikes by the Tatmadaw resulted in thousands fleeing to Thailand. This conflict was only one of many effects of the ongoing armed conflict since the Myanmar coup of February 1, 2021.

What the international aid community and governments urgently need to push now is cooperation between the Thai government and ASEAN to accept new refugees in Thailand, to ensure cross-border humanitarian assistance for IDPs on the Thailand-Myanmar border. This can be achieved by cooperating with effective third sectors actors on the ground to distribute aid for those in need. In addition, Myanmar refugee and migrant-focused CSOs such as border-based charities, Myanmar migrant workers associations, and ethnic region-based CSOs must be allowed to freely operate in the border regions.

In southeast and southern Myanmar, the KNLA, the Karen National Defense Organization (KNDO) (the armed wings of the Karen National Union) and the Karenni Army (KA) (the armed wing of the Karenni National Progressive Party), are giving thousands of urban Burmese military training and mobilising the People’s Defense Forces (PDFs), Karenni Nationalities Defense Forces (KNDFs) and Burma People’s Liberation Army (BPLA). These two ethnic armed organisations (EAOs) control areas which are adjacent to the Thailand border, an area currently under siege by Tatmadaw offensives. Populations in these areas are facing the high risk of crimes against humanity. These offensives will likely increase in the future, resulting in further displacement as the number of refugees to Thailand increase.

Refugees fleeing armed conflict need to have safe refuge in areas far from the Tatmadaw’s air strikes and artillery; they should not be asked to return to dangerous zones as previous refugees have been forced to. After the airstrikes on March 27, 2021, residents of Mutraw (Papun) district fled to the Thai-Myanmar border, but were turned around by Thai border authorities. Similarly, refugees fleeing a Tatmadaw invasion of Lay Kay Kaw areas were turned back to Myanmar.

“We have been living between these two riverbanks for more than two months. When fighting closes in on the Myanmar side, we cross the Moei river and stay on the Thai side. We are asked to return to the Myanmar side when the artillery shelling stops,” a resident of Lay Kaw Kaw staying in Moei riverbank, shared with me.

Recent visits by the United Nations (UN) special envoy to Thailand have appealed to Prayuth Chan-Ocha, the Thai Prime Minister to provide assistance to Myanmar refugees, IDPs, and the restoration of democracy in Myanmar. The two-day visit by Washington’s senior officials in the second week of October, 2021 also called for Thailand to ensure cross-border life-saving assistance along the Myanmar border. But Bangkok has no formal policy for long-term Myanmar refugees on their border.

However, as the Moso massacre in Karenni state demonstrates, provision of cross-border lifesaving assistance is not possible while the Tatmadaw continues to target civilian populations with air strikes and artillery shelling. The Tatmadaw has even cut off food and medical supplies to their operation areas.

It is imperative that the UN, US, ASEAN and neighboring member states like Thailand ensure the security of aid routes from CBOs and CSOs along the Thai-Myanmar border; these plans must include new concrete plans to aid refugees within Thailand’s borders. Yet, at the time of writing, Thailand is drafting more restrictive NGO law, which is bound to affect the humanitarian assistance available at the border.

The main concern of activists and revolutionaries within the Myanmar community so far has been the effect of international legitimacy on the junta regime’s culture of impunity; many fear that international recognition will give the military free rein to continue the perpetration of serious war crimes, kleptocracy, and the oppression of people in Myanmar.

International aid agencies in Myanmar who have tried to engage with the junta have incurred the anger of Myanmar activists and social workers, and consequently, “social punishment” on sites like Facebook. The international community needs to engage with the right local partners to provide aid effectively on the Thailand-Myanmar border.

Myanmar refugees and migrant-focused CSOs have the experience with providing aid in the border areas and social capital with the war on community. During the Lay Kay Kaw airstrikes, for example, Myanmar refugees and migrant-focused CSOs such as border-based charities, Myanmar migrant workers associations, and ethnic region-based CSOs provided aid to refugees with local funding, access which international organisations could not provide. These third sector actors are vital partners for international and long-term access and distribution to aid in Myanmar.

These partners include three key groups. First, Myanmar migrant-based CBOs, especially migrant workers associations in Thailand, are essential intermediaries––despite not being well-known as refugee aid providers. These CBOs are well-established across Thailand, particularly in cities like Mae Sot and Samut Sakhon (Mahachai). Their contributions have provided aid to people in Myanmar long before and after the coup in February 2021.

The second effective third sector actor is ethnic region-based CSOs, such as Karen and Karenni regional organisations who are also essential providers of cross-border humanitarian assistance. They have extensive experience with providing aid in the southern Myanmar, an area plagued by decades-long armed conflict since the 1990s between the Tatmadaw and ethnic armed groups in Karen and Karenni region-based areas. These ethnic region-based CSOs have been the main service providers in healthcare and education and advocates for human rights and environmental issues.

Third, cross-border based charities and refugee camps at the Thai-Myanmar border, particularly in Mae Hong Son, Tak, and, Kanchanaburi are also familiar with international aid, and already possess good institutional support and structures to manage refugee affairs. These CSOs have the network for humanitarian assistances and cross border aid distribution. Because of their institutional capacity and background, these CSOs would be effective service providers if the Bangkok government agrees to new refugee camps at Thailand side.

Tatmadaw offensives in the last few months have not only targeted and destroyed civilian livelihoods and homes; their actions include a wide range of crimes against humanity. If international agencies are eager to provide aid, they should be careful to avoid any engagement with the junta regime, or risk eliminating humanitarian assistance for those who need it most: refugees on the Thai-Burma border in Karen and Karenni state, and IDPs in Karen and Karenni regions.

Relying upon these third-sector organisations also helps to mediate between international agencies and local humanitarian organisations, thereby avoiding engagement with the junta which would anger many in the resistance movement in Myanmar. More attention needs to be given to these border-based actors, as they are the most realistic means of distributing much-needed aid in Myanmar now.

Source: New Mandala

PH CITES UN CONTRIBUTION TO THE BANGSAMORO PEACE PROCESS AT MEETING ON PEACEBUILDING FINANCING

UNITED NATIONS– Deputy Permanent Representative of the Philippines to the United Nations, Ambassador Ariel Rodelas Peñaranda cited how the Philippines has benefitted from the Peacebuilding Fund for the UN programmes in Mindanao during the high-level meeting on Peacebuilding Financing on 27 April 2022. The high-level meeting was convened by UN General Assembly President Abdulla Shahid to promoteadequate, predictable, and sustained financing for peacebuilding

Ambassador Peñaranda highlighted how the pooled resources by the UN were instrumental in helping build the capacities in the area of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), in close coordination with the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP), in line with the inclusive peace and development roadmap for the Bangsamoro Peace Process of the Duterte Adminstration.

“Through adequate and sustained financing, peacebuilding’s raison d’être is to provide support to countries in their efforts to sustain peace, and build inclusive and prosperous societies,” DPR Peñaranda said.

The Deputy Permanent Representative also emphasized the importance of the expansion “beyond the peace table” of women’s political participation and leadership, encouraged fellow UN delegates to address the financing gap in peacebuilding, and Philippines’ contribution amounting to fifty thousand US dollars (US$50,000) towards the PBF for the year 2022.

Source: Republic of Philippines Department Of Foreign Affairs