ပဲခူးတိုင္းေက်ာက္တံခါးမွာ ဗုံးေတြဆက္တိုက္ေပါက္ကြဲခဲ႔

kyauktakhaျမန္မာနိုင္ငံမွာခုရိုက္ပိုင္းအတြင္း ဗုံးေပါက္ကြဲမႈမ်ား ဆက္တိုက္ျဖစ္ပြားခဲ႔ရာမွာ မေန႔ညနဲ႔ ဒီကေန႔ညေနေတြမွာေတာ့ ပဲခူးတိုင္းမွာ ဗုံးေတြေပါက္ခဲ႔ပါတယ္။

စေနေန႔ညေန၄နာရီခြဲေလာက္က ေပါက္ခဲ႔တဲ႔ဗုံးက ပဲခူးတိုင္းေညာင္ေလးပင္ခရိုင္ ေက်ာက္တံခါးၿမိဳ႕နယ္က အမွတ္ ၇၀ စက္မႈလယ္ယာထြန္စက္ စခန္းမွာျဖစ္ပါသည္။
အဲဒီမွာ အဲဒီဗုံးေပါက္ကြဲမႈ အတြင္း စက္မႈလယ္ယာ ၀န္ထမ္းတစ္ဦး ဒဏ္ရာရသြားပါတယ္။


ေသာၾကာေန႔ ည ၁၀နာရီ ေလာက္က အဲဒီစခန္းမွာဘဲ ဗုံးနွစ္လုံးေရွ႕ဆင့္ေနာက္ဆင့္ေပါက္ကြဲခဲ႔ပါတယ္။

အဲဒီတုန္းက ထိခုိက္ဒဏ္ရာ ရသူ မရွိခဲ႔ေပမဲ႔ ထြန္စက္ တလုံးပ်က္စီးသြားတယ္လို႔ ေဒသခံတဦးက ဘီဘီစီကို ေျပာၾကားခဲ႔ပါတယ္။

ေက်ာက္တံခါးၿမိဳ႔နယ္မွာ ခါတိုင္းနွစ္မွာတုန္းကေတာ့ မၾကာခဏဆုိသလို ဗုံးေတြ ေပါက္ကြဲေလ့ရွိခဲ႔ၿပီး အခုဒီေပါက္ကြဲမႈေတြဟာ ဒီနွစ္ရဲ႔ပထမဆုံး ေပါက္ကြဲမႈေတြျဖစ္ပါတယ္။

အခုလုိလုံၿခဳံေရး အားနည္းတဲ႔ၿမိဳ႔နယ္မွာ ဗုံးေတြ စေပါက္လာတဲ႔အတြက္ လူထုၾကားမွာ စိုးရိမ္မႈေတြျဖစ္ေပၚေနပါတယ္။

ၿပီးခဲ႔တဲ႔ သၿကၤန္အၾကတ္ေန႕ကစၿပီး ရန္ကုန္ၿမိဳ႕ ၊ကခ်င္ျပည္နယ္ ျမစ္ဆုံေရကာတာ ၊ ကယားျပည္နယ္ လြိဳင္ေကာ္ရဲစခန္းနဲ႔ မြန္ျပည္နယ္ က်ိဳက္မေရာၿမိဳ႕ေတြမွာ ဆက္တုိက္ဆိုသလို ဗုံးေတြေပါက္ကဲြခဲ႔ပါတယ္။

ဒါေပမယ့္ လက္သည္တရားခံေတြကိုေတာ့ ယေန႔ထိတိုင္ မေဖာ္ထုတ္နိုင္ေသးပါဘူး။

Burma’s Kachin army prepares for civil war

KIA cadets training

Kachin military leaders know they are outnumbered by the Burmese army

By Alastair Leithead
BBC News, Laiza, northern Burma

The sharp sound of loading and unloading weapons and the barked orders of the sergeant-major cut through the mountains of northern Burma as the young cadets are put through their morning drills.

