Sonntag, 23. September 2007

Myanmar demo over fuel price hike

Myanmar demo over fuel price hike




Transport costs and the prices of many consumer goods soared following the price hike [Reuters]
At least 500 people led by pro-democracy activists in Myanmar have held a rare protest in Yangon, the country's biggest city, over the government's arbitrary increase of fuel prices.
On Wednesday the military government imposed a 100 per cent rise in fuel prices at state-owned petrol stations without giving any reason.




Sunday's march led by former student activists of the 88 Generation Students' Group began with about 100 people, moving along a major road north of Yangon, formerly known as Rangoon.
The protesters did not shout slogans or hold up placards.







The group said the crowd swelled as bystanders joined in before dispersing after marching for about nine kilometres.
The protesters, including some former student leaders who have served long prison terms, said the authorities watched and videotaped the event but did not interfere.
Min Ko Naing, a former student leader, said the protest was "to reflect the hardship our people are facing due to the government's fuel price hike".
"Some cars stopped and those inside clapped their hands when they knew that we were staging this performance in protest against the fuel price hike," he added.
Monopoly
Authorities watched the protest without
interfering, organisers said [APPPB]
The government of Myanmar, formerly Burma, has a monopoly on fuel sales.
The immediate effect of the massive price hike was felt by commuters as bus fares increased along with prices of basic consumer goods.
In a statement on Sunday, the Asia Pacific People's Partnership on Burma (APPPB) demanded that the government tackle the resulting problem of skyrocketing commodity prices and inflation rate.
The APPPB said the increase in the price of natural gas was "not rational" given its abundance in the country.
Khin Ohmar, the APPPB co-ordinator, quoted Ktay Kywe, a former student leader, as saying that while the majority had to walk, the military elites had vehicles that cost between $75,000 and RM250,000.
"These prices are quite shocking while we all are well aware of the dire situation of the people of Burma as refugees, internally-displaced peoples, migrant labourers etc," Khin Ohmar added.
On Wednesday, some workers at a garment factory in Yangon demanded salary raises to meet spiralling transportation and food prices.
Another group of activists said they would stage a protest against the fuel price hike if the government fails to scrap it within a week.

Donnerstag, 30. August 2007

A boost in energy prices has some Burmese in the streets. For how long?

A boost in energy prices has some Burmese in the streets. For how long?


Photo by Ralf-André Lettau

yangoon-southDriven by sudden five-fold fuel and commodity prices and the continuing deterioration of the country’s educational system, protests in Burma appear to be spreading outside of Rangoon to other cities and taking on an increasingly political hue despite heavy-handed crackdowns by the country’s military and allied gangs of thugs.


The protests have only a distant chance of success, but despite the detention of dozens of pro-democracy supporters, they appear to be growing in the face of fears that the soldiers could start shooting at any time. Leaders from the 1988 student protest movement, many of them jailed for more than a decade, are back on the streets along with protest leaders from even earlier periods.


Military leaders have called on the clergy in Buddhist temples to quell the protests. Nonetheless, scores of Buddhist monks joined a protest in the port city of Sittwe Tuesday as bystanders clapped from roadsides and apartments. In Akyab, the capital of the southeastern state of Arakan, 200 monks took to the street to protest the fuel increases. The presence of the monks, the country’s only real moral authority given the corrupt and brutal government, may be especially disturbing to the ruling junta in the devoutly Buddhist country.


So far, 10 days of arrests have failed to stop the protests over price increases that have left many without even the money to get to work. In at least three provincial towns, where government security isn’t as tight, hundreds of people have marched in the streets, so far only to official warnings.

It remains to be seen how far the demonstrations will go. In 1988 protests against then-military dictator General Ne Win built to a point where Rangoon and much of the country was completely outside government control. It will take more than a few hundred scattered protesters to create that kind of momentum, especially when the memories of the wholesale slaughter of protesters in September 1988 by the current junta remain fresh. But the military, which has been resupplied with modern weapons as a result of its energy revenues, particularly from China and India, is likely more powerful than ever. Although though more than 100 people have been arrested so far, protesters have continued to defy the threat of torture and prison.


The question now, analysts say, is whether other parts of society will also take to the streets of the impoverished country.


"The problem is the activists alone cannot continue this. They will be arrested and arrested until they disappear," Thailand's former ambassador to Burma, Asda Jayanama, told Agence France Press.


