- [When finally in power and asked about the Rohingya, Aung San Suu Kyi spoke like a politician or a person in denial about the military's atrocities with regard to the Rohingya ethnic minority. She fell from grace in the eyes of the West and presumably the rest of the world, while still loved by the Burmese people who are barred from having her rise to lead the country because the military dictators behind the scenes and now in front again have made laws the forbid it.]
Tuesday, November 28, 2023
The Trouble in Buddhist Burma (doc)
Thursday, November 8, 2012
FEAR: "Let's Have a War" (music)
There's so many of us/There's too many of us (repeat)!
It already started in the city; suburbia will be just as easy.
There's too many of us/There's so many of us (repeat)!
It already started in the city; suburbia will be just as easy.
There's too many of us/There's so many of us (repeat)!
It already started in the city; suburbia will be just as easy.
There's so many of us/There's too many of us (repeat)!
Sunday, January 15, 2012
US restores ties with Burma [to thwart China]
The Saffron Revolution sought a Free Burma (gawker.com).The world is paying attention but it seems to be missing the point. The US is moving to upgrade relations after more than 20 years because of Burma's affinity with its only ally, China, and overtures from India.
Clinton spoke with her Myanmar (which is what the military dictatorship calls the country) counterpart, Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin.The US Secretary of State also called on Nobel Peace Laureate and immensely popular opposition leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, to welcome the release of detainees and a cease-fire with the country’s largest armed ethnic group, the Karen rebel separatists.
This compromise by Burmese "leaders" propped up during sham elections must have the approval of the country's all-powerful military dictators. It gives the US the excuse that we only fight for human rights when we do more to ensure earthlings are deprived of them than any empire in the world. The US will again send an ambassador to Burma after a significant absence.It is amazing that we had no ambassador there. When a party from Wisdom Quarterly arrived in the isolated pariah state, we were surprised to see a massive, barricaded but functioning embassy building in the center of the capital, Rangoon (Yangon).
The dictators using citizen slave labor and embezzled funds have built a new super modern super secret capital at Nay Pyi Daw.Sadly, the isolation preserved a very pure form of Theravada, the oldest extant Buddhist school. Happily, it also led to a non-monastic vipassana (insight) meditation movement. Normalized relations with the West are sure to be lost when tourists return and meditation is taken less seriously, which is sure to improve the standard of living while endangering the tradition.
This curse afflicts Korea as well: While everyone supports an end to hostilities on the Korean Peninsula, peace could mean the end of the DMZ (demilitarized zone), an inadvertent world-class wildlife habitat. In every curse there's a small blessing (yin-yang).
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Is Burma the next Mexico?
Hillary Clinton had many “hard issues” to tackle during her recent visit to Burma (Myanmar). Yet there was no mention of one of the most, if not the most, difficult issue Burma faces: their lucrative drug trade.Northern Burma is the home of the “Golden Triangle,” a hub for opium production and the location of hundreds of heroin and amphetamine refineries. So how do political leaders and the international community plan to tackle this problem in the event that Burma truly becomes a democratic country?
The totalitarian regime which has ruled Burma since 1962 has been, to a point, successful in keeping the production of illicit substances under control. In 1999, Burma’s notorious military junta... More
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
UN envoy meets with Burma's Suu Kyi
Tomas Ojea Quintana, center, U.N. special envoy on human rights in Myanmar, leaves after meeting with Burma's Aung San Suu Kyi, right, at her home on Aug. 24, 2011, in Rangoon (AP/Khin Maung Win).
RANGOON, Burma (AP) — Burma's pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi says she is encouraged after meeting with the U.N. human rights envoy to Burma (Myanmar).
She says Wednesday's 90-minute meeting in the former capital with Tomas Ojea Quintana and leaders of her disbanded National League for Democracy party focused on the country's more than 2,000 political prisoners and other human rights issues. She says Quintana has a "genuine will to help improve human rights conditions in Myanmar."
Quintana says he has had "fruitful meetings" with government ministers and representatives of political parties. He will brief the media Thursday. His five-day visit to Burma is his first since a nominally civilian [still militaristic authoritarian] government took power in March. He was refused a visa for over a year.
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Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Tour by Burma's Lady could cause riots
RANGOON, Burma (Reuters) A possible tour of Burmese by pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi could cause riots, state media warned on Wednesday (June 28, 2011), implying she would be responsible for her own safety.
Uppatasanti, a replacement Shwedagon Pagoda in Nyapyidaw
"Her followers and supporters are gushing that the icon must keep in touch with the public. They seem willing to exploit the public. They also propagate that the government is responsible for security of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi on her trip," a commentary in all three official newspapers said.