Their discipline is good, their uniforms smart and there is little doubting their sense of purpose or patriotism towards the red and green flag with crossed machetes they proudly wear on their right shoulders.

They are the next generation of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), and say they are not afraid to be the generation that fights in a civil war many fear may soon be upon them.

“The Union of Burma was formed on the basis of equality for ethnic people, but there has been inequality throughout history and we are still being suppressed,” said cadet Dashi Zau Krang.

He is 26 and has a degree in business studies, but says inequality has stopped him getting a good job and driven him to join the military.


But he is not afraid.

“The Burmese army may be the strongest in South East Asia, while we are very few, but God will help us to liberate our people to get freedom and equality. This is our responsibility,” he said.

It is a war the Kachin people do not want and one they cannot win.

But their generals believe a 17-year ceasefire could soon end as a Burmese army deadline approaches, demanding the forces merge or disarm.

They have already refused, and although their leaders are still pushing for a political solution, their commanders are preparing for the worst when time runs out at the end of February.

“I can’t say if there will be war for sure, but the government wants us to become a border guard force for them by the end of the month,” said the KIA’s Chief of Staff, Maj Gen Gam Shawng.

“We will not do that, or disarm, until they have given us a place in a federal union and ethnic rights as was agreed in 1947.”

The KIA and its civilian organisation have been allowed to control a large swathe of northern Burma as part of a ceasefire agreement with the country’s ruling generals.

Trade with China

They provide power, roads and schools funded by taxes on the brisk trade from China as well as the jade and gold mines and teak.

But now soldiers are being recruited, veterans are being recalled and retrained, and an ethnic army is preparing to fight perhaps the biggest military force in South East Asia.

On the car radio are freedom songs, and at one of the training camps a course in traditional dance is being run – cultural nationalism and propaganda is strong.

Map locator

A BBC team travelled to an area in northern Burma controlled by the Kachin army and its civilian arm, the Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO).

We were taken to training camps and outposts, but could not walk into Laiza town to talk to people on the street for fear of being seen by an extensive network of Burmese or Chinese government informers and spies.

It made forming a balanced view very difficult, but the determination and planning of the military was clear.

High on a vantage point above their headquarters, trenches are being dug and tree trunks are being hauled and hewn into gun turrets piled high with earth.

They can see the Burmese army positions from here and they know this will be just one of the front lines if fighting breaks out.

A well-oiled and highly polished large-calibre anti-aircraft gun is produced, standing on a tripod in a bunker overlooking the lush jungle valley.

Guerrilla war

The gleaming gun is a statement, a display for the visitors, but the small metal plane stencilled on the sights looks woefully optimistic.

They are organised and say they have heavy weapons, but we did not see them.

There are around two dozen ethnic groups in Burma, mostly scattered around its borders, and the biggest have been in various states of ceasefire or civil war over the past few decades.

Kachin dance with military theme

Traditional Kachin dances now take on a military theme

The KIA is one of the biggest. Their commanders say it includes 10,000 regular troops and 10,000 reservists, but it is impossible to know for sure.

The Burmese army is huge. It has an air force of sorts and artillery, and the KIA knows the only way to survive will be to withdraw into the jungle and fight a guerrilla war of attrition.

But civil war would create tens of thousands of refugees and create regional instability.

“If we are attacked the other ethnic groups will support us, as they know the same could happen to them,” Gen Gam Shawng explained.

The nearby Wa ethnic group has tens of thousands of troops and resources funded by drug smuggling, and we were told a deal with them had been agreed.

Whether civil war comes here is now up to the Burmese government.

If they use this election year to solve what they see as the “problem” of the ethnic groups they will have a fight on their hands, and the region will have to deal with the consequences.

