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Weekly Business Roundup (September 26, 2008)
China Taps into Burma’s Nickel Resources Further evidence of China’s increasing economic grip on Burma has emerged with the announcement that Chinese state-controlled mining companies are to tap the country’s nickel resources. The military government has signed an agreement to allow the China Non-Ferrous Metal Group to develop mines in the Mandalay region to extract a massive 100,000 tonnes-plus per year. Initial work on the development, at Tagung Taung, is due to begin by the end of this year, with full production beginning in 2011. All the nickel will be shipped to China for use in its metal industries. Burma’s Ministry of Mines claims that the project will provide jobs for more than 1,000 Burmese, but observers note that China will be the main beneficiary. “It’s reasonable to say that Burma is being systematically plundered for its natural wealth by its big neighbors, China, India and Thailand,” said one analyst with an economic development agency in Thailand, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to media. “The loss over time of gas, oil, timber, precious stones and now metals will further impoverish Burma’s economic development if and when the regime comes to an end.”
Major international insurance company Lloyds has been accused of making blood-money profits out of Burma as it announces a 2008 first half year global profit of US $1.76 billion. Despite calls by the British government for British-owned firms to end their business involvement in Burma to strengthen economic sanctions against the military regime, London-based Lloyds refuses to disclose the extent of its involvement in the country. It’s believed to be associated with shipping and aviation—key transport in junta-linked exports. The British human rights NGO Burma Campaign UK says its research shows that several Lloyds-linked businesses operate in Burma. “Research has revealed that three members of the Lloyd’s market, Catlin, Atrium (owned by Ariel Re) and Kiln (owned by Tokio Marine), are involved in Burma. Despite repeated requests, Lloyd’s has refused to state how many other member companies are also involved,” campaigns officer Johnny Chatterton told The Irrawaddy this week. “Lloyd’s secret Burma profits are paid for in blood and poverty by the people of Burma’” said Johnny Chatterton, a campaign Officer at Burma Campaign UK. “Lloyd’s should come clean about their involvement in Burma and stop insuring companies that fund the dictatorship. Some of these claims may well be linked to Cyclone Nargis which devastated Burma’s Irrawaddy delta in May. Lloyds said in July it was not breaking British or European Union law by operating in Burma. “Unless there are official international sanctions in place, we do not instruct the market where it can and cannot write business,” said Lloyds. 1 | 2
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