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

TAKE ACTION: Sign the petitionto free the Burma VJ prisoners

Monthly Archive for July, 2009

Bid For a Signed Poster

Richard Gere was kind enough to sign a mounted poster of Burma VJ that we are auctioning on behalf of the DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma).

The DVB is a non-profit media organization based in Oslo, Norway. Run by Burmese expatriates, it makes radio and television broadcasts aimed at providing uncensored news and information about Burma, the country’s military regime, and its political opposition. The DVB played a pivotal roll in the production of Burma VJ and all the money rasied from the sale of the signed poster will go directly to the DVB.

You can bid for a Burma VJ movie poster, signed by Richard Gere by emailing
poster@burmavjmovie.com
. Only the highest bid wins, entries close midday, Wednesday 22nd July.

We will contact the person with the highest bid to arrange for delivery and payment.

Images from the Premiere

Dame Vivienne Westwood introduces the film.

The Burmese Monks with L-R Barry Clavin, Clare Ebrey, and Paul Monaghan of The Co-operative.

The Burmese Monks with Anna Godas and Andy WHittaker of Dogwoof.

The Saffron Premiere

On 14th July at 8:30pm, the nationwide Saffron Premiere of Burma VJ took place.

Packed cinemas in 40 locations all across the country were satellite-linked LIVE to BAFTA in London. Things kicked off with an introduction from Paul Monaghan (Head of Social Goals at The Co-operative) ,who then, to the delight of the audience, handed over to Dame Vivienne Westwood.

Having welcomed everyone and having given an impassioned plea for harmony and understanding, Dame Vivienne gave way on the stage to five Burmese monks who pronounced a chant to bless the screening and it was time for the film.

After the film a special message was broadcast from Richard Gere, thanking everyone for attending, and thanking the filmmakers for the brave piece of cinema just witnessed.

You can bid for a Burma VJ movie poster, signed by Richard Gere by emailing

poster@burmavjmovie.com. Only the highest bid wins, entries close midday, Wednesday 22nd July.

The evening finished with a Q&A comprising of Paul Monaghan, Anders Ostergaard (Director of Burma VJ), Joshua (Burmese Video Journalist for Democratic Voice of Burma) and Mark Farmaner (Director of The Burma Campaign UK). As well as fielding questions from the audience at BAFTA, a selection of great questions were picked from close to a hundred texts that came in from around the country and put to the panel – check back here to see all these being posted online in the next few days.

The historic satellite premiere was made possible by the thousands of people around the country who turned out to support the film. Check back here for videos from the night and more pictures.

A message from Tipping Point film fund

As the Burma VJ Saffron Premiere draws closer, the new non-profit co-operative film fund Tipping Point leaves a message of support.

When people put their lives on the line to take up arms through video cameras to expose the brutality of a regime such as that in Burma, we who are not living under such conditions have a duty to show our support with those who are taking these immense risks - and we must speak up. We want to wish Burma VJ, the Saffron Premiere and all the ongoing campaign outreach every success in contributing to the downfall of an odious regime. The power of people and film is something we profoundly believe - and we should honour those whose pictures give us the ammunition with which to fight for change.

Tipping Point is an innovative new fund supporting the development, production and distribution of challenging, truth-telling films. To find out more and get involved visit www.tippingpointfilmfund.com.

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.

Richard Gere backs Burma VJ!!

Golden-Globe winning actor and humanitarian Richard Gere has announced his support for Burma VJ and the Free the VJs campaign.

On seeing Burma VJ, Gere commented: “It is desperately important that people see this film and get involved in the movement to help Burma and Aung San Suu Kyi.”

“I was incredibly moved on many different levels by what the filmmakers achieved. The conviction and urgency that Burma VJ conveys is very difficult to communicate on film in an honest way.”

Watch Richard Gere’s video message here.

The annoucement of support comes as the Burma VJ campaign gathers pace, with only four days left until the nationwide ‘Saffron Premiere.’ Visit www.burmavjmovie.com/watchthefilm for tickets.

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.

If I went back to Burma I would be arrested and in prison forever

What’s it like to be the daughter of a Burmese human rights campaigner? Introducing our third guest blogger, Wai Hnin Pwint Thon, a Burmese refugee living in the UK

My name is Wai Hnin Pwint Thon and I am a refugee from Burma. I left my country in 2006 to carry on my studying for my future. In Burma, I passed my high school exams in 2005 with good marks and hoped to go to university. I applied to study International Relations but the regime wouldn’t allow me to study the course, because my father campaigns for human rights and democracy in my country. After they rejected my application I decided to come to the United Kingdom so that I could study.

My father¹s name is Mya Aye and he is one of the leaders of 88 generation-students group and one of the political prisoners in Burma who are serving the 65 year sentences. My father believes in human rights and freedom and he believes that every single person in the world deserves these. The 88 generation-students group is not a political party but a democracy movement of the people who were active in 1988 uprising.

My father was arrested in 1989 for the first time when I was only 5 months old. He was sentenced for 8 years imprisonment for his role as a student leader in 1988 uprising. At that time I was too young to remember who my father was and my mother showed me his photograph and taught me to call him ‘Daddy’. My mother also explained to me that he lived in a separate place not far from our home, I always wondered why he never came to visit us.

