"If we still believe in ourselves that one day, our country will practice Democracy, wiping out every piece of the current army trash led by General Than Shwe, and we are striving for it no matter what the costs will be, our belief will become the reality."
~Kyal Zin Lin Latt

Sunday, February 28, 2010



Zoya Phan inducted as a ‘Young Global Leader’

By Nan Kham Kaew

Zoya Phan, a Karen exile and daughter of the late KNU leader Pado Mahn Sha has been chosen as a ‘Young Global leader’ (YGL) by the World Economic Forum; the same organisation that hosts the annual meeting of world and business leaders in Davos, Switzerland.

Zoya Phan, who is also the international coordinator for the Burma Campaign UK (BCUK), was amongst as many as 200 young people who are chosen each year by the World Economic Forum for “their professional accomplishments, commitment to society and potential to contribute to shaping the future of the world.”

Speaking to DVB, Zoya Phan said: “We are bringing more international attention to Burma’s situation via campaigns through the BCUK as well as Karen organisations.”

“I was chosen to be honoured [as a YGL] for my work in highlighting human rights violations and the [Burmese junta] army’s offences in Karen state and campaigning to seek international action [on the Burmese junta] with the use of media.”

The YGLs convene at an annual summit – this year it will be in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, from the 2 to 7 May; the first time the gathering is to be held in Africa. It will also be the largest ever gathering of YGLs.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Nan Kham Kaew.

My opinion:

Congratulation for your efforts and spirit!!!


Thursday, February 25, 2010

New flu strain spreading fast in Burma

By Ahunt Phone Myat

A mosquito-borne virus with symptoms similar to dengue fever is spreading rapidly in Burma, according to doctors who asserted however that it has a low fatality rate.

The Chikungunya virus only became commonplace in Burma in mid-2009, although cases were reported as far back as 1975. It comes as doctors warn of a new wave of the AH1N1 and AH5N1 viruses in Burma that have struck more than 60 people in the past fortnight.

“[Chikungunya] begins like a normal flu with symptoms such as aches and pains, especially in the joints,” a specialist doctor in Rangoon. “The joint pain can be so severe that elderly patients may be unable to walk.”

Although the flu has strong symptoms, it has low fatality rate, particularly if the patient receives proper treatment at inception, the doctor said.

“Personal hygiene is important for flu diseases. Wash hands properly and avoid getting bitten by mosquitoes. Chikungunya is mainly contracted by mosquitoes,” he said.

Rangoon has seen a reemergence of the AH1N1, or ’swine flu’, virus in recent weeks, with more than 60 people confirmed as carrying the disease. Burma’s secretive capital of Naypyidaw, populated mainly by government staff, has also been affected by the fresh outbreak.

Meanwhile, around 2500 chickens were recently culled in Rangoon following an outbreak of the A/H5N1, or ‘bird flu’ virus.

Health awareness remains low in Burma, with Rangoon residents earlier this month complaining that locals were failing to follow proper procedures to prevent the spread of the virus.

The Burmese government has also been heavily criticized for its low spending on healthcare; around $US43 per person per year, according to the World Health Organisation.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Ahunt Phone Myat.

My opinion:

It is the government's responsibility to educate its locals about health issues and to prevent diseases and unnecessary deaths as many as possible. But, Burma's junta just ignores these. How inhumane!

Imprisoned NLD staff ‘must not be omitted’

By Khin Hnin Htet

Detained opposition party members who deserve to be in the party’s central committee must be included, opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has announced.

The pledge was made following the release last week of the National League for Democracy (NLD) party deputy, Tin Oo, who had been kept under house arrest since 2003.

His and Suu Kyi’s imprisonment, as well as crippling restrictions placed on the party by the Burmese junta, has led observers to complain that progress by the party has been slow. Around 430 NLD members are currently behind bars.

A recent reshuffling of the senior-level Central Executive Committee (CEC), whose members rank above the central committee, included the addition of younger members to dilute the ageing leadership and was seen as the first step in reinvigorating the NLD.

"A person who deserves to be a [central committee member], even if currently imprisoned, must not be omitted purely because their imprisonment stops them from working," lawyer Nyan Win quoted Suu Kyi as saying.

Lawyers met with Suu Kyi yesterday at her Rangoon house-cum-compound where she has been detained for 14 of the past 20 years.

