More MMC members arrested in Maungdaw

More MMC members arrested in Maungdaw

Thursday, 03 April 2008

Maungdaw, Arakan State: The crackdown on Myanmar Muslim Council (MMC) members continued in Maungdaw Township. Yesterday night the authorities picked up township level members. Earlier district level members were arrested.
The arrested were identified as Dr. Kamal, Doctor Zahirb, a dentist hailing from Ba Gone Nah village, Nur Khobir, the younger brother of late master Md. Yunus, Haji Shamshu, former Village Peace and Development Council (VPDC) chairman and Baha Du from Nafati Dil in Maungdaw Township, according to an aide of police under Maungdaw town.

The Maungdaw police raided their homes last night and arrested them. The detained are Township level MMC members. Earlier, on March 30, 10 members of the district level MMC were arrested. They were picked up while they were attending a meeting in their office.

The arrested are now in police custody and are being summoned to the Military Intelligence (Sarapa) office to be interrogated.

Those arrested last Sunday (on March 30) were alleged to be in cahoots with insurgent groups in exile. Cases were filed cases against them under Act 17(2). The police asked for 10 days remand for the arrested for further investigations, said a town dweller on condition of anonymity.

It was learnt that since the arrests other MMC leaders in Maungdaw Township have gone into hiding.

Link: Original Source

Published in:  on April 28, 2008 at 3:06 pm Leave a Comment

A Release Against the Decision of PM on Rohingyas in Thailand

A Release Against the Decision of PM on Rohingyas in Thailand
Friday, 04 April 2008
Date: April 04, 2008 Ref: : 06-2008/PM/TH

On behalf of entire Rohingya community, we, the members of the Free Rohingya Campaign (FRC), would like to express our disappointment with the decision of the Government of Thailand to send the stranded Rohingya refugees to an isolated island. This decision is inhumane and a clear violation of human rights. It violates several UN and International laws, especially the 1967 Protocol of the Geneva Convention, regarding Statelessness.

The Rohingyas in Burma have been rendered stateless after being denied their citizen rights since 1982. They are under the threat of extinction through a systematic genocidal campaign of the brutal Burmese junta. They are indeed the most oppressed people on earth. This fact has been documented and corroborated by several international agencies, including the NGOs operating in the region.

It is the Burmese regime’s atrocity and inhuman treatment of the Rohingya Muslims that has been the Raison d’être for their forced eviction and refugee status in countries like Thailand. We are simply horrified to notice the Thai Government’s utter indifference to the plight of our people. We are sorry to state that the decision of the Thai Government mimics its hostile and hateful attitude towards its own Muslim minority who face daily persecution and religious oppression.

We call upon the Thai Government to stop this forced encampment of the Rohingya refugees immediately.

We would like to call upon the Arab League and the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC), and all member nations of the OIC to stop the Government of Thailand from forced encampment of the Rohingya Refugees in an isolated island that would kill them.We would also like to point-out that the restriction of movement against the Burmese Refugees in Thailand, Malaysia, Bangladesh, and other countries is in itself a crime that hinders their survival as human beings. We also call upon the UN human right bodies to take meaningful steps toward stopping the forced exodus of Burmese people in future. And we urge the international community to do everything that is within its power to stop such encampment of Rohingya refugees. It should also raise concerns about economic and political ties of the Thai and Chinese governments with the Burmese regime.

We call upon the UNSC to continue Burma’s Agenda in her next session as a serious issue and to support the demand for an arms embargo against the brutal regime.

Finally, we would like to request all democracy-loving countries to limit their business transactions with counties like Thailand, India, China and Russia that provide the lifeline to the brutal Burmese junta, through their economic bilateral ties.

Thanking you in anticipation.

With best regards,

Ko Ko Linn

(On Behalf of Central Executive Body)

Free Rohingya Campaign (FRC)

Headquarters (New York, United States of America)

Tel: 1-(646)-821-1475

Fax: 1-(347)-561-9901

E-mail: info@freerohingyacampaign.orgThis email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Website: http://www.freerohingyacampaign.org

Copy to: Prime Minister’s Office

United Nation Representative of Thailand (New York, U.S.A)

Thai Ambassador’s Office, Washington, USA

US Ambassador’s Office, Bangkok, Kingdom of Thailand

National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma (NCGUB)

All Burma Students’ Democratic Front (ABSDF) Headquarters

Euro – Burma Office

US Campaign for Burma

Amnesty International

Human Right Watch

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Headquarters

The Office of International Red Cross and Red Crescent (Headquarters)

HRE Grassroots Human Rights Education and Development Committee (Thailand)

Water crisis and rape (Refugee Camp)

KPN News

Teknaf, Bangladesh: Rohingya undocumented refugees living in Dum Dum Meah (Tal) perpetually face water shortage with the onset of summer in Bangladesh. The refugees meet their need for water from near the camp. Most women refugees fetch water for their house hold work.

In such a situation, some local people who live near the camp and others loading and unloading goods from trucks at land port, take advantage of Rohingya women refugees who fetch water from near the camp in the mountainous area, said a refugee Majee called Hussain.