The Lady, Burma's Daw Aung San Suu Kyi- In Burma, a woman’s inner freedom, unbroken by fear
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- US Urged to Target More Junta Cronies
- Suu Kyi: Arab Spring is an “inspiration” to the Burmese
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- Suu Kyi delivers prestigious BBC annual lecture
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- US appeals for safety of Myanmar refugees
Friday, May 13, 2011
Burmese president meets Chinese military
Vice Chairman of China's Central Military Commission Xu Caihou (L) shakes hands with Burmese president U Thein Sein at the President's House in Burma's new capital Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar, May 13, 2011 (Xinhua/Myanmar News Agency).
NAY PYI TAW, Burma - Myanmar president U Thein Sein met with visiting Vice Chairman of China's Central Military Commission Xu Caihou in China Friday with the two sides exchanging views on issues of common concern.U Thein Sein expressed delight to see major progress achieved in the two countries' cooperation in various sectors, including frequent reciprocal visits at high level.
The visit of Xu soon after Myanmar's formation of the new government has actively reflected the friendly relations between the two countries and the two armed forces, he said.

He added that strengthening of Myanmar-China unity and cooperation not only conforms to the fundamental interests of the two peoples, but also contributes to the development and stability of the region.
On the occasion, Xu said 61 years after the two countries established diplomatic relation, bilateral ties have always maintained a healthy and stable development. More
- China, Myanmar sign MoU on rail transport project
- China's mining project put into operation in Myanmar
- Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railway starts test operation
- 14th Wuyi Int'l Investment Fair kicks off in SE China
- Service held in memory of quake victims
- China aids least-developed countries
- China-EU cooperation looks forward to further development
- China becomes "outstanding actor in trade agenda" for Latin America: UN official
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Police state bans plastic bags in Burma


The Orwellian junta, or group of generals enforcing military rule in Burma are going green...at least in the main city (no longer the capital) by banning plastic, according to state's media outlet.
It said polythene bag factories that failed to close would lose their operating licenses and face legal action. The move comes two years after authorities in Burma's central city of Mandalay successfully prohibited polythene bags to protect the environment.
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Sunday, March 27, 2011
Earthquake in Burma (Myanmar)
(AlJazeeraEnglish) Many have been killed and injured since an earthquake hit Burma on Thursday, particularly eastern Shan state, where Burma, Thailand, and Laos meet to form the golden triangle, about 50 km from the epicenter of the quake.
An earthquake of about 7.0 magnitude hit Burma. The earthquake struck near the [Golden Triangle] border shared between Burma, Thailand, Laos, and China. The quake reverberated as far as Thailand and Vietnam. Myanmar state radio announced that the latest number they got of people killed was 74 and 111 injured in the quake. But the total will be frequently updated. It is said that some 390 houses, 14 Buddhist monasteries, and 9 government buildings were destroyed. The state-run New Light of Myanmar [propaganda arm] newspaper reported that 15 houses collapsed in the town of Tarlay, where at least 11 people were killed and 29 injured. Another U.N. official said a small hospital there was partially damaged as well as a bridge, making it difficult to access the town. Another two people were killed in the Thai border town of Tachileik, including a 4-year-old boy. Six more people were injured in the town, just across the border from Mae Sai in Thailand's Chiang Rai province. Fears of a tsunami have been allayed as the earthquake was reported to be an inland surface quake.
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
"Burma VJ" (film)
"Burma VJ" (trailer)
The trailer introduce the film. A "video journalist" (VJ) visits the closed police state, now renamed Myanmar by the military dictatorship, with a hidden video camera. He catches scenes of shocking brutality against peaceful Buddhist monks demonstrating (in what came to be called the Saffron Revolution) in support of the Burmese people and jailed democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi (pronounced "Sue Chee"). She is the daughter of a great Burmese revolutionary hero, Aung San.
Ellen Page introduces dictator Than Shwe
She was thrust into a position of leadership by his assassination. Having married a British scholar living in England, Suu Kyi is kept in the country because if she leaves, she will not be allowed to return. However, she is allowed to say only under house arrest, while the people are systematically exploited and destroyed by "Big Brother" come to life in the form of Than Shwe and his military junta.
Full theatrical version of "Burma VJ" (in equal segments)
Monday, September 20, 2010
Life in Burma after the Saffron Revolution
The Peninsula (Sept. 20, 2010)
MANDALAY, Burma (modern Myanmar) - U Ottama recalls joining thousands of fellow Buddhist monks who flooded Burma’s streets in a saffron-robed protest brutally crushed by the [dictatorship's] army, the Saffron Revolution. Three years on, he still lives in terror. “We have to be very careful,” he said quietly, taking a break from his monastic duties in central Mandalay region. “The local authorities have a list of who was in the movement and I’m on that list.”
