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Dawei: Myanmar’s Mafia General

Dawei: Myanmar’s Mafia General

Since the British declared independence of Burma in 1948, the Tatmadaw – Burmese Army – has been running modern-day Burma via coups and proxies. Up until 2008, Myanmar, as it is now known, had no Constitution, and only from 2011 to 2015 did it go through a proper democratic transition with a general election finally being held in 2015.

The election saw the National League for Democracy (NLD) helmed by de-facto Leader, Nobel Laurette, and Myanmar’s symbol of Democracy, Aung San Suu Kyi, sliding to victory. The more recent November 2020 general election saw the General’s Daughter, as she is fondly known, and her NLD party obtain a landslide victory; winning a colossal 83 percent of the 476 seats in the Burmese Parliament.

The Tatmadaw, led by the notorious Min Aung Hlaing (Dawei), who is set to retire in July 2021, disputed the results citing electoral fraud, and proceeded to consolidate power via a military coup.

General Min Aung Hlaing (Dawei)

A protégé of now-retired controversial military junta leader Than Shwe, General Dawei rose up the ranks quietly and in the shadows of the «Aba Gyi» or «Great Father» – the term used to refer to Than Shwe.

The Great Father was a violent dictator whom the United Nations (UN) had a tough time dealing with – refusing humanitarian aid during Cyclone Nargis, refusing to allow the UN Secretary General to visit Suu Kyi during her house arrest, and ordering the execution of 59 civilians living on Christie Island. The list is long and General Dawei is cut from the same cloth.

Hence the coup d’état has come as no surprise to the international community despite the Electoral Commission validating the results.

Instead of planning for retirement, General Dawei has proceeded to hijack democracy and propose a year-long emergency rule. Banned from Twitter, Facebook, and from travelling to the United States (US), General Dawei is a firm believer that the actions of the junta against the minority Muslim Rohingya is justified. Referring to them as “Bengali” and foreigners, he has been at the forefront of the ethnic cleansing and displacement of these “foreigners” on “Burmese soil.”

He continues to carry the baton of the “Great Father” junta military rule ideology, having negotiated the release of Suu Kyi in pre-junta military rule Myanmar and also silently forcing his hand on her during her time in office.

At the Hague, under the spotlight and to the amazement of the very same international bodies that pushed for her release from house arrest, Suu Kyi defended allegations that the Tatmadaw were not hell-bent on “destroying the Rohingya as a group, in whole or in part”; despite close to 700,000 having fled Myanmar to Bangladesh; causing an international humanitarian crisis for both countries that share a common border.

Blaming a possible civil war scenario between the Tatmadaw and the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, Suu Kyi told judges at the Hague to “please bear in mind this complex situation and the challenge to sovereignty and security in our country when you are assessing the intent of those who attempted to deal with the rebellion.”

“Surely, under the circumstances, genocidal intent cannot be the only hypothesis,” she added.

What transpired in the corridors of power between General Dawei and Suu Kyi remains unknown.

The Dawn Raid

“When these tasks have been completed in accord with the provisions of the State of Emergency, a free and fair multiparty general election will be held and then, the assigned duty of the State will be handed over to the winning party, meeting norms and standards of democracy” – read a statement issued by General Dawei’s office to the international community and people of Myanmar, citing the need to rectify electoral fraud and contain the COVID-19 outbreak.

At the time of writing, Myanmar has close to 12,000 active cases and over 3,000 fatalities related to the COVID-19 coronavirus.

Known for his shrewd, lethal, and stealthy manoeuvring, the pre-dawn raid within hours of the swearing-in was a classic example of the tactics employed by General Dawei and the Tatmadaw.

In one fell swoop, on the back of playing tensions with the civilian government – Win Myint the President, Suu Kyi, and dozens of other members of the NLD were detained under the emergency ordinance.

Before the raid, communications were cut off in the capital at 5:00 am. Phone and internet connections in the administrative capital of Naypyitaw and in the main commercial city of Yangon were disrupted and state television went off air.