On the morning of April 17, Mamonah (not real name) (18), mother of one child, went to fetch water from the stream near Teknaf Land port area with Du Du Meah (60), a boy named Kamal (10) and a young girl named Halema (9) at about 8 am, said Mamonah. When the refugees entered the stream, two local truck staff followed them and when they reached the stream, the two asked them not to move threatening them with a wooden tall stick. One of the men suddenly attacked Mamonah and forcibly took her away from the group and entered a bush, said Du Du Meah.

Mamonah screamed for help. The old man was unable to rescue her as he was being threatened. The man raped Mamonah in front of the three refugees. The young boy started running and screaming for help. He ran towards the land port where some refugees were working as daily wage laborers. They rushed to the spot and caught the rapist and handed him over to the guards of the land port, he added.

The land port’s guards are Para military staff called Ansars who tried to mediate by offering 500 Taka for the incident. But, the victim and other refugees demanded punishment and that the rapist be handed over to the concerned authorities. The guards went against the refugees and detained three of them in their guard box for two hours, said a refugee who was arrested. The guards took some bribe from the truck’s staff and released the rapist. The victim and other refugees went to the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) near the land port and reported the incident.

The officer-in-charge called the Ansars of the land port. The Ansars said they knew nobody that the refugees were referring to. After that the officer told the refugees to inform the office when they find out the staff of the truck, said Husson Majee from refugee camp. The truck belongs to Bismillah Rice Mill Ltd. and the truck’s staff is Aziz. T

he number of the truck is 11-100-59 (it is a Three Star truck), according to the truck association. “If the RAB pressurize the guards of the land port it will be easy to find the rapist,” said a refugee who works in the land port. In the last week of March, a young refugee girl called Sara (11) (not real name) went along with some other refugees to fetch water from near the Teknaf land port and was attacked by some local youths tried to drag her away from the group with the intention of rape. She screamed for help, so that Refugees who work as daily wage earners in the land port rush to the spot and rescued the young girl, said the father of victim. “If we fetch water from near our camp this will keep happening to us,” said a woman refugee called Banu. ##

Burma’s Stateless Minority Under the Tip of Globalization’s Spear

Burma’s Stateless Minority Under the Tip of Globalization’s Spear
Sunday, 27 April 2008
Derek Flood:

A column of frail women and children in brilliant cotton tunics deftly balance aluminum jars atop their heads as they trundle down a steep, eroded jungle hillside. They are spending most of their day in search of the area’s most valuable commodity, clean drinking water. After hours of searching, what they most often find are muddy, stagnant pools. These are the Rohingya, a people you have never heard of, striving to subsist in a place you’ll never visit, inhabiting a violent landscape of crisis completely devoid of human rights.

The most common image of the plight of human migration portrayed in cooperate media these days is what’s known as “South to North”: Guatemalans passing themselves off as Mexicans trying to enter California’s vast produce engine or Cameroonians traversing thousands of miles up the African continent to look for work in a Parisian suburb are but a few odd examples that come to mind. However there is another scenario that is far off the radar of Lou Dobbs and his ilk who appear to advocate blatant xenophobia as part of a Pavlovian response to their own fears and misconceptions about the pace of an increasingly integrated global economy.

Referred to as “South to South” migration in think tank parlance, these massive underground movements are an example of the complex patterns of today’s transnational human exodus across political and cultural boundaries. South to South migration is an economic indicator writ large conveying the severity of poverty (and often state repression) of people struggling to earn $2 a day in the “Global South.” This ambiguous term, which may be new to some, is what we used to refer to as the “Third World” during the Cold War. These human movements and refugee outflows are only likely to increase in the 21st century across this vast region. This Darwinian competition strains the world’s economic and human resources in parity with the ascendancy of these pragmatic Asian market states. With particular reference to the Republic of India and the People’s Republic of China, these furiously accelerating economies are further less inclined to institute a faintly moral foreign policy in light of the wishes of their leadership and the needs of their respective billion-plus populations. Rather than promoting liberty and idealism as the triumph of human desire, the search for natural gas fields and connectivity of deep-sea ports are a core strategic component in the rise of these mega states.

In ten years of travel and reportage at civilization’s fraying and violent crossroads, I’ve witnessed an array of struggles of people burning in the smoldering embers of post-World War II decolonization and the last great upheavals of the post-Berlin Wall paradigm shift. From meeting depressed Iraqi refugees living in a dark hotel in coastal Syria, to nowhere Palestinians in brick and mortar “camps” in South Lebanon, I have never personally encountered a situation as dire and a people as desperate as I have on a recent expedition to the far south of Bangladesh. There, near the country’s last settled town of Teknaf, I went to meet a stateless minority from western Burma called the Rohingya. With the advice of people from the United Nations’s High Commissioner for Refugees and Doctors Without Borders, I ventured into a squalid, ad hoc settlement along the Naf river. The Naf is not only a political boundary between Bangladesh and Burma (though the name Myanmar is the preferred nom of the country’s military dictatorship), but it is also a civilizational boundary between Muslim and Hindu South Asia and Buddhist Southeast Asia. This miserable aggregation is known locally as the “makeshift camp” indicating that it survives outside the recognized protection of the U.N. The refugees who “live” there remain in permanent legal limbo. The U.N. is severely limited by an understanding with the government of Bangladesh on specifically who and just how many Burmese it is allowed to help. The U.N.’s writ here is tenuous at best since Bangladesh has refused to acquiesce to the 1951 Convention on the Refugee (when it was then Pakistan’s deprived, untenable eastern wing) and its subsequent 1967 protocol. In other words, from Dhaka’s perspective, the world should be satisfied by the fact that a portion of refugees are being helped at all since Bangladesh is under no international or legal mandate to do so.

