Myanmar nuclear plan could speed up

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BANGKOK (AFP) – Myanmar is carrying out a secret atomic weapons programme that could "really speed up" if the army-ruled country is aided by North Korea, according to a top nuclear scientist. The comments follow a June documentary by the Norwegian-based news group Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) that said Myanmar was trying to develop nuclear weapons, citing a senior army defector and years of "top secret material". Robert Kelley, a former director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), inspected the files smuggled out of Myanmar by Sai Thein Win and said the evidence indicated "a clandestine nuclear programme" was underway. "This is not a well-developed programme. I don't think it's going very well," he told the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand late Tuesday. "But if another country steps in and has all of the knowledge, the materials, and maybe the key to some of the things that are plaguing them, including bad management, this programme could really speed up." Kelley said North Korea was "certainly the country I have in mind". Myanmar, which is holding its first elections in two decades on November 7, has dismissed the reports of its nuclear intentions and brushed aside Western concerns about possible cooperation with North Korea. The DVB documentary gathered thousands of photos and defector testimony, some regarding Myanmar's network of secret underground bunkers and tunnels, which were allegedly built with the help of North Korean expertise. The United States has expressed concern about military ties between the two pariah states, and said it was assessing the nuclear allegations against Myanmar, which would be "tremendously destabilising" to the region. The Southeast Asian nation has also come under fire for the upcoming polls, which Western governments believe are a sham aimed at entrenching the rule of the army generals behind a civilian guise. Kelley doubted their nuclear programme would succeed without outside help. "I think it's safe to say the people of Thailand are safe for the next few years because these people don't know what they're doing. I wouldn't want to give them more than a few more years," he said.

Protesters in Japan decry 'sham election' plan

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TOKYO: Some 250 protesters rallied in Tokyo on Wednesday to call for a boycott of next month's election in Myanmar, decrying it as a sham for excluding the biggest opposition party. Demonstrators, mostly Myanmar nationals, marched through central Tokyo ahead of the November 7 vote, carrying banners, one of which read: "We can't accept the unlawful 2010 election. Boycott sham elections." "It is important not only for people in Burma (Myanmar) but also people outside the country to unify our voice to protest the election," said Kyaw Kyaw Soe, 47, chairman of League for Democracy in Burma, based in Japan. "We also call on Japan to review its dialogue-based policies, which have yet to produce any fruitful results for years," he said, adding that Tokyo at least should not accept the results of the poll. Japan has long maintained trade and dialogue with Myanmar, warning a hard line against the military junta could push it closer to neighbouring China. The centre-left Democratic Party of Japan took power last year by ending the conservative Liberal Democrats' half century of near unbroken rule last year, but has not reversed Tokyo's conciliatory stance toward Myanmar. Western nations have said the vote will not be credible unless detained democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other opposition figures are freed.

