Thursday, August 28, 2008

School Trash Bank Helps Reduce Rubbish

August 25th, 2008 by King Kong Janoi Print This Post/Page

Thailand_Rubbish_School2__web_.JPGWhat to do with rubbish is a problem every country in Asia is facing.

Burning rubbish contributes to global warming and we are running out of land to use as garbage dumps. Plastic bags cog the regions rivers killing fish and wildlife.

Reducing, Recycling, and Re-use recycling as become a urgent and immediately task for us all.

Leading the way is the Thammachote Suksalai School in Suphanburi, 200 kilometers North West of Bangkok. It’s publics run a garbage bank are earn money saving the environment.

King Kong Janoi visited the inspiring school.

Students make flowers out of used plastic bottles.

Pupils at this school in North-West Thailand are recycling champions.

On site is a garbage bank where they collect, recycle, re-use and sell rubbish.

Sunisa Suandokmai is one of the volunteers running the garbage bank.

“I am happy to work saving the environment because we can earn money recycling garbage. I have also learned from my teachers about global warming and I want to do something to stop the planet from getting hotter and hotter.”

The garbage bank was set up two years ago. Now every day before the end of school students trade rubbish.

Students collect rubbish from the school grounds or bring waste from their homes.

The waste is then separated into three groups-paper, plastic, and aluminum.

They then sell what they can to recycling collectors and use the rest to make products to sell at the market.

Over two years the school has earned more than three thousand US dollars from the project.

One of the teachers, Ampanan Mekchai says they try to recycle everything.

She says, Organic waste is made into fertilizer and sold to local farmers.

Used cooking oil is mixed together with methanol and sodium hydroxide to make bio-diesel which fuels the schools garbage truck.

“I am really happy about our work because although it’s small we are helping the country by reducing garbage and slowing climate change.”

Teacher Vannaporn Mukda calls on other schools to follow their lead.

“We want to urge other school in other province to save our world. Even though, we don’t have much budget from the government for doing this the impact of the community, the students and the environment is really significant.”

The garbage bank also buys computers and electrical appliances that are no longer functional.

Students learning mechanics practice their skills by fixing them.

They also encourage their students to reject plastic bags and across the campus, students proudly carry renewable cloth bags.

“To fight global warming we encourage students to plant trees at school and at home. We also encourage student to use public transport as much as they can. We are do not allow the student to burn the garbage and ask them to sell it at the garbage bank instead.”

Last year the school won an environmental award from Thailand’s Ministry for the environment.

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Remembering the 1988 Burmese Uprising

August 9th, 2008 by King Kong Janoi Print This Post/Page

20 years ago this week, Burmese Women and men, old and young, rich and poor, were flooding the streets – in a tide of anger against the repressive military government.

Revolution was in the air on August 8 back in 1988.

Ma Myait Myait San was a final year student at Rangoon University at the time.

“In 1988 I would say that was the birth of the human rights movement. I had never heard the word human rights. I took part with the other students because I was hoping for a life change.”

Six weeks of rallies - which became known as the 88 protests - were eventually brutally suppressed by the military.

At least 3,000 civilians were killed as the military tightened its grip on power.

On the anniversary, King Kong Janoi speaks with Aung Zaw, a student leaders who was forced to flee after their uprising failed.

“I still remember my departure when I prayed and worshipped my mom. I told her I will be back in a few months and she cried and I cried. I thought naively that I would see her again but I have not.”

He is now the editor of Irrawaddy Magazine that covers Burma from Thailand.

His greatest wish is to return home.

“I thought of if I buy air ticket here to Burma, it would only take 55 minutes to fly but I can not go home. So that is really give us a hard feeling. But the spirit of 88 continues. We have determination.”

But the military regime that has ruled the country for 46 years shows no signs of collapse, despite international condemnation and economic sanctions.

This week President Bush both delivered speeches criticising the Burmese junta.

In an exclusive Interview with Asia Calling’s partner station the Democratic Voice of Burma President Bush says the international community needs more.