BBC Monday Evening News

Monday Evening

Burma
Referendum was held despite the country was severely hit by a cyclone

Burma says new constitution overwhelmingly approved

The Burmese state media announced that the constitution, which was drafted by Burmese government, was approved by 92.5 percent of voters in a referendum carried out in two phases – first on May 10 and then May 24 in the cyclone-hit areas of the Irrawaddy delta and Rangoon.

The ruling generals said that by the end of a referendum process on Saturday, more than nine voters in ten had backed a controversial new constitution.

They say the constitution will pave the way for a general election in 2010.

However, a spokesperson of the opposition NLD party, U Thein Nyunt, rejected the announcement as a ‘mere joke’.


UN hopeful on Burma relief access

Only a quarter of the 2.4m affected have received help, the UN says
Only a quarter of the 2.4m affected have received help, the UN says

The United Nations says there are encouraging signs of better co-operation from Burma on cyclone relief.

Kathleen Cravero, who heads the UN’s Development Programme (UNDP), said foreign aid workers were finding it easier to gain access.

The UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, earlier spoke of a more flexible attitude.


Five killed in Sri Lanka explosion

The injured were rushed to local hospitals for treatment
The injured were rushed to local hospitals for treatment

Military officials in Sri Lanka say at least seven people have been killed and more than sixty injured in an explosion on a train near the capital, Colombo.

They said the blast occurred in one of the compartments of the evening rush-hour commuter train at a suburban station.

Officials blamed the Tamil Tiger rebels for the blast.

There has been no comment from the Tigers yet.

Fighting has intensified in Sri Lanka since the breakdown of a ceasefire earlier this year.


Also in the news:

Burmese embessy in Bangkok
Fire blazed the Burmese embassy in Bangkok

-A fire broke out at the Burmese embassy building in Bangkok early on Monday but there have been no reports of death or injury.

– After five years under house arrest, legal experts said time is now due to release Burmese pro-democracy leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.

– More reports about vote rigging during the referendum, witnesses told the BBC Burmese Service.

– Relief for cyclone victims is under way but huge number of refugees said they have not got anything

BBC Burmese News Saturday Dawn

Monk in september
Dr Rice concerned that world attention to Burma had dissipated since September’s crackdown

Rice vows U.S. will keep world pressure on Burma’s military junta

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Friday promised renewed efforts at the United Nations and with China to press Myanmar’s ruling junta to negotiate with its democratic opposition.

Rice said she was concerned that world attention to Burma had dissipated since September’s crackdown on protests led by Buddhist monks.

“It’s our responsibility, along with others, to try to keep a focus on that effort,” Rice told a year-end news conference.

The top U.S. diplomat said Washington wanted to end “unacceptable” treatment of the special U.N. envoy.

“The special envoy Mr Ibrahim Gambari faced many difficullties when he made schedules and meetings during his trip in Burma” an official from State department of US told BBC.

BBC Burmese News Tuesday Evening

Tuesday Evening

It has been one month since Daw Aung San Su Kyi last met with the Minister of Relation.
It has been one month since Daw Aung San Su Kyi last met with the Minister of Relation.

NLD: “no sign of dialogue”

The Burmese opposition, the National League for Democracy, says that for one month there’s been no sign of any dialogue with the military government.

The spokesman for the League, Nyan Win, said he’d not been allowed to speak to the detained opposition leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, since before her last meeting with a government minister on the nineteenth of November.

The United Nations said there had been progress towards a dialogue after a mission to Burma by a senior envoy.

BBC coverage includes

EU envoy to Burma, Pierro Fasino, has started his three day mission in China to discuss Burma issue with the Chinese government.

He wants China to help the dialogue process between Daw Aung San Su Kyi and the military regime mediated by the UN special envoy Mr Gambari.


Congressional medal for Daw Aung San Suu Kyi

Daw Aung San Su Kyi has spent most of the past eighteen years under house arrest.
Daw Aung San Su Kyi has spent most of the past eighteen years under house arrest.