Post raid, false statements were doctored by the Tatmadaw under the name of the NLD Godfather and patron U Win Htein and circulated amongst civilians calling them to take to the streets and protest the emergency. The objective was to create a confrontational situation that is Pro-NLD and Pro-Tatmadaw but the NLD has consistently opposed this, calling voters to be non-violent and non-confrontational.

Cold war tactics such as these are part of General Dawei’s playbook. What guarantee do the people of Myanmar have that in a year’s time democracy will return

The Tatmadaw’s Billions

In 2015, transparency campaigners Global Witness released a report stating that the Tatmadaw may have allegedly carried out the “biggest natural resources heist in modern history.” The report claimed that a massive US$31 billion in jade production had been extracted from mines located in Kachin state – dubbed the world’s biggest jade mine.

In simpler terms, the aforementioned amount represented nearly 50 percent of Myanmar’s official gross domestic product (GDP) and about 50 times the government’s expenditure on healthcare.

The vast majority of this extracted jade is smuggled by the Tatmadaw and sent across porous borders into China. The Tatmadaw operates like a cartel and has a hand in all lucrative contracts including the alleged drug trade.

Top cronies and known drug lords are believed to be closely linked to the junta military and nothing moves without a cut from the largesse. Even ethnic armies, in return for maintaining a ceasefire in certain states within larger Myanmar, are given concessions for all forms of natural resource allocation.

And on top of this pyramid of rampant corruption and abuse of power is General Dawei.

Suu Kyi And The Last Decade

While Suu Kyi’s arrival as a beacon of democracy brought about a freer press – people having access to mobile phones and the internet, commercial development and better access to water and electricity as well as the release of a number of political prisoners – she has failed to make a move towards containing and reducing the influence of the all-powerful Tatmadaw and their tentacles within the nation’s apparatus.

In hindsight, her biggest mistake is probably allowing the sleeping dragon to awake, for allowing the traitors and underminers of democracy to plot, scheme and manifest into a reformed Tatmadaw; that is shrewder, more daring, and blatant in its pursuit for absolute power.

As result, Myanmar has been dealt a huge blow. The ASEAN member state has taken a step back and is now a junta military-controlled state. The opportunity of a lifetime where political power sat with the people of Myanmar has now been diminished and probably gone for good.

Has the General’s Daughter been naïve to think she could have managed Myanmar’s Mafia General?

Fuente de la Información: https://theaseanpost.com/article/dawei-myanmars-mafia-general

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Bahamas: Campbell: No more corporal punishment in children’s homes

Campbell: No more corporal punishment in children’s homes

Behavior modification program to be introduced instead

Child protection council recommends external accredited training as requirement for child caretakers

NASSAU, BAHAMAS — The government will immediately cease all forms of corporal punishment at children’s homes across the country, advised Minister of Social Services Frankie Campbell yesterday.

Campbell, who spoke to reporters outside Cabinet, indicated that the government will implement several recommendations from the National Child Protection Council following an investigation into allegations of child abuse at the Children’s Emergency Hostel.

Last month, a video was widely circulated on social media showing several women, allegedly at the home, appearing to verbally scold a group of little boys before beating them.

As a result, four employees at the home were “relieved of their duties” after preliminary investigations by the National Child Protection Council yielded sufficient information to refer the matter to the police for an official probe.

“We have agreed and accepted the recommendations and we will notify all employees, all staff members of children’s homes, in writing and let them sign to show that they are aware of the missive that there will be no corporal punishment in any form at this time,” Campbell said.

“And to make sure we are clear about corporal punishment, we will adopt the definition that is given by the Ministry of Education so that there is a standardized understanding.”

Campbell advised that other recommendations put forth by the council include the implementation of regular and random site visitations from senior officials in the Department of Social Services and a member of the council, to ensure logs are being properly maintained as well as proper oversight.

In addition to the in-house training the staff is given, the council also recommended that there be an external accredited training program as part of the requirement for employment at the homes.

The social services minister said the government has also accepted the recommendation to create a behavior modification program for the children.

“It is important that while we won’t administer corporal punishment, that the behavior of the children is as such that it is acceptable in any social environment,” he said.

Additionally, Campbell advised that the government will implement evaluations of each child at the admission stage to determine where they are at and how best to address their needs on an individual basis.

