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Karen Fear Military Offensive near Planned Dam
BANGKOK — With the annual monsoon rains ending, there is a growing fear among the Karen ethnic minority living along military-ruled Burma's eastern border of a dry season offensive. The most vulnerable are villagers residing in the vicinity of the controversial Hat Gyi dam. The Burmese military will use its proxy force, the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA), to target the area along the Salween River that is essential to the Hat Gyi dam, environmentalists and human rights activists told IPS. Besides driving out the unarmed Karen civilians, the offensive will also target the fifth brigade of the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), currently camped along the Salween River, which flows past the border that Burma shares with Thailand, they added. The KNLA is the armed wing of the Karen National Union (KNU), which has been waging Asia's longest separatist struggle—since 1949—to carve out an independent state for the Karen minority in Burma, also known as Myanmar. The DKBA is a breakaway group, splitting from the KNU in 1995 and joining forces with Burma's oppressive regime. "The attacks in the fifth brigade area to defeat the KNU and clear the area for the dam will result in thousands of Karen fleeing across the Thai border as refugee," said David Thakerbaw, vice president of the KNU." It will lead to more human rights violations, adding more suffering to what the people have already endured." "People in that area are opposed to the Hay Gyi dam for this reason," he added during a telephone interview from an undisclosed location along the Thai-Burma border. "The dam area will become more militarized; the Burmese army will bring in more troops to keep the site under their control." Such a grim forecast stems from what happened in June, soon after the monsoon rains broke. The Tatmadaw, as Burma's over 400,000-strong military is called, launched an offensive with the DKBA, vanquishing the important seventh brigade of the KNU. The surprise attack forced over 4,000 already displaced Karens to flee into Thailand. This onslaught and the link it had to the planned Hat Gyi dam, which the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT) has agreed to partially finance, prompted the KNU to ask the Thai government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to withdraw Bangkok's support for the dam. "There has been no proper survey to assess the environmental and social damage that the dam might cause," wrote General Tamla Baw, president of the KNU, to Abhisit in an early August letter. "The building of the dam at this time would bring many thousands of the junta's troops who would perpetrate widespread human rights violations, such as forced labor, torture, extra-judicial executions, rape of women, looting of property (and) extortion." "I would like to appeal to you and your government not to repatriate the Karen refugees in Thailand and not to initiate construction of the Hat Gyi dam," added Gen Tamla Baw. The recent flow of Karen refugees from Burma added to the already 120,000 refugees who have been living in camps on the Thai side of the border for over two decades. Within Burma, the plight of the Karens is as dire. They are among the estimated 540,000 internally displaced people seeking refuge in forests and in the mountains after fleeing attacks by the Tatmadaw. "The highest rates of recent displacement were reported in northern Karen areas and southern Shan Sate," the Thailand Burma Border Consortium, a humanitarian organization helping Burma's ethnic minorities fleeing into Thailand, revealed this week. "Almost 60,000 Karen villagers are hiding in the mountains of Kyaukkgi, Thandaung and Papun Township, and a third of these civilians fled from artillery attacks from Burmese army patrols during the past year." The Karen, who make up an estimated seven million people of Burma's 56 million population, are one of the largest ethnic minorities in this South-east Asian nation. The Shan and the Kachin are among the other groups in a country that has a patchwork of some 130 ethnic communities. Burma's military has been waging wars with nearly 20 ethnic rebel groups since it gained independence from the British colonizers in 1948. 1 | 2 |
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