ACTING COLLECTIVELY TO PROMOTE AND PROTECT HUMAN RIGHTS.

 

 

 

 

th July 2008

 

Press Statement

 

 

ACTING COLLECTIVELY TO PROMOTE AND PROTECT HUMAN RIGHTS.

 

This year SUHAKAM hosted the Thirteen Annual Meeting of the Asia Pacific Forum of National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs) in Kuala Lumpur.

This was a very important meeting as the goal of the meeting is to enhance human rights cooperation in the Asia Pacific through the promotion and strengthening of NHRIs.

In conjunction with this meeting, Myanmar Ethnic Rohingyas Human Rights Organization Malaysia (MERHROM) drew the attention of SUHAKAM, Asia Pacific Forum (APF), National Human Rights Institutions as well as the Non-governmental Organizations on the human rights violations that took place in Burma as well as problem faced by Burmese refugees in neighboring countries.

As many of us aware, many Burmese people have to flee Myanmar due to the fear of prosecution by the Junta. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) the global number of Refugees and Displaced people reached 67 million in 2007. There has been an increase in the last 2 years. Burmese refugees contributed to this number.

For the stateless Rohingya refugees, we fled our homeland Arakan (Rakhine) State of Myanmar since 2 decades ago due to gross human rights violations. We were denied citizenship, our movement was restricted, our land and property was confiscated, we were denied education, tortured, no religious freedom, mosques has been destructed, we become forced labour, denied access to employment and discriminated in many ways.

We crossed the border into the neighboring countries in the hope for protection and security of our life. We started started struggling for our rights and freedom of our country. Unfortunately we have been spending most of the time in horrific conditions as we are continuously subjected to arrest, detention and deportation.

The refugees are not only facing arrest, detention and deportation by the host countries but also become victims of human trafficking. On top of this, refugees’ life is challenged by the high increase of the prices of goods. This made refugees’ life really in difficult situation as refugees are not allowed to work.

 

MERHROM therefore requested SUHAKAM and Asia Pacific Forum to:

 

  1. Closely monitor human rights violations in the Asia Pacific region and take the necessary measures to eliminate the rights violations

  2. To add pressure to Junta to restore democracy in Myanmar, release Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and all political prisoner and stop religion and ethnic discriminations

  3. Work closely with the ASEAN Countries to promote and protect human rights

  4. Follow-up with the Malaysian Government on the issuance of IMM 13 document for the Rohingya refugees

  5. Dialogue with the Malaysian Government to stop the arrest, detention and deportation of refugees

  6. Lobby the Malaysian Government to sign the Refugee Convention 1951

  7. Work closely with UNHCR to ensure equal treatment and protection for refugees regardless of race, religion and ethnicity

  8. Dialogue with the develop countries to accept more refugees and asylum seekers without any discriminations

 

We hope to work closely with the National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs) and the Asia Pacific Forum in bringing a better future to all refugees.

 

Thank you.

Yours sincerely,

 

Mr. Zafar Ahmad

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

Penthouse, Wisma MLS, No. 31, Jalan Tunku Abdul Rahman, 50100 Kuala Lumpur.

Tel: 603-26913691 / 26973671- Fax: 603-26913681

H/P: 016-6827287

E-mail: rights4rohingya@yahoo.co.uk

Blog: http://www.merhrom.wordpress.com

Published in:  on July 31, 2008 at 7:25 pm Leave a Comment

Forgotten People: The Rohingyas of Burma

http://rohang.blogspot.com/2005/06/forgotten-people-rohingyas-of-burma.html 

 

The human rights situation in Burma has led to thousands of people of various ethnic groups fleeing to neighboring countries. The Rohingya Muslims from Arakan state are vulnerable as they have no legal status in Burma and are considered to be non-citizens. The plight of the Rohingya demonstrates how people without citizenship rights in their own country can be forced out and become refugees, leaving them still vulnerable and without citizenship in the country of asylum.

