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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Burma: Foreign Investments Prop Up Military Junta
- Message-ID: <1992Nov11.004844.20517@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: PACH
- Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1992 00:48:44 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 108
-
- /** reg.seasia: 198.0 **/
- ** Topic: Economy under SLORC **
- ** Written 11:31 am Nov 8, 1992 by burma in cdp:reg.seasia **
- From B.U.R.M.A, a Bangkok based NGO-
-
- ECONOMICS
- Foreign investments continue to prop up the Burmese military
- junta which has ruled the country since the coup in 1988.
- Despite a great influx of money from the outside, the lives of
- the majority of the Burmese continues to deteriorate at an
- alarming rate.
- According to an article in the International Herald Tribune of
- March 31, 1992, U.S.-Burmese trade has doubled since 1988.
- Although the US Congress has authorized president Bush to impose
- trade and investment sanctions on Burma, he has refused to do so
- accept for a trade embargo on textiles. Private investments by
- US companies in Burma go on unhindered. According to the deputy
- assistant secretary of state for East Asian affairs, Kenneth
- Quinn, the Bush administration's policy in East Asia is to oppose
- economic sanctions.
- At the same time, large amounts of foreign currency are entering
- the country through logging concessions sold to companies from
- Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan. These investments
- provide the military junta with about US$112 million annually.
- Japan not only has resumed its development aid worth about US$134
- million in 1991, but has also exported to Burma more than 15,000
- Isuzu, Nissan and Toyota trucks. These trucks are reported to be
- used only by the Burmese military.
- Theoretically, the economic situation in Burma should be
- improving. In 1988 foreign currency reserves were reported to be
- around US$12 million. In 1991 these reserves jumped to US$900
- million.
- In a country so rich in natural resources and capable of
- producing such vast amounts of food, Burma should therefore be
- facing a good future. A UNICEF report made on March 16 of this
- year, however, presents a very sad situation for the Burmese
- people, especially the children. The report gives the following
- statistics concerning children in Burma today:
-
- The infant mortality rate at 98 per 1000 live births is more than
- double what had been reported for two decades;
-
- About 175,000 children under five die each year, mostly from
- readily preventable or treatable diseases -- mainly due to lack
- of essential drugs and essential information;
-
- An appallingly high 10% of children under three suffer from
- severe malnutrition -- comparable to the situation in Sudan,
- Burundi, Pakistan and Mali. This is primarily the result of
- untreated infections and infestations, progressively eroded
- purchasing power and forced resettlements;
-
- Maternal deaths of 58 women per week is 40% attributable to
- illegal abortions, which in turn are caused by unwanted
- pregnancies and lack of affordable contraception;
-
- Less that 20% of primary-school age children complete all 5 years
- -- comparable with Bangladesh and Nepal; but unlike these two
- countries, there is no second chance for Burma drop-outs or adult
- illiterates, since non-formal education programs do not exist;
-
- Safe water supply in rural and urban areas (31% and 38%
- respectively) is half that for the developing world as a whole,
- and population increase outstrips current program expansion.
- Even urban water supplies remain untreated;
-
- Many children are orphaned, abandoned, trafficked, exploited in
- the labor force, institutionalized or jailed. Some are used in
- drug running, while others are targets of ethnic discrimination.
- In the civil war children have become victims or participants in
- armed conflicts, at times used as porters, human shields or human
- minesweepers.
-
- The UNICEF report summarizes its findings in very stark words.
-
- "These problems all have one thing in common, namely a chronic
- and malignant failure by the State to provide for the survival,
- protection and development needs of children. This failure is
- directly linked to the long drawn-out civil war. These problems
- also reflect the Government's persistent refusal, since 1962, to
- allocate any part of its foreign exchange earnings to the non-
- military social sector. In other words, the import component of
- social sector programs in heal and nutrition, water and
- sanitation, education and social welfare for all those years was
- exclusively financed by donor contributions from governments and
- international organizations.
- This UNICEF report highlights the fact that foreign investments
- under the present regime can never benefit the people. Despite
- relatively large amounts of foreign currency entering the
- country, malnutrition, early death, and a multitude of other
- problems will continue to plague the people and will, in fact,
- increase.
- It has been no secret that since the military coup in 1988, the
- Burmese military has been busy upgrading its weaponry, and
- increasing its numbers. This is where money gained through
- foreign investments is going. Companies which are establishing
- department stores in Rangoon, building hotels, drilling for oil,
- or producing soft drinks like Pepsi are not able to improve the
- lives of the majority of the people. The Burmese people,
- especially the children, do not need Pepsi or modern consumer
- goods. They need medicines, good food, and better education.
- One member of the opposition fighting against the military regime
- stated it this way, "They (foreign investors) are sleeping in bed
- with the dictators. Because of them, our people must suffer even
- worse than before. We will one day rid our country of the
- military dictatorship, and then it will be necessary to cancel
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.seasia **
-
-