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BurmaNet News: October 31, 2000



______________ THE BURMANET NEWS ______________
        An on-line newspaper covering Burma 
_________October 31, 2000   Issue # 1652__________

INSIDE BURMA _______
*Wired: Myanmar's Tangled Web 
*Myanmar Times: Cyber culture hits city as promoters open Uni outlet
*Shan Human Rights Foundation: Forced labor in Shan State

REGIONAL/INTERNATIONAL _______
*AP: Myanmar press says Briton owes freedom to goodwill, not pressure

ECONOMY/BUSINESS _______
*Courier News Service:  Diesel Company Seeking to Attract Investors
		
OTHER _______
*International Rescue Committee: Job positions, Thai/Burma border

The BurmaNet News is viewable online at:
http://theburmanetnews.editthispage.com


__________________ INSIDE BURMA ____________________
	

Wired: Myanmar's Tangled Web 

by Swaroopa Iyengar 

WIRED NEWS, 2:00 a.m. Oct. 30, 2000 PST


Not even 1 percent of the 46 million people in the Union of Burma can 
read this article online.  
Unlike neighboring countries India and Thailand, where technology is 
making inroads, Burmese military dictatorship has actively kept Internet 
access out of bounds from its citizens.  
The military junta -- the State Peace and Development Council -- has 
been so effective in closing down Burma that it has been included in the 
"top 20 enemies of the Internet" list released by Reporteurs Sans 
Frontieres last year.  

According to the 2000 Amnesty International report on human rights 
violations, there are "at least 19,000 prisoners in Burma, 700 of whom 
were being held for 'national security' reasons. Prison conditions 
amounting to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment continue to be 
reported."  
To maintain the status quo, the junta keeps a tight reign on all 
communication systems in the country.  

Telephone lines are tapped, and fax machines, modems, computers and 
satellite dishes have to be registered with the government. Any sort of 
unauthorized use or possession of "illegal" devices result in severe 
penalties and imprisonment.  

"There is only one main government-run news agency in Burma, and even 
there we don't use computers -- only typewriters," said a Burmese 
student currently in San Francisco requesting anonymity. "The three 
newspapers, and the two radio and television stations feed off the news 
agency, and together, act as mouthpieces for the junta."  

"There have been instances of people who get 15 years in jail, just for 
using a fax machine or installing a satellite dish without permission," 
continued the student.  

"The junta tries to subdue the citizens by keeping them in fear. But we 
still want news from outside so we try and tune into BBC, VOA and 
Democratic Voice of Burma (a Norway-based radio station) -- the 
broadcast is monitored by the military intelligence and some portions of 
the news are scrambled."  

Given the fact that the junta's stronghold depends upon their control 
over the flow of information, the advent of the Internet posed a serious 
and immediate cause for concern.  
In 1996, the SPDC passed a "Communication Computer Law" that enforces 
seven- to 15-year imprisonment on anyone who tries to use the Internet 
without prior sanction from the Ministry of Communication, Posts and 
Telegraph.  

"E-mails have to go through a government-monitored server," said another 
Burmese student living in San Francisco. "And it is impossible for 
ordinary individuals to get a line.  
"First priority is given to government officials and organizations, then 
to foreign embassies and foreign businesses and finally to certain local 
businesses. When I want to send an e-mail, I need to take the 
information on a floppy disk to an office that has an e-mail server and 
then pay $1 per page. And all the data has to be text only."  

The nervous regime has squelched the possibility of connecting to an 
outside ISP by making international calls too expensive to afford on a 
regular basis.  

The average income of a government employee in Burma is $25 a month; 
applying for an international calling facility costs $1,000 and calls to 
the United States are as steep as $50 for five minutes.  

While people in the country have a vague idea about the possibilities of 
the Internet, activists and pro-democracy groups working from outside 
say that the connectivity a Web address and e-mail provides has been 
vital in bringing the diffused Burmese community together.  

"The Internet has been irreplaceable in helping us come together and 
communicate as a group," said Larry Dohrs, an activist working with the 
Free Burma Coalition. "The fact that information moves faster online 
enables us to always have someone on the ground, whether in Ireland or 
San Jose or Japan."  

