Wheels of Justice Turn Slowly for Displaced Rohingya People

Myanmar’s displaced Rohingya Muslims are marking a solemn anniversary this week.

On August 25, 2017, the Myanmar military began a brutal “clearance operation” in response to government reports that a Rohingya insurgent group called the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army or ARSA, had attacked more than 30 police outposts in Rakhine State.

The disproportionate response from Myanmar security forces, which commenced at daybreak, drove an estimated 700,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to neighboring Bangladesh over the following weeks, and led to charges of genocide against the Myanmar army leaders.

The death toll rose quickly.

An estimated 6,700 Rohingya were killed in the first month with thousands more in the months to follow, according to Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), as accounts of gang rapes, torture, and mass killings were relayed by survivors and villagers who escaped the attacks.

Despite the global condemnation of their actions in 2017, the Myanmar army has continued its brutal aggression on civilians since seizing power in a coup last year, followed by attacks on all ethnic groups.

Myanmar officials have denied the military carried out human rights abuses. The government said the campaign was necessary to defend against attacks by Rohingya militants.

In March, the United States declared Myanmar military actions against the Rohingya as genocide.

Experts say ongoing abuses being committed across Myanmar have confirmed the credibility of the accounts of the 2017 attacks.

“It’s drawn the attention of the international community to the grave abuses that the military is committing and also has opened the eyes of some of the other groups within Myanmar to the plight of the Rohingya, groups that had previously not believed what the military was committing against the Rohingya or believed the military’s lies,” explained Dan Sullivan, Refugee International’s Asia and Africa deputy director.

While the move to unite all opposing ethnic forces has become increasingly popular, some rights groups are not sure that it will become reality.

“In order to overcome the ruthless military junta, all parties need to be united against them,” says Kyaw Win, the executive director of the Burma Human Rights Network (BHRN). “It is not enough only opposing the junta … it is crucial to collaborate with each other.”

There are 135 ethnic groups in Myanmar, excluding the Rohingya, who were stripped of their citizenship in a 1982 law created by the army, which perpetuated decades of abuse and unfair treatment.

Meanwhile, life in the sprawling Bangladesh camps remains tough for the stateless refugees, who face adverse conditions and increased restrictions.

“Since the completion of the fencing around the whole refugee camp, people are having trouble traveling from one camp to another—even inside the fenced area—because of the security forces who were deployed in the camp and many other reasons,” explained a 25-year-old camp youth, who lives in Kutapalong, the world’s largest refugee camp.

The youth, who asked to remain anonymous, says that while the fencing is good for security, police often extort the Rohingya instead of protecting them, and taxi fees have doubled because drivers now have to pay more money at checkpoints.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet discussed repatriation options with Rohingya representatives during a visit to the massive camp earlier this month.

“All of them have said, we want to go back, but we want to go back … when we have an identity as citizens of Myanmar,” she said while visiting the camp. “When our rights are respected, we can have our livelihoods again, we can have our land and we can feel we are a part of a country.”

This desire for equal rights and recognition is echoed by the few Rohingya who have remained in Rakhine, as coup-related travel restrictions in Myanmar have contributed to increased food prices, exacerbating the hardships.

An experienced Rohingya aid worker in Rakhine who did not want to use his name because of security concerns, assessed the junta’s promises of new homes and jobs for Rohingya people who choose to be repatriated.

“It is very difficult, and I would say there are rare opportunities for the Rohingya. Inside Myanmar and Maungdaw, I would say no preparations have been made for them to come back,” the aid worker told VOA by phone, referring to a town in Rakhine.

The aid worker, who witnessed the 2017 exodus first-hand and assisted foreign support teams in Bangladesh, said that some of the refugees are desperate to escape the camps.

“Some people will try to come back but, in the end, it will be a more horrible situation than what they are facing in the refugee camps.”

The worker also said some repatriation shelters, complete with barbed wire and watch towers, have been constructed near Maungdaw in the last few years, but they have already been flooded and damaged.

While waiting for conditions to improve, foreign aid and rights groups are urging the Bangladeshi government to allow schooling for the displaced youngsters in the camps.

“Expanding these education and livelihood opportunities for girls and boys will be the best way to prevent social problems and criminality and to fully prepare refugees for sustainable reintegration in Myanmar society,” Bachelet said at the end of her visit.

Preparing future generations of Rohingya is also a concern for BHRN’s Kyaw Win.

“The Bangladesh government has done a great job opening its border to save many lives,” Kyaw Win said. “However, not allowing education for the children in camp is like killing their souls. Education is extremely important for the Rohingya children to build up their community in future. More humanitarian and human rights organizations must be allowed to operate inside the camp to provide trauma healing courses.”

Despite setbacks created by increased Myanmar junta atrocities, the first step toward justice for the Rohingya people occurred last month in The Hague.