The Rohnigya are a Muslim people originating in Arakan state on Burma’s west coast. Arakan has since been renamed Rakhine State by the junta in favor of the ethnic Rakhine Buddhist majority. Since Burma’s independence from the British Crown in 1948, the Rohingya have been persecuted by the central government in several violent fits over the last six decades. The essence of the dispute, for lack of a better term, being that the junta does not consider the Rohingya to actually be Burmese citizens in large part because the are Muslim and it is therefore well justified in using ethnic cleansing to force them off of their farms and out of their villages in Rakhine State. This push factor throws the vulnerable Rohingya into neighboring Bangladesh and as far west as southern Pakistan (which we will visit in Part Two of this piece). Although Bangladesh is a majority Muslim republic to which the refugees feel a large degree of cultural, linguistic and religious affinity, they are hardly welcome there. The Rohingya refugees surviving in this dreadful camp are considered by the Bangladeshi authorities to be “illegal economic migrants” according to Shannon Lee, a Doctors Without Borders officer operating a therapeutic nursing center for under and malnourished children near the camp’s roadside entrance.

A refugee collects unclean water for drinking and cooking

Upon visiting the Teknaf area camp, I was forced to ask myself if this utter wretchedness was even remotely acceptable under international legal and moral norms? The scene was more evocative of a Nicholas Kristof column on alleged genocide in sub-Saharan Africa than of 21st century South Asia. I thought to myself, somewhat cynically, that at least the Darfuris have George Clooney and Samantha Power. The Rohingya have no one, own nothing and have been stripped of everything, even their history. Naked children waddling around with distended bellies and emaciated elders stooping in their fetid huts without even the stamina to beg confound the odd visitor. This scene looked more out of a late night cable Christian infomercial than laying on the periphery of this century’s most highly touted, emerging global powers; China and India. It is therein I believe lay the issue of why there is a devastating dearth of political leverage on this urgent issue. While technocrats in “Incredible India” can attempt to dress up their strategy in Burma as constructive engagement, the Politburo in Beijing cannot be bothered to waste time on such euphemisms. In fact, it is precisely a reaction from within the Asian economic theater that India has abandoned its 60’s era ideologically driven foreign policy in favor of Kissengerian realpolitik to compete with the Chinese in the regional buffer states of Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and most disturbingly, Burma.

Refugee children wait to have their ID photos taken by the NGO

Last year, India’s activist Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee indicated that India would be willing to supply fresh arms and military-related spare parts to the Burmese regime in order to help its military flush out ethnic Naga and Assamese rebels from its territory back into India’s insurgency-wracked states of Nagaland and Assam along the Indo-Burmese frontier. India has a multitude of festering rebellions in its isolated Northeast that date back to the country’s painful birth in 1947. The calculatingly severe junta in Burma, forever playing the victim, says it is perfectly willing to coordinate on defense with the Indians so long as India agrees to assist them in updating their aging Cold War arsenal. The fact that China has been Burma’s principal military supplier over the years does not sit well with New Delhi as India looks to assert itself and increase cooperation in the region.

A family poses for a photo for NGO identification cards. The cards are being made in order to shift them to the new camp.

Part of India’s realpolitik outlook, known domestically as its “Look East” policy, is to have totally dropped the public support it once maintained for Aung San Suu Kyi, the junta’s Nobel Prize winning hostage. Sitting in the heat and pain of the makeshift camp, a Rohingya elder employed by a British NGO named Abdul Jabbar explained to me that his people had made an alliance with prime minister-elect Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy in the ill fated elections of 1990. Following the junta’s decision to nullify the democratic process in the country, the generals began to systematically crackdown on those who had supported the League. Aung San Suu Kyi’s party was meant to be a multi-religious and multi-ethnic umbrella organization (at least in theory) where the Rohingya would have been participants. For the cruel, late General Saw Maung and his successor Than Shwe, a massive, vengeful collective punishment was the order of the day for Burma’s Muslims. In the early 1990s, hundreds of thousands of them fled to riverine environments in Bangladesh’s deep south.

A sick Rohingya child stands unattended by the roadside

The junta, in the then capital of Rangoon, insisted that the Rohingya minority were not historically Burmese nationals and had no right to dare assert their political or sub-national identity. Bangladesh, a perpetually poor and deeply corrupt state, claimed it had neither the means nor the goodwill to house and assist the Rohingya refugees seeking shelter. The generals in Burma insist that the Rohingya are in fact historically Bangladeshis who migrated to what is now Burma beginning in the early 1800’s at the onset of British colonial rule in Rangoon. The general’s solution to the Rohingya “problem” is blunt state repression interspersed with occasional ethnic cleansing. As for the refugees status in Bangladesh, authorities in Dhaka insists that the refugees are Burmese nationals who must eventually be repatriated to Burma lest their bothersome presence encourage further migration. The great irony of all this, as anyone familiar with the region might surmise, is that no one seems to be pushing out more migrants than Bangladesh itself. Bangladesh is the world’s most densely populous nation of any size and pushes untold numbers of genuine economic migrants north and west into neighboring India (as well as across the entire rest of the world). For the central government in Dhaka to label the Rohingya, who are legitimate refugees, as illegal economic migrants is the quintessence of hypocrisy in this age of hyper politicized globalization.

