 |

|
Shwe Gas Campaign Training Activities |
|
|
|
|
Written by EarthRights International
|
|
Tuesday, 05 June 2007 |
| Strategy and Planning Workshop for Arakan Gas Movement
|
May
2004, Mae Sot, Thailand |
In May 2004, ERI joined
the Shwe Gas campaign, protesting a destructive and
environmentally insensitive gas pipeline through Arakan and Chin states in
western Burma.
Responding to the Arakanese community’s requests to get involved in the
campaign, ERI staff members Naing Htoo and Tyler Giannini held a 5-day training
workshop titled “Strategy and Planning workshop for Arakan Gas Movement” in Mae
Sot, Thailand,
with fifteen members of the local Arakanese community. This was our first such session as well as
one of the first session where different Arakanese activists base in Thai side
came together to talk about Shwe gas development issue among themselves.
|
|
We helped facilitate in
order to identify what resources that the group already had and which areas
where different people best fit in to this campaign. We shared our experiences
from past campaigns, including lessons learned from our successful legal
campaign against Unocal’s Yadana gas pipeline project in Burma. We also shared ideas with
the attendees on how we can best devote our resources to the movement.
This session helped
develop a broad understanding of our organization and the Shwe Gas campaign
among the members of the affected communities. We built further strong ties
between ERI and the Arakanese community through follow-up workshops, and many
of the original participants remain involved in the campaign to this day.
|
|
Workshop on
Fact-Finding and Sharing Yadana/Yetagun Experiences with the Shwe Gas Movement
- May
2005, Mae Sot, Thailand
|
|
Building on our successes
with the Shwe Strategy and Planning Workshop, ERI's Burma Project gave a 3-day
fact-finding training session in May 2005, taught by Naing Htoo. Eight dedicated
volunteers from the All Arakan Student and Youth Congress
learned how to collect vital information about the Shwe Gas project from within
Arakan state.
|
|
In this workshop we gave training on why data gathering is
important in to our campaign, how to conduct fact finding, and techniques of
documentation. ERI’s Burma Project also
specifically shared fact finding experience and methods which where used in the
Yadana case. We looked into lessons that could be learned from the differences
between the situation in Yadana pipeline project area in Southern
Burma and the possible pipeline route area in Arakan state.
|
 |
| After the training several participants from
the training went into Burma
on a fact-finding mission to gather ground information on human rights
violation and environmental abuses that are happening around the proposed
pipeline area.
Following from this
training, in 2006 AASYC released a report titled “Supply and Command.” The
report sheds light on one of the most
pressing issues in Burma
today - how natural gas extraction in Western Burma
strengthens the military regime and amplifies human rights abuses and
environmental destruction.
|
|
Fact Finding and
Advocacy Training
August
2005 Dhaka, Bangladesh
Our ongoing campaign
against the Shwe Gas pipeline in Arakan state demands that we work not only in Thailand, but in also Burma,
neighboring Bangladesh, and India
as well. As Arakan state lies on Burma’s
border with Bangladesh and India,
many Arakanese refugees and exiles now live in both countries. In August 2005,
ERI held an 8-day fact-finding workshop in Dhaka with ten Arakanese activists,
half of whom live in Bangladesh.
|
|
|
Several different
community-based organizations from inside Burma were represented, including
the Arakan Women’s Organization, the All Arakan Student and Youth Congress, and
the Arakan Youth Network Group. Our participants included 7 men and 3 women.
Similar to the training that we gave to Arakan groups Thailand, the participants in this workshop
learned detailed interview techniques, field research skills, the importance of
fact-finding to the success of the Shwe Gas campaign, and other knowledge
essential to protecting human and environmental rights in Burma. By sharing with the
participants our successes in the Yadana campaign in the Southern part Burma, we helped to show a larger picture of
earth rights issues in Burma
and illustrated the great potential of field research. Security conditions
forced us to work in a small space, with limited resources and almost no
freedom of movement, yet the participants were enthusiastic and said they
learned a great deal.
Following from this, six
of the participants immediately began their fact-finding missions inside Burma,
collecting and disseminating important information about the impact of the Shwe
pipeline. These missions continue to this day, providing invaluable insight
into human rights and environmental issues in western Burma.
|
Shwe
Gas Capacity
Building Training
September 2006 New
Delhi, India
|
|
In September 2006, ERI’s
Burma Project traveled to New Delhi to train
fifteen Burmese activists concerned with the earth rights impacts of the Shwe
gas project, a natural gas development project controlled by private and
state-owned firms from India
and South Korea.
Facilitated by the Indian activist Nityanand Jayamaran, this training focused
on India-based advocacy and was organized with ERI’s partners The Shwe Campaign
Committee India and The
Other Media, an NGO in New Delhi.
ERI contributed a training segment on fact finding and a presentation on ERI’s
groundbreaking lawsuit against Unocal Corporation for human rights abuses
committed in Burma.
Other
topics included India’s
energy demands, parliamentary lobbying in India,
Indian environmental law, the Right to Information act (RTI), and the rights of
Burmese refugees living in India,
as well as relevant campaign examples from ERI and Bhopal activists. The training also covered
other practical areas such as writing effective press releases, using the
media, and strategy planning. The training was intended to build the capacity
of local activists to advocate on their own behalf, and to provide a structure
for future advocacy. It resulted in a detailed six-month plan of action that was
drafted by and for campaigners in India.
|
|
The Shwe Gas Strategy Workshop and Planning
Meeting
December 2-6, 2006, Chiang Mai, Thailand
In December 2006, ERI’s
Burma Project planned, organized, and hosted 5-day workshop and strategy planning
meeting for the core members of the Shwe Gas Movement (SGM). Located in Thailand,
it brought together for the first time the core members of the SGM from Bangladesh, India,
Thailand, and Korea.
The objectives of the workshop, agreed upon by the coalition, were threefold: 1)
Clarify the identity of the core coalition, 2) Determine new
campaign strategies, and 3) Realize
the potential of the existing core members of the SGM. The latter included
developing advocacy skills through specific trainings in media messaging, media
interviews, press releases and press conferences, and speaking on film. A
professional television crew assisted with mock interviews and press
conferences, giving participants the invaluable opportunity to be on camera,
followed by a critical peer review of their performance. This also included a
brief training on video camera technology by a professional news video
technician. The meeting built the strength and capacity of the core coalition,
and resulted in a comprehensive 17-page strategy plan of action for the Shwe
Gas Movement (SGM), which maps future advocacy efforts.
|
 |
|
|
 |