Junta shell kills a woman and injures her husband and baby in Sagaing region

A mortar shell fired by junta troops killed a woman and injured two family members when it struck their home in Wetlet township in Myanmar’s Sagaing region, according to a local who declined to be named for safety reasons.

The troops fired heavy artillery at Shein Ma Kar village on Monday night, the resident told RFA.

“Two shells hit the southeast corner of the village and two shells hit the north,” the local said. “When a shell landed on a house near the hospital and the football field, a woman … was hit and died. Her husband was also injured. Half of their child’s face was torn and she lost an eye. Their house also burned down. The shells were fired even though there was no fighting [with local People’s Defense Forces].”

The woman, 33, was identified as Ka China Ma and her husband, also in his thirties, was named as Thaung Myint Oo. The baby girl, aged around one-year-old, had not yet been named by the family.

Locals said that a military column of about 50 soldiers also raided Pi Tauk Chon village near Shein Ma Kar on Tuesday morning, set fire to houses and then returned to Wetlet township. RFA has not been able to verify their claims.

Nearly 6,000 residents from 10 villages in the township fled their homes during nearly four weeks of junta raids on Wetlet last month, according to locals.

The village attacks came as local People’s Defense Forces (PDFs) stormed the Shwe Pan Kone village police station in the western part of Wetlet township. The military fired on them from a helicopter gunship, killing a woman from a nearby village in the process.

It has been a brutal month for people living in Sagaing region. Troops killed four villagers from Monywa township during five days of fighting with PDFs at the start of November, forcing more than 3,000 villagers to flee their homes.

According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma) 2,420 civilians have been killed by the junta since the Feb., 2021 coup.

Iranian Commander Called For Strengthened Military Cooperation With Iraq

TEHRAN – Chief of Staff of Iranian Armed Forces, Mohammad Bagheri, yesterday, announced his country’s readiness to share experiences in the defence sector with Iraq.

 

In a telephone conversation with recently-appointed Iraqi Defence Minister, Thabet Muhammad Saeed Al Abbasi, Bagheri said, military relations between the two countries were not at a desirable level currently, and called for the armed forces of both sides to improve bilateral relations.

 

“The armed forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran have a lot of capacity and capabilities in various fields, including in the defence industry, and fight against terrorism,” he said, adding, “Iran can provide its experience and knowledge to the Iraqi armed forces.”

 

The Iranian commander also called for more consultations between officials and commanders of the two countries at different levels, saying, they can have more effective cooperation by setting up a joint commission.

 

For his part, the Iraqi defence minister announced his country’s readiness for military cooperation with the Iranian side.

 

Source: Nam News Network

Thailand’s Consumer Inflation Growth Dropped In Oct

BANGKOK– Thailand’s consumer inflation growth slowed for the second straight month in Oct, as energy and food prices continued to fall, data showed yesterday.

 

The country’s consumer price index (CPI), a key indicator of inflation, rose 5.98 percent, year on year, last month, down from a 6.41 percent increase in Sept, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

 

The core CPI, which excludes raw food and energy prices, edged up 3.17 percent in Oct, compared to an increase of 3.12 percent in the previous month.

 

In the first 10 months, the country’s CPI rose 6.15 percent from a year earlier, far above the central bank’s target range of one percent to three percent, for headline inflation.

 

This month, inflation would slow, due to lower consumer product prices, while other prices remained stable, despite rising costs, aided by government measures to reduce the cost of living and to relieve the flood, the commerce ministry said in a statement.

 

It added that, high energy prices, a weak Thai baht, and increased domestic demand, could be risk factors that limited the inflation rate decline.

 

The headline inflation rate this year is projected to range between 5.5 percent and 6.5 percent, the ministry said.

 

Source: Nam News Network

Japan Says Repayment of TEPCO Fukushima Cleanup Delayed

Repayment of the more than 10 trillion yen ($68 billion) government funding for cleanup and compensation for the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant disaster has been delayed, the Japanese government says.

The Board of Audit said in a report released Monday that the delay stems from technical difficulties and Tokyo Electric Power Co. Holdings’ worsening financial state. It said the entire process may take more than 40 years.

The nuclear plant suffered triple meltdowns following the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, spewing radiation that contaminated areas nearby and forcing tens of thousands of people to evacuate.

