YANGON: Thousands of people in northern Myan­mar took to the streets on Monday to protest against the proposed reinstatement of a Chinese-backed mega-dam they say will cause huge environmental damage and bring little benefit to the country.

The protest came just days ahead of a trip by civilian lea­der Aung San Suu Kyi to Beijing for a summit on China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

Myanmar’s former military junta signed a 2009 deal with Beijing to construct the Myitsone dam in Kachin state. But public an­­ger rose to the surface as the country started to transition towards democracy and the $3.6 billion project was mothballed two years later.

If the 6,000 megawatt dam were built on the country’s famed Ayeyarwaddy River, it would flood an area the size of Singapore, displacing tens of thousands.

Now China is increasing pressure on its southern neighbour to revive the controversial project.

On Monday protesters marched through the Kachin town of Waimaw, some 50 kilometres from the proposed site of the dam, brandishing banners reading “No Myitsone Dam” and calling for the river to “flow freely forever”.

“Myitsone is our inheritance from our ancestors and we cannot lose it,” protester Tang Gun said. He said more than 4,000 people took part in the march while several thousand more had signed a petition pledging their support for the protest. Local police said 3,300 protesters had taken part.

The proposed project has stoked widespread public anger and anti-Chinese sentiment across Myanmar.

A World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) 2018 report estimated that some 34 million people in Myanmar live in the Ayeyarwaddy basin, roughly two thirds of the country’s population.

An environmental assessment commissioned by the Myanmar government five years ago strongly advised against the dam’s construction, saying the move could alter the river flow on a wide scale.

Published in Dawn, April 23rd, 2019

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