The Rohingya have faced continuing persecution by the military government in Burma, and have escaped to Bangladesh in large numbers, with the biggest influx in 1991 and 1992, when about 250,000 of them crossed the border. Although many of these refugees have since then been repatriated to Burma, there are still about 21,500 refugees living in two camps in southern Bangladesh. The refugees are completely dependent on UN and aid agencies for food.
In addition, an estimated 100,000 Rohingya are living illegally in Bangladesh without access to protection or humanitarian assistance. Since economic opportunities in Bangladesh are limited, the Rohingya outside of camps are not living in Bangladesh for economic security, rather they are fleeing a history of persecution and human rights abuses by the Burmese government.
At first the Government of Bangladesh was welcoming towards the Rohingyas and made efforts to accommodate them. In recent years, however, it has pushed for all refugees to be sent back to Burma and has rejected any possibility of local reintegration for them.
The Government of Bangladesh, in order to improve relations and economic ties with Burma, has declared that the remaining Rohingya refugees in the camps should be repatriated by June 2003 and UNHCR has also announced its plans to turn over responsibility for the Rohingya to the Government of Bangladesh by the end of 2003.
Meanwhile the Government of Burma has not cleared most of the refugees in the two camps for return and accuses the camp residents of having contact with insurgents. The Burmese government has created a complicated system of bureaucratic conditions and procedures, which make it very difficult for refugees to be cleared and repatriated. Even though the Government of Bangladesh wants the refugees to leave, there is a very slow rate of repatriation.
The refugees who eventually make it to Burma find conditions there as bad as before, with restriction on movement, forced labor, violence and intimidation. They often have no choice but to reenter Bangladesh. Since January over 1,000 of those who have been sent back to Burma have returned.
The Rohingya
The Arakan State of Burma, bordering Bangladesh, is inhabited by two ethnic communities, the Rakhine Buddhist and the Rohingya Muslims. The Rakhine Buddhist is the majority group and is close to the Burman in terms of religion and language, while the minority group, the Rohingya Muslims, is ethnically and religiously related to the people from the region of Chittagong in southern Bangladesh.
The Rohingya Muslims number approximately 1.4 million.

The Rohingya have been in Burma since at least the twelfth century and often coexisted relatively peacefully with the Rakhine Buddhists. However, this changed around the Second World War, when communal riots erupted between the two ethnic groups. After Burma’s independence in 1948, Muslims carried out an unsuccessful armed rebellion demanding an independent state within the Union of Burma. This resulted in a backlash against the Muslims that led to their removal from civil posts, restrictions on their movement, and confiscation of their property.

Under the military regime of General Ne Win, beginning in 1962, the Muslim residents of Arakan were labeled illegal immigrants who settled in Burma during British rule. The government at the center made efforts to drive them out of Burma, starting with the denial of citizenship. The 1974 Emergency Immigration Act took away Burmese nationality from the Rohingyas, making them foreigners in their own country.
Following the takeover of the country by the military in 1988, there has been increased army presence in Arakan state. This build up has been accompanied by human rights abuses, and the Rohingya continue to face discrimination. They need authorization to travel outside of their villages, their land is confiscated by the government for use by Buddhist settlers, their mosques are destroyed by the military and they are routinely subjected to forced labor.
Conditions in Refugee Camps in Bangladesh
Out of 20 camps established in 1992 in south-western Bangladesh for the thousands of refugees, only two remain and even these are expected to be closed by June 2003. New arrivals from Burma have been denied access to these camps since 1995 and there are an estimated 100,000 to 200,000 Rohingya living outside the camps.
According to Medicins sans Frontieres, for 10 years, the majority of Rohingya refugees in the camps have been malnourished and for many, food is the only source of income as employment is prohibited. There is limited access to adequate sanitation and the huts in which the refugees live are small and crowded. The freedom of movement of the refugees is restricted and they are confined to their camps. The MSF report on the situation in the Rohingya camps, “10 Years for the Rohingya Refugees: Past, Present and Future” is available at the following link:
Coercion by Bangladeshi officials to repatriate and involuntary repatriation of cleared refugees have been reported from the camps, with refugees complaining that if they refuse to repatriate, they are arrested.

