Burma | Junta bans men from applying to work abroad

(Rangoon) The Burmese junta has decided to suspend the issuance of authorizations to men allowing them to work abroad, in the midst of a wave of departures to escape military service announced in February.




The authorities have “temporarily suspended” the acceptance of applications from men wishing to work outside the borders of Burma, the Ministry of Labor announced in a press release published Thursday evening.

The measure was taken to be able to “take more time to verify the departure procedures, and in connection with other questions”, it is written, without further clarification.

Thousands of Burmese tried to leave, after the junta indicated in February that it wanted to impose military service of at least two years on men aged 18 to 35 and women aged 18 to 27.

In the days following the announcement, long queues formed outside foreign embassies in Yangon, and other people tried to cross the border into Thailand, media reported.

More than 13 million people are affected by the call to the flag, according to a junta spokesperson, although the army only has the capacity to train 50,000 per year.

The military service law was designed by a previous junta in 2010, but had never been applied until then.

The text is “essential given the situation our country is experiencing”, justified a spokesperson for the junta.

It provides for an extension of military service up to five years in the event of a state of emergency. Those who ignore their summons risk a prison sentence of the same length.

Risk of prison

A first group of several thousand recruits has already started training, according to projunte Telegram accounts.

Decreed by the generals when they took power in 2021, the state of emergency is renewed every six months, in a context of deterioration in the security situation.

The persistence of the state of emergency also postpones new national elections, promised by the army when it overthrew elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

The putsch sparked a resumption of conflict with ethnic minority fighters active for several decades, and gave rise to dozens of new “People’s Defense Forces” that analysts say surprised the army with their efficiency.

The coordinated offensive by three ethnic minority groups near the Chinese border at the end of October marked a major turning point in favor of the adversaries of power, who took control of certain strategic towns and roads, according to observers.

More than four million Burmese worked abroad in 2020, according to an estimate by the International Labor Organization, citing government data.

Many others are employed illegally far from home, experts have warned.

More than 4,900 people have been killed in the widespread crackdown on any dissenting voice since the coup, and more than 26,000 others have been arrested, according to a tally by a local monitoring group.


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