Suu Kyi can be president, says Thein Sein

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/suu-kyi-can-be-president-says-thein-sein.html [/postlink]


Burma's leader Thein Sein has said in an interview he would accept democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi as president if elected.


The Burma leader, whose meeting with Ms Suu Kyi in New York marked the latest sign of warm relations between the nation's leader and its most famous former political prisoner, told the BBC that there were "no problems" between them.
"If the people accept her, I will have to accept her. As I said before, we are now working together," he said.
But he insisted that he could not act alone to remove the barriers impeding the democracy champion's route to the presidency, as the country heads towards crucial 2015 elections.
Burma's constitution currently prohibits those with close foreign relatives from holding high office and Ms Suu Kyi, who married a British academic, has two sons living in the West.
"I alone cannot change the constitution. This depends on the wish of the people and also the wishes of the members of parliament," he said.
Thein Sein also underscored the continuing importance of the military, which is guaranteed a quarter of the seats in Burma's parliament.
"The constitution clearly defines the responsibility of the military and every sector of the parliament. We cannot exclude the army from politics," he said.
Thein Sein has won international plaudits - and the suspension or lifting of most Western sanctions - for the fast pace of change in Burma since he took the helm of a quasi-civilian regime last year.
Hundreds of political prisoners have been freed and Ms Suu Kyi - herself locked up for a total of 15 years - has now entered parliament after her National League for Democracy (NLD) party swept key by-elections in April.
Thein Sein, who was a senior figure in the previous junta, has met Ms Suu Kyi on several occasions amid efforts to steer the long-isolated country towards democracy and economic prosperity.
In his address to the United Nations this week, the Burma leader went further than ever in his praise of the veteran activist, whose struggle for change in her impoverished homeland has earned her deep affection both at home and abroad.
"As a Myanmar [Burma] citizen I would like to congratulate her for the honours she has received in this country in recognition of her efforts for democracy," he said.
                    

Is Bangladesh after Myanmar?

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/is-bangladesh-after-myanmar.html [/postlink]
 
 
Muslim attack  Hindu temples  Buddhist viharas in Bangladesh
 
Authorities slapped ban on gatherings for an indefinite period after religious fanatics rampaged through a village of Buddhists in Cox's Bazaar's Ramu Upazila in the early hours of Sunday apparently triggered by a Facebook posting allegedly defaming the Quran.

One of the worst religious attacks in Bangladesh, the mayhem started at around 11:30pm on Saturday and ended around 4am on Sunday, witnesses said. The extremists set fire to at least seven Buddhist temples and nearly 30 homes and shops and looted and damaged more than a hundred others.

Cox's Bazaar's Acting Deputy Commissioner Jashim Uddin said that the district administration has slapped CrPC's Section 144 – which restricts gatherings of more than four people – for an indefinite period in the area since Sunday morning in an attempt to contain the situation.

"A large number of Police, BGB, RAB personnel have been deployed in the area."

Home Minister Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir and Industries Minister Dilip Barua visited the site of the hate attack, officials of the local administration said.

Local people said followers of an Islamist party led by several leaders took out a procession around 10pm on Saturday alleging that a photo was uploaded on the Facebook to defame the holy book.

At a subsequent rally, they claimed that a youth by the name of Uttam Barua had pasted the purportedly offensive photo in the social networking website and demanded his arrest.

Another militant procession was taken out that marched down towards the Barua Parha around 11:30pm and some youths from the procession set some homes of the Buddhists on fire.

From then on, 15 homes, three temples including 'Saada Ching' and 'Laal Ching' were burned to the ground, Dipak Barua, a local resident, said.

Several houses and Mithhachharhi Bonbihar, some five kilometres from Ramu Sadar Upazila, were also set on fire around 3:30am, said General Secretary of Ramu Upazila Juba League Nitish Barua.

Gias Uddin Ziku, Office Secretary of Cox's Bazaar district unit of Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal and Chairman of Jhilangja Union, said he dispersed Jamaat-e-Islami activists who had gathered around localities of ethnic minorities. He also said he had informed the police of the incident.

A local journalist, who was hiding with family in the neighbourhood that came under attack, told bdnews24.com the Cheranghata Barakyang Temple close to his home was set alight. He said the flames died out around 2:45am.

Ramu Upazila officials said that during the night long attack 'Saada Ching' and 'Laal Ching', Ramu Maitree Bihar, Sina Bihar, Jadiparha Bouddha Bihar, Bimukti Bidarshan Babna Centre and Mithhachharhi Bonbihar were torched, ransacked and looted. Around 30 residences were also set alight in these areas.

Cox's Bazaar district's Superintendent of Police Selim Mohammed Jahangir acknowledged the violence in the Buddhist-dominated locality. He said around 4am situation in the Ramu district headquarters was under control but in areas on the fringe, tension remained.