The regime is not oblivious to the importance of having a Net presence. 
Myanmar.com, "the only official website for Burma," invites tourists to 
the golden land in four languages and with a few clicks one may even 
stumble upon a five-page rant on "American interference in the internal 
affairs of Burma."  

The New Light of Myanmar, the junta's online English newspaper, carries 
an endless barrage of military propaganda. 

The Myanmar Times' online edition recently celebrated the opening of a 
new "i-cafe" in Rangoon, calling it "a place where cake and coffee is 
served with an info-technology twist" -- the writer carefully avoided 
the forbidden "I" word -- but extolled at some length on the "wide 
assortment of games" the cafe will offer its members.  

"The military uses the Net aggressively to push their point of view," 
Dohrs said. "They understand the usefulness of e-mail lists. The print 
editions of the newspapers might have several anti-NLD stories but they 
never really make their way to the websites. We have not heard of anyone 
who has actually found an Internet cafe that offers access in Burma."  

The junta is making claims of allowing lenient access soon, but 
activists see it as a mere facade. 
 
Individuals will still have to obtain a license from the MPT -- 
currently the only Internet server in the country -- and the government 
will monitor content for any "anti-nationalistic" sentiment. Facts are 
murky, but initial connections might cost anything from $300 to $1,000, 
followed by a $3 to $5 per-hour user charge, according to different 
sources.  

"Governments are supposed to deliver services to people," said Douglas 
Steele, editor of BurmaNet News, based in Japan. "This is more of an 
armed gang. Besides, the junta is being dragged into getting Net access 
because of their membership with the Association of South East Asian 
Nations. Merely because of this involvement, there are at least 300 
people in the government who have to have e-mail."  

Steele started the electronic newspaper in 1994 -- he assimilates news 
from Burma using various sources and sends it out in an e-mail 
newsletter to 2,000 mailboxes each day.  

"There are a number of groups that have access to information inside the 
country -- I use them quite actively," Steele said. "There are people 
who travel into Burma frequently. We do not hire people from within, but 
most of the groups I work with have networks in Burma and they become 
visible on the borders."  

"The junta has to now make a trade-off like China did," Dohrs said. 
"They want in on the benefits of e-commerce but that would mean free 
flow of information into the country. They are not willing to risk 
anything for commercial gain."  

The information that is coming out of Burma and making its way around 
the world in a single day is undoubtedly making the regime edgy. A new 
set of Internet regulations was announced on Burmese television by the 
MPT on Jan. 20, explicitly prohibiting citizens from using the Web for 
political speech.  

"They are looking at BurmaNet very carefully," said Maureen Aung-Thwin, 
director of the Burma Project in New York. "In August this year, one of 
their ministers criticized their practices at a business seminar outside 
the country. BurmaNet reported this and a couple of days later Zaw Tun 
was sacked."  

"They will let the Net in as they want foreign investment in the country 
-- e-commerce is too tempting," Steele said. "Right now, the situation 
for them is like a rope with a noose on either end -- and to us 
activists, it does not matter which end they hang themselves on."  
BurmaNet is now being translated into Burmese, a step Steele hopes will 
be the key to reaching several more people inside Burma.  

"Now, there are other ways of getting information through," Steele said. 
 

"Burma is asserting control by being primitive; so they might confiscate 
a laptop at the airport, or look for video and audio tapes or disks," he 
added. "But these days, we routinely carry around more megabytes of 
memory, like maybe on a palm pilot. Or the new Walkmans that include MP3 
players -- they are as small as a pen. The authorities are not 
sophisticated enough to figure all this out. 


********

BurmaNet adds: As is not uncommon in the media, Wired got a few things 
wrong.  Some of the quotes are not exactly right and the text of Zaw 
Tun?s remarks were first published on the Free Burma Coalition?s mailing 
list, not BurmaNet. 


