Arakan security beefed up with announcement of electoral laws

Arakan security beefed up with announcement of electoral laws
by -
Takaloo
The Burmese junta ordered riot police to adopt necessary security measures in western Burma's Arakan State when it publicized laws for the forthcoming election, said a police officer on Thursday...

Sittwe: The Burmese junta ordered riot police to adopt necessary security measures in western Burma's Arakan State when it publicized laws for the forthcoming election, said a police officer on Thursday.

The officers said that 300 riot police were recalled on Wednesday from border fence construction sites on the western Burma border on orders from the junta to strengthen deployments across Arakan State.

"We have to pull back 300 of our personnel, of more than 500 sent for fence construction work on the western border, as ordered by the higher authorities for reinforcing our security deployments in the main towns of Arakan State," said the officer who spoke anonymously.

He also added that police forces are being ordered to prevent any form of public unrest during the time that the junta is enacting laws for the election.

According to a resident from Arakan's capital Sittwe, the military regime's move to beef up security is likely due to growing public interest in politics after it started to publicize the new electoral laws.

"I find many people in our town are unusually reading newspapers and listening to radio programmes from Burma and abroad as the junta releases laws for the coming election. Their interest in politics seems to be growing these days. That is probably why the junta has ordered its forces to step up security in the main towns in our state," said the resident.

Since the monk-led demonstrations in 2007, the regime frequently doubles deployment of riot police at key locations, including near monasteries, in the main towns in Arakan State in order to maintain peace during politically sensitive occasions.

According to the junta's political party registration law released yesterday, democracy leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi will not be able to participate in the election. The law says that anyone who has been convicted by a court and is currently serving a prison term cannot join a political party or contest as a candidate in the election.

The law also bars civil servants and Buddhist monks from joining political parties.

U Aye Thar Aung, the leader of the leading Arakanese political party, Arakan League for Democracy, said his party will not contest the election unless the junta amends the 2008 constitution.

"Our party will not participate in the election if the military regime does not amend its 2008 constitution. There are no rights for the ethnic minorities like Arakanese in the 2008 constitution."

The Arakan League for Democracy was the third largest victorious party in the 1990 elections that the Burmese junta never recognized.