He added that party members who are carry out valuable social work should also be included in committee dialogue. "The CEC is now working within the boundary of this policy," he said.

The announcement of the formation of the central committee is due to be made tomorrow, NLD spokesman Khin Maung Swe said.

"[Suu Kyi] especially thanked U Tin Oo for carrying out the NLD duties as soon as he was released from house arrest, and she thanked him for talking to the media about his political standing," Nyan Win added.

After being released on 13 February, Tin Oo told reporters that he was "very hopeful" that Suu Kyi would also be released, having had her house arrest extended by 18 months in August last year.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Khin Hnin Htet.

My opinion:

Hey, Than Shwe, if you are not afraid, why are you arresting people like from NLD? Just face them.

Monday, February 22, 2010


Burma opposition downcast over UN visit

By DVB admin

Opposition activists and politicians yesterday lamented last week’s "fruitless" visit to Burma by the UN rapporteur on human rights, Tomas Ojea Quintana.

Quintana was denied a meeting with imprisoned opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi during the five-day visit, despite being allowed to hold talks with the recently released opposition vice-chairman, Tin Oo.

Observers have echoed Quintana’s reflections on the apparent intransigence of the Burmese junta, and said that the visit failed to reap any concrete results. It coincided with the high-profile sentencing on Wednesday of a monk who had helped victims of cyclone Nargis in 2008.

Bo Kyi, joint secretary of Assistant Association for Political Prisoners-Burma (AAPP), said that the trip was "fruitless" and that the junta’s failure to acknowledge the presence of political prisoners in the country meant that it was unlikely any would be release prior to elections this year.

Quintana told ABC Radio in Australia today that "there is no sign, no indication that the government is willing to respect human rights and in that sense the election won’t be acceptable".

The spokesperson for Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party, Nyan Win, said however that the trip "could not bring a change to the human rights situation in Burma overnight".

"We can consider that there are benefits if the UN special rapporteur has learnt more about the human rights situation in the country and thus can pass his knowledge on to the world," he said.

His views were echoed by lawyer Min Lwin, from the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), who said that Quintana’s findings could be used to inform the next UN Human Rights Council meeting in March.

Tight restrictions on the outflow of information from Burma has often left the international community in the dark about the scale of human rights violations in the country.

During the trip Quintana also met with members of the government-backed National Unity Party, leaders of ethnic ceasefire groups, and the ruling junta’s labour and liaison minister Aung Kyi.

Visits were also made to three prisons, two in Burma’s remote western Arakan state, and the other Rangoon’s notorious Insein prison, where the majority of the country’s 2,100 political prisoners are kept.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the admin.

My opinion:

It is indeed true that international aids are just fruitless though they might be helpful a bit. It is also needed that Burmese civilians needs to make efforts to get democracy. Most of the duty is Burmese civilians'. They also shouldn't just rely on international aids only.


Fiancé of Burma prisoner ‘betrayed’ by US

By DVB admin

The fiancé of an American rights activist imprisoned by Burma said she felt betrayed by the US government and urged a more robust response to the military regime.

In a piece to appear in Monday’s Wall Street Journal, Wa Wa Kyaw said she and her fiancé Nyi Nyi Aung had been grateful to become US citizens as their adopted country "cherished democracy, freedom and human rights."

"But over the past five months our government has betrayed us," wrote Wa Wa Kyaw, a nurse in the eastern state of Maryland.

Supporters say Nyi Nyi Aung, a democracy campaigner who also goes by Kyaw Zaw Lwin, returned to Burma in September to visit his ailing mother, herself a jailed activist.

He was arrested and on 10 February handed a three-year sentence on fraud and forgery charges.

State Department spokesman Philip Crowley has urged the junta in Burma, earlier known as Burma, to release him, calling the conviction "unjustified" and "politically motivated."

But Wa Wa Kyaw faulted secretary of state Hillary Clinton for not doing more on his case before the verdict. President Barack Obama’s administration has launched a dialogue with Burma aiming to end its isolation.

"President Obama and Secretary Clinton, my message is simple. Neither your words nor your actions show that you take my fiance’s imprisonment seriously," she wrote.