After dismissing objections by Myanmar’s military ruler, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in July allowed a case to proceed alleging that Myanmar performed acts of genocide against the Rohingya.

Despite overwhelming evidence gathered, analysts say that more pressure is needed as the trial could continue for years.

“Fundamentally, the impunity of the junta needs to be addressed through concerted international actions with better coordinated and expanded sanctions including the oil and gas sectors, the pursuing of an arms embargo and then sustaining that humanitarian aid and accountability,” explained Sullivan of Refugee International.

BHRN’s Khaw Win agrees with calls for increased pressure on the junta.

“More countries need to join the ICJ case and more countries should open up universal jurisdiction cases against the perpetrators,” Khaw Win said, adding that mounting evidence collected by international agencies is increasingly difficult to refute.

Texting from his bamboo hut, the unnamed 25-year-old Rohingya youth struck a more optimistic tone on the historic court ruling.

“We feel good because the world is still under the administration of intellectual people that will reveal there’s no place in the world for perpetrators,” the youth wrote. “We also feel that this is the time to deliver justice and hold the perpetrators accountable.”

Source: Voice of America

Indian Gov’t Signed Loan Agreement Of 96.3 Million USD With ADB To Improve Water Supply, Sanitation

NEW DELHI– India’s federal government and Asian Development Bank (ADB), yesterday signed a loan agreement of 96.3 million U.S. dollars, to improve water supply and sanitation services, in the state of Himachal Pradesh, officials said.

The agreement was signed in New Delhi by Rajat Kumar Mishra, a senior official of the department of economic affairs, representing the government of India, and Takeo Konishi, country director of ADB in India.

“The ADB and the government, today (yesterday), signed a 96.3-million U.S. dollar loan agreement, to provide safe drinking water and improve water supply and sanitation services, in the state of Himachal Pradesh,” reads a statement issued by India’s finance ministry.

Mishra said, the project was aligned with the objectives of the government of India’s Jal Jeevan (Water Life) Mission, which aims to provide piped water to all rural households by 2024, and to ensure safe, sustainable and inclusive rural water supply and sanitation services.

According to the federal finance ministry, more than 90 percent of the state’s rural population has access to drinking water, but the water supply infrastructure needs revamping.

“The ADB project will connect 75,800 households to the service, providing uninterrupted water supply to about 370,000 residents across 10 districts,” the ministry said.

Source: Nam News Network

Police Searched Bus Company, Suspect Negligence After Fatal Crash In Central Japan

TOKYO, Aug 23 (NNN-NHK) – The offices of a bus operator were searched by the police, today, following the fatal crash a day earlier on an expressway in Nagoya, central Japan, that left two people dead and injured seven others.

The operator of the bus, Aoi Traffic Corp., located in north Nagoya’s Komaki city, was searched on suspicion of negligent driving resulting in death and injury, local media reported.

Two people died and seven others were injured, as the bus overturned and caught fire, after hitting a concrete divider on the Nagoya Expressway. The bus was on its way from the city centre to the Nagoya Airport.

Another vehicle was also involved in the fiery collision.

Investigative sources said, the bus hit the concrete divider, as it was travelling in the lane leading to the expressway’s exit.

Police are looking into the driver’s decision-making and his condition at the time of the crash as there were no brake marks at the scene.

After hitting the divider, the bus overturned and caught fire, with thick black smoke seen billowing from the inferno.

Today, images of the bus were broadcast by local media, showing the burned-out shell of the vehicle, with the words “safe & kind” and the operator’s name “AOI” just recognisable on the side of the charred vehicle.

The police will likely confiscate documents related to how the firm’s drivers operate, including their working hours and the company’s overall safety management.

In fatal accidents in the past, bus drivers here have been found to have been working dangerously long hours, depriving them of sleep, and not adhering to speed limits or standard routes to get to their destinations, in order to save time and money.

Source: Nam News Network

UN split over ban on Taliban officials’ travel

UNITED NATIONS— Members of the United Nations Security Council remained divided Monday over whether to exempt some of Afghanistan’s Taliban officials from a travel ban, diplomatic sources said.

Under a 2011 Security Council resolution, 135 Taliban leaders are subject to a sanctions regime that includes asset freezes and travel bans.

Thirteen of them benefited from an exemption from the travel ban, renewed regularly, to allow them to meet officials from other countries abroad.

But this exemption ended last Friday, after Ireland objected to its automatic renewal for another month.

In June, the Sanctions Committee in charge of Afghanistan, comprised of the Security Council’s 15 members, had already removed from the exemptions list two Taliban ministers responsible for education, in retaliation for the drastic reduction in the rights of women and girls that was imposed by the hardline Islamist regime.

Several Western countries would like to further reduce the list, according to diplomatic sources.

They highlight the failure to respect the commitments to uphold human rights or fight terrorism that were made by the Taliban when they returned to power a year ago.

