News Asia
Shop Owner Jailed By Myanmar Junta for Giving Employees a Raise
The owner of three mobile phone shops in Mandalay, Myanmar has been arrested for announcing on Facebook he was giving his employees a raise. Word of his generosity quickly spread on Facebook, and his workers cheered the news of a raise.
However, the military regime that rules Myanmar saw it news differently. Soldiers and police officers arrested the owner, Mr. Pyae Phyo Zaw, shuttered his three mobile phone shops and charged him with inciting public unrest under a vaguely worded law often used to suppress dissent, his brother and an employee said.
Mr. Pyae Phyo Zaw is one of at least 10 business owners arrested in recent weeks after word circulated online that they were increasing their workers’ pay. Raising wages has not been outlawed, but the business owners are charged with undermining the regime by making people believe that inflation is rising, one legal expert said. They all face 3 years in prison.
Soldiers posted a notice outside one of Mr. Pyae Phyo Zaw’s shops saying it was closed for disturbing “the peace and order of the community”.
The Myanmar junta’s spokesperson, Gen Zaw Min Tun, declined to take repeated calls from The New York Times.
“We were very grateful for the salary increase, but now the shop is closed and I don’t get paid,” said the employee, who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid arrest. “Ordinary people like us are suffering from high prices, almost to the point of despair.”
Myanmar Military Coup
The military’s return to power in a 2021 coup and the ensuing popular rebellion against its rule have plunged the country into economic crisis, reversing progress achieved during a decade of quasi-democratic leadership.
The junta faces intense pressure from armed ethnic rebels and pro-democracy fighters who control more than half the country’s territory and continue to make steady gains on the battlefield, overrunning numerous army bases and outposts.
While battling rebels, the army burned villages and rice fields in Shwebo, the rice bowl of upper Myanmar, destroying the crop and contributing to a sharp rise in food prices. The rebels, by seizing major border crossings, have disrupted trade with China, India and Thailand.
Throughout the country — except for the generals’ capital city of Nay Pyi Taw — electricity is usually available for less than four hours a day, curtailing manufacturing and spreading misery in a place where temperatures often reach 100 degrees. At least 250 people died of heatstroke in May in the regions of Mandalay and Magway, according to a nonprofit ambulance service that carted away the dead.
“Myanmar’s economy post-2021 has moved on from crisis, journeyed through chaos, and now arrives at what is surely its near collapse as a formally functioning, developing entity,” said Australian economist Sean Turnell, a former adviser to the ousted civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi. He now advises an opposition leadership group, the National Unity Government.
Country Wide Poverty
The World Bank reported in June that Myanmar’s economic output had shrunk by 9% since 2019, and poverty has soared to levels not seen for nearly a decade. About one-third of the population now lives below the poverty line.
The workforce has shrunk as more than 3 million people have fled the fighting for safety in remote villages and jungle camps in Myanmar, and many young men and women have escaped overseas to avoid being drafted into the army. Many thousands more have abandoned the cities to join the resistance army.
With Western financial sanctions helping cripple the economy, Myanmar’s growing isolation has left it starved for foreign currency. The country’s own currency, the kyat, has plummeted on the black market to one-third of its pre-coup value.
The kyat’s collapse amounts to wealth destruction “on an epic scale,” said Turnell, who himself was imprisoned by the regime for 22 months on trumped-up charges.
The generals’ economic policy is “a desperate scramble for the financial wherewithal to fund their war,” he said in a statement released by the National Unity Government. He noted that the regime has slashed funding for health and education while military spending has jumped 60% since the coup.
Banks Accused of Collusion
Many of the regime’s weapons come from overseas, with Thailand emerging as a major conduit, according to a report released last Wednesday by Tom Andrews, the UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar.
Andrews said the junta imported nearly $130 million in weapons and equipment from Thailand-registered suppliers in the past year, more than double the previous year. He urged Thailand to halt the flow of weapons.
The report also accused 16 banks in seven countries of helping Myanmar’s ruling junta evade Western sanctions. Andrews urged the banks to stop aiding “war crimes and crimes against humanity.”
To fund its war, the junta has printed nearly 30 trillion kyat since the coup, about $9.2 billion at the current official exchange rate, leading to the sharp devaluation of the currency and driving up inflation.
To counter inflation, the junta froze prices of key food items such as rice, meat and cooking oil; restricted the purchase of gold and foreign currency; and sought to curb the flow of money overseas.
In recent weeks, authorities have rounded up dozens of people for violating the price and currency restrictions, including rice producers, gold traders and money changers. They also arrested brokers for selling condos in Thailand — a major outlet for investment — as well as buyers who opened bank accounts in Thailand to facilitate their purchases.