UNHCR is trying to reduce the burden of caring for the Rohingya refugees. They have recently proposed a phased withdrawal of their support, beginning with handing over responsibility for repatriation to the Government of Bangladesh at the end of June 2003. By the end of this year, UNHCR proposes to end all material support for the care and maintenance of refugees in the camps and the Government of Bangladesh will assume all responsibility for camp administration. UNHCR’s primary focus will be to monitor the degree to which any repatriations are voluntary.
Recommendations

 

The plight of the Rohingya in Bangladesh presents the dilemma of how to solve a protracted refugee crisis. They are unwanted in Bangladesh, but face danger and discrimination should they repatriate to Burma. As Muslims, they are particularly unlikely to be accepted for third country resettlement in the security environment prevailing in the post-9/11 world.

The Rohingya are therefore extremely vulnerable to being forced back to Burma. Prevention of being forced back (refoulement) is one of the signal protections in the 1951 Refugee Convention, and under no circumstances should UNHCR allow such a process in the case of the Rohingya. This will require UNHCR to maintain its presence in the Cox’s Bazaar area of Bangladesh where the refugees are located.

The best solution would be political change in Burma creating a political environment in which the rights of the Rohingya could be revisited within the context of the rights of minority peoples throughout the country. With this degree of political change presently unimaginable,

Refugees International recommends that:

  • UNHCR maintain its support for the material well being of Rohingya refugees in camps in Bangladesh.
  • NHCR continue its direct involvement in refugee protection, including preventing refoulement, ensuring the voluntary nature of refugee returns to Burma, and providing logistical support to repatriation as required.
  • The Government of Bangladesh cease all pressure on Rohingya refugees to repatriate and consider the possibility of providing options for local integration, with the financial support of international donors.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Published in:  on July 17, 2008 at 1:30 pm Leave a Comment

San Francisco most walkable U.S. city, Web site says

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2008/7/17/worldupdates/2008-07-17T094358Z_01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_-345530-1&sec=Worldupdates

NEW YORK (Reuters) – San Francisco, New York and Boston are the United States’ most walkable cities, according to new rankings from a Web site that evaluates how easy it is to live in the nation’s cities and neighborhoods without a car.

Walkscore.com, which uses an algorithm to identify those neighborhoods boasting the most amenities per person, published its ranking on Thursday and deemed San Francisco the most walkable city, with a “Walk Score” of 86 out of 100.

Vehicular traffic travels on the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California January 2, 2008. (REUTERS/Robert Galbraith)

The ultimate goal is to see the site’s scores included in property listings, said Mike Mathieu, founder of the company that created the site’s software.

“What we see is someone calling up a broker and saying ‘I want three bedrooms, two baths, a walkability score of 85, what’ve you got?’” Mathieu said.

Type an address, and the site generates a map showing the nearby grocery stores, cafes, movie theaters, schools and parks.

New York received a score of 83, Boston a score of 79.

Scores greater than 70 indicate neighborhoods where it’s possible to get by without owning a car, while scores greater than 90 qualify communities as a “Walker’s Paradise.”

Government to see what people have to say first

http://thestaronline.com/news/story.asp?file=/2008/7/17/nation/21844353&sec=nation

ALOR STAR: The Government will consider the people’s views before deciding whether to hold more debates with the Opposition on issues affecting the people.

Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said the Government was studying the feedback from Tuesday night’s debate between Information Minister Datuk Ahmad Shabery Cheek and PKR leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

“We want to know the people’s opinion before deciding

on future debates,” he told reporters after receiving the Darjah Seri Setia Sultan Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah Yang Amat di-Hormati award from Sultan of Kedah Tuanku Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah at the investiture ceremony held in conjunction with his golden jubilee celebrations here yesterday.

