Kachin rebels express skeptism over govt cease-fire

Updated 20 January 2013
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Kachin rebels express skeptism over govt cease-fire

NAYPYIDAW: Kachin rebels cast doubt yesterday over a Myanmar government pledge to end a military offensive after weeks of intense fighting that sparked international concern, amid reports of fresh shelling.
The government move on Friday came after the country’s fledgling parliament called for a halt to the fighting, which has left dozens reported dead in northern Kachin state and marred optimism about the country’s political reforms.
The conflict between government troops and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) has escalated in recent weeks with the use of air strikes by the military, prompting the United States and the United Nations to speak out.
A KIA official, requesting anonymity, said the military had gained “the upper hand” by surrounding the rebel stronghold of Laiza and was therefore able to declare an end to the offensive from a position of strength.
But he cautioned that the rebels would “wait and see” if military operations ceased.
The halt to the offensive was due to take effect from 6:00 a.m. yesterday (2330 GMT Friday) but the political wing of the KIA said attacks had continued near Laiza, which borders China.
“The Burmese... never keep promises,” Thailand-based spokesman James Lum Dau said, adding “several minutes of shelling” had taken place on Saturday near Laiza, the rebel’s base since the resumption of fighting in 2011.
A witness told AFP that an uneasy peace prevailed in the city itself.
Some experts have questioned the level of control President Thein Sein, a former general, exerts over army units in Kachin after an order to end military offensives in December 2011 was apparently ignored.
Rights groups meanwhile have condemned the impact of military action on civilians — rebels said three people, including a teenager and an elderly man, died after army shells landed in Laiza on Monday.
“We are particularly concerned about the way the Burmese have been fighting this war, including shelling Laiza,” Phil Robertson of Human Rights Watch Asia said, adding the unilateral cease-fire appeared to be “very limited” in scope.
The exact number of casualties from the conflict is unknown, but the government said Friday that 35 soldiers had been killed and 190 injured in a series of ambushes by the rebels since 2011, in the first official death toll for the military side.
The quasi-civilian government in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, has reached tentative cease-fires with a number of ethnic rebel groups since taking power in early 2011 but talks with Kachin rebels have shown little progress.
The reform-minded president on Saturday re-stated his government’s desire for peace with the rebels.
“I have ordered the Tatmadaw (Myanmar’s army)... to seek a peaceful solution to the conflict. I believe the Kachin Independence Organization will soon join us in the peace process,” he said in a statement, referring to the rebels’ political arm.
Doibu, a lower house MP of the Kachin State Unity and Democracy Party — who goes by one name — welcomed the declared end of the recent offensive.
But she said renewed clashes had been reported elsewhere in the resource-rich state, while Presidential spokesman Ye Htut said two policemen had died in a KIA raid on a police station on Saturday morning.


EU proposes suspending a duty-free sugar import scheme

Updated 4 sec ago
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EU proposes suspending a duty-free sugar import scheme

  • The IPR scheme allows companies to import sugar at zero duty and ⁠without limits
  • White sugar imports under the IPR totalled 155,000 tons in 2024/25, up 5 percent year-on-year

PARIS: The European Commission proposed suspending a scheme allowing some duty-free sugar imports into the bloc, aiming to ease pressure on European producers facing falling prices and increased competition.
“I will propose a temporary suspension of the sugar inward processing regime to ease pressures on sugar producers,” European Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Christophe Hansen said on X late on Monday.
The IPR scheme allows companies to import sugar at zero duty and ⁠without limits, provided the sugar is refined or processed into food products and then re-exported outside the European Union.
Raw sugar imported into the EU under the IPR in the 2024/25 marketing year totalled 587,000 metric tons, up 19 percent on the previous ⁠year, of which 95 percent came from Brazil, European Commission data showed.
White sugar imports under the IPR totalled 155,000 tons in 2024/25, up 5 percent year-on-year, of which 43 percent came from Brazil, followed by Morocco, Egypt and Ukraine, the data showed.
European sugar beet producers have raised concerns about unfair competition and the potential impact of a trade deal with the Mercosur bloc of South ⁠American countries which includes a larger sugar quota.
Producers say imports have contributed to a supply glut that led EU sugar prices to slump to their lowest in at least three years.
The European sugar beet growers lobby CIBE expressed strong support for the decision, calling it timely and necessary.
“It will provide the right signal and some relief on a very depressed EU sugar market,” the group said on X.