Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Alambadi



What started as a peaceful protest to lift the ban on Jallikattu, the traditional sport of bull-taming played on the occasion of Pongal in Tamil Nadu, opened a veritable Pandora's Box. While political leaders, intellectuals, film actors, right wings activists as well as animal activists jumped into the fray, fiercely debating over animal rights versus tradition, a chorus has risen across the country to permit other animal sport as well. The protest at Marina Beach, which soon turned violent, may well be the precursor to legalise these games in the name of tradition and culture. 

While animal activists have documented the cruelty meted out to animals and the courts point to animal rights under Indian law, those promoting these animal sports, some of which are being played for centuries, insist they helped preserve some of the Indian breeds, which have been driven to the brink of extinction. 

Animal rights activists and organisations, including PETA (People for Ethical Treatnent of Animals), have opined that sport involving animals is cruel as they are goaded to perform. Animals being raced, including bulls and bullocks, are whipped to get them to run fast. Those pitted against each other often fight to the finish. What kind of sports are these in this age of technology, the animal lovers wonder. What emerged from this entire debate was that animals became the talking point. The big question now is how far will animals become part of festivities? How long one will animals be used to showcase emotions? What about the emotion of animals? Jallikattu is just such festival sport, but there are many such festivals in India, leave alone the world, where animals are used as a pawn. While some activists call for a total ban, others insist regulation is the way to go and ensure no cruelty is meted out. 

Hoards of festivals 

Jallikattu, celebrated across Tamil Nadu on the second day of Pongal, was described as "Yeru thazhuvuthal", which means embracing the bull. The word, Jallikattu comes from salli or jalli (coins) and kattu (bag), which refers a bag of coins, which was tied to the bull's horns and the winner had to retrieve. It has been part of their tradition and culture, and celebrated across the state on the second day of Pongal. 

What was traditionally full of fun and gaiety, has now turned into a big-money sport. Bulls are specially trained and as they balk at the sight of a cheering crowd, are goaded to run. Animal activists have recorded instances of forcing alcohol down the throat of the animal, chilli powder rubbed into its eyes and tail twisted or even bitten.  

What many people may not realise is that almost every Indian state has some or the other festival, where animals are part of celebrations. Listed here are some of the major ones: 

Cart race 

Kambala is a buffalo race, very popular in South Karnataka. In this two buffaloes are tied to a plough and raced as a team across paddy fields filled with slush and mud. Traditionally a non-competitive race, the Kambala season starts in November and lasts until March and is held annually in coastal Karnataka as well as parts of Kerala. The use of whips to race the buffaloes has been criticised. With the Supreme Court in 2014 banning use of bulls and buffaloes as performing animals, this sport too came under the scan. The state high court on  18 November, 2016, passed an interim stay order stopping all Kambala events in the state. 

Bullock cart racing is also held in Maharashtra and is very popular in Marathwada, Konkan and Western Maharasthra. The festival goes back around 450 years back, but unlike Tamil Nadu, does not have any link with any festival. Besides, bull/bullock/ox or even horse cart racing are held in Punjab, Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh during Pola, parts of Gujarat, at cattle fairs in Uttar Pradesh and in villages of West Bengal on Dasami day. 
 
Cock fights 

This blood sport was also highlighted over the last few months as it is mainly indulged in during Sankranti festival in Andhra Pradesh. Stakes run into hundreds of crores of rupees as two roosters lash out at each other. Sharp blades are tied to the legs and it usually ends with the vanquished getting killed. 

There is evidence of cock-fighting in the Indus Valley Civilization and was a popular sport in China, Persia and ancient Greece. In India now, cock-fight is  a gambling game and can also be seen in Karnataka, Kerala and Jharkhand. Indian judiciary has banned the sport though it is still conducted illegally. 
 
Bulbul fights 

Organised during the harvest festival of Assam, Bhogali Bihu, which coincides with Makar Sankranti, bulbuls are fed with intoxicating concoctions to make them aggressive and fight. The birds sustain injuries during the fight and losers are let off after trimming the crest so that they do not enter a contest again. There is no betting on the fights. This very popular sport has now been banned by the courts. 
 