An overview of the dense refugee camp amid a mangrove swamp

Trudging through the overwhelming stench of human waste and the eyes of hunger, I came upon a significant light of hope. While the camp is in the process of being taken over by a British NGO, a new, and in relative terms, state of the art refugee camp is being constructed up the road with humanitarian aid funding from the European Union. After a few days of wading through this squalor, it was incredibly heartening to see the new camp being constructed at breakneck pace with many of the laborers being refugees themselves. According to Engineer Bashar, who is in charge of the camp’s day-to-day construction operation for Islamic Relief UK, he is able to employ between 60-75% refugees of the approximately 1,000 workers under his charge. This not only brings in desperately needed income for refugee families, but also adds a sense of self worth for people who have lost everything to a regime that heeds not even the most fundamental cries of human dignity. It is not a circumstance devoid of hope, however much, much more progress is needed to shore up the Rohingya’s most basic human rights and long term food security.

Ultimately, we must ask ourselves the following: television host Charlie Rose has referred to this period in which we are now living as the dawn of an “Asian Century” while interviewing leading global economists and politicos from these aspiring superpowers. Here on the frontier of Bangladesh and Burma, two of Asia’s poorest nations, the Rohingya, an obscure and stateless people, suffer in silence at the hands of the military government in Burma’s Orwellian new capital of Naypyidaw, , while the leaders of Bangladesh’s feeble caretaker regime have themselves been less than sympathetic. As India and China are interested in resuscitating decrepit colonial era ports and WWII era transport routes in these weak states in the name of securing resources for their respective domestic economic progress, the Rohingya are literally being crushed to death. In the darkest shadows of dawn in this Asian century, there are children starving.

Link: Orignial Source , Free Rohingya campaign

Pakistan’s Black Revolution
Apr 27th, 2008

_ by Anne-Marie Slaughter

[Anne-Marie Slaughter, the dean of Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School and author of The Idea that is America, is currently on a year-long sabbatical in Shanghai.]

SHANGHAI — Immediately after taking office last month, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani ordered the release of the 60 judges who had been detained by President Pervez Musharraf since November. This is a triumph for the rule of law in Pakistan, and above all a triumph for the brave Pakistani lawyers who took to the streets to protest Musharraf’s imposition of a state of emergency last autumn.

The lawyers marched, sang, danced, and exchanged their briefcases for signs and, occasionally, eggs and stones. As one Pakistani blogger wrote, “They danced in black coats and they danced in black ties. Their black coats their Kalashnikovs and their black ties their bullets.” In a world of color revolutions, Pakistan’s was clothed in the sober hues of the law.

Last November, Musharraf effectively declared war on both the bar and the judiciary, dismissing all judges who refused to recognize his declaration of a state of emergency, purportedly aimed at protecting the nation from terrorists. The seven-member Supreme Court, headed by Chief Justice Iftikar Mohammad Chaudhry, countered by issuing an order barring the government from proclaiming emergency rule.

Musharraf dissolved the Supreme Court and the four High Courts, put Chaudhry and his entire family under house arrest, sealed the Supreme Court premises under army guard, and proceeded to arrest and detain all judges who refused to swear allegiance to the Provisional Constitutional Order upholding the state of emergency. The result was the detention of most of the senior judiciary, as well as bar association presidents across the country and all leading lawyers and human rights activists seeking to defend judicial independence.

In the ensuing protests, lawyers were routinely beaten, gassed, brutalized, and humiliated. They stood with and for their judges, making it virtually impossible for judges willing to take Musharraf’s oath of allegiance to operate. The lawyer’s movement, it seems, drove a historic wedge between the judiciary and the executive.

Yet in Pakistan, the United States, and other countries where lawyers have helped to lead fights for human rights and the rule of law, lofty ideals cloak an equally important set of interests. The Pakistani lawyers were safeguarding their livelihoods as much as their principles. Lawyers cannot practice without judges to hear their cases. And clients will not bring those cases unless they believe that the judges are independent enough to decide cases on the merits, rather than on the basis of bribes or political considerations.

These interests also help explain why Kenya’s lawyers were at the forefront of protests against the corruption of President Daniel Arap Moi’s regime in the early 1990’s, but much less visible in the eruption of tribal violence this past year. Corruption corrodes the possibility of making a living through the law, which becomes a preserve of the rich. By contrast, in crises fueled by ethnic conflict, lawyers’ interests are not so clear.

Noting the convergence between ideals and interests does not in any way demean the Pakistani lawyers’ courage and the importance of their protests. America’s founders, for instance, fully understood that the two must go hand in hand. Their design for constitutional democracy ensured, in James Madison’s words, that ambition would counter ambition and “the interests of the man” would be “connected to the constitutional rights of the place.”

The best foundation for the rule of law is to build an island of legality wherever it is most needed to advance legitimate government goals – to stop corruption, to protect the environment, to clean up the financial system, or to enforce contracts with foreign investors. Within these limited areas, independent judges and the lawyers who can argue before them have a home.

