US senators call for UN probe on Myanmar

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – Thirty-two US senators urged Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday to back the creation of a special UN commission to investigate possible crimes against humanity and war crimes in Myanmar. "While your administration continues along a path of sanctions and pragmatic engagement with Burma, we believe that such a commission will help convince Burma's military regime that we are serious about our commitment to democracy, human rights, and the rule of law for the people of Burma," they wrote. The group, led by Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein and Republican Senator Judd Gregg said a UN Commission of Inquiry for Myanmar was needed to look into "a number of reports" that showed "a consistent pattern" of rights abuses. They cited "the use of child soldiers, the destruction of villages and the displacement of ethnic minorities, the use of rape as a weapon of war, extrajudicial killings, forced relocation, and forced labor." The lawmakers noted that the UN special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, Tomas Quintana, had called for such a commission when he reported UN Human Rights Council in March after a visit to Myanmar a month earlier. US officials refer to the country as Burma.

Myanmar working on a nuclear weapons

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Leaked aerial photographs show what appear to be nuclear reactors � like those specifically used to enrich uranium to make weapons. The photos have led to a massive increase in surveillance on the secretive state and their arms trade with North Korea. Hundreds of photos and secret documents, smuggled out of the country by defector Sai Thein Win, indicated that Burma was intent on developing nuclear weapons and long-range missiles. Fears that Burma had joined a nuclear network linking North Korea, Iran, Pakistan and Syria have been growing for some time, but there has not been hard evidence until now. Sai Thein Win is an army major who trained as a defence engineer and missile expert. He said he had access to two secret nuclear facilities, including a "nuclear battalion" which was "charged with building up a nuclear weapons capability". Robert Kelley, an American former senior weapons inspector with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said the evidence was the most compelling yet. The photographs, which were passed to the Democratic Voice of Burma, part of the Burmese opposition, showed components built with German machines imported through Singapore, which Mr Kelley believed indicated "nefarious purposes". Mr Kelley said: "They are either trying to make reactor fuel which they could buy for nothing from another country, or they are trying to make a weapon clandestinely. "There is just not much point doing that unless it is for a bomb." Read more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3069479/Burma-making-nuclear-bombs.html?OTC-RSS&ATTR=News#ixzz0uoMBTwP9

Clinton warns Myanmar on NKorea cooperation

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Clinton warns Myanmar on NKorea cooperation HANOI, Vietnam – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton warned Myanmar's military rulers on Thursday against any cooperation with North Korea on a nuclear program and called on the junta to hold free and fair elections this year. In Vietnam for regional security talks with senior officials from around Southeast Asia, Clinton said the U.S. was concerned about reports that North Korea has delivered military equipment to Myanmar, also known as Burma. "We continue to be concerned by the reports that Burma may be seeking assistance from North Korea with regard to a nuclear program," she added. "We will be discussing further ways in which we can cooperate to alter the actions of the government in Burma and encourage the leaders there to commit to reform and change and the betterment of their own people." Clinton also said she shared concerns about upcoming elections in Myanmar, which U.S. officials say hold no hope of being free and fair. Myanmar has said it will hold elections this year but has not given a date, and it appears unlikely that opposition figures will be able to participate. Myanmar's problems, Clinton said, have an impact "not only on the people of that country but on their neighbors, as the outflow of refugees continues," contributing to regional instability.