Dog fight 

This is a blood sport that came into India mainly from medieval Europe through Afghanistan. It is now surreptiously organised in farm houses on the outskirts of Delhi. Two game dogs are pitted against one another for the entertainment of the spectators. The dogs are kept in cages, without food for days on end, angering and maddening them and are then unleashed on each other. They are made to fight till one of them dies. Bets of lakhs are placed on the winning dog. The blood sport is banned but despite a few arrests, the popularity of the sport hasn't decreased. 
 
Showbiz 

In the Vadakkumnatha Temple, Thrissur, festival an elephant procession is held. Activists points out that a lot of atrocities is meted out to the pachyderms ~ they are shackled in chains throughout the day before taking them to the parade. At times, the bustling crowd, loud music and fireworks create extreme stress. The same was true of the Jaipur Elephant Festival. Fortunately, however, the festival was banned a few years back but usage of elephants haven't been stopped. Now they are used to ferry tourists in Amber fort situated in Jaipur. 
  
What the law says 

India has one of the toughest animals rights laws in the world. The Animal Welfare Board of India have listed out certain dos and donts to ensure the rights of animals. Under article 51A (g) it is the Fundamental Duty of every citizen to have compassion for all living creatures. To kill or maim any animal, including stray animals, is a punishable offence. Abandoning any animal for any reason can land one in prison for up to three months. Neglecting an animal is punishable by a fine or imprisonment of up to three months or both. 

Monkeys, bears, tigers, panthers, lions and bulls are prohibited from being trained and are protected under the Wildlife Law and cannot be displayed or owned or used for entertainment purposes. Animal sacrifice is illegal in every part of the country. 

But then, they say, laws are made to be broken. Animal rights activists say if government had stuck to these rules and regulation, the situation would have been far better. One didn't have to wait court orders. "Have you ever heard of anyone being punished because of hampering animal rights? No," asserted an activist. 
 
To ban or not to 

Fighting for animals rights is not new in the country. It has been done for years by different organisation like PETA, PFA (People for Animals) run by Maneka Gandhi, FIAPO and many others. At times, court also played a vital role. For instance, the Jallikattu verdict by Supreme Court in 2014, disallowing bulls to be allowed as performing animals. The court has also asked Parliament to give more teeth to the animal right rules. "Elevate rights of animals to that of Constitutional rights, as done by many of the countries around the world, so as to protect their dignity and honour," the court has said. 

A member of PETA said in an e-mail interaction, "PETA India's motto is, in part, that animals are not ours to use for entertainment. That's because animals, like humans, have the capacity to feel pain and do not want to suffer, and it is our moral duty not to cause them harm. Animals are not willing participants in spectacles like jallikattu, elephant processions and rides and so on and so violence is used to force them to take part." 

Other animal rights NGOs also shared their concern at using animals during festivals. Arpan Sharma, director, external affairs, FIAPO said, "Using of animals in religious festivities, religious sacrifice, warfare, entertainment, experimentation, luxuries such as leather, and so on, needs to be stopped." 
 Stating that between 2008-2014, not only bulls died but also over 5,000 people got injured and 43 died in

Jallikattu events from panicked bulls trying to flee,  the PETA activist said, "With changing times, culture and tradition must evolve to ensure no animals or humans are harmed. Animals are not natural or willing performers or participants in these spectacles: they are forced to perform un-natural tricks and actions through the use of violence." 

According to figures compiled by the Heritage Animal Task Force, captive elephants have killed more than 526 people in Kerala within a span of 15 years alone. 

 The anti-ban argument to allow this festival to take place is employment to locals. Be it bull fight, bullock cart race, cock fights or others, they provide employment, the promoters claim. Farmers provide extra attention to the animal and if the ban is enforced, there will be no incentive to hold on to the bulls or any other animal. Tamil Nadu has six native breeds, one of them called Alambadi, which is extinct, and others will also follow suit, they say. Moreover, Jallikattu and bullock cart racing maintain a healthy male-to-female ratio of native cattle.  The case now rests. 

Myanmar's Natural Environment Goes Dark with the COUP


Myanmar's Natural Environment Goes Dark with the COUP

            On the morning of Feb. 1, as soon as we heard the news of the military coup, we all felt like we had returned from dawn to midnight. At the same time, our country's environmental initiatives, which are just beginning, have disappeared. In fact, our country has never had a real democracy, and environmental performances are the lowest even among in ASEAN. Despite the abundance of natural resources, why're the people of Myanmar still living in poverty until now? After the end of Senior General Than Shwe's military dictatorship in 2010, the natural resources of Myanmar include petroleum and natural gas, timber and forest products, mineral resources, including jade and gold, remained relatively low even at their worst. However, Myanmar is a country that relies on raw materials to earn a living. As a country dominated by the military group's multibillion-dollar profits over natural resource areas, environmental management and natural resource issues have always been in question.

