Asia-Pacific News
Myanmar opposition leader calls for reassessment of dam project
Aug 12, 2011, 4:35 GMT
Yangon - Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has called on the governments of Myanmar and China to reassess a 6,000-megawatt dam project due to safety and environmental concerns.
'We believe that, keeping in mind the interests of both countries, both governments would wish to avoid consequences which might endanger lives and homes,' Suu Kyi said in a statement made available Friday.
The dam is planned for an upper stretch of the Irrawaddy River, the longest in Myanmar, starting in the northern Kachin State and traversing the central plains before emptying into the rice-growing Irrawaddy delta and the Indian Ocean.
Given the economic, social and environmental importance of the river, Suu Kyi appealed to the international conservationist community 'to join us in a campaign to create a worldwide awareness of the dangers threatening one of the most important rivers in Asia.'
Construction on the estimated 3.6-billion-dollar Myitsone hydro-electric dam project began in 2009, as a joint venture between the Myanmar government and the state-owned China Power Investment.
'Under the current proposal, the dam will displace up to 12,000 people from 63 villages and flood critical cultural heritage sites,' said the International Rivers environmental group, adding that the project already faced 'violent opposition from the local Kachin population.'
The Kachin are one of five ethnic minority groups that are waging insurgencies against the Myanmar army, which has ruled the country since 1962 and continues to dominate the current elected government.
The project site was reportedly hit by a series of bombs in April 2010.
Suu Kyi also questioned the geological safety of the project. 'The presence of fault lines in the vicinity of the dams and the sheer immensity of the reservoir raises the spectre of horrendous devastation in the event of an earthquake.'
Suu Kyi is Myanmar's chief opposition figure, who has spent 15 of the past 21 years under house arrest. She was released from a seven-year house detention sentence on November 13.
Although she has no official position, and her National League for Democracy party has been dissolved, Suu Kyi remains a powerful political force.
The pro-military government's chief liaison officer, Labour Minister Aung Kyi, was scheduled to meet with Suu Kyi Friday afternoon, according to opposition sources.
Suu Kyi is planning a 'political tour' to Bogo, 50 kilometres north-east of Yangon on Saturday, despite government warnings against the trip.
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