British banks under pressure over £45m loans to firm with links to Myanmar military
Human rights groups are demanding that two of
Britain’s biggest banks explain why they have lent tens of millions of pounds
to a technology company building a telecoms network that is part-owned and used
by the Myanmar military.
HSBC and Standard Chartered have loaned $60m
(£44.5m) to Vietnamese telecom giant Viettel in the last four years, a period
when the Myanmar military has been accused of committing war crimes, genocide
and crimes against humanity. Viettel is a major investor in Mytel, a Myanmar mobile
network that, since its launch in June 2018, has grown to become the
second-biggest operator in the country with over 10 million users.
A Myanmar state-owned enterprise, Star High Co Ltd,
a subsidiary of the military-operated Myanmar Economic Corporation, has a 28%
stake in the network; Viettel’s international telecommunications investment
subsidiary, Viettel Global JSC, controls 49%; and Myanmar National Telecom
Holdings, representing a group of Myanmar companies, owns 23%. The shareholding
structure, which confirms Mytel is a major revenue generator for the Myanmar
military, is revealed in a report by the campaign group Justice For Myanmar
(JFM).
The report, based on open-source material and a
trove of documents that emerged when a Viettel subsidiary accidentally
published online internal files relating to the company’s operations in
Myanmar, reveals how Mytel has been upgrading the Myanmar military’s
infrastructure, including the army’s network of fibre-optic cables.
The links between Mytel and the military are well
established. Major General Thaw Lwin, director of the military’s Directorate of
Signals, who has responsibility for its infrastructure, is a director of Mytel.
A Viettel subsidiary is leading the construction of at least 38 Mytel network towers
located in Myanmar military bases.
The report also claims that Viettel units, under the
Vietnamese Ministry of National Defence, are mining user-data for analysis in
Vietnam. It alleges that the Myanmar military has access to the data, opening
up the possibility it could be used for military purposes.
JFM has established that HSBC loaned $40m (£29.7m)
to Viettel Global JSC between 2016 and 2020, while Standard Chartered’s UK arm
loaned just over $20m (£14.8m) over the same period.
Viettel Global’s accounts show that more than half
of its capital expenditure this year and almost half last year went into Mytel.
“The report sets out very well the position of Mytel in relation to the Myanmar
military and the position of Viettel in relation to Mytel,” said Christopher
Sidoti, a former member of the UN Human Rights Council’s Independent
International Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar.
“The facts establish that Mytel plays a vital role
for the military and that Viettel makes Mytel possible.”
JFM says businesses with interests in Myanmar –
formerly Burma – have responsibilities under UN human-rights principles and
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development guidelines to uphold
international standards on human rights. It also questions whether HSBC and
Standard Chartered may be in breach of EU restrictive measures on Myanmar.
“The report reflects where the money trail leads,”
Sidoti said. “Among other places, it leads to HSBC and Standard Chartered. The
report does this very cautiously, conservatively, not asserting that HSBC and
Standard Chartered are liable for prosecution for crimes under international
law or that they are directly aiding and abetting the commission of such
crimes. Rather, the report puts these companies into a third category of entities
that have human-rights due-diligence responsibilities that they have breached.
That is a conclusion with which I agree.”
Yadanar Maung, a spokesman for JFM, said: “HSBC and
Standard Chartered should be transparent and show exactly how they monitor and
prevent their loans from financing human rights abuses.”
HSBC said: “HSBC complies with sanctions, laws and
regulations in all the jurisdictions in which we operate and strongly supports
observance of international human rights principles as they apply to business.
We do not comment on client relationships, even to confirm or deny that a
relationship exists.” Standard Chartered declined to comment.
The Observer put detailed allegations to a spokesman
for Viettel about its relationship with Mytel, the Myanmar government, its
military, HSBC and Standard Chartered. The company did not respond to requests
for comment.