The United States House of Representatives has voted unanimously to award the Burmese pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, its highest civilian honour — the Congressional Gold Medal.

Members of the House made clear the award was intended to send a message to the Burmese military leadership that the US would continue to press for Aung San Suu Kyi’s release.

She has spent most of the past eighteen years under house arrest.

Many western countries repeated their calls for her release following the pro-democracy marches in Burma in September.


Also in the news

-KNU attacked a DKBA convoy near Kawkayeik in Karen State, killing five.

-Ko Htin Kyaw has appeared before the special court inside Insein Prison.

On International Immigrant Workers’ Day , the Burmese Women Union has pointed out the migrant women’s problems including discrimination and sexual abuse.

BBC Burmese News Thursday Evening

Thursday Evening

EU treaty signed
The treaty was signed at Lisbon’s historic Jeronimo monastery

EU leaders sign landmark treaty

European Union leaders have signed a reform treaty that will substantially change the way the twenty-seven nation body operates.

The treaty of Lisbon creates the post of EU president, and a more powerful foreign policy chief, as well as scrapping veto powers in many areas.

It replaces a proposed EU constitution rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005.

The British prime minister, Gordon Brown, was the only EU leader not to attend the ceremony in the Portuguese capital, but will sign the document later.

The new treaty has been controversial among those who oppose any further transfer of power to Brussels.


A Human Rights organization reports hundreds killed in Burma protests

monk
Monks are among those who killed in crackdown

Christian Solidarity Worldwide; CSW reports the number of people killed by the Burma Army in the crackdown on peaceful protests in September was far higher than official figures.

It said hundreds thought to have been killed.

Some members of CSW returned from Thailand-Burma border where they met with monks and civilians who fled Burma crackdown and made this report.

BBC Burmese News Wednesday Evening

Bush threatens to impose new sanctions on Burma
Bush threatens to impose new sanctions on Burma

Bush slams Burmese regime after rights report

U.S. President George W. Bush condemned Burma and threatened new sanctions after a U.N. report said its military rulers had used excessive force to crush a Buddhist monk-led revolt in September.

Bush said he was “deeply disturbed” by U.N. human rights envoy Paulo Sergio Pinheiro’s report describing how the military government in Burma harassed, detained, and killed peaceful demonstrators.


Cambodia criticizes UN report on Burma

Cambodia hosts Burmese PM on a recent state visit
Cambodia PM welcomes Burmese PM on a state visit

The U.N. should leave Burma alone and stop disrupting the junta’s progress toward democracy by issuing critical reports on human rights abuses, Cambodia’s leader said Wednesday.

Hun Sen, whose government is regularly criticized for human rights abuses, lashed out at a report released Friday by U.N. human rights investigator Paulo Sergio Pinheiro.

The report found that at least 31 people were killed during the crackdown, twice the toll acknowledged by the junta. It also said that 650 people remained in custody and another 74 people were missing.

Hun Sen said the report did nothing but «disturb» Burma’s efforts toward reform.

BBC Burmese News Tuesday Evening

UN human rights envoy Paulo Sergio Pinheiro
UN human rights envoy Paulo Sergio Pinheiro

UN’s human rights rapporteur said Burma underestimating dead and detained

A United Nations investigator will present evidence later today that Burma’s military rulers have not told the truth about the number of people who died and were detained during the suppression of anti-government protests in September.

The UN’s human rights rapporteur, Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, is presenting his long-awaited findings to the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday.

He told the BBC that at least thirty-one people died — not fifteen as Burma’s military leaders suggest — and that up to one thousand people are still being detained.

Mr Pinheiro says he wants an unconditional amnesty for all those held, and an independent investigation into what he said were killings, beatings, hostage-taking and torture.

His report follows his recent visit to Burma — the first time for four years that he was allowed in.

Also in the news

-According to Ko Tate Naing, the secretary of AAPP (Burma), 22 people died, all are men including 2 monks.