"I beg you to stop ignoring his plight, and to help secure his release from this illegal and unjust imprisonment. Just as Nyi Nyi continues to live up to the oath we took to defend America, please, live up to the promise America made to defend us."

The administration opened talks with the junta last year, saying that the previous approach focused on punishing Burma has failed. It has maintained sanctions, saying they would be eased in return for progress on democracy.

The military has ruled Burma since 1962. It refused to let Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy take power after it swept the last elections in 1990.

The junta plans to hold new elections this year, which have met with wide skepticism as Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, remains under house arrest.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the admin.

My opinion:

Yes, what she said is true. It is good that US is also considering Burma's issues but it is bad of USA that they are just shouting and criticizing the Burmese junta without making any effort that can bring good changes to Burmese civilians. At last, USA is also among the countries that do something only if they get something back in return. SELFISH!!!

Friday, February 19, 2010

UN expert warns of mass deportations of Burmese

Jorge A. Bustamante, a UN expert on the human rights of migrants has expressed concern about the millions of migrants in Thailand who face deportation if they have not registered biographical data by the end of the month to governments in their nations of origin.

The independent expert urged Thailand to abide by the notion of ‘refoulment’ where by deporting many put them at risk and would thereby be knowingly putting them in danger.

Thailand’s nationality verification process seeks to register the millions of migrant workers and refugees from neighbouring countries but requires that foreign nationals have proof of their nation of origin.

The lack of bureaucracy in Burma and fear of authorities has prevented many migrants from Burma registering, thus making them unable to apply for the Nationality Verification process in Thailand.

"I reiterate my earlier messages to the Government to reconsider its actions and decisions, and to abide by international instruments,"…"If pursued, the threats of mass expulsion will result in unprecedented human suffering and will definitely breach fundamental human rights obligations." Mr. Bustamante told the UN web site.

A labour activist in Mae Sot recently told DVB that; "there are rumours that local authorities will threaten and extort money from the families of migrant workers".

Furthermore many migrant workers come from ethnic areas that are not in SPDC control. These workers will then be deported as they will have no way of proving their country of origin. While archaic bureaucracy means that many longer term migrants will no longer be on local authority ‘family lists’ that every ‘village peace and development council’ keeps of families.

Workers in Mae Sot have detailed to DVB how deportations occur whereby migrant workers are handed by the Thai authorities to non government armies such as the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA). If the deportees are unable to pay a fee dependent upon where they were detained by the Thais they are put into forced labour by the group which has been regularly criticised for human rights abuses and severely lacking accountability.

Mr Busamente was further quoted on the web site saying that; ""I am disappointed that that the Government of Thailand has not responded to my letters expressing calls for restraint,".

The UN web site also noted that Mr Busmanete is not paid by the UN and is an independent expert.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma).

My opinion:

I'm sorry for those illegal Burmese immigrants to Thailand. They were indeed facing the Burmese junta's persecution and threatening and now are facing Thailand's registration system.

Charity Monk Jailed

A Buddhist monk arrested last year at Rangoon’s international airport was sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment by the Rangoon western district court on Wednesday.

Venerable U Gawthita of Nga Htat Gyi Leikpyakan monastery in Bahan township was arrested on 26 August after returning from a missionary tour in Taiwan.

"He was arrested with seven other monks… and sentenced under the emergency immigration act, unlawful association act and for keeping foreign currency," a lawyer Aung Thein said.

Seven other monks were allowed to change money at the airport while U Gawthita was unable to do so and arrested for possessing foreign currency, he added.

"The other monks were released and they could change money, and there is no evidence that he joined any association in foreign countries, and you can’t say that he reentered the country illegally because he came out of the country with a Burmese passport and reentered [the country] through Mingaladon airport with the Burmese passport."

Aung Thein said the monk’s lawyer Kyaw Htay will appeal the sentence.

U Gawthita was actively involved in providing help to victims of Cyclone Nargis which devastated the delta region of lower Burma in 2008.

Burmese authorities also jailed some charity workers, mainly opposition party members, who helped the people in the past when they were deemed to be challenging their authority.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma).

My opinion:

The reasons with which U Gawthita was arrested are absolutely not valid and not concrete. But, if the junta says "you are wrong", then you are wrong. That's how the Burmese political system works.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Mysterious bomb blast in Kokang

By DVB admin

A bomb went off in the Shan State Special Region 1 capital Laogai on Monday, killing one man and injuring at least eight, according to local sources.