“What we have to do is continue to work with members of the Security Council and explain to them that what matters most in life is the human condition. We have a lot of work to do to convince people that life can be better in Burma and it’s in their interest to make it better. China is a very important country. It’s in our common interest that Burma be peaceful but I don’t know if China will agree that Aung San Suu Kyi should be free and at the centre of the country like we do. We just have to work that much harder.”

Political analysis U Aung Naing Oo who met with President Bush argues America should take a more diplomatic approach.

“The US government should engage with Burmese military and US government should come out with pragmatic program to help the transition and to build democratic institution in Burma and to bring the military out of isolation.”

He argues that the Burmese people not the military are suffering because of the economic sanctions.

“I don’t think sanctions are effective. Sanctions have unwittingly punished the people because the military has a lot of money from the sale of oil and gas. They don’t care sanction.”

He says while fellow Asian nations like Thailand and China still trade with the military US and EU sanctions are meaningless.

Southeast Asian nations maintain a non-intervention policy with Burma.

But there have been recent moves by ASEAN to put more pressure on the military to make democratic reforms.

Many of the protests to mark the 88 revolution have focus on China.

Activists say Beijing could be the key to making the military respect human rights.

Dissidents in Rangoon though, say it is very difficult to organize mass protest now because most their leaders are in jail or hiding.

But U Aung Moe Zaw, the chairperson of the Opposition Democratic Party for a New Society remains optimistic.

“Change in our country will come from the inside. The people and our political activists are working together to achieve our goal.”

On the eve of the anniversary One of Burma’s most popular comedians was charged with several offences, after he defied the military by giving aid to the victims of Cyclone Nargis.

His relatives say Zarganar faces charges including creating public unrest and unlawful association for his aid activities during the disaster.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Identity cards give power to the hill tribe people of Thailand

July 19th, 2008 by King Kong Janoi, Asia Calling Print This Post/Page


Thailand_Hill_Tribe__web_.JPGIn Thailand up to three million hill-tribe people are denied basic services because they don’t have Identity cards.

That’s the findings of a study by the Thai NGO the bureau of Social development and UNESCO released this month.

The report says many of the hill tribes of the north - who have lived in Thailand for generations- are discriminated against when it comes to access to education, health.

They also lack the right to buy land, travel and vote.

To tackle the problem the government has created a Thai hill tribe identity card.

But as King Kong Janoi reports from the Kanchanaburi province, many are still slipping through the cracks.

Without a Thai identification card, 22 year-old Mi Samulk Chan has lived all her life in fear of the immigration police.

“I am afraid to go to hospital, they might catch me there. So when I feel sick we just stay at home and take medicines from a local shop.”

There are cases where Hospital staffs have reported patients to the immigration police.

Mi Samulk has lived in the Mon tribe in the hills between Thailand and Burma all her life. She is effectively stateless.

It’s a common story here in Sungklaburi a town on a lake, 370 kilometers north of Bangkok.

I am standing on a wooden bridge that crosses the water, on one side live the Mon tribe and the other ethnic Karen people.

Nai Kong Non from the Mon Tribe was born in Thailand. But says he was denied a scholarship because he did not have a Thai ID card.

“I have been studying in Thai school from kindergarten to middle school, I study hard, try to get good grades. We are poor family so I applied for a scholarship. I wish they allow us to have a scholarship to study in higher level but the answers is No because being a Mon student, we no rights, no opportunities like the Thai people.”

Due to pressure from the Thai King, authorities launch a Thai hill tribe identity card program in 2005.

People who could prove they were born in Thailand were given ID cards.

Now at the age of 20 Nai Kong Non proudly carries a Thai hill tribe ID card.

“It is totally different from the past. Before I was Mon and not Thai and there was nothing I could do about it. I have no rights to do anything, no right to education, no right to vote but when I came a Thai citizen, my life turned upside down.”

He is very grateful that now he can continue his education.

“Thanks so much to Thailand, thanks to the king and government and all Thai people and authorities who give us a big change and a big opportunities to become a Thai citizen and have power as Thai people. I have a dream to study in university now my dream can come true by becaming a Thai citizen.”