On Sunday, a junta media outlet announced that 11 more people, including the heads of four major grocery chains, and seven large rice producers, were arrested for charging more than double the junta’s fixed price for rice. One of those arrested is an executive with a Japanese grocery chain, the report said.
Jailed for Price Increases
At a market in Mandalay, a video captured a local official using a megaphone to announce fixed prices for pork, beef and mutton. She urged customers to report anyone charging more.
“Arresting shop owners because of the increase in prices is not following any law,” said human rights lawyer Kyee Myint. “In Myanmar, the law exists only in name, so from a legal standpoint, everything the junta is doing is absurd.”
For most people, rice is an essential part of their diet, and rising prices have hit the poor especially hard.
One woman shopping in Mandalay, Daw Nge Nge Tun, said the price at her market has tripled and she can no longer afford to buy decent rice. Now she buys cheap, broken rice usually used as chicken feed.
“I could buy and eat good quality rice before,” she said. “Come to think of it, the life of people in Myanmar is the same as the chickens on the farm that sit and wait their turn to be killed.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times
News Asia
Bangladesh Supreme Court to Rule on Controversial Job Quotas Amid Nationwide protests
(CTN News) – The future of public service hiring regulations, which have provoked national conflicts between police and university students that have resulted in at least 133 fatalities so far, is set to be decided by Bangladesh’s Supreme Court on Sunday, or today.
Later in the day, the nation’s highest court will meet to declare its decision about the controversial job quotas—either in favor of or against their elimination.
This week’s protests over politically motivated admission quotas for highly sought-after government posts turned into some of the worst instability during Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s watch.
Due to the ongoing turmoil, a curfew has been in place since Friday. In addition, the government has declared a two-day holiday during which all offices and institutions would be closed.
After riot police were unable to restore order, soldiers are now policing cities throughout Bangladesh, and since Thursday, there has been a statewide internet blackout that has severely limited the flow of information to the outside world.
SEE ALSO: Nearly 1,000 Indian Students Return from Bangladesh Amid Deadly Unrest Over Job Quota System
Hasina made hints to the public this week that the plan will be abandoned, which comes after her opponents accuse her government of using the judiciary to further its own agenda.
However, a positive decision is unlikely to calm the nation’s simmering rage in the wake of the intensifying crackdown and growing dead toll.
Business owner Hasibul Sheikh, 24, told AFP, “It’s not about the rights of the students anymore,” while observing a Saturday street demonstration in the capital city of Dhaka against a statewide curfew.
“Our demand is one point now, and that’s the resignation of the government,” he stated.
A system that reserves more than half of civil service positions for particular groups, like as children of veterans of the 1971 war, is the driving force behind the upheaval this month.
Hasina, 76, has ruled the nation since 2009 and won her fourth consecutive election in January following a ballot in which there was no real competition, according to critics who claim the program helps families who support her.
Rights organizations accuse Hasina’s government of abusing state institutions, including as the extrajudicial assassination of opposition activists, in order to strengthen its grasp on power and quell dissent.
Bangladesh’s 170 million people lack access to sufficient employment possibilities, therefore the quota system is a major cause of anger for recent graduates who are struggling to find work.
“The government’s actions have made the situation worse, rather than trying to address the protesters’ grievances,” Pierre Prakash, Asia director of Crisis Group, told AFP.
After a week of increasing violence, Hasina canceled her intentions to depart the nation on Sunday for a diplomatic trip to Spain and Brazil.
Source: The Indian Express
News Asia
Pakistani Government Plans to Ban PTI
(CTN News) – The Pakistani government has announced measures to outlaw Pakistan Terheek-e-Insaf (PTI), the party of imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan.
Information Minister Attaullah Tarar made the declaration on Monday, only days after the Supreme Court declared the PTI eligible for a share of reserved seats in national and provincial assemblies.
After reviewing all relevant information, the government has decided to ban PTI. “We will file a case to ban the party,” he said, citing claims such as inciting violent protests last year and leaking confidential information.
Tarar stated that the case would be moved to the Supreme Court.
He also stated that the government intended to file treason charges against Khan and two other senior party leaders, former President of Pakistan Arif Alvi and ex-Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly Qasim Suri, as well as a review appeal against the Supreme Court’s ruling that the PTI should be allocated some assembly seats reserved for women and members of religious minorities.
According to Sayed Zulfiqar Bukhari, a top PTI politician and party spokesperson, the government’s action “betrays their complete panic”.
“After realizing that they could no longer threaten, compel, or blackmail judges, they decided to make this move through the cabinet. “All of their attempts to stop us have been declared illegal by the courts,” he stated.
Last week, the Supreme Court recognized the PTI as a political party and confirmed that the party’s lack of an electoral emblem did not affect its legal right to field candidates.