As these islands begin to form an archipelago, a legal class emerges, supported by the clients who need them. And on the day that a judge finally crosses a political line, speaking constitutional truth to usurped power, the government’s refusal to comply threatens the interests and ideals of an articulate and motivated segment of society.

The coming weeks will reveal whether Pakistan’s new government has the courage and integrity not only to release the fired judges, but to restore them to the bench and perhaps to face their scrutiny down the road. If it does, Pakistan’s lawyers will be able to return to the courtrooms, and Pakistani citizens will have another chance to make democracy work. If they succeed, perhaps they should add a black border around the proud Islamic green of their flag – the black not of mourning, but of justice.

……………………………….

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2008.
www.project-syndicate.org

Published in:  on at 1:23 pm Leave a Comment

The War Against Iraqi Women
Apr 27th, 2008

_ by Zeina Zaatari

[Zeina Zaatari is senior program officer for the Middle East and North Africa for the Global Fund for Women.]

BAGHDAD – Iraqi women’s organizations and international observers point to an escalating war against women in Iraq, aided by the widespread chaos and lawlessness under the US occupation. In addition to violence by US troops inside and outside of prisons, women in Iraq face daily violence from militants under the guise of religion and “liberation.”

In Iraq’s second largest city, Basra, a stronghold of conservative Shia groups, as many as 133 women were killed last year for violating “Islamic teachings” and in so-called “honor killings,” according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The methods are brutal evidence of a backlash by previously subdued tribal forces that have been unleashed by the occupation: women strangled and beheaded, and their hands, arms and legs chopped off.

With US forces in Iraq now funding both Sunni and Shia tribal leaders in an effort to stabilize the country, conditions for women grow deadlier by the day. Islamist leaders have imposed new restrictions on women, including prohibitions on work, bans on travel without a muhram (male guardian), and compulsory veiling.

According to the Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq (OWFI), formed in Baghdad in 2003, women are harassed if they appear in the streets of most Iraqi cities and towns, educational institutions, or work places. Now there are even “no woman zones” in some southern cities controlled by Islamist parties and tribal leaders.

Honor killings of Iraqi women are justified by alleged promiscuity or adultery. In fact, the practice targets holders of PhD’s, professionals, political activists, and office workers. “Politically active women, those who did not follow a strict dress code, and women human rights defenders were increasingly at risk of abuse, including by armed groups and religious extremists,” Amnesty International said in its 2007 report.

Indeed, a top police official in Basra reported that as many as 15 women are killed every month in the city. Ambulance drivers in Basra, paid to “clean the streets” before people go to work, pick up many more bodies of women every morning.

Ironically, the forces leading this assault on women had little or no power under Saddam Hussein. But, following the US-led invasion in 2003, southern Iraq was opened to forces known as Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (PVPV) – militant gangs and individuals committed to archaic Islamic rule and suppression of women’s rights.

Some members of these groups now serve in government, others in militias or as self-appointed vigilantes or hired guns. The goal of the PVPV is to confine women to the domestic realm and end all female participation in public and political life.

To date, Iraqi officials have not been willing to deal with this escalating violence against women, or even to discuss it. But, as elected representatives, they are obligated to address these crimes. So must the US. Under the Fourth Geneva Convention, the responsibility for protecting civilian populations in an occupied country belongs to the occupying forces, which, in this case, are clearly failing to protect Iraqi women.

Two measures are urgently needed. First, the Iraqi government must immediately establish “Protection of Women” security patrols in Iraq’s southern cities. These patrols must receive gender-sensitive training and prioritize women’s security over tribal or fundamentalist religious values.

Second, pursuant to its obligations under the Geneva Convention, the US must immediately take steps to protect the lives and freedoms of Iraqi civilians. Unless the US does so, it must withdraw from Iraq, because the occupation would merely continue to sustain a breeding ground for violence against women.

The timetable for action is not subject to debate. It must begin today.

………………………………

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2008.
www.project-syndicate.org

Published in:  on at 1:21 pm Leave a Comment

Soft Power and Hard Batons

Soft Power and Hard Batons
Apr 27th, 2008

_ by Chris Patten

[Lord Patten is a former Governor of Hong Kong and European Commissioner for External Affairs. He is currently Chancellor of Oxford University and Co-Chair of the International Crisis Group. He is also a member of the British House of Lords.]

LONDON – We all remember one phrase from the first presidential campaign by a Clinton.
When Bill Clinton was running for the job in the early 1990’s, one of his staff explained what the central issue in the election was. “It’s the economy, stupid.” he said. Economics explains all – jobs, prices, savings, houses. It determines the public mood and sets the political agenda.
The point is reinforced by a curious glossy magazine advertisement that you might have seen recently. It is for expensive luggage. Mikhail Gorbachev sits in the back of a limousine. He is being driven past the Berlin Wall. On the seat next to him is the luxury brand, a leather attaché case. The message? Who cares about the Wall; forget politics; money rules.

Maybe that’s really how it is. Today the world wrestles with the consequences of America’s addiction to borrowing and with the greed and stupidity of many global banks. Drivers grumble at the cost of filling their cars’ gas tanks. Housewives in poor countries – and in better-off countries, too – despair at the rising cost of feeding their families. In Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America, their husbands and sons riot over food prices.

So the economy is the big story. But two others jostle for our attention. They tell us a lot about the politics of the world in a new century. It’s not only the economy that matters, after all.