The award carries the title Datuk Seri.

Najib said the debate between Ahmad Shabery and Anwar was proof of the Government’s openness to criticism and issues affecting the people.

Home Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar, who was also at the ceremony, said the debate was a new approach to discuss issues which affected the people.

“The people can decide if we are on the right track and if the Opposition are rhetorical in their debate to gain popularity,” he said

Syed Hamid received the Darjah Seri Paduka Mahkota Kedah award from Sultan Abdul Halim which carries the title Datuk Seri.

PREAH VIHEAR, Cambodia (AP) – Cambodia and Thailand escalated their troop buildup Thursday at disputed territory near a historic border temple despite moves to hold talks next week to defuse the flare-up in tensions, a Cambodian general said.

By News The Star Online

PREAH VIHEAR, Cambodia (AP) – Cambodia and Thailand escalated their troop buildup Thursday at disputed territory near a historic border temple despite moves to hold talks next week to defuse the flare-up in tensions, a Cambodian general said.

Cambodian Brig Gen. Chea Keo said the Thais now have more than 400 troops near the Preah Vihear temple, up from about 200 the day before, and Cambodia has about 800 troops there, up from 380 the day before.

Cambodia claims the Thai troops have crossed the border into Cambodian territory in renewed tensions over land near Cambodia’s Preah Vihear temple, while Thailand maintains it is protecting its own sovereignty.

However, a Thai military source has acknowledged that the troops are in “disputed” territory.

The border in the area around Preah Vihear has never been fully demarcated.

“They have entered (Cambodian territory) with an intention to provoke us, but we are being extremely patient to prevent weapons from firing,” Chea Keo said.

On Wednesday night, Cambodia said it agreed with Thailand to hold talks next Monday aimed at easing tensions early next week.

Thailand did not immediately confirm the plans.

Cambodian Information Minister Khieu Kanharith said the two countries’ prime ministers had a “cordial” phone conversation, and that their defense ministers would meet Monday in Thailand to discuss the flare-up in tensions.

Cambodia’s application for World Heritage Site status for the temple was granted last week, providing new fodder to the long-standing conflict.

Both countries claim 1.8 square miles (4.6 square kilometers) of land around the Preah Vihear temple, and Thai anti-government activists have revived nationalist sentiment over the issue.

The activists and some government officials fear that the temple’s new status will jeopardize their country’s claims to land adjacent to the site.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and Thai Prime Minister Sundaravej also agreed that “both sides should do the utmost to prevent anything from happening,” Khieu Kanharith told The Associated Press.

Khieu Kanharith said Cambodia would not “use force unless attacked” and that the “situation was stable.”

Thai army commander Gen. Anupong Paojindasaid likewise said he has ordered his troops to refrain from using force.

“The problem has been there for a long time because there has been no demarcation of the border yet,” Anupong told reporters.

Thai officials have publicly denied that their troops crossed the border, saying the soldiers are in Thai territory to protect its sovereignty.

However, a senior Thai military source who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation acknowledged Wednesday that Thai troops were inside “disputed border territory.”

Thai troops in combat gear and armed with rifles sat in small groups Wednesday in the jungle on Preah Vihear mountain, while Cambodian troops paced only a few yards (meters) away, some of them carrying B-40 rocket launchers.

Cambodian troop reinforcements also were on the road Wednesday.

“I have received an order from our commander to back up our forces over there,” Ouch Borith, an army captain, told The Associated Press at a Cambodian village several miles (kilometers) from the Preah Vihear mountain.

In 1962, the International Court of Justice awarded Preah Vihear and the land it occupies to Cambodia, a decision that still rankles many Thais even though the temple is culturally Cambodian, sharing the Hindu-influenced style of the more famous Angkor complex in northwestern Cambodia.