The area is under control of a Kokang group, the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA).

The blast occurred at around 7:30am Monday near Laogai’s famous Drug Museum. It followed authorities’ recent warnings on the presence of bomb plotters in the town.

The man killed in the blast was identified as Chinese ethnic but no further information were revealed.

On October 24, last year, at least 10 bombs exploded in Laogai overnight, causing the town’s broadcasting station to collapse while damaging some other buildings. A number of people were also reportedly injured.

Burmese troops have been deployed in the Kokang region [Special Region 1] since last year’s violence in the area that was sparked by the ousting of the MNDAA’s former leader Peng Jiasheng. His was replaced by a pro-SPDC faction leader Bai Suoqian who favoured government proposals to transform the group into a Border Guard Force unit.

Burmese military analyst Aung Kyaw Zaw based on the Sino-Burma border said the blast could have been the work of either Peng Jiasheng’s loyalist troops or local people or even the SPDC army itself.

"Locals were very disappointed with the SPDC (Burmese) troops ransacking their houses and properties and raping their women during the incident in September last year" said Aung Kyaw Zaw.

"We should also note that the SPDC had the information [that the attack will take place] about five-six days in advance and now this happened on their watch. So there is something to think about."

"So there is a question whether it was the SPDC itself who planned the bombing to discredit Peng’s group."

"We cannot say anything solid about who is behind the attack right now."

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the admin.

My opinion:

Obviously, the only one who can have or store bombs or such weapons is the ruling junta and his army.

Tin Oo’s speaks after captivity

By DVB admin

DVB were one of the first to interview the National League for Democracy (NLD) deputy, Tin Oo after his release from 6-years under house arrest.

In this exclusive interview the 83-year old discussed the proposed election, the military, his hopes, and being released from incarceration.

Now that you have been released, how do you feel?

It doesn’t feel good as I’m the only one to be freed. There are still a lot of political prisoners remaining and I want them to be freed too. Actually, it can’t be considered that I’m free; I’m only being let out for the time being.

Are you seeing any changes for when you went in?

I don’t see many significant changes. I haven’t been to many places yet [after being released.] I was at the Shwedagon Pagoda [on Sunday] and prayed for the release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Also I visited to [the NLD] chairman [U Aung Shwe's] house and met with him, U Lwin and U Lun Tin*.

What do you wish for the most at the moment?

I wish for open negotiation, dialogue and peace for the people and the country.

We learnt that you are keeping with the stance of the Shwegondine Declaration**. But the government has said that it is impossible to meet the demands of the declaration, such as revising the 2008 constitution.How much hope are you keeping on this?

The NLD has kept with this stance so as to find answers to the problems via dialogue and is continually making that call, as well as for the release of political prisoners and such. But nothing has happened and we are still firm on that stance. Regarding the 2010 elections, there has been no details whatsoever released; such as the elections laws or political party registry law. So just like Daw Aung San Suu Kyi said, it is not yet time [to make any decision.]

As you know, the [military government] has appointed a large role for itself in the basic constitution. As a former Defence Chief, how practical do you think this is for the democratisation in Burma?

Having a government formed of only those who win the people’s vote is the main essence of democracy. But now, [the military] will take up 25 percent [of the parliamentary seats] as well as taking up its own space in regional organisations and this is completely not democratic at all. If we are to be a democratic nation, then we have to practice true democracy measures such as allowing freedom of expression, freedom to discuss and form organisations. But in reality, the military will have its members take part everywhere, including [civilian organisations] so it will [dominate] 100 percent of the power in the government even though the constitution said there will be 75 percent civilians [in the government.]

So we can never expect to have a system in our country where the military stays in its own place and does not engage in politics?

We can still hope. Why not? The army is merely a unique organisation among the nation’s services. So it should have the same servant principles. Changes will occur according to the will of the people. Changes take place slowly, by finding answers step by step.

What was your view of politics when you were in the army as an official?

I looked to a peaceful nation, independently shared rule by the upper house, the lower house and ethnic representatives in the parliament.

When you were Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces, the military leaders now were junior officials in the army. Are there suggestions you want to make to them?