First, there is Tibet, where apparently the local economy has been growing fast. This does not seem to have impressed the Tibetans. Last year, it was Burma’s Buddhist monks who were shot and beaten with batons. This year it is monks in Tibet.

The history is complicated. But I have no problem in accepting that Tibet is part of China. Many Chinese dissidents take the same view. It seems to be the Dalai Lama’s opinion as well. But can that position be sustained only through state violence?

The Dalai Lama is not a devious terrorist. China does itself no favors by remaining time-warped in the Maoist 1960’s when discussing this issue.

The Chinese have been so smart in so many areas. They devised the “one country, two systems” formula for Hong Kong. Is it really beyond the capacity of their political system to work out a formula for Tibet that recognizes its cultural and religious autonomy within the Chinese state?
I hope that this issue does not derail the Chinese effort to use the Olympics as an opportunity to show the world that their country has emerged again as one of the world’s leaders. It would make no sense at all to boycott the Games. A boycott would merely provoke nationalist hostility in China. But those who attend the Games should not be placed under any constraints about giving their views – if they have any – politely but firmly about human rights.

What has happened in China economically in the last 25 years is momentous. China has become the workshop of the world. Its success is not a threat to the rest of us. It is good news for everyone. Momentous, sure – but China is not yet a superpower. It is not a mark of a superpower’s quiet, self-confident authority to beat up Buddhist monks and attack their spiritual leader.
The other big global political story is the American presidential election. This is super-charged American soft power.

A tight contest between the two Democrats, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, has yet to be resolved. Waiting to take on the winner is a tough genuine war hero, John McCain.

The contest between Obama and Clinton, though it has produced some lamentable protectionist sentiments, has captured the world’s attention. Obama himself represents two qualities that enthuse many people, not just the young.

Obama’s success demonstrates that the United States is still the land of opportunity. If he were to win the election, imagine the impact on the world of his first speech from the podium to the United Nations General Assembly. He would be there as president of the most globalized country in the world; in a sense he would be everyone’s president.

Second, he does democratic politics a service. Like an earlier son of Illinois, Adlai Stevenson, he believes that the average man and woman are a great deal better than average.

Faced with the embarrassment of his pastor’s views on race and on America, Obama did not go into a huddle with spin-doctors to fathom how he should deal with the problem. Instead, he delivered a thoughtful, eloquent, and moving speech about race. He treated the issue head-on, and intelligently. Confronted with an awkward problem, he responded with reason. Whatever else happens in the presidential race, that speech marked a special moment.

So why is all of this – Tibet on the one hand and American soft power on the other – so significant? It’s simple. The century ahead will not be a struggle between China and the US for global leadership. This is not a balance-of-power gladiatorial contest. There will, however, be a battle of ideas.

Does the world want and need Leninism with its shopping malls? Do governments have to lock up dissidents in order to deliver prosperity? Or does the world want the sort of freedom that embraces politics as well as economics?

That is what my children would call a “no brainer.”

Irregularities lead to international Ridicule

_ by Thuria Tayza

People of Burma’s overwhelming desire to vote NO on the pro-military constitution in the coming referendum is very clear. They’ll do so if they get a chance. But the Generals are doing all they can, fair or unfair, to get a YES result _

