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Posts Tagged ‘Myanmar’

Myanmar lending team, and learn more about lending teams on Kiva

July 12th, 2010 1 comment

Hi All my dear friends!

I want to recruit you to my lending team, Myanmar, on Kiva, a non-profit website that allows you to lend as little as $25 to a specific low-income entrepreneur across the globe. You choose who to lend to – whether a baker in Afghanistan, a goat herder in Uganda, a farmer in Peru, a restaurateur in Cambodia, or a tailor in Iraq – and as they repay the loan, you get your money back.

If you join my lending team, we can work together to alleviate poverty. Once you’re a part of the team, you can choose to have a future loan on Kiva “count” towards our team’s impact. The loan is still yours, and repayments still come to you – but you can also choose to have the loan show up in our team’s collective portfolio, so our team’s overall impact will grow!

Check out the Myanmar lending team, and learn more about lending teams on Kiva in general, by clicking here: http://www.kiva.org/team/myanmar?_isc=5a68f246-8c91-11df-982e-003048cee2ae&_te=tr

P.S: If your mail addresses are not my direct mail contact and this mail make you annoying, I really apologize for this inconvenience.

Thanks, Melody Maung



Myanmar gains more air access this year

July 9th, 2010 1 comment

It seems that the promised tourism boom is gradually at its best approach amidst some uncertainty. July, this month has shown a considerable “investment” of airline industry. Air Asia made a fourth access from KL to RGN counting 3 existing companies: Myanmar Airways International (8M), Malaysia Airlines (MH) andSanBummi Air who represents Air Bagan. Air Asia from KL will fly daily basis while Thai AirAsia allegedly double up its single daily routine from the last week of July; 2 times a day. Latest news is that, the Vietnam Airline will add up a direct air access with Yangon from Ho Chi Minh city while it is having newly launched route between RGN and Hanoi.

It seems a bit Horaay!! for Myanmar tourism having more direct air access than before. However, direct flight access from Myanmar main tourism markets such as Europe would be blessing. What a pity that we couldn’t hold up the Qatar airways which is best access from Europe to Myanmar. Following news from Xinhua might be mistaken about Qatar airways on the list. Vietnam to launch more direct flight to Yangon

YANGON, July 8 (Xinhua) — The Vietnam Airline will launch a new air route to directly link Ho Chi Minh city with Myanmar’s Yangon to enhance trade between the two countries, the local Myanmar Newsweek reported Thursday.

International passengers from the Vietnamese city will not transit through Hanoi for trip to Yangon, thus saving time if the direct link is established, the weekly quoted airline circle as saying.

Starting October, the Vietnamese airline will fly four times a week, using 150-seat A-320 airbus, the report said.

Meanwhile, the Vietnam Airline has increased its services between Hanoi and Yangon to five flights a week since June in a bid to boost tourism of the two countries, while planning flights to two more tourist sites of Bagan and Mandalay as part of the move.

When both flights are in service, there will be nine flights a week between Yangon and the two Vietnamese cities.

The Vietnam airline started flying Hanoi-Yangon on March 2 this year using Fokker-70 aircraft.

Vietnam Airlines represents Myanmar’s 6th foreign airline that has direct link with Yangon after those of Thailand, Singapore, India, Malaysia and China.

The 13 foreign airlines flying Yangon comprise Air China, China Southern Airline, Thai Airways International, Indian Airlines, Qatar Airways, Silk Air, Malaysian Airlines, Bangkok Airways, Mandarin, Jetstar Asia, Phuket Airline, Thai Air Asia and Vietnam Airlines.

Categories: Asia Tags: , , ,

SEMINAR ON TOURISM IN RANGOON, MYANMAR WITH LUXURY TRAVEL

July 7th, 2010 1 comment

Vietnam First Luxury Tour Operator (www.luxurytravelvietnam.com) To Attend a Seminar on Tourism in Rangoon, Myanmar with the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism.Vietnam will hold a seminar on tourism in Myanmar from 10 to 15 June 2010 to promote tourism development of the two countries, according to the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism.Luxury Travel Company joins the VNAT and attends the seminar, delegates from Vietnam and Myanmar will introduce their countries’ tourist potentials, especially eco-tourism and religion tourism of Myanmar and sea tourism of Vietnam.The two sides will also put forth measures to diversify tours, lower prices, increase service quality, and lure more visitors.Besides, the delegates will seek ways of overcoming difficulties relating to visas, languages, payment, international credit cards and the establishment of tourism entities in Myanmar.“Luxury Travel is one of the first companies in Vietnam to promote tours to Myanmar and develop niche tourism products for both Vietnamese and Western travelers who want to discover this mystical land from Hanoi” said Pham Ha, Founder and CEO of Luxury Travel Company. Luxury Travel (www.luxurytravelvietnam.com ) has won numerous travel awards. With a sales representative in the USA, Luxury Travel is headquartered in Hanoi and has offices around Vietnam and management offices in Myanmar.