In 1988, when the military retook the streets of Rangoon on September 18, hundreds, if not thousands, died, according to activists, diplomats and journalists. Asia Sentinel Executive Editor A. Lin Neumann was one of the few journalists to witness the carnage of September 1988 first hand: “They put machine gun emplacements on pedestrian flyovers and raked the streets with gun fire. Soldiers trapped students in a square by the US Embassy and killed people in the cross fire. The gunfire went on for days and the hospitals ran out of morphine and medicine. We later saw trucks filled with bodies leaving the city. It was impossible to know how many died.”


Student leaders were imprisoned, with hundreds more escaping into the jungle, where their influence increasingly waned with the passing years. The shootings instilled a visceral aversion to protest.


It is questionable if the popular mood is changing. Burma analyst Win Min told AFP that activists believe they have popular support, but that he was unsure if the public was ready to risk their lives by joining the protests.


In Rangoon Tuesday, about 50 activists gathered near a bus stop close to the former campus of Yangon University on the north side of the country’s main city, but plainclothes police and pro-junta goons broke up the group after only 10 minutes, witnesses said. Su Su Nway, an activist who was awarded the John Humphrey Freedom Award by the Canada-based group Rights and Democracy after having been arrested in 2005 and 2007, was said to have narrowly escaped a violent pro-junta mob that broke up the demonstration she was attending at Hledan Market in Rangoon’s Kamaryut Township. She was reportedly dragged by the mob but escaped.


“It was terrible,” she told reporters. “I shouted at them that we were peacefully demanding the prices of commodities be reduced for people, including soldiers and police.”


As an example of the changing atmosphere, the long-dormant All Burma Federation of Student Unions, many of whose members were either imprisoned or driven out of Burma, announced it would resume its struggle against the country’s military government.


“Today we reestablish the ABFSU to take on the shifting roles of former students in a new generation to fight for freedom, justice and the building of a democratic country,” a spokesperson for the group, who gave his name as Kyaw Ko Ko, told the Burmese exile magazine The Irrawaddy on Tuesday. The student union’s activities go back decades, earning admiration for its role in opposing British colonial rule, and the rise of Burma’s military dictators.


Kyaw Ko Ko said the group is now organizing among university and high school students in Rangoon and other major cities. In addition, the pro-democracy 88 Generation Students Group, whose members led the 1988 uprising, have also become active.


Although Burma’s captive media reported that only 56 people have been arrested during the protests, Thailand-based political dissidents on Monday said it was at least 100. Min Ko Naing, considered Myanmar’s most prominent pro-democracy advocate after detained opposition leader and Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, was arrested on August 19.


“In the last week, the 88 Generation Students group leaders and other opposition political parties have held protests,” said Kyaw Ko Ko, who currently studies economics at a university in Rangoon. “It is important that we students and the general public join them to stand up for the people of Burma.”

According to Irrawaddy, the government said only that authorities were interrogating those taken into custody. Most of those arrested have already spent more than a decade in prison.

Montag, 20. August 2007

Myanmar demo over fuel price hike

Myanmar demo over fuel price hike




Transport costs and the prices of many consumer goods soared following the price hike [Reuters]
At least 500 people led by pro-democracy activists in Myanmar have held a rare protest in Yangon, the country's biggest city, over the government's arbitrary increase of fuel prices.
On Wednesday the military government imposed a 100 per cent rise in fuel prices at state-owned petrol stations without giving any reason.




Sunday's march led by former student activists of the 88 Generation Students' Group began with about 100 people, moving along a major road north of Yangon, formerly known as Rangoon.
The protesters did not shout slogans or hold up placards.







The group said the crowd swelled as bystanders joined in before dispersing after marching for about nine kilometres.
The protesters, including some former student leaders who have served long prison terms, said the authorities watched and videotaped the event but did not interfere.
Min Ko Naing, a former student leader, said the protest was "to reflect the hardship our people are facing due to the government's fuel price hike".
"Some cars stopped and those inside clapped their hands when they knew that we were staging this performance in protest against the fuel price hike," he added.
Monopoly
Authorities watched the protest without
interfering, organisers said [APPPB]
The government of Myanmar, formerly Burma, has a monopoly on fuel sales.
The immediate effect of the massive price hike was felt by commuters as bus fares increased along with prices of basic consumer goods.
In a statement on Sunday, the Asia Pacific People's Partnership on Burma (APPPB) demanded that the government tackle the resulting problem of skyrocketing commodity prices and inflation rate.
The APPPB said the increase in the price of natural gas was "not rational" given its abundance in the country.
Khin Ohmar, the APPPB co-ordinator, quoted Ktay Kywe, a former student leader, as saying that while the majority had to walk, the military elites had vehicles that cost between $75,000 and RM250,000.
"These prices are quite shocking while we all are well aware of the dire situation of the people of Burma as refugees, internally-displaced peoples, migrant labourers etc," Khin Ohmar added.
On Wednesday, some workers at a garment factory in Yangon demanded salary raises to meet spiralling transportation and food prices.
Another group of activists said they would stage a protest against the fuel price hike if the government fails to scrap it within a week.