Latest from AP-Wire

Published in:  on at 12:26 pm Leave a Comment

UN Launched Fresh Appeal for Burma Despite Hesitant Donors

July 11, 2008: The UN Cyclone Nargis Flash Appeal relaunches today in New York, aiming to fill a vast funding shortfall that has left many sectors of the relief response struggling.

Although donors have not yet fully met the UN’s initial request for US$201 million, the relaunched Flash Appeal now hopes to raise US$486 million. After two months of appeal, a lack of available funds across agencies threatens to jeopardise the international response.

“Donors have been somewhat hesitant to support the UN Flash Appeal,” said World Vision’s Cyclone Nargis Response Manager, Judy Moore. “We speculate that this is because of a fear that the aid is not getting through to those that need it. But World Vision can confirm that our relief is reaching those affected.”

“The relief operation is by no means over,” said John Holmes, head of U.N. humanitarian operations. “There are many who still remain in need of basic assistance and urgent support.”

Holmes said he was launching the appeal after initially requesting $201 million in aid and receiving nearly $180 million in pledges.

But along with the shortfall from that original request, the U.N. says it now needs an additional $280 million for the work of 13 U.N. agencies and 23 non-governmental organizations.

The money is intended to help the 2.4 million people that the U.N. says have been seriously affected by Cyclone Nargis. More than 100 projects are planned to deliver food, shelter, clean drinking water, sanitation, education and other needs.

Despite the relief efforts by international aid workers and Myanmar’s government, many areas of the Irrawaddy Delta hit hard by the May 2-3 storm still have not received as much as aid as they requested, Holmes said.

Holmes repeated his assertion that international aid efforts were making “significant progress” since U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, traveled to Myanmar to win a pledge from its ruling general, Than Shwe, to free up more access.

Holmes said, however, that half the families in Myanmar have food supplies of only about one day or less and some 60,000 children were at risk of malnutrition. He said the cyclone wiped out 42 percent of the nation’s overall food stocks.

Some 924,000 people will need food assistance until the November harvest this year, while around 300,000 will need continued relief until April 2009, the UN said.

Over 70 percent of households reported inadequate access to clean water because of damage to rainwater collection systems and saltwater contamination of ponds.

As a condition of full funding, the international community demanded a comprehensive assessment of the conditions facing those affected by Nargis. In response, a joint assessment was launched with the involvement of the Government of Myanmar, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the UN, and NGOs.

Six World Vision Myanmar staff were part of the joint assessment team, covering some of the worst-affected areas in Yangon, Labutta, Bogale, and Pathein, as well as providing coordination among the various teams. The Post-Nargis Joint Assessment is due to be released on the 21st of July.

“Now that the conditions laid out by donors have been met,” said World Vision’s Judy Moore, “it’s time that the international community step up and fully fund the response.”

One Response to “UN Launched Fresh Appeal for Burma Despite Hesitant Donors”

  • #1 George Than Setkyar Heine Says:
    July 13th, 2008 at 9:34 am I don’t believe Judy Moore’s claim “Now that the conditions laid out by donors have been met”.
    What conditions?
    The fact that the military regime is still refusing to let international aid workers into the country to do their respective jobs alone is the reason why international community is hesitating to fulfill their pledge.
    Ban Ki-moon went into Burma and nothing came out of his visit. The only thing he managed to do is ‘drive away the US, Britain and French ships laden with supplies to weigh anchor and left the scene leaving the devastated people in hoplessness and despair, while giving the notion that the international community is not willing to help them only’. Thus, Than Shwe has triumphed in this episode also, driving home the point that the people could not depend on the international community for their salvation. Hence, he has succeeded in making the people of Burma that they could hope no help from the international community.
    Also, the fact that Than Shwe is demanding to get hold of all the aid supplies in his hands smacks of an evil ploy. Of course, the relief supplies would be ‘branded’ as gifts from the ruling generals and distributed to the people and that also, is in part only as the larger portion would land in the hands of Than Shwe who would distribute them to his hirelings and thugs who are loyal to him. In this way Than Shwe would PROFIT from Typhone Nargis. The people would be still at his mercy.
    By the way, if I may ask, what has happened to BILLIONS OF DOLLARS that Than Shwe got when he sold the gas and other natural resources of Burma to China and other countries?
    I haven’t heard anything about the military regime parting with even a fraction of this ill-gotten loot to alleviate the plight of the citizenry of Burma, other than YELLING FOR MONEY from Ban-kimoon and his likes at the UN and the international community. If I remember right Than Shwe is demanding US $ 110 Billion, right?
    Oh Buddha, the Ali Ba Ba of Burma is trying to make a lot of money out of the Cyclone Nargis disaster!