The 2007 protests began as small rallies against the rising cost of living but escalated into huge anti-government demonstrations led by crowds of monks, whose striking attire saw their movement dubbed the “Saffron Revolution.”
Posing the biggest challenge to military rule in nearly two decades, this peaceful swell of hope and defiance was dealt with mercilessly: at least 31 people were killed by security forces while hundreds were beaten and detained.
Today more than 250 monks are imprisoned, thousands have been disrobed and key monasteries remain under constant watch for their role in the September rebellion, according to rights activists.
Monk U Ottama, whose name AFP has changed for his protection, said government spies are everywhere.
“The majority of monks don’t like our regime... but we can do nothing. We are very unlucky for having a military government,” he confided, as rust-red robes fluttered on the washing line outside.
“I’m still angry with the regime. Whenever I think about them I get very angry. Every monk feels like me, I think.”
Feelings of bitterness towards the junta may still be strong among the monks, who number up to 400,000 in Myanmar, but U Ottama said they were “very afraid” of joining — let alone leading — further anti-government action.
He said the authorities had stepped up efforts since 2007 to curry favour with senior monks — “to calm them down” and stop them talking about the regime — who had then told their juniors to steer clear of dissident discussion.
But in hushed corners, with fellow brethren he trusts, U Ottama talks about politics every day, and when the monastery’s lights go out he tunes his radio to the BBC or Voice of America to get “correct news.”
“The Myanmar government says they are the killers of the airwaves,” he said.
Economic hardships present a further challenge for the wider population: since coming under military rule in 1962, Myanmar has slumped from prosperity to being one of the poorest countries in Asia.
“The people have to work hard for food and clothing and living. They can’t give much thought to politics or creating some movement. That’s why they are not interested in the 2010 election,” U Ottama said.
The national poll, scheduled for November 7, will be Burma’s first election in two decades but is widely expected to be neither fair nor free.
A controversial constitution passed in 2008 bars monks from any formal political role, ending a long tradition in Burma. But U Ottama, in his 30s, still thinks they should be able to play a part. “In Thailand, the Buddhist monks don’t take part in politics but they can have influence on the government,” he said. “We should have a chance to vote, but we have no chances.”
The regime’s wariness over the monks is understandable: they have a history of political defiance during Burma’s most tumultuous periods and they command deep respect from the people. Source
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Burma's Aung San Suu Kyi birthday in jail
Birthday candles are lit in front of image of Burma's detained opposition leader, Nobel Peace Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi (AP).Holding candles and yellow roses, they lit a birthday cake with 65 candles and released 65 doves into the sky while chanting, "Long Live Daw Aung San Suu Kyi." Plainclothes security watched and videotaped the event.
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Sunday, May 9, 2010
US envoy to meet with Aung San Suu Kyi
RANGOON, Burma (AP) – A top U.S. official was due to meet Burma's detained democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi on Monday, after expressing concerns about the legitimacy of the military-run country's upcoming elections. Kurt Campbell, assistant secretary of state for East Asia, started off his two-day visit by saying Washington was deeply concerned about the political environment the ruling junta has created in the run-up to Burma's first election in 20 years. Campbell arrived Sunday and met with senior junta officials in the remote administrative capital of Naypyitaw before flying Monday to Rangoon, the biggest city. He was due to meet Suu Kyi in the afternoon at a government guesthouse near her lakeside villa, diplomats and officials said. More>>Saturday, May 8, 2010
Fresh Burma aid appeal after Cyclone
Reconstruction in the low-lying Irrawaddy Delta has been very slow. Two years after a devastating cyclone hit Burma, the aid agency Oxfam has appealed for more aid, as international funding pledges remain unfulfilled. Oxfam said that two years into a three-year appeal, only about a quarter of the money needed had been promised. With the monsoon season approaching in Burma, shelter and agriculture were priorities, it said. Cyclone Nargis killed about 140,000 people and severely affected the lives of another 2.5 million. After an international outcry, Burma's military government eventually opened up to foreign aid - but now Oxfam says that aid is falling short and putting its achievements at risk. More>>Tuesday, April 13, 2010
SE Asian leaders urge credible Burma elections
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) – SE Asian leaders urged Burma's isolated military regime [April 9, 2010] to hold inclusive elections amid controversy over planned polls the opposition has vowed to boycott and denounced as designed to extend the [dictating] junta's rule. The 16th annual summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) wrapped up Friday in the Vietnamese capital with a pledge to enhance economic cooperation among the organization's 10 members. Burma's military junta plans to call elections sometime this year. But under the election laws, detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi is forbidden from participating. Her party, the National League for Democracy, is boycotting the polls — the first in two decades, potentially undermining the credibility of the outcome. More>>Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Calling Burma's Bluff

Aung San Suu Kyi throws down the gauntlet before elections. Burma's generals are embracing democracy this year — "discipline-flourishing democracy," as they like to put it — and some of the junta's friends are buying in to the program. "There is a new beginning after the elections," said ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Secretary General Surin Pitsawan last month, calling them "a step forward." But not Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of the opposition party that won Burma's last elections in 1990. At her bidding, Ms. Suu Kyi's party announced...
