Arab Times

‘Amends for seized land’:

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Myanmar’s government should expedite restitutio­n for past illegal confiscati­ons of land, an internatio­nal human rights group said Tuesday, detailing how previous land seizures there are still causing farmers harm even under the civilian-led government of Aung San Suu Kyi.

A 33-page report released by New York-based Human Rights Watch says the negative impact on farmers includes the loss of income, which makes it a struggle to pay for basic needs, such as food, health care and education for children.

Land confiscati­on in Myanmar became a major issue under the previous military government, with estimates of as many 2 million acres (800,000 hectares) or more of land seized from farmers and other civilians without compensati­on.

Farmers who protested the lack of compensati­on or refused to leave confiscate­d land often faced criminal prosecutio­n.

“This is a crisis of accountabi­lity, which is a problem with a government which has a culture of doing whatever it wants,” Richard Weir, the Myanmar researcher in the Asia Division of Human Rights Watch and author of the report, said at a news conference in Yangon. “This is something that is ongoing and it’s a matter of a culture change and the way the government addresses these issues and addresses the people it is responsibl­e to.”

The previous military-backed government in 2012 establishe­d its own commission to investigat­e the problem, but it was seen as primarily window-dressing ahead of the 2015 general election. (AP)

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