ASEAN urges Myanmar to hold free,

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ASEAN urges Myanmar to hold free, fair election HANOI, Vietnam – Southeast Asian foreign ministers gave Myanmar's military-run government an "earful" while demanding that it hold free and fair elections — a rare stand by the cautious group often accused of overlooking rights abuses in member nations. Foreign ministers from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations ended their annual meeting Tuesday in the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi, where they tackled a diverse agenda — from setting up a European-style economic community by 2015 to bolstering ties with the West and regional powers China, Japan and India. But at a dinner on the eve of the conference, Myanmar took center stage as diplomats vented their concerns about planned elections, which the junta has said will be held this year, without giving a date. Many ministers told Myanmar's that the junta should hold "free, fair and inclusive" elections. Such straight talk is unusual given ASEAN members' bedrock policy of not interfering in one another's domestic affairs. "Myanmar, I think, got an earful last night that ASEAN is very much concerned," ASEAN Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan told reporters on the sidelines of Tuesday's meetings. The ministers also offered to send observers to the elections. Myanmar Foreign Minister Nyan Win, in keeping with his government's typical secrecy, did not give a date for the vote. "The responsibility is for the ... elections commissioner, not the foreign minister," he said. Some ministers expressed hope for some change within the regime, while continuing to press for the release of detained democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, 65, who has spent 15 birthdays in detention over the past 20 years, mostly under house arrest. She is the world's only imprisoned Nobel Peace laureate. "Once the generals take off their uniforms and they've got to win votes and kiss babies and attend to local needs, the behavior will change and the economy will gradually open up," Singapore Foreign Minister George Yeo told reporters on the meeting's sidelines. "We suggested quite strongly to our Myanmar colleagues that they consider having ASEAN observers at the elections." Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa told reporters that Nyan Win has agreed to inform the ASEAN members whether their offer to help is approved by the government. In a joint statement after their meeting on Tuesday, the ASEAN ministers devoted one of 73 paragraphs to repeat their call for free elections in Myanmar. It did not mention demands to release Suu Kyi and other prisoners, reflecting efforts to avoid embarrassing Myanmar officially. Critics have dismissed the election — the first in two decades — as a sham designed to cement nearly 50 years of military rule in Myanmar, also known as Burma. Suu Kyi is not allowed to participate in the election, and her party is boycotting the vote and has been disbanded. "The way that the military regime is treating political prisoners led by Aung San Suu Kyi even makes the ASEAN countries embarrassed," said Trevor Wilson, a Myanmar expert at the Australian National University in Canberra. "And they're pretty good at treating political prisoners badly themselves." On Monday, Thai Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya also raised concerns about allegations that Myanmar may be interested in developing a nuclear weapons program with help from North Korea. Myanmar has denied those claims. The ministers also discussed North Korea's nuclear program. The Philippines has proposed that a group be formed to persuade the North to return to stalled talks aimed pressuring the regime into giving up its nukes, according to a diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to speak to the press. Tensions between the Koreas are high following the deaths of 46 South Korean sailors in the sinking of a warship blamed on Pyongyang earlier this year. The North has denied involvement. "We deplored the incident of the Cheonan ship sinking," the ministers said in their statement, referring to the South Korean ship. "We urged all parties concerned to exercise the utmost restraint." The North's top diplomat is expected to arrive in Hanoi on Wednesday and attend an ASEAN security forum later in the week with all members of the disarmament talks, including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. The last talks, which involve the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States, were held in Beijing in 2008. ASEAN, founded in 1967, includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Martyr's day Pause to read the speech

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Arzarni Day Martyr's day Pause to read the speech in Tokyo , created by (joint Action Committee - Japan) Tomorrow is the 63rd years after General Aung San and the cabinet ministers were assassinated. On the morning of 19 July 1947, a group of gun men stormed into the cabinet meeting room at the Secretariat Office in Rangoon. Together with General Aung San, six other cabinet members were assassinated. Killed together with them were the secretary of the cabinet and his body guard. On this day in 1947 at approximately 10:37am, Burma Standard Time, several of Burma's independence leaders were gunned down by a group of armed men in uniform while they were holding a cabinet meeting at what was known as 'The Secretariat' in downtown Yangon. The assassinations were planned by a rival political group, and the leader and alleged master-mind of that group Galon U Saw, together with the perpetrators, were tried and convicted by a special tribunal presided by U Kyaw Myint with two other Barristers-at-law, U Aung Thar Gyaw and U Si Bu. In a judgment given on December 30, 1947 the tribunal sentenced U Saw and a few others to death and the rest were given prison sentences. Appeals to the High Court of Burma by U Saw and his accomplices were rejected on March 8, 1948. In a judgment written by Supreme Court Justice U E Maung (1898-1977) on April 27, 1948 the Supreme Court (the highest court under the 1947 Constitution of the Union of Burma) refused leave to appeal against the original judgment. [All the judgments of the tribunal, the High Court and the Supreme Court were written in English. The judgment of the tribunal can be read in "A Trial in Burma" by Dr Maung Maung (Martinus Njhoff, 1963) and the judgment of the High Court and Supreme Court can be read in the 1948 Burma Law Reports.] The President of Burma Sao Shwe Thaik refused to pardon or commute the sentences of most of those who were sentenced to death, and U Saw was hanged inside Rangoon's Insein jail on May 8, 1948. A number of perpetrators met the same fate. Others, who had played relatively minor roles and were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment, also spent several years in prison. The assassinated cabinet members were General Aung San, Thakin Mya, Dedoke U Ba Cho, Abdul Razak, U Ba Win (oldest brother of Aung San and father of the leader of the National League for Democracy government-in-exile Dr Sein Win), Mahn Ba Khaing and Saopha of Mong Pawng. Cabinet secretary U Ohn Maung and a bodyguard called Maung Htwe were also killed in the shooting. Many Burmese to this day believe that the British had a hand in the assassination plot one way or another; two British officers were also arrested at the time and one of them charged and convicted for supplying an agent of U Saw with arms and munitions enough to equip a small army, a large part of which was recovered from a lake next to U Saw's house in the immediate aftermath of the shooting.[1] Soon after the assassinations, Sir Hubert Rance, the British governor of Burma appointed Thakin Nu (later U Nu) to head an interim administration and when Burma became independent on January 4, 1948 Thakin Nu became the first Prime Minister of independent Burma. July 19 was designated a public holiday and to be known as Martyr's Day in Burma/Myanmar.

