Yangon - Myanmar's ruling junta has cracked down on at least
two cases of forced labour since agreeing to establish a complaint
mechanism against the widespread practice with the International
Labour Organization (ILO) last month, media reports said Saturday.
According to the Ministry of Home Affairs, two government
officials from Aunglan township were sentenced to six months
imprisonment on February 28 for forcing villagers to make road
repairs on the Aunglan-Thanbula Road, reported The New Light of
Myanmar - a government mouthpiece.
In another case, Forest Department personnel who forced villagers
from Sangalay town to cut down trees and build a road have been
dismissed from the jobs, claimed the daily.
The two cases follow on the heels of Myanmar's agreement on
February 26 to set up a mechanism with ILO that will enable victims
of forced labour to seek redress.
The ILO had been pressuring Myanmar for more than a year to set up
a mechanism whereby complaints of forced labour can be made to their
office in Yangon without fear of imprisonment and intimidation of the
complainants by the authorities, as has happened in the past.
The ILO was to decide at its next session in Geneva whether to
take the issue to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) if Myanmar
continued to refuse to agree to the mechanism.
Myanmar's military regime has drawn international condemnation for
the widespread use of forced labour in its myriad of infrastructure
building projects such as roads, dams and bridges over the past two
decades.
ILO sources say that although the practice is now less widespread,
the government has switched to using prison labourers of late. Child
labour, with pitiful pay of less than 1 dollar a day, is also a
common phenomenon.
The mechanism, which will implemented on a trial basis for 12
months, will be unique to Myanmar.
Under the agreement, Myanmar's regime guarantees that no
retaliatory action will be taken against complainants and allows the
ILO liaison officer to travel within the country to meet complainants
about forced labour.
The mechanism, while unlikely to end forced labour in Myanmar,
could undermine the sense of 'impunity' local authorities have
enjoyed in the past in conscripting villagers for corvee labour or
dangerous jobs in war zones for the government, ILO experts contend.
The mechanism was proposed by the ILO after several people who had
registered complaints about forced labour in Myanmar were imprisoned
by the government.
Myanmar has been ruled by the self-styled State Peace and
Development Council (SPDC), a military junta, since 1988 when an army
crackdown on a nationwide pro-democracy movement left more than 3,000
people dead.
The regime earned itself international condemnation for refusing
to hand over power to the National League for Democracy (NLD), led by
Nobel peace prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, after it won the 1990
general election by a landslide.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
Your Talkback on this Story