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China says regrets death in Myanmar mine protest
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 24, 2014


Police deny two killed in Nicaragua canal protests
Managua (AFP) Dec 24, 2014 - Police denied Wednesday that two demonstrators were killed in a crackdown on hundreds of Nicaraguan farmers protesting the construction of a $50 billion canal across their land.

An opposition leader and activist had said earlier two protesters were killed at the demonstration against the expropriation of land by Chinese firm Hong Kong Nicaragua Development Investment (HKND) to build a massive canal.

At least 21 people were injured and 33 arrested in violence during a police eviction of protesters, police director Aminta Granera said at a conference.

The injured included 15 officers and six civilians, Granera added, including one officer, Armado Gomez, who was in critical condition after a gunshot wound to the chest.

However, Granera denied any protesters had been killed.

Protest leader Eduardo Montealegre had told AFP he saw the bodies of two people, but police blocked protesters from approaching them.

Montealegre said that the crackdown also left many people injured.

Protests followed the inauguration of the canal on Monday by President Daniel Ortega and Chinese billionaire Wang Jing. Police action against the protesters began on Tuesday and intensified Wednesday.

Wang won a 100-year contract to build the canal in 2013. The environmental, technical and financial studies of the 280-kilometer long (175-mile) route have been kept secret.

The canal is expected to displace around 30,000 people, mainly poor farmers and native people, but could be a major financial boon for the Central American nation.

HKND is expected to employ 50,000 people over five years of construction. The canal route crosses Lake Nicaragua and runs through rainforest and at least 40 villages.

China expressed regret on Wednesday after a woman protesting against a controversial Chinese-backed copper mine in Myanmar was shot dead.

The woman, believed to be in her 50s, was gunned down Monday when police opened fire on local protesters, in the latest dispute involving a Chinese project in the country.

"We express concern and regret about the casualty," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hua Chunying told a regular press conference.

"We encourage Chinese companies to abide by local laws," she added.

The mine has triggered fierce opposition from local villagers due to alleged land grabs and environmental damage. It has raised questions about Myanmar's reliance on investment from neighbouring China -- which gave crucial political support to the former junta.

China's Wanbao, a government owned firm which runs the project as part of a joint venture with a major Myanmar military conglomerate, said the woman's "senseless death" was "painful and poignant".

Beijing was a key backer of Myanmar's military junta while it was under Western sanctions, but President Thein Sein has increased ties with other countries including the United States since launching political reforms in 2011.

Protests against the huge $3.6-billion Chinese-backed Myitsone Dam led Thein Sein to suspend the project in 2012, sparking anger in Beijing.

Wanbao said it had completed two major consultations this year in a process of "reconciliation" with local people while the project remains on hold.

In November 2012 a botched police raid using phosphorus on a protest at the mine left dozens of people, including monks, with burn injuries.

That crackdown, the harshest since the end of outright army rule in 2011, sparked fury in the Buddhist-majority country.

Earlier this year two Chinese workers were kidnapped at the site by activists, though they were later released unharmed.

Myanmar state media reported Monday that nine protesters and 11 police officers had also been injured during the protest.


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