Since the beginning when they declared that they’d hold a referendum in May ‘08, they also declared that a new election under the new constitution will be held in 2010. It clearly shows that in their mind they are sure about the referendum result; determined to get their constitution approved by any means.
The draft constitution was made public only a month before referendum date, making it virtually impossible for ordinary people to grasp the essence of the draft constitution.
The draft constitution copies were sold only in limited quantities in Rangoon and other major cities only, leaving out the bulk majority of voters in remote areas in the dark about what is really written in the draft constitution.
The draft constitution was not made public even about three months after the constitution drafting commission has finalized it. And during those about three months period, the generals inserted some new clauses into the already finalized constitution, without any consultation with any public body. These illegitimately added clauses give total immunity to the Generals. How convenient for them!
Although it was declared that the referendum is to be held in May, the exact date was not announced until less than one month before the date. The date was fixed only when the Generals felt sure that they have prepared all arrangements for vote rigging and intimidation to get a YES result.
And the date was announced very shortly before the actual referendum to make it impossible for opposition party(s) to launch an effective “Vote NO” campaign.
Until a few days before the referendum, overwhelming majority of people have not yet seen the draft constitution.
The government made very little or nil effort to explain the constitution to the ordinary people on the ground.
The government made no public discussions or debates on the constitution.
And political opposition is not allowed to hold any public discussions or debates on the constitution.
Instead, the military government passed a law which gives a straight three years minimum jail sentence to any one who says anything against the referendum.
The authorities very widely interpret that vaguely worded referendum law and have already wrongfully accused and detained many political activists on false charges of attempting to disrupt the referendum.
Although the referendum law only prohibits attempts to disrupt the referendum, authorities misuse that referendum law also to arrest activists who lawfully campaigned to persuade people to peacefully participate in the referendum and vote NO.
The referendum law does not clearly state the minimum percentage of voter turn out for the eligibility of the referendum. So, for instance, if only the soldiers and military families are allowed to vote (to vote YES) and majority of ordinary people who want to vote NO are intimidated not to vote, then the referendum may still be ridiculously eligible with tiny percentage of voter turn out!
U Aung Toe who was Chair of National Convention and constitution drafting commission is also the Chair of referendum commission. So it’s very much like, he is the player as well as the goal keeper and as well as the referee and as well as the linesman.
Virtually all members of all local referendum commissions everywhere in Burma are members of pro-junta militant Kyant Phunt organizations.
Opposition Party(s) are not allowed to take part in local referendum commissions.
International and United Nations referendum monitors and observers are also NOT allowed inside the country.
Students and government servants are forced into Kyant Phunt organizations, and Kyant Phunt leaders have ordered their members to vote YES in the referendum.
Arrangements have been made in the army to trace how individual soldiers and their families vote in the referendum, so that they won’t dare to vote NO.
Top Generals have ordered regional and local military commanders and government ministers to make sure a YES result in the areas where they are responsible.
So all regional and local military commanders and government ministers these days are doing an intensive and nonstop effort to intimidate people to vote YES, or at least to buy YES votes.
5000 kyats or a batik longyi or a bag of rice is usually offered by local authorities for a YES vote.
In border areas, migrant workers and traders from neighbouring countries (especially those from Communist China, a long term supporter of Burmese military regime) are given temporary Burmese citizen cards so that they can vote (to vote YES) in the referendum.
Many already deceased persons and non-existing persons have been found on the local electoral registers, whilst many a really living and really existing eligible voters cannot yet get themselves onto the electoral register.
Although multi millions of legal and illegal migrants from Burma are living abroad, Burmese embassies around the world do not make any systematic effort to get them onto expatriate electoral registers.
Instead, Burmese embassies around the world send out invitations for voting only to a selected few people whom they trust to vote YES.
In addition to announcing the actual referendum date only less then one moth before it, Burmese embassies around the world collect the expatriate votes two weeks earlier than the announced date, so that exile politicians are left with very little chance to campaign among expatriates for a NO vote.
Burmese embassies’ dishonest arrangement to disallow vast majority of expatriate “NO” voters in Singapore and Japan has led to chaos and serious discontent and dissent among expatriates Burmese communities in those countries.
see http://burmadigest.info/2008/04/27/photo-burma-constitutional-referendum-expat-voting-in-singapore/
see http://burmadigest.info/2008/04/27/photo-burma-constitutional-referendum-expat-voting-in-japan/
The deadline date for expatriate votes is 27.04.08 in many countries, which has already passed now, with unbelievably huge number of multi millions of migrants from Burma around the world haven’t yet got a chance to cast their votes.
Read also http://burmadigest.info/2008/04/16/referendum-in-burma-to-be-held-on-10-5-08-full-of-deceptions/
Because of such massive irregularities, whatever results the military junta declare after the referendum, it will be just a subject of mammoth ridicule by the whole self-respecting international community (which usually does not include governments of Russia, Communist China, Sudan, Zimbabwe etc.).

If junta declares a YES result, in a believe-it-or-not manner, no decent international leader will recognize it as a respectable credible result.

If junta have to concede and confess defeat and declare a “NO” result truthfully, the top Generals will lose face with their own hardline deputies, and then there is a strong possibility of a soft coup or a palace coup by his hardline deputies to topple current military supremo Than Shwe. In such a case the military junta will need to make arrangements to draft a new constitution; probably they will then reconvene a new national convention, again with their crony and lackey delegates, taking the country back to square one.

Eventually, irregularities during the referendum will just pave the way for continued political deadlock in Burma.

[This article is an on-going one, and will be added on and modified continually as required until referendum is finished and the results are clear.]

Published in:  on at 12:57 pm Leave a Comment

STOP ARREST OF BURMESE REFUGEES AND ASYLUM SEEKERS. RELEASE REFUGEES IN DETENTION AS SIGN OF COMPASSION AND SOLIDARITY WITH THE PEOPLE OF BURMA.

PRESS STATEMENT

23 April 2008

 

 

STOP ARREST OF BURMESE REFUGEES AND ASYLUM SEEKERS. RELEASE REFUGEES IN DETENTION AS SIGN OF COMPASSION AND SOLIDARITY WITH THE PEOPLE OF BURMA.

 

 

The recent riot by the Burmese political refugees in Lenggeng Detention Camp shows the frustration of refugees as there are no solution to refugees issues. The Malaysian government has continued the Crackdown against refugees and on the other hand there is no development to their application to resettle in the third countries.

 

Since the situation in Burma has become worse, we really hope that the Malaysian government stop the arrest of refugees. The continuous arrest of refugees cause crowdedness in the detention camps throughout the country and it would not solve the root cause.

 

There are refugees in the detention camp awaiting the intervention by UNHCR for the past 3 to 4 years. They do not want to be deported as they will be arrested and detained again and again. Many of these refugees suffer from depression as they have stayed for a lengthy time at the detention camps and the uncertainty of their future.

 

While we appeal to the Malaysian government to stop the arrest on refugees, we also hope UNHCR to actively dialogue with resettlement countries to accept more refugees regardless of ethnic, race, religion & etc.

 

Myanmar Ethnic Rohingyas Human Rights Organization Malaysia, calls on the Prime Minister, Y.A.B Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi:-

 

1) To stop the arrest of refugees and asylum seekers in the country

 

2) To release all refugees who are currently detained in the various detention camps.

 

3) To give them temporary document to continue their stay in Malaysia while their   resettlement being processed.

