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Home News Singapore Myanmar junta siphons gas revenue into Singapore banks
Myanmar junta siphons gas revenue into Singapore banks Print Email
Friday, 11 September 2009

Reuters

Myanmar's military has transferred billions of dollars from a gas project into two banks operating in Singapore, contributing to "high-level corruption", a U.S.-based environmental group said on Thursday.

A report by non-profit Earth Rights International (ERI) said the junta had transferred $4.83 billion since 2000 from a gas pipeline, money that was kept off the national budget and stored in the banks operating in the city-state.

 


"Rather than contribute to Burma's economic development, the billion dollar revenues from the project have instead contributed to high-level corruption," the report said. The money, it said, came from the controversial Yadana gas project involving energy companies Chevron Corp of the United States, France's Total and Thailand's PTTEP.

The two banks and the Singaporean government were informed of the group's findings last week, ERI said. All had yet to respond.

"As long as Myanmar's regime has easy access to these funds we feel it will have little incentive to change," Matthew Smith, one of the report's authors, told a news conference.

"We urge the international community to use this as leverage to help the people of (Myanmar). We fully expect the Singapore government and the banks to do the right thing."

Despite a broad range of sanctions placed on Myanmar by the United States and the European Union because of political repression, its vast reserves of natural gas have been a financial lifeline for the regime.

ERI estimated the military government had received 75 percent of the revenue generated by the Yadana pipeline, which runs from the Andaman Sea to western Thailand.

ERI said the junta managed to keep the $4.83 billion off its national budget accounts by using a 30-year-old exchange rate from dollars to the local kyat currency, which produced a sum in kyat far smaller than the real amount generated.

"Singapore has very tight laws regarding corruption and misappropriation of public funds," Smith said. "These accounts should be red-flagged until the banks have the opportunity to cooperate with the authorities."

China's largest oil and gas producer, the China National Petroleum Corporation, is due to start construction of nearly 4,000 km (2,485 miles) of dual pipelines from Myanmar's western Arakan State to China's Yunnan province next month.

The deal is expected to provide the government, which has ruled the country since a 1962 coup, with at least $29 billion over 30 years.

http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSBKK35660720090910

See also Burma's junta gas profits stashed in Singapore banks.

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Comments (5)
  • AN
    Where there's money to be make, all else can take a back seat.

    Chevron Corp of the United States, France's Total and Thailand's PTTEP, will these 3 companies be punished by their local government for collaborating with the junta?

    Such a complex issue if these companies were to be taken to tasks.
  • maxchew - S'pore's top 40 richest have $56 billion, but.....
    I know it's not relevant to the subject here, BUT...

    I read the ST today abt the above news and realised that Ho Ching's Temasek plus HarryLee's GIC LOST more than that. They both lost abt $60 billion!!!!

    Just imagine that!!! Put simply, if our top 40 richest including the likes of NgTengFong, WeeChoYaw, OngBengSeng,Lienfamily etc lost all their money in similar investments and became bankrupts, they would all combined have lost less than what HC and LKY lost!

    It's difficult to imagine the enormity of $60 billion but that's what they lost.

    Just heard that Holy Goh has been replaced in the unholy trioka Father,Son &HolyGoh by HolyHo!
    But he doesn't mind a bit because they compensated him with an annual pay of $3-$4 million plus 5 Gurkha Guards surrounding his mansion in the sky at 2nd Avenue, BTimah Rd.
  • Tan Tai Wei
    "Singapore has tight laws regarding corruption......"

    Rumoured that PAP cadres' compulsory reading is Machiavelli's "The Prince".

    If so, then note that Mac would appprove of both profiting from those doings with Myanmar whilst also being able to project that image of uncorruptibility.

    LKY said, when we were asked to leave Malaysia, that in order to survive Singapore would "go even to the devil".

    So, should we believe that those dealings with corruption in high places have been a matter of deliberate but hidden policy? ( Might not be, for surely, we can't really claim that we can't survive without those dealings?)
  • quantum
    http://www.straitstimes.com/print/Breaking%2BNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_428390.html

    Sep 11, 2009
    2 banks deny junta's billions

    TWO Singapore banks have rejected a report by a US-based rights group that said Myanmar's ruling junta deposited billions of dollars with them.

    DBS Group Holdings and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC) said in separate statements late on Thursday that there was no truth in the report by EarthRights International (ERI).

    'ERI's report is categorically untrue and without basis,' a DBS spokesman said in the brief statement.

    A spokesman from OCBC also rejected the report.

    EarthRights International had said in a report released on Thursday that energy giants Total and Chevron were propping up the Myanmar military regime with a gas project that allowed the junta to stash almost US$5 billion in the two Singaporean banks.

    The report said the junta had kept the revenues earned from the project off the national budget and stashed almost all of the money offshore with DBS and OCBC.

    'Total and Chevron's Yadana gas project has generated US$4.83 billion for the Burmese regime,' one of the reports said, adding that the figures for the period 2000-2008 were the first ever detailed account of the revenues.

    'The military elite are hiding billions of dollars of the peoples' revenue in Singapore while the country needlessly suffers under the lowest social spending in Asia,' said Mr Matthew Smith, a principal author of the report.

    French energy giant Total has also rejected the report, saying the document was riddled with errors and false interpretations. -- AFP
  • Dick - Stinking Hairy
    "Singapore has tight laws regarding corruption......"

    Yes,that is so true.

    But don't forget quiet a few here are above the law.
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