Burma VJ

The co-operative presents A Film By ANDERS ØSTERGAARD

Armed with video-cameras a tenacious band of Burmese reporters face down death to expose the repressive regime controlling their country

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Archive for the 'Latest news on Burma' Category

Aung San Suu Kyi denied access to appeal

 

Aung San Suu Kyi will not be allowed to appear in court in person during the appeal against her 18-month house arrest extension. Aung San Suu Kyi’s detention was extended after she was convicted of breaching security laws by allowing an uninvited US man into her home.

Ms Suu Kyi has spent 14 of the last 20 years in detention. The latest sentence has drawn international condemnation, and means she cannot take part in elections next year.

Meanwhile, a Human Rights Watch (HRW) report states that the number of political prisoners in Burma’s notorious jails has doubled in the two years, since the 2007 ‘Saffron Uprisings’ dramtically captured in the footage of Burma VJ.

According to HRW there are more than 2,200 people jailed for their beliefs in 43 jails, often held in solitary confinement in small, dark cells.

To find out more about the conditions faced by political prisoners in Burma, read our guest-blog post “Burmese hell holes”.

Read the full BBC news article here.

Burmese generals: $5bn profit from Total pipeline deal

A new report published by Earthrights International (ERI) claims that the Burmese military junta has pocketed almost $5bn from a controversial gas pipeline operated in Eastern Burma by the French oil giant Total in Eastern Burma, while continuing to deprive the country of much-needed social spending.

The Yadana pipeline deal, which has earned Total an estimated $483m since 2000, is so lucrative to the regime that ERI claim it is able to insulate the country’s rulers from the impact of  international sanctions put in place  in response to the country’s systematic human rights abuses. As a result, Total can be argued to play a major role in reinforcing the junta’s power, despite pressure for reform from the United States and Europe.

According to the report, the revenue from the Yadana pipeline project has not been invested in the country’s infrastructure, but deposited by the Burmese regime in two offshore banks in Singapore. Meanwhile, the people of Burma suffer some of the worst standards of living in Asia, with negligible state investment in healthcare or education.

The report’s main author, Matthew Smith, has said: “The military elite are hiding billions of dollars of the people’s revenue in Singapore while the country needlessly suffers under the lowest social spending in Asia…The revenue from this pipeline is the regime’s lifeline and a critical leverage point that the international community could use to support the people of Burma.”

Read the Earthrights International reports here

Read the full Independent article here.

Aung San Suu Kyi verdict expected soon

As reported by the BBC, a verdict is expected soon on the trial of Burma’s pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Jailed pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi

Jailed pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi

A BBC correspondent in Burma spoke to people about their hopes and fears for Aung San Suu Kyi. In Burma’s second city, Mandalay, the streets are full of bicycles at rush hour as men and women head to their places of work and study. But behind the picture-postcard setting of palaces and stupas [temples], is a country where people can be arrested for telling a joke or having a photograph of jailed pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Behind closed doors, in the security of their homes and among those they can trust, people hand out pictures of Ms Suu Kyi. To be caught by police with her photograph is cause enough to be imprisoned. To be caught talking to a foreign journalist means risking a sentence to a term in one of Burma’s many jails. But people are angry and want the world to know of their plight and their reverence for the woman referred to as The Lady.

In the words of one Mandalay citizen: “People love Aung San Suu Kyi. People believe Aung San Suu Kyi. She’s our only hope…We love her. She is the hope of the people. If she was jailed the people will be angry. And this could be the small spark that can burn down the palace”.

With elections due next year, many believe that her arrest is a convenient way for the generals to keep the one person they fear out of the way.

Read the full BBC article here.

For more information about Aung San Suu Kyi visit The Burma Campaign UK.

Burmese Hell-Holes

A former political prisoner demonstrates regulation positions he was forced to adopt in prison. Some are equivalent to torture. Photo: Nic Dunlop / Panos Pictures

Dinyar Godrej of New Internationalist on the trials endured by political prisoners in Burma – and their continuing courage.

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi has moved from being held captive in her own home to incarceration in Burma’s most notorious prison (Rangoon’s Insein prison). Her ‘offence’ was receiving an unexpected visitor who evaded security and thus endangered her. Media attention has returned to Burma as it periodically does whenever there is an ‘incident’. One does not know what the kangaroo court assembled within the prison to try her will decide, but one can only hope that it will be a return to home imprisonment rather than time in the hellhole prisons the regime likes to portray as models of efficiency where prisoners undergo rehabilitation and moral uplift. To hope for a better outcome is the luxury of dreaming.

Political prisoners in Burma get the worst treatment in the jails and upon their release often find their friends too frightened to renew their acquaintance. Currently there are an estimated 2,155 political prisoners in Burma and they languish without much attention from the outside world.

When I was preparing the Burma Burma edition of New Internationalist last year, I interviewed several political prisoners among the exile Burmese community. One of them was Bo Kyi, one of the founders of the Thailand-based Assistance Association for Political Prisoners. Here is an extract from the article I wrote:

‘I salute those democracy activists who are in prison,’ say Bo Kyi, ‘those who still continue inside Burma. It is incredible, they know they will be arrested, they know they will be tortured, but they still carry on. It means we have no other way, we have to support them. If you have respect for democracy or human rights.’

