Thursday, October 4, 2007

For Burma: National Campus Day of Action Oct 5 /Global Day of Action Oct 6

!!!!!!!!!!A Global Day of Action is currently being organized. Get involved. Show that you care.!!!!!!!!!!
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Chinese Support for Myanmar's Junta Sparks Olympics Boycott Epoch Times Article

- from the US Campaign for Burma
We are writing this urgent email to call for global demonstrations on Burma this coming Saturday, October 6th to demand the UN Security Council take action on Burma and to call for a global boycott of the 2008 Olympics. We are working together with a huge coalition of international organizations to put together this incredible day of action and we need you to make it happen.

This is one day after a day of student demonstrations across the Unted States on October 5th.

We are expecting demonstrations and protests in up to 35 countries around the world. We are asking for everyone to wear the color red on that day -- red shirts, headbands, or other -- in solidarity with the monks inside Burma. Organize an event or protest in your community, church, city or join us at the Chinese embassies and consulates in the United States and around the world.

As you know, the UN Security Council shamefully has not lifted a finger to help the courageous Burmese monks and civilians even as they are slaughtered by solders wth automatic weapons. The Security Council has also never even breathed a word after the military regime in Burma destroyed over 3,000 villages -- nearly twice as many as have been destroyed in Darfur. The Burmese regime's scorched earth campaign in eastern Burma has been perhaps the most under-reported tragedy perhaps in the world.

There is one reason only for the paralysis of the Security Council: China. One country has singlehandedly blocked the international community from stopping the carnage in Burma. As a result, the UN is making the same mistakes it made on Rwanda and Darfur: sitting on its hands waiting while people die.

Nobel Peace Prize recipent Desmond Tutu has joined us in this call, saying he will boycott the Olympics unless China changes its position at the UN Security Council.
Please pledge to boycott the 2008 Olympics today. The 2008 Olympics have become a monument to savagery and immorality
(p.s. we know that many athletes have worked for a long time to participate in the Olympics. that is why we are asking for the Olympics to be moved to another country so athletes aren't harmed).

Please sign up to host an event on our webpage and keep an eye on our webpage to see what events are already happening so you can join.

We are also requesting donations to help us fund this and more actions. If you are able to donate, please do so generously here. Or, you can host a fundraiser after your demonstration/event on October 6th. Action is always more important than money, but we are urgently short on funds and would appreciate your financial support in addition to your action.

Sign up today and keep the monks in your prayers,

Aung Din, Jeremy Woodrum, Jennifer Quigley, and Thelma Young

Burma in Crisis: 1988 Part 2

In response to international outcry, Myanmar's Foreign Minister Nyan Win addressed the UN General Assembly last Monday, blaming foreign powers for inciting the protests which led to the bloody crackdown. While the official state death count is 10, according to dissidents, the military regime’s violent response to the demonstrations has led to over 200 deaths and more than 6,000 arrests. Some estimates are much higher, with reliable sources reporting of massacring of students and monks. Hla Win, a mid-ranking major and former intelligence officer, is the most senior official to defect so far, exclaiming, “Many more people have been killed in recent days than you’ve heard about. The bodies can be counted in several thousand.” He fled to Thailand after refusing orders to raid two monasteries, kill the monks, and dump their corpses deep in the jungle.

Nyan Win dismissed accusations of excessive violence, brazenly stating that Myanmar is a victim of neocolonialism, which hampers the self-chosen democratization process of Burma. He called the current situation in Burma a return to “normalcy.”

However, 45 years of dictatorship and the junta’s exclusion of the main opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), from participating in drafting a new constitution in the National Convention underscore that Burma is nowhere near attaining democracy or national reconciliation. In fact, according to the most recent Worldwide Governance Indicators report, Myanmar’s junta, officially titled the State Peace and Development Council, has been ranked the worst government in the world according to the amount of freedom citizens have to voice opinions and select a government, receiving a score of “zero.” The country is a political, social, and economic mess. In 1960, Burma was the largest rice exporter in the world. Now, 40% of children in Burma are malnourished. Poverty reigns as 90% of the populace makes less than $1 a day. The government spends 2% of its budget on health care and 50% of the national GDP on its military. The education system is in ruins. There are more than 1,600 political prisoners, including 38 elected members of parliament and the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been under house arrest for 12 of the last 18 years.