I would like to tell them to welcome ideas from the people and to pay them respect. It would be a wonderful situation if the members of the Tattmadaw treated people with due respect and did things aimed at the happiness of the public.

*NLD Central Executive Committee Members**The declaration at which the NLD declared that they would not compete in the 2010 election because of the 2008 constitution.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the admin.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

‘Prayer’ activists sentenced

By DVB admin

Four detained organizers and participants of weekly prayer ceremonies that called for the release of Burmese political prisoners were each sentenced to two years’ imprisonment with hard labour by a court in Rangoon yesterday.

"When passing the sentence, the court could not provide strong evidence against them as there is no (reliable) witness," their lawyer Kyaw Ho said. "The punishment is unacceptable legally, and I am making preparations to appeal."

The sentence was passed by eastern Rangoon district court on the day the UN human rights envoy Tomas Ojea Quintana arrived in Burma to examine the country’s progress on human rights.

Naw Ohn Hla, Cho Cho Lwin, Cho Cho Aye and San San Myint were arrested on 3 October after attending a religious ceremony at a monastery and charged with section 505(b) of the penal code (disturbing public tranquility) for handing a Buddhist prayer book to a monastery abbot in Magwe division.

The charge has been used to imprison a number of perceived dissenters, including journalist Eint Khaing Oo, who was recently honoured with the Kenji Nagai journalism award. Naw Ohn Hla, is a member of Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party.

Her husband Aung Than expressed his dismay at the verdict and serious concerns for her.

"Her health is not good. She has heart condition and blood pressure problems," he said.

In June, two members of the prayer group were handed sentences of one and a half years each after holding a prayer ceremony at a pagoda near to Rangoon division’s Twante township.

They were charged under Section 295(a) which addresses "desecration of religious buildings and property".

The prayer campaign has been running for more than five years, and has been subjected to frequent intimidation by police in Burma.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the admin.

My opinion:

Why are they arrested? Even without concrete evidence? Even without hurting the junta or the military? That's so cruel and terrible of the junta.

Friday, February 12, 2010


Senator says US must engage Burma on sentence

By DVB admin

Senator Jim Webb, who paid a rare visit to Burma last year, called Thursday for the United States to keep engaging the military regime after it handed a three-year sentence to a US citizen.

Webb, who heads the senate foreign relations subcommittee on East Asia, said he was concerned about Burma’s sentence on Thursday of activist Kyaw Zaw Lwin, who also goes by Nyi Nyi Aung.

"The circumstances of Kyaw Zaw Lwin’s arrest, confinement and trial demonstrate clearly the need for more consistent high-level engagement between our two governments," said Webb, a Democrat from Virginia.

"It is strongly in the national interest of the United States to continue to promote a democratic transition in Burma," Webb said.

Webb last year visited Burma and secured the release of an eccentric American who had swum to the home of democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi, who remains under house arrest.

The United States has demanded that the regime immediately release Kyaw Zaw Lwin, who has been active in Burma’s pro-democracy movement and said he returned to his native country to see his ailing mother.

The court convicted him of fraud and forgery, in part for not formally renouncing his former nationality.

The conviction led representative Howard Berman, a Democrat who heads the House Foreign Affairs Committee, to call on president Barack Obama’s administration to consider tightening sanctions on the regime.

The Obama administration last year entered talks with Burma to coax it out of isolation. The regime plans this year to hold elections, which Western governments and the opposition fear will be a sham.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the admin.

My opinion:

It is good that the world is emphasizing on Burma's junta, but it is bad that they are just criticizing without any effort that can bring changes to Burma.



Burma ‘will release’ opposition deputy

By DVB admin

Burma opposition party deputy, Tin Oo, will be released tomorrow when his house arrest term expires, a government official has said.

Colleagues and family members said they were hopeful that the ruling junta would honour the release date for Tin Oo, who was detained along with National League for Democracy (NLD) leader Aung San Suu Kyi in 2003 following the Depayin massacre.

An official told AFP that he "will be released tomorrow as his detention period is complete", although the government has been known for doubling back on similar pledges, such as it did with Suu Kyi last year.

Khin Maung Swe, spokesperson for the NLD, said that they couldn’t tell how strong the possibility of his release is.

"His six-year term is up on 13 February, so a lot of people are presuming that he will be released on that day," he said.

