March 24,2017
About 600 residents of the deep-water port town of Kyaukphyu in
western Myanmar’s Rakhine state on Monday protested against Chinese oil
tankers moving into the area, as the operation of a long-delayed and
controversial U.S. $1.5-billion pipeline gets under way.
The residents boarded more than 100 motorboats and piloted them from
Kyaukphyu to Maday Island, site of the local office of the Chinese
state-owned oil company China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), or
PetroChina, which operates the tankers.
The protesters said that local fishermen’s livelihoods are threatened
because Myanmar’s Fisheries Department has banned them from fishing in
the area, while allowing oil tankers to operate there, and that the
government has failed to rectify the situation.
Protesters demanded that officials do something to ensure the
fishermen’s survival and provide adequate health care and education so
they can eke out a living.
“We fishermen are in trouble,” protester Ko Lone Lone told RFA’s
Myanmar Service. “We protest today because we want to know whether CNPC
or the government will assume responsibility for our survival, health
care, and education.”
The protesters also demanded the delivery of electricity to their
homes 24 hours a day and the construction of communication towers, high
schools, and dams that will benefit residents.
Myanmar and China agreed in April to open the 770-kilometer
(480-mile) oil pipeline between Kyaukphyu and Kunming, capital of
southwestern China’s Yunnan province, after years of project delays and
negotiations.
The pipeline will allow China to import oil from the Bay of Bengal,
thereby diversifying its oil supply routes and scaling down its
dependence on sensitive shipping lanes in the South China Sea.
A twin gas pipeline that is part of the same project has started operating.
Credit: RFA
Wednesday, 24 May 2017
Hundreds Protest Presence of Chinese Oil Tankers in Myanmar Port City
Wednesday, May 24, 2017
Myanmar News