Early this month the United States announced the killing of Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in a drone strike on Kabul, calling into question the Taliban’s promise not to harbor militant groups.

China and Russia, however, supported a regular extension of exemptions list.

“These exemptions are still just as necessary,” the Chinese presidency of the Security Council said last week, deeming it “counterproductive” to link human rights to travel issues for Taliban officials.

Since last week, and again Monday, several compromise proposals that would more or less shrink the list of officials concerned, or the number of authorized destinations, have been rejected on both sides, according to diplomatic sources.

Discussions are expected to continue.

Pending a possible decision, none of the Taliban officials on the sanctions list can travel.

That was of particular concern to the Taliban’s foreign minister, Amir Khan Muttaqi, who has visited Qatar several times in recent months for diplomatic discussions and who was among the 13 exemptions.

In a statement posted Saturday on Twitter, a foreign ministry spokesman called on the Security Council “not to use sanctions as pressure tool” and said all sanctions against Taliban officials should be lifted.

“If the travel ban is extended, it will create distance instead of promoting dialogue & engagement, an outcome that must be prevented,” the spokesman said.

Source: Nam News Network

Six Digital Banks May Now Pursue Full Operations

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) recently issued Certificates of Authority (COA) to Operate to two additional banks, allowing them to proceed with full operations as digital banks. This has resulted in a total of six digital banks allowed to operate in the Philippines.

The most recent recipients were UnionDigital Bank, Inc. (UDB) and GoTyme Bank Corporation (GTYME), which obtained their certificates last July 12 and 29, respectively. In the first quarter of 2022, the BSP authorized Tonik Digital Bank, Inc. (TONDB) and Maya Bank, Inc. (MAYA) to operate as digital banks, while Overseas Filipino Bank, Inc., A Digital Bank of LANDBANK (OFBDB), and UNObank, Inc. (UBI) were authorized during the second quarter of 2022.

The BSP issues the COA to Operate to digital banks that have substantially complied with the BSP’s conditions for approval and pre-operating requirements. These include capitalization, risk and governance structure, and information technology systems, among others. The process for securing a COA to Operate begins with the application to establish a digital bank, to be approved by the Monetary Board (MB). Once approved by the MB, the BSP issues a COA to Register, to be submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission. After registration and completion of all other requirements, digital banks may then obtain the COA to Operate from the BSP.

OFBDB, TONDB, and MAYA are now fully operational, while UBI, UDB, and GTYME have commenced limited operations targeting select customers. Operating initially under limited capacity is a conservative approach adopted by digital banks to further ensure that all aspects of their digital operations are ironed out prior to fully launching their services to the public. UBI, UDB and GTYME are expected to publicly launch within the second half of this year.

Digital banks, unlike brick-and-mortar banks, have no physical branches. Their financial products and services are processed end-to-end through digital platforms or electronic channels.

From January to June 2022, the volume and value of electronic payments and financial services processed through digital banks reached 1.4 million transactions and P8.45 billion, respectively.

The operations of digital banks support the BSP’s Digital Payments Transformation Roadmap, which aims to digitalize half of the total volume of retail payments in the country, and onboard at least 70 percent of Filipino adults into the formal financial system by 2023.

Source: Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP)

ADB, USAID Partner to Help Pacific Strengthen Community Resilience and Governance

MANILA, PHILIPPINES (23 August 2022) — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) signed a joint agreement to help the Pacific better adapt and respond to climate and disaster impacts, pandemics, and economic shocks.

The Regional Development Objective Agreement was signed by ADB Senior Advisor for Strategy, Policy, and Partnerships Kenji Yuhaku and USAID Acting Mission Director for the Philippines, Pacific Islands, and Mongolia Betty Chung.

“ADB and USAID share similar goals in addressing development challenges in the region,” said ADB Director General for the Pacific Leah Gutierrez. “This new partnership will provide for stronger collaboration in Pacific island countries as they continue to address climate change risks, strengthen efforts to mitigate and respond to disasters, and improve management of natural resources in the Pacific region.”

Under the agreement, USAID will support efforts to strengthen community resilience and governance, and advance resilient economic growth in the Pacific.

“As a proud Pacific nation with very strong ties in the region, the United States is deeply invested in the Indo-Pacific. This agreement further underscores our commitment to Pacific Island countries,” said Ms. Chung. “We believe that by advancing an open, connected, prosperous, resilient, and secure Indo-Pacific, countries in the region will be more empowered to adapt to the challenges of the 21st century and to seize its many opportunities.”

The partnership aims to expand access to affordable and climate-smart energy systems through private sector-led investments, and strengthen health systems and health coverage, to help the region become more resilient to shocks and more able to overcome the challenges of distance and isolation.

ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. Established in 1966, it is owned by 68 members—49 from the region.

Source: Asian Development Bank