The protests did not stem only from last month’s draconian fuel increases, but decades of repression, human rights abuses, corruption, and civil war. The military never had the popular mandate to rule and refused to recognize the results of the 1990 general election—Burma’s first and only free election—when the NLD won 82% of the parliamentary seats. To suppress ethnic rebels and political dissidents, the junta has destroyed over 3,000 villages (twice the number of villages destroyed in Darfur) in Eastern Burma and has carried out a campaign of rape, wrongful imprisonment, extrajudicial killings, forced labor, forced relocation, and torture. As a result, there are 2 to 4 million internally displaced peoples within Burma, and more than 1 million refugees in neighboring Thailand and Bangladesh.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has conceded that although UN special envoy to Myanmar Ibrahim Gambari exerted the maximum amount of diplomatic pressure possible during his recent four day trip to Burma, the trip was “not a success” . The day after Gambari left, the junta continued to defy international opinion, engaging in a new round of brutal nighttime arrests. Furthermore, amid the recent massacres of students and monks, raiding of monasteries, beatings, and arrests, there are now unconfirmed reports of the junta burning protestors--dead and alive. UN special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar Paulo Sergio Pinheiro has called the deteriorating situation “an emergency” and urged for diplomacy to bring calm to the country of 47 million.

Nations are increasingly rallying behind Burma’s democracy movement. But a schism between freedom supporting nations and countries with vested commercial interests in Burma will be the most difficult hurdle for the people of Burma to conquer. While the US, EU, Canada, Australia, and Japan have all imposed sanctions, cut diplomatic ties, and or drastically reduced aid to Myanmar, China, India, Russia, and Thailand continue to diplomatically and financially support the SPDC.

Burma is a country rich in natural resources, and its abundant oil and gas deposits, mineral resources, and hydropower potential prove too tempting to resist for many multinational companies, mostly notably American oil giant Chevron and France’s Total SA. Some of the more infamous projects include the Shwe Gas Project, the Yadana Pipeline, and the Salween dams, but few multinationals consider the effects that the development projects will have on the local people. Theses resources are called “conflict resources”, as their harvesting has been linked with forced labor, relocations, and numerous other human rights abuses. Investment and profits line the pockets of the military, allowing them to continuing purchasing arms and military hardware from China, Russia, India, and South Korea.

According to BP PLC’s World Review of Statistics, in 2006, Burma's proven gas reserves alone were 19 trillion cubic feet. If current production rates are maintained, at Thailand’s contract price, the deposits will give the military nearly $2 billion a year in sales over the next 40 years.

At the end of last month, while demonstrations were reaching a head, India’s Oil Minister Murli Deora was in Yangon signing oil and gas exploration contracts on behalf of state-owned ONGC Videsh Ltd.

Last January, China and Russia used their UN Security Council veto powers to defeat what would have been the first UN Resolution on Burma, claiming that the situation in Burma is an internal matter and does not threaten international peace and security. However, they discounted the effects of Burmese-based insurgents on India, refugees surging into Thailand and Bangladesh, and the universally acknowledged fact of the complicity of Burma’s junta in the international heroin trade.

While the Chinese Foreign Ministry has called on the military junta for restraint in dealing with the protests, China has come under fire by refusing to condemn Myanmar and for ruling out sanctions. As Myanmar’s largest diplomatic, financial, and military supporter, the Asian superpower can to use its clout to bring about change. But unless it can engineer a bloodless coup, inaction is likely. China is in a particularly compromising position, as, with the Olympics less than a year away, the CCP is trying to clean up its image. China already has to deal with allegations of persecuting Falun Gong practitioners and ethnic minorities, not to mention controversially supporting abusive and unpopular regimes such as Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge and President Omar al-Bashir’s government in Khartoum. China cannot afford to be perceived by the international community as supportive of a 1988 or Tiananmen style crackdown in Burma, should one occur.