____________________________________________________



Myanmar Times: Cyber culture hits city as promoters open Uni outlet

October 23-29  ,2000 


YANGON might not yet have access to cyberspace, but at least it has 
cybercafe culture.That culture arrived in the city last week with the 
opening of iCafe, a partnership between Café Aroma and Innwa Books, on 
the edge of campus of Yangon University.And it looks certain to attract 
a diverse clientele of students, academics, businesspeople and those 
hungry for a taste of the e-revolution.
 
Looking to emulate a formula which has proved successful around the 
world, 

iCafe is stocked with both books and computers ? the latter locally 
networked to games, educational resources and a vast array of academic 
databases ? plus an up-market coffee service. Innwa Managing Director, U 
Pyone Maung Maung, addressed a crowd of 100 at the iCafe launch last 
Wednesday night. He said the event represented more than the opening of 
a venue in which customers could undertake computer-assisted research, 
drink a coffee or buy a magazine.

?Very soon Myanmar will join the information revolution and this is 
going to change the face of education here,? U Pyone Maung Maung 
said.?This iCafe represents the transformation that will inevitably 
sweep our system over the coming generation.?As part of the global 
online revolution the face of teaching will be changed forever, and we 
are not about to be left out of the technology race. ?Indeed in the 
halls of academia, the World Wide Web has moved rapidly from a 
controversial talking point to a revolution in higher learning.?

U Pyone Maung Maung said universities across the globe were placing 
increasing emphasis on the development of online course, and integrating 
web-based elements into core curricula as a matter of course.In Myanmar, 
the information revolution would force universities to re-examine their 
role and professors to update courses they had been teaching for years. 
It would reshape the domestic education model, he said.?With a free 
market system and a solid, well established university system Myanmar 
can make this grade ? and iCafe is an example of how learning systems 
will evolve,? he said.

?The biggest challenge for anyone in online education is to determine 
the most appropriate uses for technology.What kind of things are we 
after here, and what is the best way to deliver it??Having information 
at our fingertips will push our country into a better position for doing 
business and will help the rest of the world have a more favourable view 
of our country.?The many students in Yangon without computer access will 
be a key market for iCafe.To mark its opening, iCafe is offering 
discounted membership rates until 30 November.
 
  


____________________________________________________



Shan Human Rights Foundation: Forced labor in Shan State

Excerpt from SHRF  Monthly Report  --  October 2000

        Despite their promise to the ILO to let up the use of forced 
labour, the Burmese military junta are still blatantly using unpaid 
civilian forced labour in virtually all their undertakings, including 
economic activities, military operations, building and maintaining 
infrastructures such as roads, bridges and military facilities, 
cultivating crops for the military, and, in many cases, even in their 
daily personal matters, in the whole Shan State.         

Ox-carts, mini-tractors, trucks, cars and other vehicles of the people 
are frequently  being forced to serve the military for nothing and 
without them taking any responsibility for any damage done to the 
vehicles.          

GENERAL SITUATION OF FORCED LABOUR AND EXTORTION IN MURNG-TON 

        The civilian population in Murng-Ton township are being forced 
to work without pay for the SPDC troops regularly for at least 15 days 
per month.          

For each month, every household has to provide workers to work for the 
military in the following categories of work. Working in rotation, each 
household has to give up their time for the military generally as shown 
below: 

1. Guarding roads ---  2 days and 2 nights

2. Serving as porters (actually serving or standing-by) --- 7 days and 7 
nights 

3. Waiting on stand-by at military camps (for running errands, etc.) --- 
2 days and 2 nights 

4. Working in military farms and fields --- 2 days

5. Making fences, chicken shacks and pigsties, etc. --- 1 day 

6. Clearing military compounds and drainages, etc. --- 1 day         

Each civilian truck or car in the township has to wait at the military 
camps on stand-by for 7 days per month to do various kinds of 
transportation. Any truck or car, even though its turn for serving the 
military is not yet due, is subjected to conscription at any time in an 
emergency. The owners have to provide their own fuel for their vehicles. 
        

Mini-tractors are often forced to work or borrowed æfor freeÆ by the 
military for several days at a time and the soldiers take no 
responsibility for any damage done to the tractors. Video tape recorders 
are also very often borrowed by the soldiers, either to entertain their 
families or for their own enjoyment, sometimes for several weeks and are 
returned usually only after they have broken down, and the owners have 
to pay for the repair.         