Ref: http://pr-usa.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=430252&Itemid=32

Categories: Asia Tags: , , , , ,

Myanmar airport departure tax will remain unchanged

July 3rd, 2010 No comments

There is a news report of Myanmar airport tax increase starting from today, July 1st 2010. We’d like to clarify that it’s for Myanmar citizens only and not for international travelers departing from Myanmar.

Myanmar airport departure tax is 10 USD per person as usual.

As people Daily Online news says

The Myanmar aviation authorities will increase the airport tax of the Yangon International Airport to 3,000 Kyats (about 3 U.S. dollars), which is six times the previous rate of 500 kyats, starting July 1 this year, sources with airline industry said on Wednesday.

The raising of the airport tax is due to increased cost for installing new digital machines at the arrival and departure lounges for rapid service, it said.

We’d like to assure our clients and supporters around the World that the tax rate increase just does not have an effect upon tourists.

Categories: Asia Tags: , , , , , ,

world-critically endegered birds eaten and killed by Myanmar people??

June 14th, 2010 2 comments

Dear Matthew,

Thanks for your kind information.

In year 2000, John Rappole at Smithsonian Institution wrote me about Myanmar Bird Concerns as follows;

1. Loss of Habitat – Although Myanmar has more native habitat than most Asian nations, the rate of loss is significant, with habitats located in lowland areas suitable for farming likely to disappear soon.

2. Lack of Information – The status of much of the avifauna in Myanmar is completely unknown. Without such knowledge, whole community of birds (and other animals and plants) are likely to disappear before it is even recognized that they are threatened.

3. Lack of Public Awareness – The people of Myanmar have a natural love and affinity for their environment. It is a part of their culture and religion. However, few understand the links between their environment and themselves, or how important it is to conserve resources – for themselves and their children.

We, SST co-founded Myanmar Bird and Nature Society(MBNS) and run the the public awareness Environmental Education Programs(EEP) throughout the country in co-operation with Oriental Bird Club(OBC) and UNDP. However, we could NOT fight the POVERTY, the root cause. One of the University teacher told us a true story of a man who feeding his parents by earning of catching, killing and selling the birds. He would like to change his living as a farmer because of RELIGIOUS teaching. At Environmental Thematic Working Group meeting, UNDP’s technical advisor in cyclone Nargis affected area also remind to solve the root cause while doing conservation. I commented not to ignor the GREED at Environmental Performance Assessment workshop of NCEA and UNEP.

Recently, I requested to the society to go on the EEP in delta as Environmental Action Programs. However, active members are being away from the society for their survival. Even me and SST is struggling in ecotourism. I sympathize your feeling of keen birdwatcher. I persued you to get the REAL cooperation of the Western and UK-based organizations, which usually reluctant to break the SANCTION even though I reminded that the deterioration of bidioversity would not wait till the sanction lift.

We have been longing to team up with you and any organization. With best regards,

Nyein

Myanmar opens doors in pursuit of tourist cash

June 12th, 2010 No comments

YANGON / BAGAN // As ever more travellers seek trips off the beaten track, the Myanmar military government is encouraging tourists to come to the country – still subject to a tourism boycott campaign – by easing visa restrictions.

The introduction of visas on arrival for all nationalities, made in a surprise announcement by the government at the end of last month, is an unprecendented opening of the country to outsiders.

Visits by foreigners have been banned or limited to seven days for selected periods since military rule was established in 1962. Today, apart from a couple of one-day visit exceptions, land borders are officially sealed to tourists who must fly in and out of Yangon or Mandalay.

Myanmar tour operators are already reporting increased inquiries and visits from tourists. Previously tourists would have to apply for a visa at one of the few Myanmar embassies abroad.

“We had one group of tourists who rebooked a trip they had cancelled because of the difficulties of getting a visa,” said Kerstin Jung, the general manager of Gracious Myanmar, an agency based in Yangon.

Sources close to the government have said the regime wants to increase tourism and improve its image.

But Myanmar analysts believe the new system does not signal a fundamental change in the junta’s closed regime. The reasons for the new system are increased revenues for the ruling junta, they say – directly linking tourism to support of the regime.

“This is not about Burma [Myanmar] opening up,” said Mark Farmaner, the director of Burma Campaign UK, a pro-democracy group which advises against tourism to Myanmar.

