Salween Dams Threaten to Drown Refugees Hopes of Returning Home

by Team FNVA
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Pianporn Deetes
International Rivers
July 10, 2015

Shan soldiers patrol the Salween River as plans for a series of hydropower projects threaten to swallow up thousands of acres of land, jeopardizing the return of ethnic minority refugees. Pianporn Deetes

Shan soldiers patrol the Salween River as plans for a series of hydropower projects threaten to swallow up thousands of acres of land, jeopardizing the return of ethnic minority refugees.
Pianporn Deetes

In mid-June, the Thai military government and its Myanmar counterpart signed a memorandum of understanding on energy, with an eye to expanding Thailand’s import of electricity from Myanmar, by up to 10,000 megawatts. The initial agreement also promotes overseas investment by Thai state-owned and public companies in numerous coal and hydropower projects in Myanmar, including the Hat Gyi, Ywathit, and Mong Ton dams on the Salween River. Significantly these projects are all situated in ethnic states namely the Shan, Kayah, Karen, and the Tanesserim divisions, which make up some of the country’s most vulnerable areas and populations.

A Shan colleague of mine recently visited the proposed Mong Ton Dam on the Salween River, and met a Shan pro-democracy commander who spoke of the area’s history of forced displacement and ongoing conflict. “This area was depopulated during the massive anti-insurgency campaign of the Burmese army between 1996 and 1998. Around 300,000 villagers in eleven townships in central Shan state were devastatingly uprooted during the period. To date, only around 30% of population has returned.” he said.

There are numerous reports from this period which document the widespread human rights violations committed by the Burmese military against civilians including looting, rape, sexual violence, and massacres.

“We were ordered [by Burmese soldiers] to leave our village immediately. If they returned and saw anyone, they would shoot,” a 50 year old Shan man told my colleague. ”It happened to many of us. We had no choice but to leave our homes, rice paddies and farms, livestock, and everything. My family hid in the forest for months, then decided to go back to our farm as we needed to feed ourselves.”. His story is similar to that of thousands of other victims.

The forced mass relocation resulted in the division of villagers into three groups: those who fled to the Thai border, those who were forcibly moved to relocation sites, and finally those who hid in the forest and became internally displaced persons (IDPs). According to a Shan human rights activist, humanitarian groups provided rice and foods for as many as 150,000 refugees in Thailand’s Fang district during the first months of the relocation. Later many became migrant workers in fruit orchards, construction sites, and elsewhere in Thailand.

Almost a decade later, a number of villagers have decided to return to their damaged villages and rebuild their homes, temples, and schools. However more than half of those who fled are still not back as they are uncertain about the military situation. Now their future is even more unclear and again in jeopardy due to the proposed Mong Ton Dam. The 7,000 megawatt project is the largest planned Salween River dam, with a reservoir the size of Singapore, which threatens to swallow up thousands of acres of land and homes.

The claims that peace and democracy are in the process of being restored in Myanmar, seems surreal and distant in this part of the country; particularly when it is evident that agreements, such as the one between Thailand and Myanmar was signed before fair elections occur.

“If the (Burmese) government proceeds with building the Mong Ton Dam under current conditions, it is certain that they will send in larger numbers of troops and increase military fortifications to secure the area. This will in turn fuel greater conflict, and lead to increased abuses against local communities,” reads a May 2015 statement by Shan community organizations. “Conflict will be further inflamed by the fact that Naypyidaw is proceeding to sell off the Salween River section by section to neighboring countries, instead of waiting until there is a negotiated federal settlement under the peace process, which would give ethnic peoples decision-making power to protect the natural resources, including waterways, in their areas.”

While electricity from Myanmar might look cheap for investors from the outside, its significant environmental and social costs have not been taken into account and will be borne by the marginalized communities, including tens of thousands of refugees in Shan state and throughout the country.

For Thailand, it’s time we recognize the transboundary impacts of our projects being built in neighboring countries, particularly in war-torn areas of Myanmar, where the real owners of the resources still do not have a say over their land and natural resources. As an emerging energy investor, Thailand must begin to consider its extraterritorial obligations when investing in large infrastructure projects abroad. It’s time to stop investing in hydropower and coal in conflict areas of Myanmar or risk further jeopardizing the already fragile peace building process underway.

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