The UN Human Rights Council has condemned the SPDC, but the international community must do more to bring about social change in Burma, where citizens have been suffering under the yoke of tyranny for close to five decades. UN ineffectiveness, China’s unflinching support of the junta, and irresponsible investing practices are to blame. The warning signs of additional casualties are there. The question is, will the UN act or will this be a repeat of August 8, 1988, or worse? October 5 signals the National Campus Day of Action for Burma, and October 6 is the Global Day of Action. On these days, the global community must stand in solidarity with the monks and civilians who are so painfully suffering. The free and democratic Burma that Aung San envisioned in the 1940’s can be achieved, but only if people within and outside Burma rally together.

Myanmar blames West for "Neocolonialism", Gambari's trip "Not a success",

Myanmar's Foreign Minister Nyan Win addressed the UN General Assembly last Monday, blaming the bloody crackdown on foreign powers meddling in Myanmar's affairs. He brazenly stated that Myanmar is a victim of neocolonialism and that the people of Burma are entitled to a future that is self-determined.
The UN's report
Daily Mail's account of Myanmar's address to the UN.

Yesterday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, conceded that although UN special envoy to Myanmar Ibrahim Gambari exerted the maximum amount of diplomatic pressure possible during his four day trip to Burma, the trip was a failure. The day after Gambari left, the junta continued to defy international opinion, engaging in a new round of brutal nighttime arrests. Unsurprisingly, Chinese officials have deemed Gambari's voyage "positive", maintaining China's priority of natural resources over people. The US House of Representatives have since passed a nonbinding resolution calling for China, India, and regional blocs like ASEAN to intervene in Burma.

Now, there is increasing pressure on multinational companies investing in Burma's conflict resources to pull out. National resources are being exploited without the consent of the people, and the profits go only to the ruling junta. Widescale environmental degradation perpetuate human rights abuses. And the labor pool for these projects is forced labor.
In addition to China, India, Thailand, and other Asian nations, Western companies have long been profiting from the repression in Burma. Another article HERE.

Smuggled out CNN video on the beatings.

Celebrities are pushing for change in Burma as well.
U2 frontman and peace advocate Bono speaks out. Incidentally, U2's "Walk On" is dedicated to Aung San Suu Kyi.
Actor Sylvester Stallone reflects on the atrocities he saw filming John Rambo on the Thai / Burma border.

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Wednesday, October 3, 2007

The world weighs in on Myanmar

Amid massacres, raiding of monasteries, beatings, and arrests, there are now unconfirmed reports of the juna burning protestors--dead and alive.

The report can be found HERE
Radio Free Asia's account on the escalated violence.

Different countries have taken different tones towards Myanmar.

The US has imposed harsher sanctions, targeting the financial assets of the top members of the junta, their family members, and their supporters.

The EU has proposed sanctions as well. French president Nicolas Sarkozy has urged French companies, including oil giant Total, to stop new investments in Burma.

India, Burma's second largest supporter after China, has maintained its silence, protecting its interest in Burma's oil deposits.

In response to the killing of a Japanese journalist, the first foreign fatality from the crackdown, Japan is considering cutting aid to Burma. The Japanese government has already previously decreased aid to the impoverished country.

Australia has engaged in a diplomatic war, rejecting Myanmar's choice for its ambassador to Canberra.

Canadian citizens, led by David Kilgour (who has advocated extensively against China's persecution of Falun Gong practitioners), turn out to support the Saffron Revolution

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

STUDENTS AND MONKS MASSACRED SEPT. 29th. / Oct. 5 National Campus Day of Action for Burma


On September 29th, up to 100 students and parents and 200 monks were massacred in Yangon.
What's to prevent the junta from murdering hundreds or thousands more? These killings speak to the fact that Senior General Than Shwe and junta leaders are unwilling to listen to the international community and have the predisposition of resorting only to violence.