The verdict was in response to the PTI being barred from competing in parliamentary elections in February using its party emblem, the cricket bat, forcing it to field candidates as independents.
Despite the setback, PTI-backed candidates emerged as the largest parliamentary bloc, winning 93 seats.
After Khan declined to cooperate with his political opponents, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PMLN) and Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) formed a coalition government with other smaller parties.
Ex-Governor Sindh Zubair, who formerly served in the PMLN, stated that the government’s action was in response to the Supreme Court’s ruling last week and warned of political upheaval ahead.
“The powers that be are trying to disenfranchise the largest majority of voters of the country, who voted for PTI,” he disclosed to Al Jazeera.
Khan was appointed prime minister in August 2018 but was dismissed from power in April 2022 after a parliamentary vote of no-confidence.
The cricketer-turned-politician has since faced a slew of legal issues, including charges of misplacing and leaking the contents of a confidential cable delivered to Islamabad by Pakistan’s then-ambassador in the US in 2022.
Khan has continually disputed the charge, claiming that the dossier contained evidence that his resignation as prime minister was orchestrated by his political opponents and the country’s powerful military, with assistance from the US administration. Both Washington and Pakistan’s army deny the accusation.
Despite multiple recent court verdicts in his favor, Khan has been in prison since August of last year.
Source: Aljazeera
News Asia
NAB Re-Arrests Imran Khan and Bushra Bibi After Iddat Case Conviction Overturned
(CTN News) – Former Prime Minister Imran Khan and his wife, Bushra Bibi, were acquitted in the Iddat case by a sessions court on Saturday, less than 24 hours after the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the PTI in reserved seats.
However, their relief was short-lived when Imran Khan was detained by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) for selling official goods. Bushra Bibi was also rearrested in this case while being released from Adiala Jail’s Gate No. 3.
According to sources, the NAB detained Bushra Bibi after the bureau’s chairman issued arrest warrants for her and Imran Khan. Both are to be investigated in Adiala Jail.
Opposition leader Omar Ayub Khan condemned Bushra Bibi’s imprisonment and criticized the Adiala Jail administration. He also cautioned the jail superintendent of the repercussions and announced that a privilege motion would be filed against him.
Imran Khan and Bushra Bibi were acquitted in the Iddat case after Additional District and Sessions Judge (ADSJ) Mohammad Afzal Majoka reversed their previous verdict, which sentenced them to seven years in prison on February 3, five days before the general election.
Imran Khan’s lawyers, Usman Gill and Zaheer Abbas, were in court when the verdict was pronounced.
In the 28-page ruling, Judge Majoka rejected Khawar Fareed Maneka, Bushra Bibi’s ex-husband,’s arguments that Imran Khan and Bushra Bibi’s nikah was illegally performed and that Mr. Maneka was denied Buju (reconciliation rights) under religious law.
The court also rejected the allegation of fornication under provision 496-B of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC), stating that no charge was filed under this provision against both Imran Khan and his spouse “because there was no evidence of a second witness”. The trial court heard only one witness, Mr Maneka’s domestic servant.
“In these circumstances, it cannot be said that the appellants committed fornication,” the judge wrote. Regarding the charge of contracting marriage fraudulently during the Iddat period, the judge found that in a video given as evidence during the trial, Mr. Maneka lauded his ex-wife, Bushra Bibi, and “deposed that his ex-wife is a pious lady.”
The magistrate inquired about “how this witness [Mr Maneka] can claim that the appellant No. 2 [Bushra Bibi] committed fraud with him” .
The court announced its decision: “From a perusal of Section 496 PPC and the above-mentioned esteemed citations, this court is of the view that the appellants have not gone through any marriage ceremony fraudulently or with dishonest intention because none of the parties claimed that nikah was not performed and fraudulently he or she was supposed to believe that marriage ceremony was solemnised.”
The court judgment added: “In the instant instance, it is the complainant’s case that the appellants’ nikah was done on January 1, 2018, followed by the second nikah in February 2018. By no stretch of the imagination, it was a marriage with dishonest or deceptive intentions.”
Regarding Mr. Maneka’s claim that he was denied reconciliation rights and so deceived by Imran Khan and Ms. Bibi, the court noted that during cross-examination, Mr. Maneka stated that he learned of the appellants’ marriage on the second day of their nikah.
Before submitting the complaint, the judge questioned why Mr Maneka had been silent on his reconciliation rights for six years.
The judge stated, “The complainant has failed to prove his case against the appellants.” As a result, both appeals filed by appellants No. 1 [Imran Khan] and No. 2 [Bushra Bibi] are accepted, the judgment of the learned trial court of February 3, 2024, is overturned, and both appellants are acquitted of the accusation.”
The court ordered their freedom unless they needed to be imprisoned in other cases.
Source: DAWN
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