New Myanmar party pays tribute to 'idol'

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New Myanmar party pays tribute to 'idol' Daw Aung San Suu Kyi
YANGON (AFP) – A new Myanmar opposition party that split from Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) vowed Saturday to keep up their idol's fight for democracy in rare elections, despite signs of a spat. The National Democratic Force (NDF), which is made up of former members of Suu Kyi's disbanded NLD, said it would "continue the democracy struggle" after being given permission to register as a party on Friday. Brushing aside recent signs of a row within the opposition, NDF chairman Dr Than Nyein said activists were still devoted to Suu Kyi. "Aung San Suu Kyi is a real idol of democracy," he said. "We will always respect and admire her courage, her belief and sacrifice." The NLD refused to meet a May 6 deadline to re-register -- a move that would have forced it to expel Suu Kyi -- and opted to boycott the vote, which critics say is a sham designed to legitimise the junta's half-century grip on power. There have been signs of friction between older hardline opposition figures and more moderate figures who opposed the decision. "We formed our party with the aim to continue the democracy struggle under the law," Dr Than said. "Meantime, we are also trying to solve the social and economic problems that are happening at the moment in the country." The NDF still needs to prove it has 1,000 members to be eligible to run in the election, but it is thought this will just be a formality for the group. The NLD, which was founded in 1988 after a popular uprising against the junta that left thousands dead, won a landslide victory in 1990 elections but the military rulers never allowed it to take office. Suu Kyi has spent much of the past 20 years in jail or under house arrest.