But the program failed to register everyone and a new ID drive began this month.

At the local police station in Sungklaburi hill tribe people are queuing up to have their ID cards processed.

But Naw Say Mar has been turned away because she doesn’t have a birth certificate.

“I was born in Thailand but I don’t have birth’s certificate because I was born at home not in a hospital. You must have that to be recognized as a Thai citizenship. It is really hard for us but I don’t know why! It seem the process of working it out is very complicated.”

She says she will be forced to stop school in grade nine and without an ID card it will be very hard for her to get into University.

Community leader Nai Bod complains that the ID process is irregular.

“A man near my home, has live for more than 20 years in Sangklaburi northwest Thailand, but he didn’t get a ID card. Many people are not educated about how to fill out the forms, so they miss things and write the wrong thing and so they don’t get the card.”

However, the Thai Interior Ministry officials say it is difficult to tell the difference between members of hill tribes and “newcomers” such as refugees from Burma.

Surapong Kongchantuk is a ethnic minority researcher based in Bangkok.

He argues there is wider problem of racism in Thailand that needs to be addressed.

“Among Thai society there is a belief that if you are not pure Thai then you have no right to use the resources in Thailand. Even you born on Thai soil, if you are not Thai race the society does not accept you.”

Sunday, June 15, 2008

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Sunday, June 08, 2008

Untold Story of Burma’s Relief Effort

June 7th, 2008 by King Kong Janoi Print This Post/Page

Burma_Cyclone_Survivor__web_.JPGBurma’s state-run media has strongly condemned media reports of the devastation caused by Cyclone Nargis.

An article in a state daily accused “self-seekers” of faking video footage of the destruction - and foreign media of using it to harm Burma’s image.

Reports that survivors were living in dire conditions in the Irrawaddy Delta were exaggerated, it said.

The reality our Correspondent King Kong Janoi has seen and heard is very different.

Victims re-build their huts destroyed by the cyclone in Your Thit village in the Irrawaddy delta. The roofs are made with coconut leafs.

Ma Mya Aye, who is seven months pregnant, worries about what will happen when the rainy season, comes. However, there are no other materials to work with.

She recalls the horror of the cyclone.

“People were floating everywhere. I grabbed a piece of wood to keep me a float; it was an uprooted coconut tree. It was hard to hold on to the wood so I grabbed the leaves. The waves were hitting me really hard over and over again really. It must have been hard for my baby inside. The rain also strung my skin.”

She had no dry clothes to wear after the cyclone. She waited in wet clothes for help with fellow villages who managed to survive.

Only two people were taken by relief boat to the provincial capital Labutta, the rest made the journey on foot.

Ma Mya Ayes group wait for two days for help before walking to find relief.

“I could not eat or drink. We just had coconuts to eat but I was too exhausted to eat. My body was bruised from the waves. On the fourth day, we decide to go to Pyit Sa Lu village and then on to Labutta to seek help. It normally is a two hour journey but it took as a day because we moved very slowly.”

Relief supplies are now slowly trickling down to communities in the worst hit areas, but the ruling generals - notoriously suspicious of the West - are wary of what is coming in.

Survivors like Ma Mya Ayes are surviving off relief from private local donors.

Thousands of victims push and shove as rice is handed out in relief camps in Labutta.

A message over a loud speaker calls for calm and order.

Ma Mya Aye is too weak to join the crowd so she goes with out food.

“I can’t jostle with them. A donor comes to distribute rice soup but they do not hand out bowls, I don’t have a bowl so I couldn’t have soup. The next day there was about three hundred people in the queue so it would take half a day to get rice. I can’t stand in the sun for that long. I only drink water but I was not hungry because I was thinking about my lost husband. I don’t know whether he is dead or alive.”

Despite being pregnant and injured by the cyclone, she has received no medical assistance.

She worries about her baby.

“After the disaster I have not felt my baby move in my womb. Strong trees hit me.”

Two weeks after the disaster a local donor brought her to Rangoon. She is now sheltering in a monastery.

“I am alive because of that person. Here monks give us food to eat. They even gave us slippers for our feet.”