"Since our chairperson U Aung Shwe has been unable to come to office [through poor health], U Tin Oo will be taking the leading role in the [central executive committee] if he is released."

Tin Oo’s son, Thant Zin Oo, told DVB from Japan that he was optimistic his father "will be free again very soon".

The retired general was transferred from prison to house arrest in Rangoon in February 2004 under an anti-subversion law.

He has been allowed to leave his home for medical check-ups, and party colleagues said the detainee’s health was "fine" after having an eye operation at a private clinic a few weeks ago.

Suu Kyi told her visiting lawyers on Tuesday that it was still too early to make a decision on whether the NLD should participate in elections this year. She will likely remain under house arrest during polling, while her party has claimed the elections are a sham designed to cement military rule in Burma.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the admin.

My opinion:

I also hope that U Tin Oo will be released so that he could work for NLD again.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010


Burma’s double-edged sword

By Francis Wade

Kyaw Min Htun’s is a story too often seen, but not told: the boy was plied with alcohol by troops in the small town of Taungdwingyi in central Burma last month, before being abducted and taken to a nearby army base.

He became one of an estimated 70,000 child soldiers in Burma; thought to be the world’s highest figure, but one that rarely gets media attention. Following a failed rescue mission, his mother contacted the BBC’s Burmese service, along with Radio Free Asia, who quickly aired interviews carrying pleas for his release. Then last week, soldiers arrived at her house with her son.

His release exemplifies the effect that international media exposure of the secretive state can have. Aye Myint, from the Guiding Star advocacy group that monitors child soldiers in Burma, heralded a growing international awareness of the country thanks to a new level of media exposure that “now limits corrupt government officials from taking advantage”. But following his own outspoken comments to foreign media, intelligence agents on Sunday arrived on his doorstep to question him. This is the dark side of Burma’s media sphere, within which the continued imprisonment of journalists provides a chillingly ironic reminder of the power of the pen.

That Kyaw Min Htun’s mother contacted the media in the first place is a rarity in a country in which publicly aired criticism of the military government, let alone exposure of state-sanctioned corruption, can land you decades in prison. The Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders last year ranked Burma 171 out of 175 countries in its annual Press Freedom Index, with only Iran, Eritrea, Turkmenistan and North Korea deemed more repressive.

Under the all-seeing eye of the regime’s Censor Board, opposition media outlets have had to develop innovative ways in which to circumvent a near total ban on non-state media broadcasting in the country, with journalists often crossing into Thailand on foot to deliver footage to exiled media based along the border. Organisations such as the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), RFA and Voice of America then package the material and beam it back into the country, on television or shortwave radio, via satellites in Europe.

But no plan is foolproof, and in the past six weeks alone, two DVB journalists have been imprisoned. Twenty-five year old female Hla Hla Win in December was charged under the Electronics Act after filming interviews with monks, and sentenced to a total of 27 years. Her crime was no more than an attempt to show the world a simmering discontent among the normally apolitical, and highly revered, monks’ community in Burma.

Then on 27 January, Ngwe Soe Linn, who had filmed the lives of children orphaned by cyclone Nargis in 2008 for a Channel 4 documentary, was given a 13-year sentence, softened only through his recognition by the Rory Peck Award, one of the world’s leading honours for cameramen working in dangerous environments.

He knew that filming in the cyclone-stricken Irrawaddy delta would be precarious. In the days following Nargis, the junta slapped a blanket ban on both reporters and aid workers entering the region, fearing a public airing of its lax reaction to the disaster. Ngwe Soe Linn and fellow cameraman ‘Z’, who is now in hiding, regularly had to dodge authorities, often lying low for several days until it was safe to begin work again. Then, after each round of filming, the two disassembled their cameras and hid each part in separate locations before smuggling them out of the delta, piece by piece, over the course of several months.

This painstakingly secret operation, normally reserved for drugs or weapons trafficking, draws a startling analogy of the apparent threat posed by independent media to the Burmese junta. The number of DVB staff now imprisoned stands at 14, and this is expected to rise as the government prepares to tighten its grip in the run up to elections. Joining the 14 in jails across Burma are more than 250 monks, 30 cyclone relief workers and 12 lawyers, out of a total of more than 2,190 ‘political prisoners’. Around 130 are thought to be in poor health, and some are serving sentences of more than 100 years.

