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New round of EU-Myanmar sanctions garners praise

The European Union imposed its fourth round of sanctions on Myanmar’s military junta on Monday afternoon, months after the US and Britain strengthened their punitive measures against the country’s armed forces that overthrew a democratically-elected government more than a year ago.
An additional 22 officials and four military-aligned companies were added to the EU’s sanctions l in response to the “continuing grave situation and intensifying human rights violations” in Myanmar, the European Council said in a statement.
The newly-sanctioned persons include Aung Naing Oo, the junta-appointed Miner of Investment and Foreign Economic Relations, as well as the miners of industry, information, social welfare, relief and resettlement.
Several officials from the Union Election Commission were also sanctioned for their roles in annulling the results of the November 2020 elections, which were won easily the now-ousted National League for Democracy (NLD).

EU answers calls to sanction MOGE
Most importantly, the EU became the first to impose sanctions on the state-run Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE), one of the junta’s largest cash-cows.
Krina Kironska, a Bratislava-based academic who specializes in Myanmar, told DW that Burmese activs and international campaigners have long called for sanctions on Myanmar’s profitable oil and gas sector.
It accounts for approximately half of the foreign currency revenue for the junta, which took over the state’s banks and savings after its coup in February 2021, she said. The junta expects MOGE to earn in excess of $1 billion (€882 million) from oil and gas projects in the 2021-2022 financial year.

The sanctioning of MOGE is a “horic win for grassroots activism throughout Myanmar and around the world, after over a year of campaigning to stop oil and gas revenue flowing to the terror military junta,” said Yadanar Maung, a spokesperson for Justice For Myanmar, a research activ group.
She said these sanctions are “essential to deny the junta the funds it needs to finance its increasing and intensifying violent attacks against civilians, which amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.”
More than 1,500 civilians have been killed security forces since last year’s coup, according to the Assance Association for Political Prisoners, which monitors military abuses.
Last September, the National Unity Government, the shadow government, called for a popular uprising against the junta. Parts of the country are controlled civilian militias, the People’s Defense Forces, and ethnic-minority armies.
Myanmar citizens living in India hold placards as they attend a protest, organised pro-democracy supporters, against the military coup in Myanmar and demanding recognition of the National Unity Government of Myanmar, in New Delhi, India, February 22, 2022. (Reuters)
Calls for ‘immediate cessation’ of hostilities
“As a matter of priority, the EU reiterates its calls for an immediate cessation of all hostilities, and an end to the disproportionate use of force and the state of emergency,” the European Council said in a statement.
“The European Union will continue to provide humanitarian assance, in accordance with the principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence,” it added. “The EU reiterates its call for the full and immediate respect of international humanitarian law.”
Mark Farmaner, the director of Burma Campaign UK, a London-based NGO, told DW that “one of the biggest impacts of these EU sanctions may be that they embarrass the US into finally taking action on gas revenue to the military.”
Some analysts believe the EU’s decision to sanction MOGE came after the French-owned gas giant, TotalEnergies, announced last month that it was ceasing operations in Myanmar. It had operated the Yadana gas field production in partnership with MOGE and the Thai-owned PTT, the main purchaser of the exported gas, for several decades.
US firm Chevron, a minority partner in the project that supplies around half of the country’s gas, also announced its exit from Myanmar around the same time. Meanwhile, Japanese trading house Mitsubishi said last week that it plans to sell its stake in a natural gas field in Myanmar.
Military trucks with soldiers inside are parked behind police security standing guard behind a road barricade in Mandalay, Myanmar Friday, Feb. 19, 2021. (AP)
However, questions remain over how the sanctions on MOGE will actually work in practice.
Last month, TotalEnergies initiated the contractual process of withdrawing from Myanmar over the deteriorating human rights situation. The process “will be effective at the latest at the expiry of the 6-month contractual period” and will be done “without any financial compensation,” according to a company statement issued on January 21.
“During this notice period,” it stated, “TotalEnergies will continue to act as a responsible operator in order to ensure the continuity of gas deliveries for the benefit of the population.”
“In the event of withdrawal, TotalEnergies’ interests will be shared between the current partners, unless they object to such allocation, and the role of operator will be taken over one of the partners,” it added.

A junta spokesperson told reporters earlier this month that Thailand’s state-controlled energy company, PTT, is bidding to acquire TotalEnergies’ and Chevron’s combined stake in the Yadana gas field.
As part of the latest sanctions, however, the European Council introduced a new “derogation” allowing for EU companies “to carry out the decommissioning of oil and gas wells in accordance with international standards and to terminate contracts with that entity,” meaning MOGE.
As such, it is believed that TotalEnergies won’t be engulfed in these sanctions before its already-terminated contract expires later this year. Yet it remains unclear how the sanctions will be imposed if TotalEnergies’ stake in the Yadana project is transferred to another entity.
Questions over junta oil profit
It’s also unclear whether the latest EU sanctions will affect how profits from Myanmar’s oil and gas sectors are routed back to the junta.

Last year, Daniel Eriksson, the CEO of global anti-corruption organization Transparency International, wrote to EU officials calling on them to sanction MOGE as well as the Myanma Foreign Trade Bank and Myanmar Investment and Commercial Bank, the intermediary banks that collect oil and gas revenue. These have not been sanctioned the EU.
“France and the EU need to clarify exactly how exemptions in the sanctions on MOGE will be applied and commit that they will not allow any financial or share transfers, which will benefit the military,” Farmaner of Burma Campaign UK told DW.
“These sanctions should also impact European companies involved in behind the scenes services to MOGE, including insurance,” he added.
John Sifton, Asia advocacy director of Human Rights Watch, called on Brussels to impose the new sanctions “in ways that ensure that energy companies’ shares in oil and gas operations are not simply transferred or relinquished to junta-controlled entities — an outcome that would only enrich the junta further,” he said in a statement.

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