Small shops selling a small amount of consumer goods are taxed 1,500 
Kyat per month by the military authorities and bigger shops selling 
clothes and other goods are taxed 3,000 Kyat and upwards.          

Whenever there are occasions during which there are visiting senior 
military authorities, or transferring of troops or military units, the 
soldiers often take many things from the shops without paying the costs. 
        

Apart from the regular provision of many kinds of forced labour, there 
is often random conscription of labourers, especially porters, whenever 
the so-called emergency cases arise. 

FORCED LABOUR AND BEATING IN MURNG-NAI AND KUN-HING

        Since early this year, SPDC troops of Kun-Hing-based LIB524 have 
been conscripting ox-carts of the civilian populations in Kaeng Tawng 
area of Murng-Nai township to transport teak lumber from Kaeng Tawng to 
Kun-Hing town in Kun-Hing township. About 30 ox-carts from Kaeng Tawng 
are being used at a time and at least 2 times per month.

    The owners and the drivers of the ox-carts get nothing for their 
service but are scolded, fined and even punished if they fail to fulfill 
their forced labour obligations. Those who could not work fast enough to 
meet the demand of the troops because of some defects are often scolded 
and beaten; sometimes even the oxen are beaten to death. One such event 
took place on 22.9.00.



FORCED LABOUR IN KAENG-TUNG


   On 25.8.00, SPDC troops of IB226 issued an order forcing the 
villagers of Wan Hud village in Murng Laab tract, Kaeng-Tung township, 
to provide bamboo pieces for the military base to make fences around it.

    On that day, at about 09:00 hrs, 5 SPDC troops from IB226, based at 
Loi Muay in Kaeng-Tung township, came to Wan Hud village and told the 
headman, Lung Sai, to go and see their commander at the base 
immediately.

In order to get to the military base as soon as possible, the headman 
and 2-3 villagers hired a car and set off right away. When they got to 
the base, the commander rapped out an order to the headman to tell his 
villagers to bring 60 bunches of bamboo pieces for making fences by 
30.8.00, no matter how they got them, and dismissed them immediately 
without letting them utter a word. Each bunch of bamboo contained 100 
pieces of 2-inches-thick and 6-feet-long bamboo sticks.

    The village headman had no choice but to call a village meeting and 
allotted the duties among his villagers. Since there was no wild bamboo 
that could be cut for free in the area, the villagers had to buy from 
other villages, some as far as 20 miles from their village.

    The villagers managed to meet the deadline set by the commander of 
IB226 by working very hard and squeezing out 300 Kyat from each familyÆs 
meagre income to pay for the bamboo and the car rent. In addition to 
their free labour, the villagers also had to provide over 8,000 Kyat of 
money to fulfill the demand of the military.

    According to the local people, every village in the area often has 
to do one kind of forced labour or another all year round, and no 
village or family is spared. 

FORCED LABOUR IN MURNG-YARNG

   On 17.8.00, SPDC troops of Murng-Yarng-based IB279 forced the 
villagers of Wan Yaao, Wan Pung and Wan Pa Hai villages in Murng Luay 
tract, Murng-Yarng township, to do sanitary work in the military base 
all day long without pay, and the villagers had to provide their own 
food and tools. 

  On 16.8.00, the headmen of the said 3 villages were summoned to the 
military base of IB279 and were told by the commander to contribute 
labour, one person from each house in their villages, to do sanitary 
work in the base on the next day, and added that this was æbecause the 
soldiers and their families were too busy to do it themselvesÆ. The 
villagers were dismissed immediately without being given a chance to say 
anything.

   Each person from the 17 houses of Wan Yaao village, 9 houses of Wan 
Pung village and 14 houses of Wan Pa Hai village had take their food and 
tools and go to work at the military base from 08:00 hrs to 17:00 hrs, 
stopping only for a short while around midday to eat their meal.

   The villagers saw many soldiers and their families in the base who 
were doing nothing most of the time, and some of them even came every 
now and then to stand and watch them work with folded arms, but no one 
seemed to care even to provide the villagers with drinking water.  