He indicated that he has spoken to the chairman of the board of the Children’s Emergency Hostel and will share the report with him before releasing it to the public.

“The recommendations that we have accepted will be across the board for all of our children’s homes through the Commonwealth of The Bahamas as we await the results of the investigations from the police.”

In the nearly 10-minute-long video, at least five different women, including one in a wheelchair, are seen beating several young boys with either their hands or thin objects. It is unclear whether all of the adults were employed at the home.

Initially, the boys are lined up and called one-by-one to receive their beatings. But as the video goes on, the scene becomes more extreme as some boys, writhing in pain and trying to escape, end up being chased around the room or even held down on a desk and struck by some of the women as others look on.

While he was unsure whether any additional workers have been terminated, Campbell once again assured that “whoever is responsible, whoever is found culpable, will have to answer to some authority”.

The children at the home are receiving independent counseling in collaboration with the Ministry of Education.

Currently, there are about 150 children in eight homes under the Ministry of Social Services. That number does not include children who are in foster care but still fall within the remit of the ministry.

Three of those homes are owned by the government and the others are privately-owned entities that receive government oversight.

Fuente de la Información: https://ewnews.com/campbell-no-more-corporal-punishment-in-childrens-homes

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Education Department Letter Highlights Effort to Help Americans Pursue Higher Ed During Pandemic

Education Department Letter Highlights Effort to Help Americans Pursue Higher Ed During Pandemic

Following up on President Biden’s Executive Order last week directing all federal agencies to address the current economic crisis resulting from the pandemic, the U.S. Department of Education today announced a special effort to help Americans pursue higher education.

As part of its ongoing response to that order, the department released a letter reminding student financial aid administrators of their ability to make it easier for those who are unemployed or have received unemployment assistance to get federal aid for postsecondary education.

For instance, the letter reminds aid administrators that they have authority under the Higher Education Act to engage in «professional judgment» — a process that allows them to adjust factors that play into a student’s eligibility for federal financial aid, such as their income.

The letter informs administrators that at all times — but especially during the national pandemic — they may set income from work to zero for a student or parent who received unemployment benefits. This, in turn, may make applicants eligible for a Pell Grant or possibly a larger loan award.

«Easing the economic burden on working people is critical in helping America recover from the ongoing pandemic and its effects. Under the President’s leadership, we are working to help families who have lost jobs to get financial support to pursue higher education,» the department stated.

For more information on student financial aid, please see the department’s webpage, studentaid.ed.gov.  The site contains extensive information on how students can apply for aid to pursue higher education.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/education-department-letter-highlights-effort-help-americans-pursue-higher-ed-during-pandemic

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Estados Unidos: Central American Leaders Hope to Develop Common Agenda with Biden

Central American Leaders Hope to Develop Common Agenda with Biden

WASHINGTON – Washington’s immigration policy will focus on regional migration and its root causes, as well as the annulment of policies inherited from the Trump administration, according to White House officials.

President Joe Biden will make the announcement Tuesday, Press Secretary Jen Psaki said during a daily briefing this week.

Representatives of the governments of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala envision more U.S. attention toward the region during the Biden administration and plan to support a common development agenda based on «mutual respect.»

President Biden told his Mexican counterpart, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, that Washington will address the containment of the irregular flow of migrants to Mexico and the United States, in part, through promoting economic development in Central America.

FILE - In this Dec. 18, 2020 file photo, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador gives his daily, morning news conference…

FILE – In this Dec. 18, 2020 file photo, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador gives his daily, morning news conference at the presidential palace, Palacio Nacional, in Mexico City.

Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández told VOA that approach represents an “opportunity to retake” what the Obama administration was working on.

Guatemalan Foreign Minister Pedro Brolo told VOA that both countries have a “common agenda” beyond economic opportunities, including fighting increased organized crime and drug trafficking, and he plans to bring those issues to the table in future meetings.

Cooperation and mutual respect 

Ariel Ruíz Soto, an analyst at the Migration Policy Institute in Washington, said U.S. investment in the region is not enough.