The body of one of the monks killed on Sept. 30th at Nwye Kyar Yan Monastery. Read the story HERE

I will be stepping up efforts to not only update this blog with the most current events, and also give further analytical background on the social, political, and economic backdrop of the situation in Burma. If you guys have any suggestions, comments, or questions...any feedback on how to make this blog more informative, please, let me know.

Please educate yourselves about this issue. And TAKE ACTION. On the left hand side of my blog are category selections. Click on the TAKE ACTION category. It goes to online petitions and other actions to protest the situation in Burma and to call on the junta's supporters to stop funding human rights abuses. I also condensed the actions at the end of this post. Please scroll down.
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from the US Campaign for Burma

October 5: National Campus Day of Action for Burma

Brave university and high school students inside Burma are working closely with monks in leading peaceful protests throughout Burma.
On September 29th, there was a massacre at State High School No.2, Tamwe in Rangoon. Reports have confirmed that an estimated 50-100 students and parents were killed.
Is your university supporting the military dictatorship?

We need a ground swell of support and action! We urge schools across the country to show their solidarity with students inside Burma and organize a Saffron Revolution Solidarity event for Friday, Oct. 5th.
Click here to sign up!

Actions to take:
1) SIGNATURES - Collect as many people as you can to sign a petition to Chinese President Hu Jintao demanding China stop paralyzing UN Security Council action and use their leverage with Burma's military regime to stop the massacre inside Burma(You can find the petition to download online here)
2) WEAR RED - Have everyone on your campus wear red as a sign of solidarity with monks peacefully protesting in Burma
3) EDUCATE - Organize a rally, speaker, silent march, candle light vigil, or hold a film screening on the that day
4) ACT- Pass a resolution to get your University to use it's shareholder power to convince companies to stop doing business in Burma.

WHY we are doing it:
1) To raise awareness on campus and in the surrounding area about the protests in Burma
2) To give support to those risking their lives and peacefully protesting inside Burma; the Burmese hear about our protests through satellite radio
3) To put pressure on China to take action on Burma. China is starting to respond due to the international outcry; we need to get more people involved to keep up the pressure.

HOW to get students on your campus involved:
1) Start a Facebook event. Invite everyone. We already have a national Facebook event up- National Campus Day of Action for Burma
2) Send out emails to all listserves available and ask your friends to do the same
3) Put up banners, posters, dormslips, tableslips all around campus (we have provided these. Read below)
4) Set up tables on main quads and outside dining halls to collect signatures for the petition and hand out Burma "quick fact sheets"
5) Pass out red duct tape and red ribbons at tables to start raising awareness during the week, along with fact sheets
6) Work with other groups on campus to get the word out (Amnesty, STAND, other social justice networks)
7) Make sure to contact the local and regional press. This is crucial. Contact your school newspaper, alumni publications, town/city newspapers, AP, Reuters, local TV stations, and local radio stations.
8) Make sure the students know why they are wearing red by having speakers who explain the situation in Burma
9) Get professors, school departments, and school administration involved

Website for Campus Day of Action:
1) We have made a webpage for this Friday's Burma days: www.studentsforburma.org.
2) On the webpage you can download posters, tableslips/handbills, and "Burma quick fact sheets" to post around campus

-Thelma Young

TAKE ACTION! The Petitions for Burma

For those who care about human rights, please sign the NINETEEN(19) PETITIONS below if you have not done so already. Please take the 5 minutes to do this. It's easy and CAN and WILL bring concrete results to the suffering people of Burma.

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19 ONLINE PETITIONS/PLEDGES

1. AVAAZ is petitioning the UN and Chinese President Hu Jintao HERE.

2. AVAAZ also is launching a global boycott of Total Oil and Chevron and all their subsidiaries that operate in Burma HERE. By hitting them straight in their bottom line, AVAAZ hopes to press these corporations to either push Burma to democratic reform, or to leave the country entirely.

3. Also, please sign the US Campaign for Burma petition calling for China to withdraw support of Burma's military regime HERE.

4. Human Rights First is calling on ASEAN members to put pressure on Burma to stop the bloodshed now. Please sign before the ASEAN meeting on November 17th HERE.