    George Than Setkyar Heine
    Anti-Dictatorship, People’s Freedom Movement in Burma
    Washington DC
    USA

Published in:  on at 11:25 am Leave a Comment

US lawmakers ease pressure on Chevron in Myanmar

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US lawmakers have dropped plans to impose sanctions that would have pressured US energy giant Chevron to pull out from a gas project in military-ruled Myanmar, congressional aides said on Tuesday.

Sanctions that would end tax write-offs enjoyed by Chevron were part of a package of new US measures passed by the House of Representatives last year aimed at punishing the military junta for its deadly crackdown on pro-democracy protests.

But in a compromise this week, legislators from the House of Representatives and Senate removed the provision after Chevron argued that other firms from nations such as China and India could easily take over its stake if divested, congressional aides said.

“One of the things it does is it removes the part about tax incentives that affect US companies who might do business in Burma (Myanmar),” a congressional aide told AFP in describing the compromise resolution that was unanimously passed by the House of Representatives on Tuesday.

The new legislation, which is also expected to be cleared by the Senate, merely urged “investors” in the gas project “to consider voluntary divestment over time” if the junta did not embrace reforms.

Under the previous plan, “no deduction or credit against tax shall be allowed” for Chevron on revenues from the Yadana gas project.

Chevron could also have been barred from making any payments to the junta from its joint venture with French oil giant Total, Thailand’s PTT Exploration and Production, and Myanmar’s Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise operating the lucrative Yadana gas fields.

Under Myanmar law, if Chevron sold its stake, it might have to pay the military junta much of the company’s capital gains on the project — estimated to be around 500 million dollars.

Chevron’s vice-chairman Peter Robertson defended Chevron’s investment in Myanmar at a congressional hearing in May, saying the company had helped victims of a recent deadly cyclone that ravaged Myanmar.

“Our plan is to stay in Burma … If we sell our interest, we would pay a large capital gains tax to them (military junta),” he said.

“Any way of extracting us would be a benefit — a windfall benefit to the Burmese government.”

Published in:  on at 11:21 am Leave a Comment

Reality Checks for Burma before too Late

 

Reality Checks for Burma before too Late_ by Thuria Tayza

Inside the country, Burma’s military regime has got every and all political opposition, and potential oppositions, either crushed or contained. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s house arrest has been extended, new generation leaders like Min Ko Naing, Ko Htin Kyaw, Su Su Nway etc are all in jail, students and monks already crushed in the Saffron Revolution of 2007; and with all offices except the Head Quarters closed down and all able and capable activists already detained, the main opposition party the National League for Democracy is just surviving feebly in the form of a handful of very old and frail care-taker leaders who are approaching their ninety years of age.

So, naturally, people hope for the help to come from the outside world.

The loudest clamouring about outside help, since cyclone disaster, is concerned with the so called Responsibility to Protect (R2P).

But the problem with R2P is that its biggest cheer-leaders are the French!

