Yangon: First of all I wish to offer my heartfelt thanks to
the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation and the Board of Trustees
for acknowledging my work and including me in this year’s
illustrious list of awardees.
I am deeply honored by this award, but also humbled in the
knowledge that I owe it all to the host of wonderful friends,
colleagues and partners at home and abroad, who have sustained
me in my work with their wise counsel, help and encouragement.
So I accept this award not as a personal honour, but as a
celebration of our collective achievement.
I first embarked on the ‘development’ journey, quite inadvertently in 1987,
when the late Maran Brang Seng, Chairman of the Kachin
Independent Organization (KIO), persuaded me to become involved
in work to improve the situation of destitute Kachin communities
along the borderlands of northern Myanmar. Today, I thank him and
the KIO leadership for directing me on this path. I would also
like to offer my sincere thanks to the government of Myanmar for
opening the door for me to initiate openly and freely, programmes
that would assist conflict-affected communities after the 1994 ceasefire agreements.
Sadly, as many of us know, that ceasefire in Kachin was not
sustained. After 17 years fighting resumed in June 2011 on such
a scale that to this day some 70,000 peoples are displaced.
Without lasting peace there can be no real development. But the
recent May 28-30 Myitkyina dialogue between
the government and the KIO has given me new hope and I will
continue to coordinate efforts, wherever possible, to resolve the
underlying political grievances of the ethnic minority peoples
of Myanmar and ensure that voices of the common people are heard
in the ongoing peaceful transformation process.
In keeping with my commitment to work for sustainable peace
and a development process that will evenly spread across the
country, I pledge to use the prize money towards projects that
will protect and preserve the Myitsone area in northern Myanmar,
and provide sustainable livelihood opportunities for its
communities. Myitsone refers to the confluence area where 2
rivers converge to form the Irrawaddy River, the lifeblood of the
nation.
Today the area is under threat from a dam project which
poses grave dangers to its delicate eco-system, its cultural and
religious heritage sites, and its communities, displaced and
deprived of land and livelihood.
Losing Myitsone, for the Kachin, is like losing his or her
heart and soul. It would be a loss of unbearable proportions, not
just for the Kachin at the source of the Irrawaddy, but for the
rest of the country also, for whom the river is like “ a mother
who feeds Myanmar’s citizens”.
The dam project was suspended under Presidential Orders in 2011,
but there are strong indications of an imminent resumption of
construction. I am therefore, most grateful to the Ramon
Magsaysay Award Foundation for providing me with the opportunity
not only to use my prize money to protect and preserve Myitsone,
but also a powerful forum to publicize the need to stop the dam
construction once and for all. My fervent hope is that the
Irrawaddy will continue to flow for all time, and that efforts to
make this a reality with be a factor that unites all citizens of
Myanmar.