7 July In Tokyo Photos News ( BCJP News )

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hose were the days of the happiest aspect of my life when I was just a fresher at the Rangoon University, which in Burmese we say literally translated will be a serine paradise island of learning. But that was in 1962 when just barely four months ago when the Tatmadaw (a) Burmese military ogre makes it present felt on 2nd March under the first dictatorship General Ne Win, who took power, killing my childhood friend Sao Myi Myi Thaike (son of Saw Shwe Thaike, brother of Eugene and Harn Yawnghwe). At that time I was a young boy residing in Taungoo Hall and no nothing about politics but I sense that life is not going to be an easy one. I clearly recollect of how after a hard study in our hostel, we used got hungry about midnight or so and often goes to U Chit shop in the compound to eat. I was rather upset when the law was enforced on the hostel that we could not go out after 9 PM, which later became the embryo of the 7th July incident. At that time I did not know that the order came from the Revolutionary Council itself to provoke the students to confrontation so that they can find a pretext to crack down on the students and closed the University which they construe as a hot bed for dissidents. Those were the days when only students from the States and Divisions were eligible for hostels and so it was the hostellers that first take up the cudgel against these unjust laws. There was a peaceful demonstration in the University campus on the evening of 5th July, it gathered momentum the next day and suddenly the security personals show up and fired the tear gas to the peaceful students. If it is a hand thrown tear gas it would have no harm, but it was shot from an ejector and one of the projectile hit the groin of Sai Yi Leik, one of my bosom friends from Taunggyi, who has to be hospitalized. This action provoked the entire student body that now came out en-mass and shouted slogans in the campus. The next day 7th July the army commanded by Brigadier Sein Lwin surrounded the University. They were posted round Waing Gale and Hle Htan Waing Gyi a Burmese name for round about traffic but did not come into the campus. Some student from Mandalay Hall facing the University Student’s Union were teasing the soldiers, while those near the students make friends with the soldiers saying that we are making a peaceful protest. But Ne Win and the Junta has already made the fatal decision to wipe out the students dissidents once and for all. Suddenly without any warning butcher Sein Lwin gave the signal and the solders start shooting at us at the point blank range. Those in front were cut down while some soldiers took aim at the students on Mandalay Hall and shoot them indiscriminately like birds, one after another falling down from the verandas of the hostel. Kyaw Lin, the younger brother of Kyaw Min, was hit and yells for his brother who came and helps him as another bullet hit him right in the chest and the two brothers died instantly in each other’s arms. I had learnt something in the UTC (University Training Corps) and lay flat but my roommate Saw Eh Doh ran and was hit on the head with his brains sprinkling on my body. These were some of the horrific scenes still in my eyes and the next day we woke up to a very big explosion only to discover that the Student’s Union was blown up with the student’s hardliners who refused to leave the buildings. The body count by a passerby put the tool as 137 but the Junta say that the causalities were only seven. Since then, military dictatorship in Burma has closed the universities off and on until 1988 revolution when all the university education was closed down for nearly a decade. The prolonged closure of Universities has affected the future of almost all the young people of Burma. Now we clearly know that successive military Juntas deliberately targeted the University education, the future brain of the country as only then they can control the country. Now it is over half a century that these men in uniform are in power and with the new flawed election with an equally dubious constitution, they will continue to rule the country in different guise. The date 10/10/10 has been chosen, to be consistent with the paranoid generals' fixation on numerology and superstition, but Nobel Laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi will be still imprisoned, and the NLD has been denied with unjust laws. It is foreseeable that the Junta will "win" the election and reinforce their power and the tyrant will be even more removed from reality and continues to spread the misery as far and wide as possible. But each act of brutality girds, the people will to resist them with the 7th July spirit. What, the people of Burma could not comprehend is why the civilized world acquiesce to the crassness of the Generals. Lamentably the world did not know that the Jean is out of the bottle on that 7th July and is going to threaten the entire world with nuclear weapons. Earlier this month, U.S. and UN intelligence officials announced that they believed Burma was importing North Korean nuclear weapons technology. This clearly indicates that some sort of nuclear weapons is going on as North Korea will trade whatever it has be it ballistic missiles, nuclear weapons tech, infantry weapons and such to whoever can pay. The low level war with ethnic nationalities, and those opposed to the military dictatorship, continues rarely appeared in the international media. Several attacks by the Burmese army on civilian population go unreported. So do the air force bombings of rebel camps or villages suspected of being bases. Army patrols and abuse of ethnic nationalities, rarely makes the news. Occasionally, ethnic refugees fleeting to Thailand will report new atrocities. But there's nothing new about the bad behaviour of the troop’s rape, robbery and general destruction in the ethnic areas. It's been going on for half a century. The civilized world led by the West look on with folded arms because the world's most brutal regimes, is also amongst the least well understood. In terms of trade and communications, the country is as closed as North Korea and nearly as isolated as Afghanistan under Taliban rule. The Junta has the worst images in the world and has very few friends, and even its powerful regional allies of China and India keep a safe public distance so as not to catch any of the generals' political cooties. The civilized world doesn’t care; the rhetoric of R2P has become RIP. However, the 7th July spirits will lives on as generations of brave activists risk their lives every day to move information in and out of the country, hoping to give global audiences a glimpse of the horrifying truth behind the veil, which is an indication of asking for help to overthrow the regime. No doubt, the opposition have their own failings, mistakes, short comings, the trial and error method, in unifying themselves is still quite a distance as even the ethnic communities of Northern Alliance (different sections of Wa, Kachin) still has to be worked out with the Southern Alliance (Karen, Mon, Karenni, and Shan) drawing in the Western groups (Arakan and Chin) before they were able to find a common ground with the pro democratic groups of inside the country and in Diaspora. But the most important aspect is the encouragement from the international community who will give us marginal material support to overthrow the Junta. Until and unless we manage to find a nixes of these tripod to work together there is little or no hope to overthrow the Burmese Junta. The Burmese military Jean even though out of the bottle is still not as mighty as it looks, for its nuclear arsenal is still primitive. But the obsession and the intent are clear and there is every possibility that it can get stronger day by day, if the world cannot nib it in the bud. Will the international community wake up to this clarion call and supply the much needed resources to the ethno-democratic forces to fight the Junta and end the scenario? The people of Burma has realized that cannot look to America or EU, as their rhetoric and their talk seldom match their walk simply because Burma has no major oil resources. The people of Burma may have to look to our ASEAN neighbors who can implement things, if they want to see this part of Southeast Asia a more peaceful and nuclear free zone and take a turn in dealing with the pro democratic ethnic movement rather than the Junta. Will their Constructive Engagement Policy be so pragmatic to switch to Realistic Engagement Policy and create a better world to discover whether Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and the ethnics will ever let ASEAN down in the international arena? Will the genuine democratic countries of Philippines and Thailand together with Indonesia and Singapore of the core ASEAN take the lead? Up to this day they still does not have not vision that it is far better to deal with the legally and democratically elected government that will act responsibly rather than deal with the dictators for a short term economic gain and be more like an EU. Once this is scientifically and systematically pursued and armed the ethno-democratic forces we are quite confident that every single people of Burma will be willing to make a supreme sacrifice for the country and for their younger generations. The emblem of the fighting peacock still flies high as it cut across the ethnic nationalities, different strata, spheres, ideologies and classes for the 7th July spirit is that even though our heads are bloody yet we are unbowed.