Usually one would duly have reservations on French politicians. They tend to try to go the other way; when the world put sanctions on Iraq, the French would do business with Saddam Hussein; when US & UK went to war in Iraq, the French opposed it. And, when the world called for universal sanctions on Burma, French would insist that oil & gas sector in Burma where French Total Oil Company was investing should be exempted; and during cyclone disaster when US & UK concentrated on humanitarian aids, the French who donated the least for Burma howled at the highest pitch for invasion of Burma.

And, even if R2P operations did happen, there was very little guarantee that French would commit enough men, money and material for the R2P military campaigns in Burma. As every one knows, in Afghanistan, French committed only a very small number of troops; and even those small number of French troops never take active duty in dangerous areas. If ever there is R2P war of invasion into Burma, only the Brits and the Americans have to take hundreds of billion dollars expenses as well as thousands of death and injuries of their soldiers. French will then make many more lame excuses to avoid taking any real responsibilities.

sarko-wife.jpg

If R2P did happen, French President would definitely get a very good personal benefit, i.e., a distraction of his electorate’s interests from his glamour model wife’s nude photos to Burma.(Photo on the left: French President Sarkozy’s glamour model wife posting NUDE)

If the US is REALLY serious about forced regime change in Burma, Burmese democracy activists both inside and outside the country would be just too eager to support it. But Burma is NOT regarded by US leaders as a serious and urgent affair; compared with nuclear Iran or Taliban’s Afghanistan, Burma is not a priority. After the November elections in the US, the White House as well as both houses of the Congress would probably fall under Democratic Party’s control; there is zero chance that Democrats will go to war in Burma. And the new American President next year, either Obama or McCain, will not be able to make war with Burmese military regime, as they have to sort out the mess in Iraq, the nuclear bomb in Iran and the resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan as the first priorities. And, there is also the current credit crunch, global economic down turn and global oil & food shortages,….. too many problems awaiting the next President of the US! President Bush has even said in a recent interview with London Time newspaper that he regret his previous warrior stance; and if he could turn the clock back and go back to the past, he would do things differently. So now the US is engaging even with their traditional enemy North Korea, and the US is now in negotiations with Iran, Syria, etc.

Moreover, there are a few very basic problems for any armed intervention in Burma _

  • Daw Aung San Suu Kyi always limit herself to mainly non-violent struggle. There is a widely believed and accepted anecdote that in 1988 at the peak of the people power uprising and the following massacre by the regime on peaceful protestors, the US Navy came into Burmese territorial waters and offered Daw Aung San Suu Kyi that they might intervene militarily, but she reportedly declined the offer.
  • And since 2003 the US had learnt a lesson, the hard way, from Chalabi and other Iraqi exile leaders. Before Iraq invasion in 2003, the self-styled Iraqi exile leader Chalabi who was very good at lobbying in Washington got the trust of American leaders; and, in exchange for American money, he gave them exaggerated information about Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction, and also gave fake guarantees and promises to help stabilize Iraq after invasion. But when the time actually came, Chalabi’s information and guarantees quickly turned out to be totally unreliable. The question is how much better Burmese exile leaders of today are than Chalabi and Iraqi exile leaders of 2003.
  • And, with half a million brutish rogue soldiers well-trained and battle hardened in guerrilla warfare, and with very hard-line very stubborn ruthless ultra-nationalist Generals in Burma, and with China regarding Burma as its backyard, any R2P invasion war into Burma will definitely be bloodier than Iraq war; it will be at least as bad as the Vietnam war, killing millions of innocent people unnecessarily.

The problem is, while the prospects for internal uprising and external intervention are both very weak, and all the capable leaders are behind bars in Burma, the care-taker leaders inside and outside the country now, after twenty years of non-stop failures and set-backs, are pretty much like a spent force with an exhaustion of ideas and are seemingly at a lost on what to do next. While the regime is approaching towards establishing a military controlled sham democracy system, the care-taker leaders of pro-democracy movement do not look like having any thorough plans on how to challenge, stop and reverse the regime’s sham democracy roadmap.