Sonntag, 19. August 2007

Timeline: Burma

Timeline: Burma
A chronology of key events

1057 - King Anawrahta founds the first unified Burmese state at Pagan and adopts Theravada Buddhism.

Shwedagon Pagoda, Rangoon
Shwedagon Pagoda: Burma's key religious site
Said to date back 2,500 years
Restored in 1998
Jewellery donated for gold roof
1287 - Mongols under Kublai Khan conquer Pagan.

1531 - Toungoo dynasty, with Portuguese help, reunites Burma.

1755 - Alaungpaya founds the Konbaung dynasty.

1824-26 - First Anglo-Burmese war ends with the Treaty of Yandabo, according to which Burma ceded the Arakan coastal strip, between Chittagong and Cape Negrais, to British India.

1852 - Britain annexes lower Burma, including Rangoon, following the second Anglo-Burmese war.

1885-86 - Britain captures Mandalay after a brief battle; Burma becomes a province of British India.

1937 - Britain separates Burma from India and makes it a crown colony.

Japanese occupation

1942 - Japan invades and occupies Burma with some help from the Japanese-trained Burma Independence Army, which later transforms itself into the Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League (AFPFL) and resists Japanese rule.

1945 - Britain liberates Burma from Japanese occupation with help from the AFPFL, led by Aung San.

1947 - Aung San and six members of his interim government assassinated by political opponents led by U Saw, a nationalist rival of Aung San's. U Nu, foreign minister in Ba Maw's government, which ruled Burma during the Japanese occupation, asked to head the AFPFL and the government.

Independence

1948 - Burma becomes independent with U Nu as prime minister.

Irrawaddy river
The Irrawaddy: backbone of Burma's rice trade
2,170 km (1,350 miles) long
Commercially navigable for 1,300 km (800 miles)
Mid-1950s - U Nu, together with Indian Prime Minister Nehru, Indonesian President Sukarno, Yugoslav President Tito and Egyptian President Nasser co-found the Movement of Non-Aligned States.

1958-60 - Caretaker government, led by army Chief of Staff General Ne Win, formed following a split in the ruling AFPFL party.

1960 - U Nu's party faction wins decisive victory in elections, but his promotion of Buddhism as the state religion and his tolerance of separatism angers the military.

One-party, military-led state

1962 - U Nu's faction ousted in military coup led by Gen Ne Win, who abolishes the federal system and inaugurates "the Burmese Way to Socialism" - nationalising the economy, forming a single-party state with the Socialist Programme Party as the sole political party, and banning independent newspapers.

Former dictator Ne Win
Ne Win crushed dissent, propelled Burma into isolation

1974 - New constitution comes into effect, transferring power from the armed forces to a People's Assembly headed by Ne Win and other former military leaders; body of former United Nations secretary-general U Thant returned to Burma for burial.

1975 - Opposition National Democratic Front formed by regionally-based minority groups, who mounted guerrilla insurgencies.

1981 - Ne Win relinquishes the presidency to San Yu, a retired general, but continues as chairman of the ruling Socialist Programme Party.

1982 - Law designating people of non-indigenous background as "associate citizens" in effect bars such people from public office.

Riots and repression

1987 - Currency devaluation wipes out many people's savings and triggers anti-government riots.

AUNG SAN SUU KYI
Aung San Suu Kyi
Resistance figure and daughter of Burma's founding father

1988 - Thousands of people are killed in anti-government riots. The State Law and Order Restoration Council (Slorc) is formed.

1989 - Slorc declares martial law, arrests thousands of people, including advocates of democracy and human rights, renames Burma Myanmar, with the capital, Rangoon, becoming Yangon. NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi, the daughter of Aung San, is put under house arrest.

Thwarted elections

1990 - Opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) wins landslide victory in general election, but the result is ignored by the military.

1991 - Aung San Suu Kyi awarded Nobel Peace Prize for her commitment to peaceful change.

1992 - Than Shwe replaces Saw Maung as Slorc chairman, prime minister and defence minister. Several political prisoners freed in bid to improve Burma's international image.

1995 - Aung San Suu Kyi is released from house arrest after six years.