Malaria stalks Myanmar's poor as

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WAIMAW, Myanmar (AFP) – In a sleepy, rural settlement in the far north of army-ruled Myanmar, farmer Tu Raw anxiously cuddles his young son and baby daughter, both coughing and feverish with the symptoms of malaria. About half of the villagers in this remote corner of Kachin State are suffering from the mosquito-borne disease, but medical supplies provided by the Kachin Baptist Convention (KBC), a Christian group, ran out two weeks ago. "We are waiting for medicine," said the 29-year-old, shaded from the fierce tropical heat by his wooden hut, as chickens squawked nearby. Tu Raw, whose name AFP has changed for his safety, does not know when the next batch of malarial drugs will arrive and he owns no means of transport to get to the nearest clinic in Waimaw township. In military-ruled Myanmar, saying anything seen as critical of the authorities can have serious consequences. "We wait because we don't have enough money," said the worried father, who has resorted to the traditional method of vigorously scrubbing the skin to relieve pain, leaving maroon, whip-like marks on his three-year-old boy's back. Malaria is the country's most rampant disease, infecting up to 10 million people and possibly killing tens of thousands each year, according to Frank Smithuis, a malaria expert who has been in Myanmar for 16 years. Many struggle to get the help they need, particularly in rural border states such as Kachin that are home to marginalised ethnic minorities. A local co-ordinator at the KBC said his group only had the resources to assist about five percent of the Kachin population in the fight against malaria. "There are many people we can't reach and it's getting worse," he said. "It's linked to poverty. Most of them can't even afford mosquito nets." Non-governmental organisations such as the KBC are crucial in a country where, according to a United Nations report earlier this year, the military regime spends just 0.5 percent of gross domestic product on health. Ask America: Learn. Listen. Be heard. Ask America Election forum The Fast Fix Map snapshot And despite being one of the least developed countries after nearly five decades of army rule, overseas development aid trickling into Myanmar is among the lowest in the world. World Bank figures show nearly a third of the 50 million-strong population lives below the poverty line, while the mortality rate of children under five is almost double the world average, according to the World Health Organisation. "It's a very hard life. We are not happy," said one of Tu Raw's neighbours, a 48-year-old woman, as she tended to her malaria-infected daughter, aged 10, huddled in the corner of their thatched bamboo home. Aside from malaria, hundreds of thousands in Myanmar also suffer from a range of other ills including HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, dysentery and malnutrition. While some public healthcare -- such as malaria tests and treatment -- is supposed to be free, often clinics are not supplied with drugs and patients have to go to local pharmacies. "Almost 70 percent of healthcare is provided by the private sector, but this is of varying quality and not affordable for a big group," said a foreign aid worker in Myanmar, who declined to be named owing to political sensitivities. He said non-governmental aid groups are not allowed access to hospitals, which are understaffed in rural areas. Despite the critical humanitarian situation, political parties have only mentioned health policy in vague terms, if at all, ahead of controversial November 7 elections that the main pro-junta party is expected to win. Maung Zarni, a research fellow on Myanmar (Burma) at the London School of Economics, said there was a "complete absence of space to seriously discuss the fundamental issues" such as healthcare. "The problem is not that people don't want to raise policy issues, it's that the generals who make decisions are not open to any policy discussion," he said. The cause of the healthcare crisis is not low revenues. The regime rakes in cash from exports of natural resources, such as gas, but 80 percent of state spending goes on the army and state-owned enterprises, according to the UN. Although humanitarian groups try to fill the gaps in the healthcare system, it is "not remotely sufficient for what is needed," the aid worker said. In the past, overseas governments have scaled down aid in protest at Myanmar's lack of democracy, human rights abuses and the suppression of the opposition, or felt forced to pull out because of the junta's tight controls. The country receives about four dollars per person a year in foreign aid, compared with about 38 dollars per person in Cambodia and 50 in Laos, according to Smithuis, the former Myanmar director of Medecins Sans Frontieres. He called for a major injection of foreign funds following signs that new drug-resistant malaria has emerged in eastern Myanmar, which he said was potentially a "very serious" threat. "It is in practice a humanitarian boycott, for purely political reasons. This is a scandal," said Smithuis. "The needs are high and the humanitarian boycott is only harming the people of Myanmar."

I won't vote in coming Myanmar election

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CNN) -- Democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi has rejected voting in Myanmar's coming election, the country's first in two decades, her lawyer said. "Since NLD (National League for Democracy) is not participating in this coming election, she doesn't want to vote," her lawyer Nyan Win said Thursday. The National League for Democracy, Suu Kyi's party, announced in March that it would not participate in the November 7 election. The party had refused to register under the country's new constitution, which automatically made the NLD illegal. The constitution requires more than 100 military nominees in parliament, which critics say is aimed at tightening the regime's grip on Myanmar. The country, also is known as Burma, has been under military rule since 1962. Critics say the coming election aims to create a facade of democracy. Video: A look into Myanmar RELATED TOPICS Myanmar Aung San Suu Kyi National League for Democracy Myanmar's military regime informed Suu Kyi that she has the right to vote, her lawyer said. Her party won a landslide election victory in 1990, but the military junta rejected the results. The regime recently passed a law that made Suu Kyi ineligible to stand in the November 7 election because of her court conviction. The Nobel laureate has called the law unjust. Suu Kyi won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991. She has spent most of the past 20 years under house arrest. An estimated 2,000 political prisoners remain behind bars in Myanmar

Video message campaign BCJP News

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Pro-democracy Myanmar activists who are based in Japan have launched a video message campaign

 which aims to pressure the United Nations to make a concrete action about the “serious human rights violations by the ruling junta” in Myanmar.
 
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