➥...  Myanmar military group begins to violate international norms after the COUP

            Myanmar's 2021 coup has not only violated human rights justice, but also causes epidemic on the country's natural resources. Since the past six decades, there has been evidence of the military group's illegal activities on the natural resources field. With 2021 coup, Myanmar's dictatorship returned to the post- Senior General Than Shwe activities of 1992 after 1988 uprising. The current coup isn't the official government of Myanmar, but U Khin Maung Yee - ( Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation ), U Win Shein ( Ministry of Finance and Industry ), U Aung Naing Oo ( Ministry of Investment ) such as the administration of ministers to former of military group members also casts a shadow over the country's remaining natural resources and environmental problems. Myanmar has been deteriorated by decades of corruption by the junta's vast cooperations, which has caused a great deal of damage to the country's environment and natural resources. In addition, the exploitation and illegal exploitation of natural resources by crony community groups has had a devastating effect on ethnic groups and deprived them of the human rights they deserved for decades. Local investment projects under military group-owned enterprises have suffered the ethnic nationalities, as well as the cultural heritage of the ethnic groups, and the natural resources and livelihoods had also been scarce. Large hydropower projects throughout the military dictatorship; With decades of investment projects that have caused more harm than good to Myanmar people, it's worrying that the coup will bring the local people back to the past. (Examples: Letpadaungtaung project, Myitsone hydropower project). Currently, ethnic groups are worried that the coup regime will repeal existing environmental regulations and create new investments.
            Myanmar Forest Products and Timber Merchants Association ( MFPTMA ) was planned to export timber two days after the military announced the coup. The program was declared legal. This statement violated the law, it violates some of the timber trade laws passed by former junta member President Thein Sein. At the same time, Environmental Investigation Agency ( EIA ) declared that " Myanmar has violated European Union Timber Regulation (EUTR) Agreement that they have agreed to."  Europe's Timber Trade Association (TTF) itself closed the timber trade to Europe, which was approved in 2017. However, Myanmar military group wasn't shocked because the main export market for Myanmar forest products wasn't Europe field.

➥... Have these sanctions stopped Myanmar military group from exporting timber?

            A statement issued by Myanma Timber Enterprise (MTE) on March. 17 demanded 300 million kyat from the military group for exporting timber. Timber trade from ports owned by the Myanmar military group; profits from private timber companies and annual illegal trade generate hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue. In the past two months alone, news hasn't surfaced on international social media, but the situation in the region has been mixed with the military group and the timber industry. According to local eyewitnesses, some of the cities have seen shifts, piles of timber, and trees being cut down in a short period of time since the coup in February. What're the moving timber trucks for? Behind the scenes...in March, the news of timber trucks passing through Mohnyin ( Kachin State ) and Lashio ( Shan State ) became a source of grief for Indigenous people. And the public became aware that their timber exports had not stopped when reports emerged that the military group was cutting down old trees in the forest area of ​​Alaungdaw Katthapa National Park, one of Burma's most iconic pagodas. Two weeks after the coup, the new issue came after news of wildlife product smuggling and some illegal logging in ethnic areas.

➥... Myanmar's 21st Century and Disaster of Forest Resources

            Myanmar has the potential to become a developed country after independence, but it has gone through some bad systems. The issue of deforestation in the region has deteriorated from the time of dictator U Nay Win to the time of U Than Shwe. Before U Than Shwe's coup, Myanmar's timber exports were only 4%, and after the coup, they rose to 42%. Under U Thein Sein, only 1.34 million acres (550,000 hectares) of forest were cut down and only 2% of the country's forest area was lost. Under Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's NLD government, reforms were initiated and 143,000 tonnes of illegal timber were seized within three years of the new government taking office. However, under the NLD government, Myanmar's environmental management has not changed significantly. NLD government has been weak focus on EIA procedures and on the environmental impact of some investment projects. This is because Myanmar wasn't a 100% democratic country even after the introduction of the people's party system. Even under the NLD government, the country's natural resources and environmental change remained under the military group. However, NLD government has begun to follow international environmental regulations. Now these initiatives have collapsed. At the same time, the issue of returning people's farmland confiscated by military group-owned cooperation groups ( including Myanma Economic Holdings Public Company Limited (MEHL) and Myanmar Economic Corporation Limited (MEC) ) has also disappeared. Therefore, 2021 Myanmar coup has not only led to human rights abuses and acts of violence, but also to worsening Myanmar's future ecosystem. Myanmar's environmental degradation, concern for the environment, corruption on the part of natural resources, pollution issues, climate change is one of the worst countries in Asia. For now, the world's second-worst Environmental Perfomance Index ( EPI ) ranked country is on the brink of collapse in two months.