1996 - Aung San Suu Kyi attends first NLD congress since her release; Slorc arrests more than 200 delegates on their way to party congress.

1997 - Burma admitted to Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean); Slorc renamed State Peace and Development Council (SPDC).

Release of pro-democracy supporters

1998 - 300 NLD members released from prison; ruling council refuses to comply with NLD deadline for convening of parliament; student demonstrations broken up.

Market in Mandalay
Mandalay, Burma's second city, saw action in World War II

1999 - Aung San Suu Kyi rejects ruling council conditions to visit her British husband, Michael Aris, who dies of cancer in UK.

2000 September - Ruling council lifts restrictions on movements of Aung San Suu Kyi and senior NLD members.

2000 October - Aung San Suu Kyi begins secret talks with ruling council.

2001 Ruling council releases some 200 pro-democracy activists. Government says releases reflect progress in talks with opposition NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi who remains under house arrest.

2001 February - Burmese army, Shan rebels clash on Thai border.

Improving border relations

2001 June - Thai Prime Minister Shinawatra visits, says relations are back on track.

2001 September - Intelligence chief Khin Nyunt visits Thailand. Burma pledges to eliminate drugs trade in the Golden Triangle by 2005.

2001 November - Chinese President Jiang Zemin visits, issues statement supporting government, reportedly urges economic reform.

Conflicting signals

2002 May - Pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi released after nearly 20 months of house arrest.

Prime Minister Khin Nyunt
Former PM Khin Nyunt was ousted in late 2004

2003 May - Aung San Suu Kyi taken into "protective custody" after clashes between her supporters and those of government.

2003 August - Khin Nyunt becomes prime minister. He proposes to hold convention in 2004 on drafting new constitution as part of "road map" to democracy.

2003 November - Five senior NLD leaders released from house arrest after visit of UN human rights envoy.

2004 January - Government and Karen National Union - most significant ethnic group fighting government - agree to end hostilities.

2004 May - Constitutional convention begins, despite boycott by National League for Democracy (NLD) whose leader Aung San Suu Kyi remains under house arrest. The convention adjourns in July.

Prime minister ousted

2004 October - Khin Nyunt is replaced as prime minister amid reports of a power struggle. He is placed under house arrest.

2004 November - Leading dissidents are freed as part of a release of thousands of prisoners, including Min Ko Naing, who led the 1988 pro-democracy student demonstrations.

2004 December - Giant waves, generated by an undersea earthquake off the Indonesian coast, hit the coast. The prime minister says 59 people were killed and more than 3,000 left homeless.

Railway station, Pyinmana
Nay Pyi Taw: New capital is in a remote region

2005 February - Constitutional convention resumes, but without the participation of the main opposition and ethnic groups. Talks end in January 2006 with no reports of any clear outcomes.

2005 7 May - Three near-simultaneous explosions go off in shopping districts in the capital; the government puts the death toll at 23.

2005 July - Asean announces that Burma has turned down the 2006 chairmanship of the regional grouping.

2005 November - Burma says its seat of government is moving to a new site near the central town of Pyinmana.

2006 March - The new capital - Nay Pyi Taw - hosts its first official event, an Armed Forces Day parade.

2007 January - China and Russia veto a draft US resolution at the UN Security Council urging Burma to stop persecuting minority and opposition groups.

2007 April - Burma and North Korea restore diplomatic ties, 24 years after Rangoon broke them off, accusing North Korean agents of staging a deadly bomb attack against the visiting South Korean president.

2007 May - Aung San Suu Kyi's house arrest extended for another year.

2007 June - In a rare departure from its normally neutral stance, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) accuses the government of abusing the Burmese people's rights.

2007 August - Wave of public dissent sparked by fuel price hikes. Dozens of activists are arrested.

2007 September - Military government declares 14 years of constitutional talks complete and closes the National Convention.

Donnerstag, 9. August 2007

Country profile: Burma

Country profile: Burma
Map of Burma
Burma, also known as Myanmar, is ruled by a military junta which suppresses almost all dissent and wields absolute power in the face of international condemnation and sanctions.

The generals and the army stand accused of gross human rights abuses, including the forcible relocation of civilians and the widespread use of forced labour, which includes children.


OVERVIEW

Prominent pro-democracy leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner, Aung San Suu Kyi, has had various restrictions placed on her activities since the late 1980s.

Her party, the National League for Democracy, won a landslide victory in 1990 in Burma's first multi-party elections for 30 years, but has never been allowed to govern.

Military-run enterprises control key industries, and corruption and severe mismanagement are the hallmarks of a black-market-riven economy.

