Chinese-funded port raises fears in Myanmar’s Rakhine

Sub-title: 

New rules threaten to prevent locals from capitalizing on the state’s coming gold rush

Description: 

"Aung Gyi is forced to fish covertly under the shroud of night in western Myanmar waters as China bids to transform the strategically key region into a shipping and industrial hub, squeezing out locals who fear being left behind in the gold rush. Myanmar has declared Rakhine state, associated by many worldwide with the military’s 2017 bloody crackdown on Rohingya Muslims, open for business but locals fear they are being left out of the gold rush as new rules restrict traditional practices. Paddies and teak forests will be flattened for a colossal Beijing-backed factory zone and deep-sea port, which will serve as its neighboring giant’s gateway to the Indian Ocean. But the state’s promise for development comes with fishing restrictions – the waterways have been freed up for Chinese ships – a situation that has devastated local lives and livelihoods. “I might be beaten or arrested” if caught fishing illegally, Aung Gyi says as he lays shrimp out to dry by his dilapidated shack in a small fishing hamlet near the town of Kyaukphyu..."

Creator/author: 

Richard Sargent, Su Myat Mon

Source/publisher: 

"Asia Times" (Hong Kong)

Date of Publication: 

2019-11-17

Date of entry: 

2019-11-17

Grouping: 

  • Individual Documents

Category: 

Countries: 

Myanmar, China

Administrative areas of Burma/Myanmar: 

Rakhine State

Language: 

English

Resource Type: 

text

Text quality: 

    • Good