FORCED LABOUR IN TA-KHI-LAEK (TACHILEK)

  Since 19.9.00, SPDC troops of Tachilek-based LIB526 have been forcing 
the villagers of Wan Saa Laa and Wan Noi villages in Fang Min tract, 
Ta-Khi-Laek township, to grow several kinds of crops for them at the 
farms near the 2 villages which have been confiscated from the villagers 
since 1998.

   The troops provided the seeds and the villagers have to do all the 
rest, from clearing, tilling, sowing, weeding, up to the harvesting and 
transporting the produced crops to the military base. The villagers 
would also be held responsible for any loss and failure.

   The crops the villagers have been forced to grow include potato, 
peanut, sesame, pea and different kinds of bean. Since there are only 
about 20-30 houses in each of the 2 villages, the villagers have to work 
in frequent rotation, and have very little time to work for themselves. 

FARMERS FORCED TO GROW RICE FOR THE MILITARY IN MURNG-TON

  On 1.10.00, SPDC troops of Murng-Ton-based IB65 issued a written order 
to all the village tract headmen in Murng-Ton and Murng-Sart township 
forcing the farmers in the areas to grow rice and other crops for the 
military.

    The order required the farmers to buy rice seeds, which had been 
brought up from the lowland in southern Burma by the military, and grow 
them for the military as the second harvest in the villagers? rice 
fields after the harvest of the rainy season crops.

    Soya bean seeds and another kind of bean seeds were also required to 
be bought by the farmers.

The farmers would be held accountable for any loss and failure. The 
paddy seeds were to be bought immediately and kept by the farmers, and 
were to be cultivated as soon as the current rice crop had been 
harvested, said the order.

   The paddy seeds would be sold at the rate of 3,500 Kyat per basket, 
and both kinds of bean at the rate of 10,000 Kyat per basket. The 
following rates of production were expected: -- 1 basket of rice seeds 
must produce 100 baskets
-- 1 basket of soya bean must produce 400 baskets
-- 1 basket of a certain bean must produce 500 baskets


  If these requirements were not met, the farmers were responsible to 
fill up the quotas.

   The 8 village tracts in Murng-Ton township were required to buy from 
1 to 3 baskets of each kind of the seeds in proportion with the sizes of 
their cultivating land areas. 

___________________ REGIONAL/INTERNATIONAL___________________
					

AP: Myanmar press says Briton owes freedom to goodwill, not pressure 

Oct 31, 2000

YANGON, Myanmar (AP)  Myanmar released a British human rights activist 
from prison last week on humanitarian grounds and not because of 
international pressure, commentaries in the state-controlled press said 
Tuesday. 

 The articles also charged that James Mawdsley, who flew out of Myanamar 
Oct. 20 after 14 months of solitary confinement, was mentally deficient. 


 ``Tolerance, forbearance and compassion are typical Myanmar 
characteristics,'' said a column in the Myanmar-language 'Kyemon' daily. 


 Mawdsley, ``an eccentric mental patient, was freed on humanitarian 
grounds and in response to the promises and requests by some prominent 
British citizens and not because Myanmar was afraid of international 
pressure,'' it said. 

 During his time in prison, Mawdsley received consular access 27 times, 
met family members 17 times and was allowed to see a Christian priest 
twice for prayers in accordance with prison rules, Kyemon said. 

 Mawdsley was arrested last year when he sneaked into the country to 
protest against the military government of Myanmar. The junta has faced 
increasing Western criticism for not allowing pro-democracy leader Aung 
San Suu Kyi to form a government despite winning elections in 1991. The 
military government is also accused of suppressing minority rights. 

 Mawdsley was sentenced to 17 years in jail for illegally entering 
Myanmar and distributing pro-democracy leaflets. Britain's Foreign 
Secretary Robin Cook has said that Mawdsley's release was the result of 
lobbying by his family and friends and diplomatic pressure from Britain. 


 ``The mercenary who was convicted due to his violation of existing laws 
was branded as a democracy and human rights activist. He was nothing but 
an addled brain,'' said another commentary in the Myanmar-language 
'Myanma Ahlin' newspaper. 