The armed forces - and former rebels co-opted by the government - have been accused of large-scale trafficking in heroin, of which Burma is a major exporter.

The largest group is the Burman people, who are ethnically related to the Tibetans and the Chinese. Burman dominance over Karen, Shan, Rakhine, Mon, Chin, Kachin and other minorities has been the source of considerable ethnic tension and has fuelled intermittent separatist rebellions.

Military offensives against insurgents have uprooted many thousands of civilians.

A largely rural, densely forested country, Burma is the world's largest exporter of teak and a principal source of jade, pearls, rubies and sapphires. It is endowed with extremely fertile soil and has important offshore oil and gas deposits. However, its people remain very poor and are getting poorer.

The country is festooned with the symbols of Buddhism. Thousands of pagodas throng its ancient towns; these have been a focus for an increasingly important tourism industry.

But while tourism has been a magnet for foreign investment, its benefits have hardly touched the people.

FACTS

  • Official name: Union of Myanmar
  • Population: 50.7 million (UN, 2005)
  • Capital: Nay Pyi Taw
  • Largest city: Rangoon (Yangon)
  • Area: 676,552 sq km (261,218 sq miles)
  • Major languages: Burmese, indigenous ethnic languages
  • Major religions: Buddhism, Christianity, Islam
  • Life expectancy: 57 years (men), 63 years (women) (UN)
  • Monetary unit: 1 kyat = 100 pyas
  • Main exports: Teak, pulses and beans, prawns, fish, rice, opiates
  • GNI per capita: not available
  • Internet domain: .mm
  • International dialling code: +95
LEADERS

Head of state: Than Shwe, chairman of the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC)

Senior General Than Shwe is the country's top military leader and heads the SPDC, the body of 12 senior generals that runs the country and makes the key decisions.

Burmese leader Than Shwe
Than Shwe, a one-time specialist in psychological warfare

He has steadfastly ruled out a transfer of power to Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD).

In 1993 he established the National Convention, a reconciliation process aimed at drawing up a new constitution. However, the general is said to be in no hurry to allow political change and talks have been boycotted by the NLD.

Born in 1933 near the town of Mandalay, Than Shwe joined the army at the age of 20. His career included a stint in the department of psychological warfare. He was decorated more than 16 times during his career as a soldier.

He is said to be introverted and superstitious, frequently seeking the advice of astrologers.

Reports in early 2007 said the 73-year-old had sought treatment in Singapore for an undisclosed medical condition.

Power struggles have plagued Burma's military leadership. Prime Minister Khin Nyunt was sacked and arrested in 2004. The former premier, who said he supported Aung San Suu Kyi's involvement in the National Convention, was seen as a moderate who was at odds with the junta's hardliners.

  • Vice-chairman of SPDC: Maung Aye
  • Prime minister: Soe Win
  • Defence minister: Than Shwe
  • Foreign minister: Nyan Win
  • Home affairs minister: Maung Oo

  • MEDIA
  • The state controls Burma's main broadcasters and publications. For the most part, the media are propaganda tools and tend not to report opposing views except to criticise them. Editors and reporters are answerable to the military authorities.

    The English-language daily New Light of Myanmar does publish many heavily-edited foreign news reports from international agencies, but its domestic news content strictly adheres to and reinforces government policy.

    All forms of domestic public media are officially-controlled or censored. This strict control, in turn, encourages self-censorship on the part of journalists.

    The BBC, Voice of America, the US-backed Radio Free Asia and the Norway-based opposition station Democratic Voice of Burma target listeners in Burma.

    Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders has placed Burma among the bottom 10 countries in its world press freedom ranking. It says the press is subject to "relentless advance censorship".

    The press

  • Kyehmon - state-run daily
  • Myanmar Alin - organ of State Peace and Development Council (SPDC)
  • New Light of Myanmar - English-language organ of SPDC
  • Myanmar Times - state-run English-language weekly

    Television

  • TV Myanmar - state-run, operated by Myanmar TV and Radio Department - broadcasts in Bamar, Arakanese (Rakhine), Shan, Karen, Kachin, Kayah, Chin, Mon and English
  • MRTV-3 - state-run international TV service
  • TV Myawady - army-run network

    Radio

  • Radio Myanmar - state-run, operated by Myanmar TV and Radio Department
  • City FM - entertainment station operated by Yangon City Development Committee
  • Democratic Voice of Burma - opposition station based in Norway, broadcasts via shortwave

    News agency/internet

  • Myanmar News Agency (MNA) - state-run
  • Mizzima News - run by Burmese exiles
  •