Gulf Today

UN seeks curbs on Myanmar army businesses

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JAKARTA: Tougher sanctions are needed against Myanmar’s wealthy and powerful military as its web of economic interests has generated a fortune that helps fund atrocities, UN investigat­ors said on Monday.

They urged the internatio­nal community to sever links with the armed forces’ dizzying economic holdings — that they said dwarf those of any other civilian company in Myanmar.

Cuting ties will “impair (the army’s) ability to carry out military operations without oversight and thus reduce violations of human rights,” said Marzuki Darusman, chair of the fact-finding mission, ahead of the launch of the report in Jakarta.

The team last year called for Myanmar’s senior generals to be prosecuted for genocide ater a 2017 crackdown forced some 740,000 Rohingya Muslims into Bangladesh.

In addition to extensive local partnershi­ps, at least 15 foreign firms have joint ventures with the military, according to the UN report, while 44 others have some form of commercial ties.

“These numbers really are the tip of the iceberg,” investigat­or Christophe­r Sidoti said.

Two main military-owned conglomera­tes — Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited (MEHL) and Myanmar Economic Corporatio­n (MEC) — as well as numerous subsidiari­es and “crony companies” have interests in everything from jade and ruby mining to real estate and tourism.

The military also controls two large banks. But the companies do not release full financial results to the public, shielding themselves from public scrutiny. The UN probe argued the army’s “business empire” allows it to evade accountabi­lity and oversight.

The 111-page report also detailed how dozens of private companies donated more than $10 million to the military amid operations against the Rohingya.

They later helped finance developmen­t projects, assisting the military to “erase evidence of Rohingya belonging to Myanmar.”

Sidoti said he found it shocking that so many firms contribute­d.

“It’s not as though businesses didn’t know what was going on. They did,” he said.

The report demanded criminal investigat­ions into these companies and urged for a complete ban on arms sales to Myanmar. Watchdog Global Witness called the report a rallying cry.

“Global government­s and companies who find themselves connected to a military company can therefore no longer plead ignorance,” said campaign leader Paul Donowitz.

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