The Northern Triangle countries need to show they are committed to solve the root causes of the immigration, including poverty and corruption, Ruiz Soto said. Bipartisan support in the U.S. Congress is also necessary to enact immigration reform, he added.

“The relationship has to change its tone. It is necessary to reopen the dialogue with Central America in order to once again have cooperation, not pressure,” Ruíz Soto told VOA.

Biden promised during his presidential campaign to allocate $4 billion to the Central American region and attack the issues that cause migration, including “endemic corruption,” poverty and economic insecurity.

Demonstrators with the New York Immigration Coalition rally asking President-elect Joe Biden to prioritize immigration reform,…

FILE – Demonstrators with the New York Immigration Coalition rally asking President Joe Biden to prioritize immigration reform, Nov. 9, 2020, in New York.

Brolo indicated the three countries that make up the Northern Triangle will be more «attractive for foreign investment» to repair economies hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic and last year’s natural disasters, including back-to-back hurricanes Eta and Iota.

“Our people would tend to migrate less, since they would have jobs,» he explained.

Brolo indicated the three countries that make up the Northern Triangle will be more «attractive for foreign investment» to repair economies hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic and last year’s natural disasters, including back-to-back hurricanes Eta and Iota.

“Our people would tend to migrate less, since they would have jobs,» he explained.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.voanews.com/americas/central-american-leaders-hope-develop-common-agenda-biden

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Governor, Superintendent, State Board Chair urge return to in-person learning

Governor, Superintendent, State Board Chair urge return to in-person learning

Alex Granados

Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper urged schools to bring students back for in-person learning during a press conference today, Feb. 2.

Cooper’s announcement came on the same day that a Senate education committee gave a favorable vote to legislation that would require schools around the state to open for in-person learning. The bill would make schools open for exceptional needs students under plan A (full-time in-person with minimal social distancing), and under either plan A or B (hybrid in-person and remote learning) for all other students. No school would be able to offer plan C (all remote). Families who want their students to remain fully virtual would still have that option.

In effect, Cooper is asking for the same thing as lawmakers, he just doesn’t want a mandate.

“I don’t think that’s the way to go,” said Cooper in reference to the legislation. “I think the way to go is to get our local school boards to take this action, and I believe that many of them — most of them — will do so, and hopefully all of them will do so, because it is the right thing to do.”

However, Cooper did not say if he would veto the legislation if it passed the General Assembly. Cooper also said that students who want to remain in remote learning should be given that option.

It was Cooper who closed schools last spring due to the COVID-19 pandemic and allowed them to reopen this fall under either plan B or plan C. Later in the fall, he allowed elementary schools to open under plan A.

State Superintendent of Public Instruction Catherine Truitt and State Board of Education Chair Eric Davis also made comments at the press conference urging schools to bring students back for in-person learning. You can hear what they had to say below.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.ednc.org/2021-02-02-nc-governor-state-superintendent-state-board-chair-urge-return-in-person-learning/

 

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México: Entrega Aispuro más infraestructura educativa

Entrega Aispuro más infraestructura educativa

  • Invertidos, 532 mdp en educación superior.
  • Más equipamiento y mejores espacios para más de 20 mil alumnos de 17 instituciones educativas.

Región Laguna.

Para garantizar un regreso seguro y digno a la escuela, seguimos fortaleciendo la infraestructura educativa en todo el estado, aseguró el gobernador José Rosas Aispuro Torres al destacar que a la fecha, se han invertido más de 532 millones de pesos invertidos en mejoramiento de instituciones con beneficio para 20 mil alumnos.

Con más equipamiento y mejores espacios, los jóvenes saldrán bien preparados para integrarse al sector productivo laboral, destacó el mandatario estatal al entregar la Unidad de Docencia y el Laboratorio de Pesado en la Universidad Politécnica de Gómez Palacio.

Con la ampliación de esta universidad, se tendrá una capacidad para dos mil 500 alumnos, la cual cuenta con la más moderna tecnología para realizar pruebas PCR que detectan el virus SARS-CoV-2 y un sistema de ultra congelación de 86° bajo cero, que en caso necesario podría usarse para el almacenamiento y protección de las vacunas del Covid-19, apuntó Aispuro Torres.

