Burma:
The greening of the military junta by the Wildlife Conservation
Society
The remote and environmentally rich
Hugawng valley in Burma’s northern Kachin State has been internationally
recognized as one of the world’s hotspots of biodiversity. It
even remained largely untouched by Burma’s military regime until
the mid-1990s.
After a ceasefire between the Kachin
Independence Organisation (KIO) and the junta in 1994, local residents
had high hopes that peace would foster the economy and improve
living conditions. However, as Valley of Darkness, a new report
by undercover local researchers published in 2007 by the Kachin
Development Networking Groups, says: “Under the junta’s increased
control, the rich resources of the valley turned out to be a curse”.
The military junta ruling Burma, together
with the US-based Wildlife Conservation Society, is establishing
the world largest tiger reserve: the Hugawng Valley Tiger Reserve.
However, the conditions of the people living there have received
no attention. The report exposes that Burma’s military junta has
confiscated farmlands and homes there to accommodate its military
infrastructure, and is selling off vast tracts as gold-mining
concessions -- offering up 18% of the entire Kachin State for
mining concessions in 2002, with major ones increasing in number
from 14 in 1994 to 31 in 2006. The valley’s forests and waterways
are now being ravaged by over 100 hydraulic and pit mines using
mechanized pumps and dredges and dumping mercury-contaminated
tailings.
Devastating impacts are felt not only
by the environment but also by local communities. “Only the junta
and a handful of businessmen are benefiting from the gold while
the local people suffer the consequences”, says the report, while
the influx of thousands of desperate migrants from all over Burma,
together with harsh working conditions, a lack of education opportunities
and poverty have led to the expansion of the drug, sex, and gambling
industries in the once pristine valley. Intravenous drug use and
the sex industry have increased the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Wildlife Conservation Society is claiming
that Burma’s junta has almost completely closed down the gold-mining
industry in the valley. This report proves otherwise, documenting
local people speaking out about the fundamental lack of local
benefit from or participation in the so called “border area development
program”, of which the military junta continually boasts.
“We want the world to know that both
tigers and people in the Hugawng valley are being endangered by
Burma’s military regime,” stresses the report.
Excerpted and edited from: “Valley of
Darkness. Gold mining and militarization in Burma’s Hugawng Valley”,
2007, Kachin Development Networking Groups (KDNG), e-mail:
kdngroup@gmail.com. The full report is available at: www.aksyu.com