“There have been clear signals that in the run up to the elections [due later this year] that foreigners will not be allowed in, and development workers may even be told to leave.”

The revenues in US dollars, achieved through foreign investment and tourism, are needed by the junta for its foreign exchange reserves.

“The junta need the money for buying arms and other foreign goods,” said one Myanmar analyst who asked to remain anonymous.

More than a decade ago the regime identified tourism as a key potential source of income and sought to encourage tourists with “Visit Myanmar Year” in 1996.

It was widely reported that forced labour was used to build tourist infrastructure and more than a million people were displaced to make way for faciltiies such as in Bagan, a vast Buddhist temple site dating to the 12th century.

A successful tourism boycott was launched in several countries in response to calls from Myanmar’s democracy movement, causing several companies and airlines to stop running trips to the country.

Almost 15 years later the boycott is less publicised, but continues to be the position of pro-democracy campaigners and interest groups who say they will campaign again if the new visa policy shows signs of success.

Myanmar’s regime claims it earns US$100 million (Dh367m) a year from tourism – or more than $1 billion since it came to power in 1988. It spends over 40 per cent of its budget on the military.

For critics of the Myanmar junta – which is unlikely to relinquish rule despite elections – tourism is directly linked to the junta’s brutal crackdowns on ethnic groups.

“There is no good in going on holiday to Burma,” Mr Farmaner said. “For the ethnic people there is a direct link between tourism and increasing crimes against humanity against them. When tourism increased in the nineties, the army doubled, and people suffered more.”

But the visa on arrival has been welcomed by travel agents and local people involved in the tourism industry.

“We need more tourists or we have no way of making a living,” said Hisham, a rickshaw driver in Mandalay. “Without foreigners I can make only one US dollar a day.”

For some, the push is good for raising foreigners’ awareness of the situation in Myanmar.

“Tell people to come, to see, and to tell other people,” said Lu Maw, one of the three Moustache Brothers, a comedy and vaudeville troupe clampded down on by the regime for links to the pro-democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi and criticism of the junta.

The effect of the new visa policy remains to be seen. Tourist arrivals to Myanmar have risen gradually over the last decade but remain extremely low. According to United Nations figures, tourist arrivals – mainly from Asia – rose from 208,000 in 2000 to 248,000 in 2008.

“The visa will help but people will still be put off by international sanctions on Myanmar and tour operators in some countries are told not to do any business here,” said Kyaw Swar Phyo, the director of Myathiri Travel and Tours.

“I have met travellers from Italy, Spain and Germany where the boycott wasn’t pushed who didn’t even know there was a dictatorship in Myanmar,” Mr Farmaner said. “It is these travellers who are likely to be attracted by the visa on arrival.”

Categories: Asia Tags: , , , , ,

Rohingya’s people in Myanmar

June 8th, 2010 2 comments

Please Read the article at the link and tell me is that truth or not

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8605669.stm

Categories: Asia Tags: , ,

Myanmar Puppets in Thailand

June 7th, 2010 1 comment

We teached them. They bought our puppets. They love our mintha, minthamee & natgadaw. We should be happy. BUT, we are SAD.

Categories: Uncategorized Tags: , ,

A vote for Myanmar Traditional Puppetry

May 25th, 2010 No comments

*Dear Madam & Sir,

Please click the link below, register and vote if you would like to promote Myanmar Traditional Puppetry.

http://www.southeastasia.org/index.php/seaawards/photos/htwe-oo-myanmar-traditional-puppet-show-yangon-myanmar/

With best regards and thanks, HtweOoMyanmar *– HTWE OO MYANMAR Traditional Puppet Theatre, Yangon-Myanmar No.(12), Yama Street, South Saw Yan Paing Quarter, Ahlone Township, Yangon, MYANMAR

Tel:(Residence) : 95-1-211942 Mobile Number : 95-9-5127271

htweoomyanmaryangon@gmail.com puppetshow@htweoomyanmar.com

www.htweoomyanmar.com www.flickr.com/photos/htweoomyanmar/sets/ www.youtube.com/user/HTWEOOMYANMAR www.myspace.com/puppettheatremyanmar www.thenatureactive.com/myanmar_burma_puppet_tradition/

A vote for Myanmar Traditional Puppetry

May 25th, 2010 2 comments

*Dear Madam & Sir,

Please click the link below, register and vote if you would like to promote Myanmar Traditional Puppetry.

http://www.southeastasia.org/index.php/seaawards/photos/htwe-oo-myanmar-traditional-puppet-show-yangon-myanmar/

With best regards and thanks, HtweOoMyanmar*