With Burma due this year to hold its first elections since 1990, the Southeast Asian pariah will once again be under the international spotlight, and the plight of Burmese opposition journalists, the ‘third pillar’ in the democracy movement, is under greater scrutiny; last week the documentary Burma VJ, filmed during the September 2007 monk-led uprising, was nominated for an Oscar, having already scooped more than 50 awards since its release eight months ago.

And this will be of some consolation to the 14 now imprisoned who knew full well the risks of picking up a camera and squaring up to the generals. But while awards reflect the work, they do not necessarily engender the real results that the country needs. This captivating footage is one of only a few bridges between Burma and the outside world, and is only worth its salt if the viewers , governments, campaigners, policymakers, and so on – can unite to lift the country out of the quagmire. The risks underground journalists in Burma face are colossal, and it’s time they were rewarded with more than a statuette.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Francis Wade.

My opinion:

It is indeed true that in Burma, there is no freedom for media and there is censorship in media. Only those who can afford to buy a satellite channel can know the true information about Burma and the junta. Many civilians are brainwashed by the junta so that the junta can control them. It is really needed to open up the media in Burma to reveal the junta's mask.



Wednesday, February 3, 2010


Burma VJ gets Oscar nomination

By DVB

The documentary, Burma VJ directed by Anders Østergaard, follows the story of video journalists (VJs) working inside Burma, for Norway based media outlet Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB).

It documents their role in reporting the monks-led demonstrations of September 2007, known as the Saffron Revolution. The film emphasizes the huge risks taken by DVB journalists collecting this material, in an attempt to show the events captured on film to the world .

Burma VJ has won over 40 international awards so far including best Investigative documentary at the San Francisco International Film Festival.

This nomination will not only highlight the work of DVB but also draw attention to the struggle of the Burmese people against the military dictatorship.

The 82nd Academy Awards, will be presented on March 7, 2010.

For more information, please contact:

Aye Chan Naing (+47 911 077 43)

Khin Maung Win (+47 452 76 649)

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma).

My opinion:

I am very proud of those who risk their lives to make this Burmese VJ video in order to get international attention on how the junta is so cruel.

Monday, February 1, 2010

‘I quit the army because I’m not proud’

By Min Lwin

A Burmese junior officer has blamed government policy after deserting the army and fleeing to a location on the Thai-Burmese border.

"When it comes to the conflict between the soldiers and the public resulting from the implementation of the government’s policies, the public sees it as the action of our army, not as of the government," said Lieutenant Yeh Htet.

"I quit the army mainly because I am unable to be proud of being a soldier anymore."

The 23-year-old from Burma's eastern Karen state added that families of soldiers are also finding it hard to survive due to a lack proper support from top generals. Moreover, the majority of soldiers want to retire from the army but are not allowed to, except on medical grounds.

His defection coincided with the emergence of reports of reshuffles of commanders, mainly at strategic departments and ‘troublesome’ areas of Burma.

Colonel Aung Linn Dway of Burmese Army headquarters Registry Office in Naypyidaw is appointed Sittwe Regional Operations Command and deputy chair for Arakan State's Peace and Development Council.

Northwestern Command’s chief Colonel San Aung is appointed director of the Transport Projects Administration while Colonel San Myint Oo of Armoured Operations Command 74 is transferred to the post of director for the Inland Transportations Department.

Tenessarim Division's Naval Base in-charge Brigadier General Thura Thet Swe is now commander-in-chief of Naval Headquarters in Naypyidaw.

Deputy chief of Northeastern Command Brigadier General Hla Myint is appointed chief of recently troubled Laogai [Kokang] Military Administrative Command. His old position is taken up by chief-of-staff of Infantry, Colonel Win Thein.

Moe Meik Tactical Operations Command's chief Colonel Khin Maung Maw, under the control of Northern Regional Military Command, is appointed Eastern Command's chief.

His position is taken up by Lieutenant Colonel Win Min Htun of the Army Administration Grade One [Management Department].

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma) by the author Min Lwin.

My opinion:

It is true that there are many soldiers who want to retire from their jobs at the military working under the junta because they no longer want to do bad things, making Burmese civilians suffer. But, they are not allowed to do so.