That sense of compulsion has got to be what drives political activists in a country where mere disagreement with the authorities is viewed as treason. Activists like Min Ko Naing, the chair of the banned All Burma Federation of Student Unions, who spent nearly 16 years in solitary confinement. This meant sleeping on concrete floors with no bedding and receiving starvation rations (mainly gluey rice). Excrement piles up in a corner on the cell floor or, if the prisoner is lucky, in a small pot. Maggots abound. Punishment iron shackles must be worn. These weigh nearly six kilos and have a bar that keeps the feet permanently astride.

It was from such conditions that Min Ko Naing refused an offer made by a US State Department official to relocate to America. Upon his release he took up political activity again, for which further incarceration followed. In another brief period on the outside (release can scarcely be called freedom in Burma), he became one of the guiding spirits of the demonstrations in August 2007. He is back behind bars.

Little wonder that Bo Kyi feels indebted to such stalwarts. We meet in the dusty and, to all appearances, sleepy border town of Mae Sot in Thailand, where Bo Kyi and other former Burmese political prisoners started the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP).

Bo Kyi is soft-spoken, composed, diligent in putting down markers of date and place, careful that the right details are provided – it’s a manner, instantly recognizable by journalists, common to many people who have suffered the worst that human depravity can throw at them. It could be mistaken for emotional numbness, but how else to recount horror without reliving it?

Bo Kyi spent two spells in prison totaling seven years and three months, beginning in March 1990, for student union activity, organizing demonstrations and refusing to become an informer for Military Intelligence (MI).

‘As soon as I was arrested I was taken to the interrogation centre. During the interrogation, for the first 36 hours I was not allowed to eat or drink. They asked questions. One group came in and asked questions very softly. Another group came, they asked questions with violent means – beating, kicking. They didn’t allow me to rest. For four days I was blindfolded and didn’t see daylight.’ Hooding is a common torture tool, depriving the prisoner of visual information of what might be coming next.

‘After 36 hours they provided a very small cup of water in the morning, then in the evening another small cup. After four days I was very thirsty, but when I asked for water they said no. When I was allowed to go to the toilet, I drank water out of the lavatory. They created such situations intentionally – forcing me to drink for my survival. During those four days I was forced to stand. If I fell down they’d pull me like this [demonstrates being yanked up by the temples]. When, after eight days, I was told I would be sent to Insein prison, I was really happy, because I thought prison must be better than the interrogation centre.’

However, the harsh conditions of Burmese prisons easily qualify as torture. In a notorious incident, pigs were beaten outside Insein prison to drown out the cries of prisoners being beaten within.

‘I was placed in a tiny cell – 9 by 12 feet. I had to stay in it for 23 hours and 40 minutes, with only 20 minutes to go outside for bathing [water for which is limited to a few cupfuls].

‘One year later I was mixed with criminal prisoners, some of whom didn’t respect us political prisoners. It was part of the divide-and-rule policy of the prison authorities. Prison warders want to get higher so they can make more money for their own survival. I was under constant surveillance because prison authorities have to report to Military Intelligence.

‘During my second term the prison authorities accused me of trying to organize a demonstration in prison. Really I had no intention, but they accused me and asked me questions, beating all the time. I was beaten at least 200 times until I lost consciousness. Then I was shackled and forced to sleep on a concrete floor. For two weeks I was beaten every day. I could not sleep on my back [due to injuries], I had to sleep lying face down. Another time I was punished because they had found 500 kyats [currently worth 45 cents] and a piece of paper in my room. Money and writing paper are forbidden in prison. ‘Insein prison has a population of 10,000; its capacity is 4,000. Prisoners have to sleep, one behind another on their sides. The weather is hot – how can you sleep?’ Infested by mosquitoes, malaria stalks the wards. Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, diarrhoeal and skin diseases are common.

‘There are no preventive measures or medicines. Because of complaints, prison doctors use disposable syringes for political prisoners. But we have to buy them ourselves, otherwise, no way. As for criminal prisoners, they just use the same syringe over and over. If you want to see the medic your family have to pay a bribe. If you want proper treatment, it will take another bribe. If your family is poor there is a 70-per-cent chance you will die in prison.’

Read the full article here.

Ban Ki Moon to visit to Burma

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The Burma Campaign UK today welcomed news that UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon is finally going to visit Burma again, but called for concrete results, not just more talks about talks. Ban Ki Moon is expected to visit Burma on the 3rd and 4th of July.

“We have had 20 years of UN envoys going back and forth to Burma and nothing to show for it,” said Zoya Phan, International Coordinator of Burma Campaign UK. “We need Ban Ki Moon to personally take the lead, but he must deliver practical results, such as the release of all political prisoners. Talking to the generals is a means to an end, but so far the UN seems to treat talks alone as a success. Ban Ki Moon must deliver the strongest possible message to Than Shwe that they can no longer defy the Security Council.”

There have been 40 UN envoy visits to Burma, including 8 by Ibrahim Gambari, who visited over the weekend. Since Ibrahim Gambari took over as envoy in 2006 there has been a dramatic escalation in human rights abuses, a doubling of the number of political prisoners, and the regime has defied the United Nations by pushing ahead with its so called roadmap to democracy, rather than entering into tri-partite dialogue as demanded by the UN.

Click here to petition the UN Secretary-General on political prisoners.

Click here to visit the Burma Campaigns website and learn more about human right in Burma.

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