5. The US Campaign for Burma is also calling on the UN Secretary General to help stop the torture, killings, and arrests HERE.

6. Call on Members of United Nations, Members of the European Union, All Political Leaders, All Head of States, and, All Dignitaries for immediate action on Burma HERE.

7. An appeal to the 15 members of the UN Security Council HERE.

8-9. Ask that Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon support the passage of a binding resolution requiring the restoration of democracy to Burma HERE. The Global Campaign for Justice in Burma's petition is asking that the Secretary-General investigate and collect proof of human rights abuses in Burma HERE. You can also email UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon asking for immediate UN intervention at inquiries@un.org.

10. Send a petition calling for the immediate release of all political prisoners in Burma, including Aung San Suu Kyi, to Senior General Than Shwe. Don't worry if one or two of these emails bounces back-the petition will go to 30 Burmese government ministries and Burmese embassies around the world- it probably means their inbox is already full of appeals. The petition, off musician Damien Rice's actionburma.com site is HERE.

11. Reporters Without Borders has a petition calling for the immediate release of Win Tin, one of Aung San Suu Kyi's mentors. You can sign the petition HERE.

12. Sign Earthrights International's petition urging Chevron to use its influence to help stop the crackdown, and to stop investing in Burma HERE.

13. Sign the Shwe Gas Movement's petition to halt South Korea's Daewoo from extracting gas in Western Burma until human rights are upheld HERE.

14. Amnesty International Canada's petition HERE is calling on Canadian Foreign Minister Maxime Bernier and the Canadian government to put pressure on the UN and ASEAN to help bring peace to Burma.

15. Burma Rivers Network's PETITION calls on the Chinese government to closely monitor Chinese companies that invest in hydropower and other extractive industries in Burma (and other countries). Nontransparent operation, poor oversight, and not keeping affect communities informed has led to environmental degradation and human rights abuses in Burma.

16. A petition calling on Canadian PM Steven Harper to act HERE.

17-19. For British citizens, please send the following 3 petitions "Support Burmese", "Democracy Burma," and "Boycott Olympics" to PM Gordon Brown. Get him to act now!

- If you know of any other petitions or pledges, email me at freeburmaactioncenter@gmail.com, and I'll add it ASAP.

- DONATE: The Mae Tao Clinic (MTC), founded and directed by Dr. Cynthia Maung, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, provides free health care for refugees, migrant workers, and other individuals who cross the border from Burma to Thailand. Its origins go back to the student pro-democracy movement in Burma in 1988 and the brutal repression by the Burmese regime of that movement.

You can help the clinic continue its work by either DONATINGor VOLUNTEERING.

- DONATE to Partners Relief and Development's 5 Alive Program. $50 can help keep a family of 5 IDPs alive for one month. Read more HERE.

- Help AVAAZ.org Break the Burmese Blackout HERE. The Burmese military has seen the power of global solidarity for the demonstrators--and has moved to shut down all communications with the outside world. As the images and stories have slowed, global media coverage of the Burmese crisis has lost its urgency.

But people power can beat the blackout. Donate below to send crucial technical support and equipment to Burmese civil society groups, and help return Burma's voice to its people. 100% of funds donated will go to Burmese groups--Avaaz will keep no portion.

- Join the Support the Monks' protest in Burma and the US Campaign for Burma Facebook groups. Check out Burma Watch's website http://www.burma-watch.org.

- You can also call and email the Chinese, Burmese, Indian, Thai, Japanese, Russian, South Korean, Malaysian, US, British,and French embassies. Demand that world leaders put sanctions on Burma until the junta upholds human rights. Call on MNCs to pull out of Burma.

- The Dirty List of companies doing business with Burma's junta, compiled by The Burma Campaign UK.

- The Clean List of companies that have either pulled out of Burma, or made a principled decision not to do business in Burma. It is not comprehensive, but does give a scope of how public outcry has led to corporate social responsibility. The list details the companies' reasons for pulling out or refraining from investing in Burma. Also compiled by the Burma Campaign UK.