Funding for the first 11 years of the disaster has already amounted to nearly half of TEPCO’s total estimate of a cost of 22 trillion yen ($150 billion) for the decades-long project.

The Board of Audit said that by April, the government had provided 10.2 trillion yen ($70 billion) in no-interest loans to TEPCO for the plant cleanup, decontamination of its surroundings and compensation to people affected by the disaster.

The government has shouldered initial costs of the compensation with money borrowed from financial institutions. TEPCO is repaying those debts out of its revenues including electricity bills.

According to the Board of Audit, the government raised its funding limit to 13.5 trillion yen ($92 billion) from an earlier 9 trillion yen ($61 billion) in anticipation of higher costs. Costs of the cleanup are funded by government bonds, so increases or delays add to the public debt.

TEPCO’s mandated repayments were cut to 40 billion yen ($270 million) a year from an initial 70 billion yen ($470 million) a year. In a worst-case scenario, it could take up to 42 years for TEPCO to fully pay back the costs, the Board of Audit said, citing its own estimate.

Assessing the damage and details of melted debris inside of the reactors is technically daunting and dozens of lawsuits could raise the amount of compensation required.

TEPCO is facing other troubles on top of its burden of decommissioning the wrecked plants and paying compensation.

The expected startups of two of seven reactors at its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant in northern Japan were delayed by technical and safety problems, so TEPCO restarted coal-fired plants to meet demands. Rising costs for fuel are an added burden.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Eyeing Global Food Crisis, Beijing Revives Elements of Planned Economy

China may be reviving key elements of its 20th-century planned economy to ensure domestic stability as a way to reduce dependence on the West for consumer commodities, particularly foodstuffs affected by the war in Ukraine, experts say.

 

Beijing is promoting the development of supply and marketing cooperatives for agricultural products and state-run canteens to help the government control the supply of key foodstuffs as relations between China and Western democracies deteriorate. The canteens are similar to college cafeterias with limited offerings and prices deemed affordable by officials in Beijing.

 

Xia Ming, a professor of political science at the City University of New York, told VOA Mandarin in a phone interview on November 4, “The emergence of supply and marketing cooperatives is often the product of economic scarcity. Today, China is obviously facing a large number of economic crises. If these crises lead to economic scarcity, the country must control the situation, especially these basic supplies, for stability.”

 

Wen Guanzhong, an emeritus professor of economics at Trinity College, told VOA Mandarin by phone on November 4 that “In general, because (China’s president) Xi Jinping knows that he is actually taking a route that is the opposite of the route of deepening comprehensive marketization, he also knows that China’s relations with countries around the world, especially Western countries, will become increasingly tense. He hopes to reestablish the CCP’s (Chinese Communist Party’s) overall control of society including control over supply and sales.”

 

Xie Tian, a business professor at the University of South Carolina Aiken, said in an interview with VOA Mandarin on November 4 that, “I think the CCP’s ambition and desire to use force against Taiwan may be implemented very soon. Canteens and supply and marketing cooperatives can control social materials and food supply during war times, which is the best way for China.”

 

In Hubei province alone, local officials have restored and rebuilt 1,373 grassroots supply and marketing cooperatives with 452,000 members, according to a report last month in the official Hubei Daily. Officials told the news outlet that by 2025, the cooperatives will have 1.5 million members.

 

In 2014, there were 696 co-ops in the province, a decrease of 61% from the peak of 1,800 in 1984, according to a report in the November 2 state-affiliated Beijing Business Daily (BBD). Nationwide, the BBD reported, there are currently 31,000 supply and marketing cooperatives in China, with nearly 400,000 outlets.

 

At the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, which closed on October 22, Liang Huiling, who led the All China Federation of Supply and Marketing Cooperatives, was promoted to membership in the CCP’s Central Committee. After the congress, the agency immediately issued a recruitment bulletin, which the experts saw as a sign that China’s future economic development will be led by a government bent on improving self-sufficiency and economic security.

 

Global food crisis

 

China is one of the world’s leading food importers. According to a 2018 report by CSIS, a Washington-based think tank, China’s food imports exceed its exports, resulting in a food trade deficit.

 

Xia said China is looking for alternative grain sources because of tense relations with Western exporters such as the United States, Canada and Australia. Beijing’s fear is that if these exporting countries reduce sales to China for geopolitical reasons or to meet their own domestic demands, prices could rise throughout China and cause domestic dissatisfaction.