➥... Environmental Situation in Myanmar Before the Coup in 2020

            In 2020, during the Covid 19 period, environmental concerns among the Myanmar people were moving in the right direction. With the news of Yangon's rising air pollution index, more people are joining the Stop Open Burning Campaign. The Irrawaddy Dolphin issue, which is facing extinction, has also received public attention with positive changes. There's also a growing understanding of KBAs, IBAs and the pollution of the Irrawaddy River issue. But in the aftermath of the coup, all of this collapsed and raised serious environmental concerns.

➥... Local entrepreneurs behind Myanmar military group's natural resources's operations

            U Tay Za, who was recently blacklisted by the international community, was one of many businessmen who had worked with Myanmar military group for many years. The main sources of revenue for the Myanmar military group's vast economy are from natural resources and mining projects. There're many businessmen who have been secretly involved behind these activities. MEC and MEHL cooperations owned by Myanmar military group have dominated Myanmar's mining sector for decades, further undermining the ecosystems of underdeveloped ethnic areas. Myanmar military group's lack of transparency in natural resources has been a major culprit in the destruction of Myanmar's ecosystem, and now, with the coup, Myanmar's future ecosystem is in danger.
            According to the survey, the military group's illegal activities include U Htun Myint Naing's ( also known as Steven Law and Lo Ping Zhong ) AWC Group ( also known as Asia World Cooperation ) and U Tay Za ( Air Bagan Airline and Htoo Cooperation ) has been involved. UNHRC also said that these groups were involved in the Bengali issue in Myanmar. Similarly, some local businessmen were involved in the military group's illegal activities. According to current statistics, the military group seized nearly 10,000 tonnes of illegal timber, including 2,000 tonnes of teak, by 2020, according to the EIA Statement. And the military group's actions and affiliates, which have seized natural resources for years, has been the main culprits in the loss of land by the grassroots farmers.

➥... Environmental Disaster After the COUP

            As Myanmar has previously ignored the Environmental Policy Act Law ( EPA ), Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), Chemical Safety Information: Site Security and Fuels Regulatory Relief Act Law,Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), Water Law (WA), Comprehensive Environmental Response: Compensation and Liability Act Law ( CERCLA ) and Environmental Impact Assessment ( EIA ) procedures, the current coup is heading in the direction of the country's environmental degradation. Currently, 2021 Myanmar Coup's illegal activities and acts of violence in the region are on the rise. An environmental concern is the links between foreign countries that could cooperate with the Myanmar military group during the coup and some of the countries that could offer timber exports. On the other hand, Xi Jinping's Belt & Road Initiative (BRI) network, an agreement between Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's NLD government and China government, also exists. Including one of the BRI projects, the Kunming - Kyaukphyu railway project. Kunming - Kyaukphyu project is one of the most important projects in China's BRI. There's a link from Yunnan - Mandalay to Kyaukphyu Port to cross to the Indian Ocean. This link could extend China's BRI strategy to the Strait of Malacca. The most worrying thing is that at the moment, the coup regime currently has only one main contact with China regarding natural resources products. Currently Myanmar is EPI Rank 172. Local Wildlife that is being stolen and killed every day. With deforestation and illegal activities, it is up to Myanmar to decide whether this coup will bring Myanmar's EPI Rank to the end of the world.