the 48th anniversary of 7-July

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the 48th anniversary of 7-JulyTOKYO JAPAN (4-july-2010)   BY THAR HTET (bcjp-news) 4-july-2010 (TOKYO)Burmese activists held protest rallies on Tuesday marking the 48th anniversary of 7-July, on which day in 1962 Burma’s military rulers’ cracked down on student protesters in Rangoon University.Seventh July is the historic day on the Burmese history on which day in 1962, unarmed university students sacrificed their lives against the Military Government. Students were massacred and Student’s Union Building was dynamited down together with the students inside. Since that day students became the RESISTENCE SYMBOL and used to spearhead the successive uprisings against the illegal Military Rulers. Burma army Chief of Staff General Ne Win and cohorts threaten the U Nu’s elected democratic government to hand over power and formed a Caretaker government from 1958 to 1960 for eighteen months. General Ne Win and cohorts had a good taste of power after 18 months of the Caretaker Government, and they regarded U Nu as a week leader and was not strong enough to govern the country. They openly told the Pyidaungsu Governments that the army had to fight vigorously and they are not happy to even protect and give security service to those corrupt political leaders. General Ne Win took over the power second time in March of 1962. Military coups were quite popular in those days of early sixties in Asia, Africa and in Latin America. Now it is out of fashion and most of them reverted back to the civilian rule. Just after the Military coup of General Ne Win, he quelled the dissents and demonstrations with his army brutally. He even dynamited the Students Union in the Rangoon University while some student leaders were still inside. General Ne Win’s first speech challenged or threatened the unarmed Burmese Citizens that he would respond knife with knife, spear with spear if any one dare to challenge him and his lap-dog army, in Burmese,” Dhar dhar chin_Lhan lhan chin shin mae”. In his last farewell speech he warned the Burmese citizens that next time if HIS Army had to be called to calm the uprising there is no vocabulary in the BURMA ARMY’s guiding manuals to shoot up into the air for warning. Burma Army would shoot straight to the target, in other words Tatmadaw declared its “SHOOT TO KILL” policy even on unarmed civilians.General Ne Win took over in the early morning of March 2nd, 1962. There was an important announcement over the radio from the Burma Broadcasting Service. We heard marching songs being played and then the announcement came regarding the taking over of the country by the military and about the formation of the Revolutionary Council. There were 17 names mentioned as members of the Revolutionary Council. Rangoon university student protests started against the Military coup on 6 July 1962. On the 7th of July 1962 there were demonstrations against the Ne Win’s military government and the government retaliated with severe measures. Aung Gyi and Tin Pe were the most senior officers and Sein Lwin was the field commanding officer in the university region. No on exactly know who gave the orders to open fire. On July 7, over 130 stubborn or diehard or brave would be martyr students who were demonstrating in the student’s union building in the campus of Rangoon University were dynamited and brutally killed by the army. The historic student’s union building was destroyed into pieces. The 7 July student’s massacre was merely a blood-stained on the Tatmadaw but they could not suppress the students’ spirit of going on fighting against the militarism. The arrest, torture and imprisonment could not crush the spirit of the fighting peacock or the revolutionary student protests. When the Students’ Union building was dynamited with some of the students inside our heart sank and nearly broke. All the students, parents and the whole population felt very hurt up to the present time especially on this auspicious or rather a notorious day. The 7th July is the 9-11 for all the Burmese. Ne Win blamed Aung Gyi and Aung Gyi pointed back to Ne Win as a responsible leader. But the real butcher who pulled the trigger was SEIN LWIN. (During the 1967 Student Festival in Mandalay, there was a small fight between the students. One of the son of Butcher Sein Lwin boasted amongst his friends that to quell that student unrest was a minor thing for his father who had shoot and killed a lot of students and dynamited the student’s union building on 7th July. And the whole Mandalay knew that the Anglo-Burmese Primary School teacher from St. Peters School was teaching English daily to that illiterate North-West Division Commander.) No wonder there was a popular rallying slogan during 8888 because Ne Win put Sein Lwin as his successor Prime Minister after his resignation: “Sein Lwin Chauk Tan_Tasauk Kan.”, “Sein Lwin Chauk Tan_sauk yan loke myi”. “San ta pyi sae nga kyat_Sein Lwin khaung ko pyat”. “Sein Lwin Phar Kyo_Hto’ Kyo” e.t.c. Ne Win was a drop out at Inter class for Bio and could not pursue his dreams to become a Medical Doctor. But he managed to snatch the wife of Dr Toke Gyi , Daw Khin May Than who was the daughter of famous Professor Dr Ba Than. Curiously both Ne Win and Dr Ba Than were notorious for womenisation. Ne Win was notorious for never finishing any book except Adolph Hitler’s book, MEIN KAMPS. (Note this is not a satire or just tried to run down on Ne Win but the truth!) And he was the one to demolish the very famous “Burmese Research Association” just because one of the professors got drunk and touch his wife Daw Khin May Than during the association’s dinner. He was shot and killed on the spot and the precious Burma Research Association was disbanded since then. According to the General Ne Win, educated class or intellectuals are undecided, ignorant and corrupted class not to be trusted in their ‘Socialist’ revolution. Actually as a military dictator, he knew that he could not fool the educated class easily. The intelligent class always uses their heads (brains) and use to question and analyze each and every order. The dictators and especially Tatmadaw leaders never like that attitude. Subordinates must always obey the command given to them. They have no right to think whether it is right or wrong, just or not. Intellectuals have no place under Military rulers. If do not want to keep their mouth shut, they must be put into detention or must leave the country to avoid the dangerous consequences. In civilized countries the scholar is always placed above the ‘man of war’ believing that “ Nations which trusted the gun perished by it earlier”. But in Myanmar under the Military rulers the opposite of the above rule is always correct. For Myanmar Military, power comes out from the barrel of the gun only. The might is always right for them. “The evil that men do lives after them…” Julius Caesar III ii.75,.by William Shakespeare Yes, all the perpetrators of 7th July Ne Win, Sein Lwin and ? Aung Gyi ? are no more on earth. But their evil of Massacring Students on this day would be remembered forever. Since that day students became the RESISTENCE SYMBOL and used to spearhead the successive uprisings against the illegal Military Rulers. The 7th July is the 9-11 for all the Burmese. The spirit of 7 July will last forever. From :Burma Digest MAHA BANDULA