Another problem is, while political solution and real democratization are seemingly too far and remote, if one suggests about humanitarian aspects for the short and medium term relief of the suffering of the real ordinary people on the ground, some so called political leaders do not seem to like it. There are even, sometimes, accusations that talking too much about humanitarian aspects will dilute the pure efforts for democratization and political change. In the aftermath of Cyclone Nargis, when UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon requested not to politicize the natural and humanitarian disaster but to concentrate only on helping the people, some politicians apparently felt betrayed by Ban Ki-moon.

But, at least there is a small glimmer of hope remaining to give serious trouble to Burmese military regime leaders, i.e., to get them indicted at the International Criminal Court ICC for their crimes against humanity; as has been happening to the Sudanese dictators recently. It is the undeniable universally known truth that the regime has committed numerous vicious crimes against humanity, and a lot of reliable evidences have already been collected and compiled by a number of activist organizations and media organizations. And indicting despotic dictators at the ICC does not need a UN Security Council Resolution; it means China cannot veto the indictment.

So now there are two very basic truths here. One is that there is very little time left before the regime finally finishes of all the political opposition in Burma; and very little chance remaining, very little room to manoeuvre and very few options at large for pro-democracy side to act on decisively and efficiently before it becomes too late. And another truth is, while real political solution remains a far and remote aim, any one who really loves Burma and feels true sympathies for the people of Burma must in the mean time think also about how to help relieve the sufferings of the real people on the ground inside Burma.

 

 

Published in:  on at 11:19 am Leave a Comment

Malaysia’s Anwar released on bail

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7510884.stm

Malaysia’s Anwar released on bail

Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim

Malaysian police have released opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim on bail after he was arrested over allegations of sodomy, his lawyers have said.

They said he had left custody, but could still face charges.

He spent a night in detention having been arrested by police for questioning over the allegations, on which he had been due to make a statement.

Mr Anwar urged his supporters to remain calm. He denies the allegations, saying they are politically-motivated.

His arrest is likely to exacerbate the political tensions that have emerged since the opposition’s unprecedented gains in the general election of March 2008.

The former deputy prime minister has been in a tense stand-off with police since a former male aide accused him of sodomy two weeks ago.

Sodomy, even between consenting adults, is a crime in Malaysia and is punishable by 20 years’ imprisonment in the Muslim-majority country.

Malaysia’s PM ‘to quit in 2010′

Malaysia’s PM ‘to quit in 2010′

Malaysia's Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi

Mr Abdullah’s party suffered huge losses in recent elections

Malaysian PM Abdullah Badawi has said he will leave office in 2010, defying pressure to step down this December.

Mr Abdullah said his deputy, Najib Razak, would take over as head of the Umno party in June 2010.

The prime minister has been under intense pressure to resign over poor election results and high fuel prices.

This pressure was heightened recently when opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim said he was poised to seize power with the help of government defectors.

But it is not only Mr Abdullah who has been the subject of bad publicity: both Mr Anwar and Mr Najib have been accused of serious misconduct.

Mr Anwar faces allegations of sodomy – a charge he has faced before. He insists the charges have been fabricated by the government.

Mr Najib, meanwhile, has denied accusations of an affair with a Mongolian woman who was then murdered in 2006.

Unfinished projects

Mr Abdullah, whose mandate expires in mid-2013, announced his decision to step down at a news conference.

He said he had agreed with Mr Najib to hand over power but that he first wanted the opportunity to implement reforms initiated since he took office in 2003.

“There are many things and programmes I want to achieve before I hand over and I hope that Najib will continue as my deputy in carrying this out,” he said, flanked by Mr Najib and Umno officials.

He said he was confident that Mr Najib would “lead the party well”.

Mr Najib pledged his support for the prime minister and urged party members to back his re-election as leader in December.

Mr Najib said that the announcement marked the start of an orderly transition of power.

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