While more foreign aid workers are now being allowed into Burma, they are finding it difficult to gain access to some of the hardest-hit areas - where villagers say they have received little or no government help.

What they are finding instead is that many people are still without clean water and at risk of disease.

Médecins Sans Frontières is warning that with the onslaught of the monsoon rains survivors risk getting infections.

Ma Mya Aye who has lost her entire family doesn’t know what her future holds.

“I have to carry on my life alone but I don’t know how. It would have been easier if I wasn’t pregnant. I don’t have anyone to lend on. My brothers and sisters died and I can’t find my husband. I have one sister living in Huin Kyi but that area also serious affected disaster so I have not been able to find her.”

Sunday, June 01, 2008

Burma Junta Arrests Local Aid Workers for Handing out Food

May 31st, 2008 by King Kong Janoi Print This Post/Page

Burma_Pro_Democracy__web_.JPGFirst to Burma, Where the military junta has finally approved all pending visas for UN staff more than three weeks after Cyclone Nargis.

More foreign relief workers from other groups are also being permitted to enter the Irrawaddy Delta.

The UN estimates that more than two million people still need aid.

And as our correspondent King Kong Janoi reveals local relief workers are being arrested by the military for handing out aid.

Cyclone Victims queue for rice in Twin Tay Township, Rangoon Division.

Some yell ‘come and help us!”

This private aid hand out is far from enough to feed their families.

A Pro-democracy activist who was involved in the September uprising says this shows the military doesn’t care about their people only power.

Private businesses in Rangoon and local groups are providing the majority of aid to the victims.

“We find food for the victims to keep them alive. We collect money from friends and neighbors and then give it to the victims who are living in remote areas where no government aid has reached, they are hungry and we try to feed them.”

There are many kinds of private activist groups working in the Cyclone affected areas - musicians, pro democracy activists and Buddhist monks.

Sayadaw Ashin Nyarnittara chants prays for the dead.

He has been travel across the country giving faith to the victims. He has also traveled overseas to Thailand and Singapore where he described to the exile Burmese community the situation in the cyclone affected areas.

He is raising re-construction fund this way.

“In Bogalay Township, we have turned 50 temples into relief centers. However many of the monasteries don’t have roofs, so we are trying to get supplies to fix that. We are also focusing on fixing the hospital roof and getting medical equipment so the doctors can work.”

It’s this kind of informal aid that is keeping people alive.

The government embarrassed by their actions is cracking down on this private aid groups.

Monks claim the authorities have asked them to hand over the aid to them, so it looks like its coming from the military.

There are even reports of local donors being arrested.

Local donors claim that on the 25th of May 70 donors trucks were stop and their drivers arrested for distributing rice to victims, in the Yangon division.

The authorities detained local aid worker Ko Soe Bay for one night.

“I am so angry about that but it has made me stronger. When we see people struggle with no food or clothes we know we must go on. We will continue our work even if they try to stop us. We are young so can face whatever.”

The UN says that up to 2.4 million Burmese need emergency assistance and has begun raising 200 million dollars for a six-month relief program.

Nearly 80,000 people are said to have died; 56,000 are counted as missing.

Despite the scale of the disaster, the government has focused on the constitutional referendum.

Even in refugee camps, they told victims to vote and how to vote.

Ko Myo Htwe explains what happened on the 24th of May.

“The authorities came just to get a list of all the people here, we can not vote by ourselves. I asked if I could make my vote independently and they said. We would vote NO and that’s not acceptable so they voted YES for us.”

The first round of voting for the cyclone took place on May the 10th in regions spared by the storm.

The state media said the constitution was approved by 92 percent, with a 98 percent turnout.

Activist say the referendum is a line and the international community has condemned the process as a sham.

But right now pro-democracy activist are too busy helping cyclone victims to fight back politically.

“We will continue to fight to achieve our goal. What we are doing we truly believe in so nothing can stand in our way. If they think we believe that the people approve their constitution then they are fools. The youth movement is working underground in the same way as before.”

This activist makes it clear that young people like him are not scared of staging another uprising against the military government.