Résultats de la recherche | Land Portal

Résultats de la recherche

Showing items 1 through 9 of 29.
  1. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    juin, 2015
    Myanmar

    Villagers in Karen areas of southeast Myanmar continue to face widespread land confiscation at the hands of a multiplicity of actors. Much of this can be attributed to the rapid expansion of domestic and international commercial interest and investment in southeast Myanmar since the January 2012 preliminary ceasefire between the Karen National Union (KNU) and the Myanmar government. KHRG first documented this in a 2013 report entitled ‘Losing Ground’, which documented cases of land confiscation between January 2011 and November 2012.

  2. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    avril, 2013
    Myanmar

    WITH SUBSTANTIAL SUPPORTING DOCUMENTS, INCLUDING A PHOTO ESSAY...Selected Land and Livelihood Impacts Along the Shwe Natural Gas and China-Myanmar Oil Transport Pipeline from Rakhine State to Mandalay Division..."Yesterday, we published a photo essay and companion report highlighting the severe impacts of the Shwe natural gas and Myanmar-China oil transport pipelines on the lives and livelihoods of local communities living around these mega-projects.

  3. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    août, 2009
    Myanmar

    10,000 Shans uprooted, 500 houses burned in Burmese regime’s latest scorched earth campaign (press release)...

    Map of villages forcibly relocated...

    Summary of villages forcibly relocated...

    Images of the Burmese regime's latest scorched earth campaign

  4. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    janvier, 2016
    Myanmar

    Summary: "In 2008, Myanmar’s military rulers ratified a new constitution that ensured their continued monopoly of the country’s natural resources. Section 37 (a) states:
    “the Union is the ultimate owner ofall lands and all natural resources above and below the ground, above and beneath the water and in the atmosphere”

  5. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    mars, 2012
    Myanmar

    Executive Summary: "Burma is rich in natural resources, particularly natural gas and oil. Yet instead of using these resources for the country’s development through industry and job growth, military leaders have been exporting them for over a decade. This has generated huge revenue flows, but a lack of transparency and mismanagement of these revenues has left Burma with some of the worse development indicators in the world, creating a resource curse. Sales revenues of natural gas exports alone amounted to US$ 2.5 billion in 2010-11.

  6. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    octobre, 2004
    Myanmar

    BURMA ARMY ATROCITIES PAVE THE WAY FOR SALWEEN DAMS IN KAREN STATE... "As Thailand proceeds with plans to join Burma’s military regime in building a series of dams on the Salween River to gain “cheap” electricity, this report reveals the atrocities being inflicted on the people of Northern Karen State to pave the way for two of the planned dams. The Upper Salween (Wei Gyi) Dam and Lower Salween (Dar Gwin) Dam are planned to be built on the river where it forms the border between Thailand’s Mae Hong Son province and Burma’s Karen State.

  7. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    décembre, 2012
    Myanmar

    China’s plans to build a giant industrial
    zone at the terminal of its Shwe gas
    and oil pipelines on the Arakan coast
    will damage the livelihoods of tens of
    thousands of islanders and spell doom
    for Burma’s second largest mangrove
    forest.
    The 120 sq km “Kyauk Phyu Special
    Economic Zone” (SEZ) will be managed
    by Chinese state-owned CITIC group
    on Ramree island, where China is
    constructing a deep sea port for
    ships bringing oil from the Middle
    East and Africa. An 800-km railway

  8. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    février, 2000
    Myanmar

    Executive Summary:
    "The impact of decades of military repression on
    the population of Burma has been devastating.
    Hundreds of thousands of Burmese have been
    displaced by the government�s suppression of
    ethnic insurgencies and of the pro-democracy
    movement. As government spending has concentrated
    on military expenditures to maintain its
    control, the once-vibrant Burmese economy has
    been virtually destroyed. Funding for health and
    education is negligible, leaving the population at

  9. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    novembre, 1997
    Myanmar

    After the annexation of Upper Burma in 1886, the modern Burmese oil industry expanded at Yenangyaung, the long-standing center of hand-dug wells worked by twinza. An earlier attempt to establish a commercial industry in Arakan in the late 1870s was thereby eclipsed. On the islands off the Arakan coast -- Ramree, Cheduba, and the Boronga Islands -- British explorers had drawn attention to oil pools and seepage. In 1878, the first modern oil well in Burma was drilled on Eastern Boronga Island.

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