Wednesday, July 3, 2024
News

Japanese supermarket chain operator official detained in Myanmar for allegedly selling rice above set prices

   SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Tokyo | July 1, 2024 10:41:20 PM IST
A Japanese supermarket chain operator Aeon Co on Monday said that a senior official of a joint venture in Myanmar has been detained, with the military junta saying he was held along with 10 others for allegedly violating rules on the selling price of rice, Kyodo News, a Japan-based news agency reported.

Aeon named the official as Hiroshi Kasamatsu, 53, an employee of Aeon Orange Co, adding it would cooperate with local authorities' investigations while seeking support from the Japanese Embassy in Myanmar.

According to the junta, which has ruled the country since ousting its civilian government in a February 2021 coup, Kasamatsu and 10 Myanmar nationals have been held for selling rice at a price around 50 per cent to 70 per cent higher than the level mandated by the authorities.

The Japanese embassy said a lawyer who met Kasamatsu at a police station in Yangon where he is believed to have been interrogated told them he has no health issues. "We are in the process of confirming the facts, but we are calling for his early release. We will also provide necessary support," an official from the embassy said.

Japan's top government spokesperson Yoshimasa Hayashi said that the government is urging Myanmar's authorities to release the official at the earliest and is communicating with the company.

The detention of a Japanese-affiliated company official in Myanmar came despite Japan having not imposed sanctions on the Southeast Asian country's military or associated individuals and groups following the coup, unlike Western countries. The incident could cast a shadow over other businesses linked to Japan in the country, Kyodo News said.

Aeon Orange was established in 2016 with local retailer Creation Myanmar Group of Companies.

The junta has sought to stabilize the market by fixing the prices of necessary goods, including rice, and setting a reference exchange rate for Myanmar's currency, the Kyat, which has weakened significantly since the coup. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE WORLD NEWS
Taiwan demands immediate release of fish...
Imran Khan, other party leaders acquitte...
Japanese PM Fumio Kishida offers condole...
Israel strikes counter Hamas efforts to ...
Taiwan accuses China of meddling in elec...
Locals of Minapin Valley in PoGB warn of...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Rajya Sabha adjourned sine die, adopts m...
Assam Floods: 'Over 11 lakh people affec...
Dr BN Gangadhar appointed chairperson of...
'It sets dangerous precedent' says Rajya...
Karnataka Health Minister to chair meeti...
Court grants custody parole to Gangster ...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
German midfielder Kroos calls Lamin... 
'Jind Mahi' song from 'Sharmajee Ki... 
SC expresses strong displeasure on ... 
Champai Soren resigns as Jharkhand ... 
'Youth acts - Planting for a sustai... 
India, France working together on A... 
In pics: Vicky Kaushal shares glimp... 
UAE, Brazil issue joint statement o...