-U Min Htet interviewed the mother of The Monks Alliance spokesperson Sayadaw U Gambira.

– U Min Htet also interviewed one of the Ba-Ka-Tha student leaders in hiding, Ko Kyaw Ko Ko on the set-up of Students’ Rights Committee.


US navy monitoring hijacked ship

Piracy is a major problem for shipping off Somalia

United States navy officials based in Bahrain say they’re closely monitoring a hijacked tanker off the Somali port of Bossaso.

US navy ships have surrounded the vessel — the Golden Nori — to prevent the pirates from receiving supplies.

Officials told the BBC that the ship is carrying potentially dangerous chemicals.

The US navy says it’ll allow the pirates to leave the ship, and take no further action, so long as the pirates take nothing from it.

The Golden Nori, carrying crew from Burma, the Philippines and South Korea, was seized in late October off the east coast of Somalia.

The Golden Nori was sailing from Singapore to Israel when pirates seized it in October.

There have been reports that pirates asked for a ransom of one million dollars.

BBC Burmese News Friday Evening

Burma's peaceful protests are crushed by military
Burma’s peaceful protests are crushed by military

Report details Burma violence

The New York-based group Human Rights Watch has published a detailed account of the suppression of anti-government protests in Burma earlier this year.

The report says it knows of at least twenty killings by the security forces, five more than the official total.

But Human Rights Watch estimates that the true number of dead must be far higher.

Based on interviews with more than one-hundred witnesses, the report describes beatings, mass arbitrary arrests and torture of detainees.

It also says many more people were detained than the Burmese government admits.

Our coverage includes :

-Interview with Brad Adams, Asia Director of Human Rights Watch on how the report was compiled and how realistic to do arms embargo by UNSC.


IMF sees limited sanctions impact on Burma

Logo of IMF based in Washington
Logo of IMF based in Washington

Tighter Western sanctions imposed on army-ruled Burma after its bloody crackdown on democracy protests will have little direct impact on the economy, the International Monetary Fund said in a report.

“The overall impact is limited because of restrictions already in place and because the new sanctions cover only a small proportion of trade,” the IMF said in its annual review of the former Burma’s economy.

Professor Sean Turnell says he agrees with the assessment that social upheavals could occur if the current ecnomic crisis cannot be tackled by the authorities.

BBC Burmese News Thursday Evening

Manila
Rebel soldiers and their supporters are handcuffed and led on to a police bus

Curfew after soldiers mutiny in Manila

The President of the Philippines, Gloria Arroyo, has imposed a night-time curfew in the capital Manila after a group of renegade soldiers called for her to be removed from power.

The soldiers and their supporters, who have now been arrested, barricaded themselves into a luxury hotel after breaking out of a nearby courthouse where they were standing trial over a mutiny attempt in 2003.

Government troops surrounded the hotel before an armoured personnel carrier smashed through the main entrance. Teargas and shots were fired, but there are no reports of casualties.


Burma closes HIV/AIDS sanctary, evicts monks

Maggin manastery
Burmese government closes the Maggin monastery (photo from Ko Htike Blog)

The Burmese military has closed a monastery in Rangoon which had been a centre for the treatment of AIDS patients.

Officials evicted the few remaining monks at the Maggin monastery, which has been raided a number of times since the pro-democracy protests in September.

It’s thought the abbott and a number of the monks from the monastery remain in detention. The monastery was part of an AIDS programme run by the opposition National League for Democracy.


Also in the news

Ludu Daw Ahmar
Ludu Daw Ahmar said unity and solidarity of the people is important for Burma

The ninety second birth day ceremony of Ludu Daw Ahmar has celebrated at Mahagandaryone monastery in Amarapura township.

Daw Ahmar and her family offer food and alms for one thousand and two hundreds monks.

In the interview with BBC, Daw Ahmar said the unity and solidarity of the people is the most important thing for Burma’s future.