 The newspaper accused the foreign media and two British voluntary 
organizations _ Jubilee Campaign and Burma Campaign _ of exaggerating 
the news over Mawdsley's release and complicating Myanmar's affairs 
under the pretext of promoting democracy and human rights. 

 Several weeks before his release, British consular officials reported 
that Mawdsley, 27, had been beaten by guards and had suffered a broken 
nose and two black eyes. Myanmar's government said he had injured 
himself accidentally in a scuffle with prison guards. 

 Mawdsley, from Lancashire in northwest England, had been arrested in 
Myanmar twice before. In 1998, he served 99 days of a 7-year sentence. 
He was pardoned on condition he not return to the country. ^aaw-gp/vj< 
 

  






____________________________________________________




____________________________________________________



_______________ ECONOMY AND BUSINESS _______________


Courier News Service:  Diesel Company Seeking to Attract Investors

Burma Courier

October 25, 2000

RANGOON -- A diesel sales and service company, which lists among its 
partners some of Rangoon's leading construction and trading enterprises, 
is looking for international funds to help finance projects in Rangoon 
and southeastern Burma.

The Myanmar Unique Diesel Company (MUD) with invested capital of more 
than $US 3 million and a network of sales and service centres in 
Rangoon, Mandalay, Taung-gyi, Pye and Museh (on the Chinese border) 
lists as its top priority the start-up of a plant for the assembly and 
distribution of diesel fueled vehicles from Japan's Nissan Corp and 
Korea's Samsung Company as well as a  Chinese company identified simply 
as JAC.  

MUD, which was incorporated in 1999, lists as associated partners some 
of Burma's leading financial, construction and trading companies 
including the Kanbawza Bank and the Myanmar Billion Group, Yuzana, 
Golden Shell, Shwe Family Trading, Myanmar Minami, Golden Orchid, A & O, 
Thilawun and Shwe Myeik Co.   Among its leading patrons are U Aung Ko 
Win of the Kanbawza Bank and U Htay Myint of the Yuzana Group.

An advertisement posted on a Myanmar government website says the company 
is "seeking foreign partners, contractors, investors or funders" for the 
projects outlined in the notice.  It also offers the company's services 
as consultant for other investment and trade opportunities. 

Besides the diesel vehicle assembly plant, MUD lists a wide-ranging 
series of development projects on its financial wish-list.  These 
include the construction of a 400 ton daily capacity cement plant and 14 
MW hydro electric power plant in Tenasserim division and the 
construction of a deep sea port and development of a granite quarry on 
Kalagauk Island in Ye township.  

One of the Kalagauk projects is the building of a highway from Three 
Pagodas Pass at the Thai-Burma border to Kalagauk.  A company named as 
the Thai Transit Trade Network is listed as having an interest in the 
port and 'export promotion zone'.  A second Thai firm, the Kanchanaburi 
Tavoy Development Co, is already involved with a Burmese firm, Kyaw Lynn 
Naing, in plans to build a deep sea port facility in Tavoy (Dawei) 
farther to the south in Tenasserim division.

Another ambitious project noted on the MUD list is the development of a 
50,000 hectare palm-oil estate and 'downstream' production facilities, 
presumably in southern Tenasserim where several national companies 
including Yuzana already have stakes.   Nearly all of Burma's major 
construction companies are currently involved in government subsidized 
land reclamation projects, which utilize pricey earth moving equipment 
during the current drought in the real estate construction market. 

MUD did not respond to requests from Courier News Services for further 
information about the company and its projects.
 