Wai Hnin Pwint Thon

Wai Hnin Pwint Thon

On my fourth birthday, my mother said we would go and meet with my father. I imagined that we would meet in a park or some place very nice. However, when I arrived to the entrance of the notorious Insein Prison, I was so surprised. The black door and iron bars in Insein Prison were totally different from my imagination. My meeting with my father was not beautiful as I expected. There were iron bars between us. I was so sad because I did not have a chance to hug my father and I could only touch my father’s fingers through iron bars.

In 1996, my father was released from prison when I was eight years old. My father carried on campaigning for freedom and democracy for the people of Burma. Every night when he was released two military intelligence officers came to our house to talk with my father. All the time I was scared that he would be taken again by the military intelligence because of his campaigning for freedom.

When I received the rejection letter from the university for my education, I felt there was no future for me in Burma. I want to be a successful and educated woman in my life. So I decided to come abroad and study. I had to make many sacrifices to leave Burma because I knew that if I left my country I may never see my father again. I came to UK and carried on my studies. When I arrived here, I met a lot of Burmese refugees and I began telling them news from my father and his friends’ activities in Burma. Being in the UK I realized how precious having freedom and human rights is and it made me want freedom and human rights in my country, Burma. So I decided to participate in the democracy movements in the UK. I found the media groups like the BBC wanted to speak to me and find out the news from inside Burma.

My activities in London caused trouble in Burma. One day the military intelligence officers came to my family’s house in Burma and took my father away to question him about what I had been doing in London. After that my father and I realised that if I went back to Burma, I would be arrested and locked up in prison forever.

I was very sad but I realised I could not go back to Burma. I was forced to apply for asylum so that I could stay in the UK and be safe. All I wanted to do was to go home to meet my family ­ but it isn’t safe anymore just because I spoke to the media in London.

In August 2007, my father and his friends of 88 generation groups marched down on the streets because of the extreme increases in fuel prices. He and his friend were detained for more than one year and sentenced for 65 years and six months imprisonment in November, 2008.

My father was sent to Loi Kaw prison which is more than 500 miles away from his home town, Rangoon. At the moment, he is very ill and suffering from heart disease and there is no doctor in prison to take care of his health. I am very scared and worry that I will never see my father again in my life. However, I have to keep myself very strong to carry on my studying and fight for freedom and democracy for the people of Burma. My father wants to see me as an educated and successful woman. So I have to try to fulfill my father wish even though I am very worried about the desperate situation for my family.

I have joined the Burma Campaign UK and campaign for human rights, democracy and freedom in Burma. I am going to University in September to study Politics and Business and I will try my very best to help fulfill my father’s dream of a free Burma.

Wai Hnin Pwint Thon is now working for the Burma Campaignm. For more information, and to donate, click here.

Early Reviews & Protest Footage

The reviews are starting to come through and they’re looking very positive.

Empire has given Burma VJ a FIVE star review calling the film “Compelling and, for anyone who values truth, essential”. You can read the full review here.

Also, Total Film gave Burma VJ four stars, saying it is “unforgettable and powerful”. You can read the full review from Total film here.

To see the other reviews as and when they come out and to discuss them, please join our facebook fan site and join the discussion here.

In addition to the reviews of the film we have some excellent footage to share today, shot at a demonstration to mark the 64th birthday of Aung San Suu Kyi, Friday 19th June, 2009, London, UK. On Sunday, 5th July, Aung San Suu Kyi marked another landmark, her 5,000th day in captivity. The world’s most famous political prisoner was remembered on June 19th and July 5th by millions worldwide.

Burma demo from richard freeman on Vimeo.

The UN and Burma

As reported by the BBC, the UN Secretary General has held talks with the Burmese military junta in the remote administrative capital Nay Pyi Yaw. The Secretary-General, Ban Ki Moon, has described the talks as ‘a very frank and extensive exchange of view’ and included assurances from General Than Shwe that the planned 2010 election would be ‘held in a fair, free and transparent manner’.

The visit represents Mr Ban’s first visit to Burma since he persuaded the junta in May 2008 to accept international aid in the wake of Cyclone Nargis. While some critics indicate there is little sign that the UN is capable of securing further concessions from the regime, others speculate that The Secretary-General may have been given an indication that his visit may produce some positive results.

Mr Ban has to date been unable to secure access to Aung San Suu Kyi, the Burmese opposition leader currently qho is currently imprisoned under charges of breaking the terms of her house arrest. Her trial is due to resume on Friday 10th July.

The Secretary General’s visit to Burma is welcomed, however, the UN must continue to apply pressure of the ruling regime, and Burma must stay firmly on the UN’s agenda.

Burma VJ tells the story of the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) and their role in the battle for a free and democratic Burma. The DVB and individual activists in this film took a great personal risk to get this story out to the world – as a result of this project, a number of them are currently incarcerated. We’re asking everyone who sees the filn to write to the UN to call for their release - and the release of all political prisoners in Burma. Add your voice: sign the petition now.

Si Thu Maung - one of the Burma VJ political prisoners

Si Thu Maung - one of the Burma VJ political prisoners

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