 

4) To stop deportation to Thailand Border as it will only put their lives in great danger.

 

5) To add pressure on Junta to restore Democracy in Burma – (ASEAN)

 

 

 

Yours sincerely,

 

 

 

Mr. Zafar Ahmad 

President of Myanmar Ethnic Rohingya Human Rights Organization Malaysia (MERHROM)

Penthouse, Wisma MLS

No. 31 Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman

50100 Kuala Lumpur Malaysia

Tel: 603. 26913691 / 26973671

Fax: 603. 26913681

H/P: 6016- 6827287,

Web: http://merhrom.wordpress.com

Email: rights4rohingya@yahoo.co.uk

 

Published in:  on April 23, 2008 at 8:53 am Leave a Comment

MEMORENDUM TO THE ROYAL THAI GOVERNMENT

o,
Date: 18 April 2008
Dear All Human Rights Medias Statement.

MEMORENDUM TO THE ROYAL THAI GOVERNMENT

“ Recognize the Plights of the Rohingyas to find Durable Solution through Adequate Protection and Assistances”

We today morning 11am hand over the memorandum to the Royal Thai Embassy. Myanmar Ethnic Rohingyas Human Rights Organization Malaysia (MERHROM), All Burma Democratic Force (ABDF) and Democratic Federation of Burma (DFB) Malaysia, the following signatories are extremely concerned about the plight or the Rohingyas of Arakan State, Burma and their jeopardy through the outbreak decision of Royal Thai Prime Minister Mr. Samak Sundarvej “We will put Rohingya on Desert Island “ that dated on 28 March 2008 .

Mr. Samak Sundanese has come to chief this action against the predominantly Muslim Rohingyas who have been living in the Thailand or taking temporary shelter on humanitarian ground that only in escaping the decades long trynnies of brutal Burmese military.

The Muslim Rohingyas are one of the worst victims of human rights violations and largest stateless and refugee communities in the Southeast Asian nations. They are deprived of their basic rights to citizenship or permanent shelter not only in Burma but also in both South and Southeast Asian regions. These people have been taking shelters in different parts of the world, particularly of those Muslim dominated and neighboring countries of Burma such Bangladesh, Malaysia, Thailand, and etc.

In these circumstances, the statement of the Thai Prime Minister sent a wave of shock and grief among the whole Rohingya community. Due to decades long political oppression, economic exploitation, social degradation and cultural slavery, the Burmese military rulers have turned the Rohingyas into a powerless, defenseless and voiceless crippled community. Today we feel so helpless that we do not know how to reach our voice of helplessness and hopelessness to the international community to stir their conscience.

Countries where the Rohingyas are hunted, are not safe for them as they are not party to UN Conventions and protocol related to refugees and stateless persons: and so that they deny to recognize refugees or political asylums but do not hesitate to exercise the activities that criminalize and jeopardize the refugees and asylum seekers.
At the same time, the region has come to target on Rohingyas for their religious belief (Islam) with a false conception of extremism as the Rohingyas are the most uneducated people who are in fear of exploitation in various ways.

We doubt that the opportunist groups may come forward for exploitation of Rohingyas in order to dispose them. These humiliations and misconceptions may lead the Rohingyas into uncertainty and that may be considered as big burden in human society while they are also seen as a threat to national security because of their irregular status.

It is true that they are forced to seek informal means of traveling and searching for safe lives which increases their vulnerability to exploitation. Many have perished at their way from Bangladesh to Thailand and Malaysia as ‘boat people’ while their vessels capsized at sea. At the same time, they are under constant threat of arrest, detention, and deportation. Though their vulnerability is widely known to the world, no quarter has been found that redress adequately in the region or in the world.

It is therefore, we call upon the Royal Government of Thailand to repeal the decision on the Rohingya refugees and to call upon the International Community and World Bodies including the UN Refugees Agency, International Rescue Committee (IRC), International Committee for Red Cross (ICRC), International Organization for Migration (IMO), European Union (EU), Govt. of USA, Britain, Australia and etc. to come forward for necessary assistances and protection for the Rohingyas in Thailand.

We urge upon the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and its member states to stop all sorts of human rights violations and ill treatments on the Rohingyas in order to settle their problems permanently, while recognizing the plight of Rohingyas to meet durable solution through adequate protection and assistances.

We also request the ASEAN to review its policies towards the Burmese military regime for the immediate democratization in Burma through meaningful national reconciliation process and tripartite dialogue among the military, pro-democracy groups and ethnic nationalities.

We appeal to the international community, particularly the UN bodies, concerned organizations on Refugees, Stateless and Human Rights to put dept sight into the miserable plights of the Rohingyas of Arakan State in their countries of refuge, particularly in Thailand in order to take necessary step for their protection and assistances before going underway to serious intimidation.

Thank you very much.

Sincerely,

Mr. Zafar Ahmad s/o Mohd Abdul Ghani
President Of MERHROM
Myanmar Ethnic Rohingya Human Rights Organization, Malaysia.
Penthouse, Wisma MLS
No. 31 Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman
50100 Kuala Lumpur.
H/P:+6016-6827287
E-rights4rohingya@yahoo.co.uk
Website: http://merhrom.wordpress.com

Published in:  on April 18, 2008 at 9:45 am Leave a Comment