Monday, March 8, 2010
Burma's military relationship with N. Korea
Risking torture and life in jail, courageous young citizens of Burma live the essence of journalism as they insist on keeping up the flow of news from their closed country.
The Obama administration, concerned that Burma is expanding its military relationship with North Korea, has launched an aggressive campaign to persuade Myanmar's junta to stop buy-ing North Korean military technology, U.S. officials said. Concerns about the relationship — which encompass the sale of small arms, missile components, and technology possibly related to nuclear weapons — in part prompted the Obama administration in October to end the George W. Bush-era policy of isolating the military junta, said a senior State Department official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject. More>>
Burma's Saffron Revolution saw monks and lay Buddhists unite against tyranny.
- "Burma VJ" misses out at Oscars
An Oscar was waiting for the Burma Video Journalist documentary inside the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles for the 82nd Academy Awards (The Irrawaddy News Magazine (Irrawaddy News Magazine)
- Cameroon athlete faces life imprisonment in Burma
- Burma denies U.N. envoy a meeting with Suu Kyi
- Burma jailed monk during U.N. envoy’s visit
- U.N. envoy to push Burma junta for Suu Kyi meeting
- Violence against refugees from Burma claimed
- Burma sentences 4 activists to prison as U.N. envoy visits
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- Burma/Myanmar News
Saturday, September 19, 2009
UN chief hails release of Burma dissidents

UN Chief Ban ki-Moon and Burmese dictator General Than Shwe
"The Secretary-General welcomes the release of a limited number of political prisoners as part of a larger amnesty," Ban's spokes-woman Michele Montas said. Earlier Friday, Myanmar author-ities freed two journalists who helped victims of last year's Cyclone Nargis and released several opposition activists as part of an amnesty for more than 7,000 prisoners, according to witnesses.
One of the freed journalists was Eint Khaing Oo, 28, who was arrested in 2008. This year she became the first recipient of an award set up in memory of a Japanese video reporter who was killed in monk-led protests in 2007 [during the Saffron Revolution]. More>>
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Burmese Troops Gain on Rebels
Myanmar Troops Gain on Rebels as Villagers Flee
Thomas Fuller (New York Times, Aug. 20, 2009)
MAE SALID, Thailand — For the first time in at least a decade, Burma/Myanmar’s central government controls most of its own border with Thailand. By the standards of most countries this might not be considered a major accomplishment. But Burma has been fighting ethnic Karen rebels along the mountainous border for nearly as long as it has existed as an independent country.
The Myanmar military and a local proxy militia undertook an assault in June that led to the capture of seven military camps run by the Karen National Union, a rebel group that once so dominated parts of the 1,100-mile Thailand-Burma border that it collected customs duties at its own checkpoints.

Karen National Liberation Army Col. Bothien Thientha, 48, was injured during fighting in June against a militia allied with the government (NYTimes/Thomas Fuller).
The June offensive surprised the Karen forces partly because it took place during the muddy monsoon season, usually a time of a climate-induced truce. Hundreds of rebels fled into the jungles infested with malaria-carrying mosquitoes. The Karen have led one of the most resilient insurgencies in Asia. They once proposed to their British colonial overlords that they create an independent “Karenistan.” More>>
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Senator frees American in Burma
NYAYPIDAW, Burma - U.S. Senator Jim Webb (D - Va.) traveled to Burma. He met with its dictator (Gen. Than Shwe) and has succeeded in winning the release Saturday of American prisoner John Yettaw. Yettaw was convict-ed in Burma and sentenced to seven years in prison with hard labor for illegally swim-ming to the residence of de-tained democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, the senator's office said. More>>PHOTOS: U.S. Sen. Jim Webb, a Virginia Democrat, and his wife, Hong Le Webb, pose for photo at the world-famous Shwedagon Pagoda, which houses the Buddha's relics on Saturday, Aug. 15, 2009, in Rangoon, Burma (AP/Khin Maung Win). Monks and citizens during the Saffron Revolution peacefully petitioning for the Lady's safe release (Reuters).