 

According to Reuters, the IMF said in September that disruptions to global grain flows caused by the war in Ukraine have prompted the worst food security crisis since the one following the 2007-2008 global financial meltdown.

 

Xia said China’s refusal to publicly condemn Russia for invading Ukraine in February has exacerbated Western democracies’ dissatisfaction with China.

 

“When China wants to team up with Russia and fight against the West, I think it will set itself up for a lot of crises of food and energy security,” he told VOA Mandarin. “So, if it wants to be hostile to Western countries or use wolf warrior diplomacy, I think it has to deal with (the consequences).”

Supply and marketing cooperatives for agricultural products first appeared in China in the 1950s when Beijing planned and controlled the economy. When Deng Xiaoping proposed reform and opening of the economy in 1978, the supply and marketing cooperatives began weakening, but they never disappeared.

 

Under President Xi Jinping’s leadership, the Chinese government has called for the reform of supply and marketing cooperatives as part of his gradual tightening of economic control.

 

In 2021, Beijing proposed a pilot project of “three-in-one” comprehensive cooperation in production, supply and marketing of foodstuffs that included loans to farmers and distributors. Some 49,000 state employees oversee the entire system of supply and marketing cooperatives starting at the county level, according to the official website.

 

According to data for the first half of 2022 from the All-China Federation of Supply and Marketing Cooperatives, the sales of the supply and marketing cooperatives in the whole system exceeded $435 billion (2.9 trillion yuan) – a year-on-year increase of 19.1%. In 2021, sales totaled about $926.9 billion (6.26 trillion yuan), according to official figures.

 

Concerned consumers

 

Consumers are worried that Beijing’s new focus on supply and marketing cooperatives and canteens may sound a death knell for current market-oriented shops and restaurants, both contributors to growth of the private economy.

 

According to Chinese media reports, Chinese officials last week attempted to assuage those concerns, saying that restarting the supply and marketing cooperatives will allow them “to take advantage of their many outlets, enhance the function of the county’s circulation service network, and promote rural revitalization.”

 

The officials added that community pilot projects, including the construction of canteens, “are not mandatory, not everything on the file must be tried.”

 

Wen said that difference between the cooperatives of old and today “depends on how private enterprises are treated in the future, whether they are restricted or whether state-run supply and marketing cooperatives are given privileges such as the power of monopoly.”

 

Xie believes that the state-led economy lacks the vitality of the market economy, which will ultimately affect the living standards of Chinese residents.

 

He said, “Just like the canteens and supply and marketing cooperatives in the old days, it is impossible to have the vitality of the market economy after returning to the planned economy. … Only the most basic meals, or the most basic food and services can be provided, which will definitely affect the living standards of the Chinese people.”

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Myanmar Resumed Hot Air Balloon Festival After Two-Year Hiatus

PYIN OO LWIN, Myanmar– Myanmar held a five-day hot air balloon festival, in Pyin Oo Lwin, starting from Friday after a two-year pause due to COVID-19.

 

About 76 hot air balloons in three main categories were competing in this year’s event, which runs until today, in the central city of Pyin Oo Lwin, to celebrate the traditional Tazaungdaing lighting festival.

 

Myanmar’s Tazaungdaing Lighting Festival is held on the full moon day of Tazaungmon, the eighth month of the Myanmar calendar, to mark the end of the rainy season, as well as, the end of the Kathina season, during which monks are offered new robes and alms.

 

“This year, we had only 40 days to prepare for the competition,” Kyaw Htay Ko, secretary of the Pyin Oo Lwin Tazaungdaing Hot Air Balloon Competition Organising Committee, said.

 

In the past years, the organisers and the hot air balloon builders, prepared for the annual event about six months in advance, according to the organising committee.

 

“However, the number of balloons competing in this year’s event is not much less than in previous years’ competitions,” Kyaw Htay Ko said.

 

The annual hot air balloon festival, which began in 2005, was organised to boost the tourism sector, assist the region’s development and promote the region’s economy, he added.

 

In many parts of Myanmar, hot air balloons, lit with candles, are released to celebrate the Tazaungdaing lighting festival, to drive away evil spirits, according to religious belief.

 

This year’s five-day festival features daytime and nighttime balloon launches, traditional dances, musical performances, and sports competitions.

 

Source: Nam News Network