_____________________ OTHER  ______________________



International Rescue Committee: Job positions, Thai/Burma border

[Abridged, contact nipawan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]   


PROGRAMS COORDINATOR 
(Field Coordinator)
Mae Hong Son, Thailand
 
SUMMARY:

Based in Mae Hong Son, the Programs Coordinator (PC / FC) will be 
responsible for overseeing comprehensive primary health care, emergency 
relief and capacity building/ development projects provided by 
IRC-Thailand in three Karenni refugee camps on the Thai-Burmese border 
(for approximately 19.000 camp-based refugees).  The total budget for 
MHS in 2001 is expected to be US$ 850,000.  An expansion of services to 
vulnerable groups, unrecognised refugees or displaced people living 
outside designated camps is envisaged.  The PC is responsible for 
overall administrative and fiscal management of the Mae Hong Son field 
office, for assessing and establishing new initiatives, and for liaison 
duties with refugee leaders, Thai government officials, visiting donors, 
and other interested parties at the provincial level.  The main 
responsibilities of the position are as follows:





CAPCITY BUILDING PROGRAM
JOB DESCRIPTION


Job Title :  Capacity Building Program Manager

Job Summary :  The Capacity Building Program Manager (CBPM) will be 
responsible for the management and administration of current capacity 
building programs and will have responsibility for future program 
direction and planning.  The CBPM will be the immediate supervisor of 
the Capacity Building Program Officers with responsibility for 
developing the capacity of the CBPO's to manage delegated aspects of the 
Capacity Building Program as defined in the CBPO's Job Descriptions.




	
Job title:	English Language Trainer (Volunteer Position)
Country:	Thailand, South East Asia
Skill group:	English Language Teacher/Trainer
Skill:	Teaching English as a Foreign Language (+ General 
Teaching/Workshop Skills)
	

Employer:		International Rescue Committee (Thailand Program), 19 Soi 33 
Sukhamvit, Bangkok, Thailand 10110     66-2-260-2870     Contact:  Khun 
Nipawan, 
Starting Date:	Dec 1, 2000 or asap
Length of placement:	Yearly contract (12 months, can be renewed if both 
parties agree) 
&#63568;	The yearly contract (12 months) is standard employment practice 
with IRC for all staff.  It is expected that the contract would be 
renewed for another one or two years, as long as a need for the position 
exists.  The placement will be managed under IRC's Capacity Building 
Program based in Mae Hong Son (Northern Thailand).&#63568;	The position 
involves working (mainly) in the Karenni Refugee Camps in Northern 
Thailand.  This can present many challenges to someone who has never 
worked in such a context before.  The climate is generally hot all year 
round with variable levels of humidity.  As with any tropical location, 
malaria is a possibility but normal precautions reduces the risk 
significantly. 

Key Duties and responsibilities of the volunteer:

&#63568;	Identify English language training needs of the main Karenni 
Leaders and Karenni NGOs.&#63568;	Develop appropriate English language 
training materials/curriculum for implementation in formal training 
lessons (to accommodate basic through to intermediate levels (expect 
advance later).&#63568;	Develop appropriate training schedule for 
implementation of English Language training (based on a year plan, 
detailed into monthly activity plans).&#63568;	Arrange and conduct 
formal language training courses for the main Karenni Organisations in 
the Refugee camps (target group size estimated between 40-50 
participants).&#63568;

	Identify, develop and maintain appropriate support materials to 
consolidate the formal training activities (i.e., a small library, 
simple English language news letter, internet usage, etc.).&#63568; 
Provide both formal and on the job support training to the CBLT 
counterpart and 2-3 Karenni refugee trainers (focus on teaching 
methodology and subject/curriculum development, etc..).&#63568;

	Monitor and evaluate training implementation and write a monthly 
progress report to the Capacity Building Program Manager.&#63568; 
Develop and maintain a filing system for all relevant correspondence and 
teaching materials.&#63568;

	Maintain appropriate records on student participation (attendance, 
progress, test results etc.)&#63568;	Attend and participate in IRC's 
weekly progress and development meetings.

Location of placement 

The placement is located on the Thai-Burma border, in the northern hills 
of Thailand, in the small tourist town of Mae Hong Son.  The climate is 
tropical and reaches temperatures as high as 38oc in March/April, it is 
relatively humid during the monsoon season (mid June to end Sept).  The 
cool season (25oc) occurs between December/January.

Social context of placement 






____________________________________________________

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Voice mail or fax (US) +1(202) 318-1261
You will be prompted to press 1 for a voice message or 2 to send a fax.  
If you do neither, a fax tone will begin automatically.

Fax (Japan) +81 (3) 4512-8143



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