➥... A Situation Behind the COUP

            As an environmental activist and author, I love traveling. That's why I love exploring the natural environment in every place I visit. When I arrived in Mong La ( Shan State ) in 2019, I was surprised. There's a market that sells rare wildlife products. Myanmar is a signatory to the international convention on the prohibition of wildlife trafficking. However, in some cities in Myanmar, such illegal trafficking and illegal activities were rampant. At Mong La market, rare leopard skin ( 4,000 yuan per kg ), ivory ( 850 yuan per stick ), rare snake skins ( 1100 yuan per skin ), tiger skins, monkey, rare birds and many other rare species were sold. Similarly, when I arrived in Putao in early 2020, there were similar sales. During the current coup, some local ethnic friends contacted me. In the past two months,  they sent me proof of illegal wildlife product shipments along with photos, about illegal logging and wildlife gangs in Kachin and Shan states. I do not know all the illegal activities that have taken place during these two months, but as far as I know, such incidents are unfortunate. At the same time, the smuggling of natural resources in Myanmar is being heard all over the country.
            During the military coup in Myanmar, illegal logging, wildlife smuggling and exports of wildlife products have risen. And the military group's subordinaters are involved in this problem. It's a violation of internationally banned wildlife smuggling law. Now myanmar citizens and local wildlife species were day by day losing freedom. Currently, motto of Myanmar military group is "get a uniform and start killing Innocent citizens and local nature, create every act of injustice". And international environmental community should know Myanmar's plight. During the military governments, a long civil war broke out in Myanmar, this period incidents of human rights abuses, animal abuses reached its peak. Now Myanmar is facing the worst injustice in six decades. 

How many people like Ko Kyaw Lwin are among the fallen Myanmar innocent citizens?




How many people like Ko Kyaw Lwin are among the fallen Myanmar innocent citizens? 


            In the past three months, hundreds of innocent Myanmar people have been killed by military terrorist group. There're still killings and the justice of Myanmar people is still missing. Ko Kyaw Lwin is from Yangon, Insein township. On the morning of April 12, he died of brutal torture by the military regime. In this process, Ko Kyaw Lwin didn't return to his family until around 6 am on April 12 (after Martial Law 8:00 pm to 4:00 pm). Family members followed up with the news of his disappearance. At around 12:00 pm noon, they was discovered that Ko Kyaw Lwin's dead body was in Hlaing Tharyar Hospital. When his family visited, Ko Kyaw Lwin was beaten to death. The body of Kyaw Lwin, who's no longer alive, saddened many people in his town with his family.

              However, the military terrorist group claimed that Ko Kyaw Lwin's death wasn't their fault and that he had died in the motorcycle accident. They also asked family members to confess that Kyaw Lwin died in an accident.  The hospital pressured the body to be allowed to return the body. In reality, Ko Kyaw Lwin was stabbed in the face. He died of multiple stab wounds, including six wounds, to the back of the head, including head injury. Worst of all, many of the stab wounds on Ko Kyaw Lwin's dead body proved that he did not die in an accident.  However, Ko Kyaw Lwin's death ended in injustice. This was very sad for the bereaved family. Justice and law are missing in Burma, but such atrocities have become not only a human right but also a global human right.


 Before Ko Kyaw Lwin Case

                    In the first week of April, hundreds of innocent people were killed in Bago Region like Kyaw Lwin. Some did not get their dead bodies back, and some were murdered, as was the case with Ko Kyaw Lwin Case.  During the three months since the coup d'état, these problems have been raging across Burma, but justice for the dead has been blurred.  Ko Kyaw Lwin, who never returned to his family, was a young man who served as a security guard for his community during the coup.  Like Ko Kyaw Lwin, many young men who worked for the security of their communities were arrested and killed during this period.

           Ko Kyaw Lwin is the father of two underage daughters and was a good citizen until his death.  Like Ko Kyaw Lwin, fathers and mothers in Burma  Mothers  Valuable children and families are being unjustly killed on a daily basis.  Justice is still a long way off, despite the growing number of innocent people living in the spring revolution of Myanmar's military dictatorship.  In addition, the death toll from such injustices is on the rise. This isn't the first time the junta has lied about the truth.  The militant regime has done the same since the last Bingali incident. Today, innocent people in Burma are being pressured into the truth of death, even if they are unjustly killed.  Like Ko Kyaw Lwin's case, some people arrested and killed by the terrorist regime are suffering from repression of death statements.  That is why the international community and international justice urgently need to be aware of issues like the one that happened to Ko Kyaw Lwin in Burma as soon as possible.

Drivan Dill
Ref: Justice For Myanmar 


Alambadi

What started as a peaceful protest to lift the ban on Jallikattu, the traditional sport of bull-taming played on the occasion of Pongal in T...