Recordó que, se han realizaron acciones  de rehabilitación y construcción de laboratorios, aulas, sanitarios y bibliotecas en instituciones que destacan Escuelas Normales, Institutos Tecnológicos, Universidades Pedagógicas, Politécnicas y Tecnológicas en municipios como Durango, El Salto, Gómez Palacio, Cuencamé, Poanas, Rodeo, Canatlán,Tamazula y El Mezquital.

Este año 2021, seguiremos trabajando para garantizar que los niños y jóvenes regresen a las aulas en cuanto las condiciones de salud así lo permitan, añadió el jefe del Ejecutivo y adelantó que se realizarán 292 acciones de mejoramiento en escuelas de nivel básico, medio superior y superior del estado, las cuales se sumarán a los mil 500 planteles ampliados y rehabilitados durante el año 2020.

Fuente de la Información: https://lavozdgo.com/2021/01/29/entrega-aispuro-mas-infraestructura-educativa/

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El movimiento ‘Black Lives Matter’, nominado al Nobel de la Paz

El movimiento ‘Black Lives Matter’, nominado al Nobel de la Paz

El movimiento contra el racismo creado en Estados Unidos a raíz de la muerte de George Floyd es, para el parlamentario Petter Eide, el movimiento más destacado por la Paz

Un diputado socialista noruego ha nominado al Nobel de la Paz de este año al movimiento social contra el racismo «Black Lives Matter», impulsado en Estados Unidos tras la muerte de un ciudadano negro a manos de un policía blanco.

«Cuando me puse a pensar para encontrar lo más importante que ha ocurrido el año pasado en cuanto a paz y conflicto, pensé en ‘Black Lives Matter’. Es un movimiento global muy importante que me ha impresionado mucho», declaró este sábado al diario «Klassekampen» Petter Eide, parlamentario por el Partido Socialista.

Eide destacó que el Comité Nobel noruego tiene una tradición de vincular el antiracismo con el trabajo por la paz, ya que el racismo «crea conflictos entre países».

Según el testamento de Alfred Nobel, el magnate sueco que instituyó los premios que llevan su nombre, pueden designar candidatos al galardón de la Paz catedráticos de universidad en Derecho, Historia y Ciencias Políticas, parlamentarios, antiguos laureados y miembros de tribunales internacionales, entre otros.

Solo si quienes proponen a una persona u organización lo hacen público se puede conocer la identidad de los candidatos, ya que el Comité Nobel noruego únicamente publica el número total de aspirantes y no confirma nombres hasta 50 años después.

Así se sabe que han sido nominados este año -el plazo finaliza este domingo- por diputados noruegos, el movimiento boy scout y la Coalición para las Innovaciones en Preparación para Epidemias (CEPI) y la Alianza Mundial para Vacunas e Inmunización (GAVI).

El International Fact Checking Network (una red para verificar noticias), la periodista filipina Maria Ressa, Reporteros sin Fronteras, la opositora bielorrusa Svetlana Tikhanovskaja, el colectivo Hongkong Free Press y la asociación independiente de jueces de Polonia figuran también entre los candidatos propuestos.

Los Nobel se fallan cada año en octubre y se entregan el 10 de diciembre, coincidiendo con el aniversario de la muerte de su fundador, en una doble ceremonia: en el Ayuntamiento de Oslo, para el premio de la Paz, y en el Konserthus de Estocolmo, para los otros cinco galardones.

El Nobel de la Paz del año pasado fue para el Programa Mundial de Alimentos (PMA) de la ONU por sus esfuerzos en la lucha contra el hambre, por prevenir su uso como arma de guerra y contribuir a mejorar las condiciones para la concordia en áreas en conflicto.

La ceremonia, al igual que la de Estocolmo, fue reducida a un acto virtual por las restricciones provocadas por la pandemia de coronavirus y el director ejecutivo del PMA, David Beasley, recibió el premio en la sede de esa organización en Roma.

 

Fuente de la Información: https://www.republica.com/2021/01/30/el-movimiento-black-lives-matter-nominado-al-nobel-de-la-paz/

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