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Kyauk Talin villagers, who work mostly on rubber plantations, have been negatively
impacted by the imposition of this order. The day after announcing the travel restriction
order, on July 6th, Nai Tun Shwe, 44, who owns five acres of rubber plantation, was
interviewed on phone:
The problem depends on how long they restrict the travel. If there is 24-hour travel
limitation for three consecutive weeks, we will run out of food. And then, during the period
of alternately coming sunlight and rain, we want to tap rubber more because it [the tree] is
productive at that time. It is very unfair to limit travel for 24 hours. We have no alternative
but to wait.
In addition to Nai Tun Shwe, close to 50 other rubber cultivators were not allowed to work
in their plantations. Nai Kyi (secret name) who owns 7 acres of rubber plantation near Nai
Tun Kyi’s, explained why the travel restriction would impact the livelihood of farmers and
cultivators:
If they limit movement like this, our investments [into the cultivation of plantations] will be
useless. We have invested about twenty millions [kyat] into our work, so we have to save
money from our daily income of five thousands to eight thousands [kyat] after subtracting
our food expenditure and other various taxes. It’s too bad the army is restricting travel so
unfairly. Anyhow, they should explain the reason publicly.
During this period of occupation some Kyauk Talin villagers have highlighted to the
HURFOM field reporter that many villagers haven’t been able to save any income due to
their living hand to mouth as laborers and farmers during this period.
According to Nai Mon Nyi (not real name), 32, a resident who is close with one of the
members of the Village Peace and Development Council (VPDC) and local militia force,
the 24-hour travel restriction by LIB No. 273 was directly ordered by Coastal Regional
Command (CRC) and Military Operation Management Command (MOMC) No. 8. The
order was given as an attempt to suppress possible contact or support for local Mon
insurgent armed groups from the villages. Even though most of the villagers have
requested thought the village headman, Nai Lwan, that the army allow them to travel
outside the village, there has been no change in the restriction order yet.
This area of Yebu Township, in northern Tennaserm Division is home to several armed
splinter groups, though none of these field a particularly high number of soldiers. These
insurgent forces are the Mon National Defense Army (MNDA) and the Nai Chan Deng
group. HURFOM estimates these groups troop strengths to be between 32 to 35 soldiers,
and 20 to 30 and soldiers respectively. In comparison, the SPDC operates at least 4
battalions within the region; LIB’s No. 282, No. 273, No. 401 and Infantry Battalion (IB) No.
31.
Mi Than Than Sint, 30, a Kyaut Talin resident, explained to HURFOM that the only option
villagers have in reaching their farms is to pay. The army is demanding money from people
who must go outside the village though a “villages pass ticket’” for duration of the travel
restriction:
If you have an important cause to go outside the village, you have to approach the second
commander of LIB No. 273 person to person via the village headman to get a “villages
pass ticket” which allows you go outside the village for a few hours. A woman who lives
near my house has to go to other villages to collect daily interest rates [to collect on small
business loans]. Depending on the tickets duration [length of time gone form the village],
we have to pay 500 to 1000 kyat for the ‘villages pass ticket’. The people who are willing
to pay for the tickets are the people who must go outside the village. [However] the poor
like us can’t afford the tickets. We have already had to pay for many other issues [Security
fees, general funding for the township peace and development council (TPDC) and local
army units, motorbike license tax, etc.].
In addition to the restriction, LIB No. 273 has taken up positions directly within the village.
This includes battalion soldiers guarding in and around villagers homes. This tactic
apparently guards against assault by insurgent forces that often aim to liberate an area,
but are also careful to protect the lives of ethnic Mon communities. Another Kyauk Talin
resident, Nai Lin Tun, 32, highlighted the very real threat the actual presence of SPDC
soldiers has for local residents:
This time they have secretly settled down in the village. They organized three or four
soldiers into a group and made them hide amongst the villagers’ houses. So we are
worried a lot about our village. We have to take care not to lose our properties [to theft]
and have to avoid unnecessary social problems with them. Another point is that they have
taken positions here for security, so the Mon rebel groups must know Burmese soldiers
are in the village. The problem is that they [Burmese soldiers] stay in our houses, so we
may also be shot accidentally.
In these instances, the continued presence of LIB No. 273 in the village is like to impact
local farmers and cultivators’ livelihoods as well as threaten the lives of residents who are
ostensibly being used as human shields by the Burmese battalion. Farmers who have a
seasonally dependent window in which to raise their crops, often invest huge amounts of
money in the cultivation of the farms and rubber plantations. This often requires farmers to
take out loans, and at the least leaves them a hairs breadth of income to be able to
continue cultivation and farming next season. Already poor farmers are often unable to pay
for even the most basic additional costs, including for the ‘village pass ticket’. If unable to
tend to their farms and plantations villagers throughout the region under travel restrictions
could loose an entire season’s crop and the investment of millions of kyat.
The presence of LIB No. 273 soldiers is a significant threat to the lives of residents whose
homes and villages are occupied. Villagers will potentially be victims of fighting between
insurgent forces and Burmese soldiers – one man was killed three weeks ago after being
mistaken by soldiers as an insurgent. By attempting to ward off incursions by insurgent
forces through the use of villagers as human shields, villagers are directly threatened with
severe bodily harm and death, not only via possible insurgent attacks, but by the very
soldiers of LIB No. 273 who make little distinction between insurgent and villager.