activists row over hat symbol

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YANGON (AFP) – Supporters of Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi on Thursday accused former colleagues who are seeking to set up a new party of copying their symbol of a bamboo hat ahead of rare elections. Former top members of Suu Kyi's disbanded National League for Democracy (NLD) said they would lodge a complaint with the election commission in the capital Naypyidaw next week about the use of the image in an official seal. "We will denounce them for using the bamboo hat," said NLD co-founder Win Tin, noting that Suu Kyi's party had used the symbol during 1990 elections which it won but was prevented from taking power. "The whole country associates the bamboo hat with Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and the NLD," he said. A group of former NLD members has applied for permission to form a new party -- under the name of the National Democratic Force -- to run in the country's first election in two decades, expected some time later this year. The NLD refused to meet a May 6 deadline to re-register -- a move that would have forced it to expel Suu Kyi -- and opted to boycott the vote, which critics say is a sham designed to legitimise the junta's half-century grip on power. Suu Kyi has been locked up for almost 15 of the past 20 years and is currently under house arrest at her lakeside home in Yangon. Analysts say that within the NLD there has been friction between older hardline members and younger more moderate figures who opposed the boycott decision. But Win Tin denied the NLD was divided, saying former members had the democratic right to create a new party. The election commission has said it will consider any complaints about the names, flags and seals of political parties seeking to register ahead of the polls.
 
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