NGO names 49 companies on Myanmar ‚dirty list‘
The largest number of named companies – 16 in total – are Chinese, supplying the country’s military with fighter jets, armed drones, ballistic missile systems, heavy machinery, navy warships and energy, according to the list. https://t.co/jlG7kjUZcp
— Burma Campaign UK (@burmacampaignuk) 14. Dezember 2018
Businesses from India, Japan, Korea, Belgium, Russia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand are also included on the list.
The report called for senior military figures to be brought before the International Criminal Court.
Another US tech company named on the list was Cloudflare, which is accused of providing cybersecurity infrastructure for Hlaing’s website. Hlaing has been accused of war crimes by a UN fact-finding mission. He has not responded to the UN accusations.
Among the two UK companies on the list is HR Wallingford, a civil engineering organisation involved in the construction of Bhasan Char, an island in the Bay of Bengal where the government of Bangladesh plans to relocate 100,000 Rohingya. The plan has faced considerable objections from NGOs and human rights groups.
Our new Legal Accountability Bulletin highlights #ZeroDraft Treaty on #BizHumanRights, providing an overview of key resources and discussions from the 4th #IGWG session, including blogs by @IHRB, @FIANista, @CIDSE, @FIDH_en, @alhaq_org, @ICJ_org: https://t.co/5rCAfEAFWfpic.twitter.com/a3Dz7Gdj7h
— Business & Human Rights (@BHRRC) 14. Dezember 2018
Facebook – among a number of companies – has been included on Burma Campaign UK’s “dirty list” of corporations accused of involvement in human rights and environmental violations in Myanmar – or of doing business with the country’s military https://t.co/DdFQ7R4sAc
— Burma Campaign UK (@burmacampaignuk) 14. Dezember 2018
H.Res.1169 – 115th Congress (2017-2018): Reaffirming the commitment of the United States to promote free, fair, transparent and credible elections in Bangladesh. https://t.co/XbxqRbJQgp
— Toby Cadman (@tobycadman) 13. Dezember 2018
Xinjiang might be preparing for an inspection visit: „to show your contentment with life, you must dance happily, and everyone must smile joyfully. No one may look sad, otherwise there will be consequences.“ https://t.co/smFgoqsiBm
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 13. Dezember 2018
“The Dirty List” names international companies doing business with the military in Myanmar or is involved in projects where there are human rights violations or environmental destruction, according to pressure group Burma Campaign UK
https://t.co/Lrech8UykN— Burma Campaign UK (@burmacampaignuk) 13. Dezember 2018
„Everything that can put pressure on the military should be tried,” said @MarkFarmaner, because it currently enjoys impunity for committing human rights violations, sabotaging the peace process and blocking constitutional change https://t.co/8t71QWpWpX
— Burma Campaign UK (@burmacampaignuk) 13. Dezember 2018
“We hope that being named on this list will prompt some companies to end their involvement with the military or operations linked to human rights and environmental problems,” said Burma Campaign UK. “In doing so, they act as a warning to other companies.”https://t.co/6EFzxJmeXm
— Burma Campaign UK (@burmacampaignuk) 12. Dezember 2018
.@Scotus hears oral arguments on IFC’s claim of ‚absolute immunity‘ in Tata Mundra case@IFC_org@WorldBank@EarthRightsIntl. Read our #ObserverWinter18 update on the case here: https://t.co/JYEp04h56L#Accountability#bankonrights
— Bretton Woods Proj. (@brettonwoodspr) 12. Dezember 2018
“It is outrageous that they should have been jailed for organizing candlelight vigils and peaceful protests, calling for humanitarian aid for starving people,” said @anna_c_roberts, Executive Director @burmacampaignuk https://t.co/oWN8jpYeZJ
— Burma Campaign UK (@burmacampaignuk) 12. Dezember 2018
ျမန္မာႏုိင္ငံတြင္းက ျပသနာ အမ်ားစုရဲ႕ အရင္းခံက စစ္တပ္ေၾကာင့္ ျဖစ္ေနရတာလို႔ ၿဗိတိန္ အေျခစိုက္ ျမန္မာ့ အေရး လႈပ္ရွားမႈ အဖြဲ႔ Burma Campaign UK က စြပ္စြဲလုိက္ၿပီး စစ္တပ္နဲ႔ စီးပြားဖက္ ႏုိင္ငံတကာ လုပ္ငန္း ၅၀ နီးပါးကို နာမည္ပ်က္စာရင္းသြင္း @MarkFarmanerhttps://t.co/GMxv4IF7XB
— Burma Campaign UK (@burmacampaignuk) 12. Dezember 2018
NGO names 49 companies on Myanmar ‚dirty list‘. Among the corporations included were giants such as Facebook, Western Union and Toshiba. Also included on the ‘dirty list’ are firms whose work is linked to human rights violations or environmental destru… https://t.co/bpwjjuukLv
— Burma Campaign UK (@burmacampaignuk) 12. Dezember 2018
I convey my deep condolence to members of his family, friends, followers and well-wishers.
These moments of sorrow are really very hard for us to digest but there is nothing that we can do but accept 2/2
— Mamata Banerjee (@MamataOfficial) 12. Dezember 2018
Today is Universal Health Coverage Day. In #Bangla, healthcare is free at govt hospitals and health centres. We have also set up fair-price medicine shops and diagnostic centres, ICCUs, HDUs, CCUs, mother & child hubs and more. We are committed to the welfare of all
— Mamata Banerjee (@MamataOfficial) 12. Dezember 2018
US moves to deny visas to Chinese officials over Tibet https://t.co/q413lmr98j
— claudio tecchio (@DossierTibet) 12. Dezember 2018
#BDElection18: Police shamelessly fire rubber bullets & violently disperse a election rally in Faridganj Upazilla of Chadpur district where at least 25 people have been wounded. #Vote4Change#Bangladesh (Photo: @sheershanews) @hrw@amnesty@KenRoth@tobycadman@mg2411@ndtv@CNN pic.twitter.com/TTxZV4vEPx
— Basherkella – বাঁশেরকেল্লা (@basherkella) 11. Dezember 2018
Ich denke nahezu jeden Tag, es kann nicht schlimmer kommen. Aber es geht. Menschen quasi als Geiseln nehmen, um ein besseres Handelsabkommen zu schließen?!? #Trumpism https://t.co/pkl567LXOD
— Birgit Schmeitzner (@BSchmeitzner) 12. Dezember 2018
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