Paramilitary BGB personnel have been called out to restore order in the affected areas, local residents said.

bdnews24.com/corr/rn/sk/1159h                          

Reformist leader urges world to take fresh look at Myanmar

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/reformist-leader-urges-world-to-take.html [/postlink]
Thein Sein, President of Myanmar, speaks during the 67th session of the General Assembly at United Nations headquarters on Sept. 27. (AP photo)
 

Myanmar's president on Sept. 27 called on the world to take a fresh look at his Southeast Asian nation as it undertakes reforms, emerges from decades of authoritarianism, poverty and isolation and sheds its former pariah status.
President Thein Sein told the U.N. General Assembly that sweeping changes in Myanmar - the freeing of hundreds of political prisoners, fair by-elections, ending media censorship - have created "a new political culture of patience and dialogue."
The 67-year-old former general and former military junta member has emerged as the unlikely catalyst for a wave of reforms that were unthinkable a year ago in the former British colony also known as Burma.
"The political progress in our country is enhancing its political legitimacy. This, in turn, facilitates the creation of basic political stability, thereby paving the way for economic and social transformation necessary for (a) better living standard of the people," Thein Sein said through a translator.
Thein Sein's reformist, quasi-civilian government took office in March 2011, ending five decades of military rule in Myanmar and ushering in broad changes.
"To complete this process, we certainly need the understanding and support from the United Nations and its member states, the international community as a whole and, last but not least, the people of Myanmar," Thein Sein added.
He said Myanmar's political and economic reforms, as well as its efforts to wind down decades-old wars with ethnic groups, justify viewing the country in a new light.
"At the same time, it is equally important that Myanmar should be viewed from a different and new perspective," Thein Sein said.
Myanmar's changes have drawn positive responses from the United States and the European Union, who began unwinding economic sanctions that barred most trade and investment in the country and upgrading diplomatic relations.

CLINTON MEETING
On Sept. 26, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told Thein Sein that the United States would take further steps to ease the U.S. ban on imports from Myanmar, a move that would help his government draw investment and create jobs for the country's 60 million people.
Thein Sein said that of Myanmar's 11 major ethnic conflicts, the government has signed ceasefire agreements with 10 armed groups and was committed to pursuing peace talks in the conflict with the Kachin Independence Army that erupted again in June 2011.
"We believe that cessation of all armed conflicts (is) a prerequisite for the building of genuine democracy," he said.
"We consider any loss of life and property from either side in the armed conflict as a loss for the country," he added.
Clinton's New York meeting on Sept. 26 with Thein Sein - their third face-to-face encounter in less than a year - came a week after she met veteran Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Washington, where the Nobel Peace laureate was awarded the highest congressional medal of honor.
Suu Kyi, who was kept under house arrest for 17 years, was released and subsequently elected to parliament in April, and has urged the United States to ease sanctions to support the reform process.

Aung San Suu Kyi, and other stories from the San Francisco Freedom Forum

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/aung-san-suu-kyi-and-other-stories-from.html [/postlink]
Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi will be honored at the San Francisco Freedom Forum on September 28, 2012. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

SAN FRANCISCO — I am here at the San Francisco Freedom Forum, which is one of a host of forums around the world sponsored by the Human Rights Foundation. Tonight the Freedom Forum is honoring Burmese opposition leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi for her work in helping Burma make a transition to democracy. There is still much work to do, as she is expected to share tonight in her speech.
The all-day conference here will include many great heroes around the world fighting for freedom, including Egyptian journalist Mona Eltahawy, Iranian author and prisoner of conscience Marina Nemat, and Russian democracy activist Garry Kasparov.
I will try to send a stream of posts to offer some of the insights and amazing stories of the people who are here to be honored by the Freedom Forum and share their stories. Others who have been honored include Somaly Mam, who was forced into prostitution as a child in Cambodia and established an NGO to help other victims and survivors. And my friend Ahmed al Omran, who I first met at Columbia Journalism School. He writes the Saudi Jeans blog and is a passionate advocate for rights in Saudi Arabia. Another honoree is Urmila Chaudhary, a Nepalese women's rights activist who is fighting against a form of indentured servitude in Nepal known as 'kamalari."
There are so many stories to tell and so little time. But I will do my best to bring you inside this extraordinary and important gathering.
More from GlobalPost: Opening up to Myanmar: Proceed with caution to protect the people
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/commentary/opening-myanmar-proceed-caution-protect-the-people

In U.N. stunner, Myanmarese leader praises Suu Kyi

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/in-un-stunner-myanmarese-leader-praises.html [/postlink]


UNITED NATIONS — Myanmar’s president Thursday said his country has taken irreversible steps toward democracy as he paid unprecedented public tribute to opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, describing her as crucial to political reforms.
President Thein Sein told the U.N. General Assembly that the country also known as Burma is leaving behind five decades of authoritarian rule.
It was a speech that reflected the momentous changes in Myanmar over the past year, as Mrs. Suu Kyi has been elected to parliament after 15 years of house arrest, and the country has shed its pariah status.
For the first time, Myanmar’s speech to the U.N.’s annual gathering of world leaders was broadcast live on state television at home. Never before had such a speech even mentioned the opposition leader, whose peaceful struggle against military rule won international admiration but only the ire of the former junta.
While Thein Sein, a former general, has orchestrated Myanmar’s political opening, he has not publicly praised Mrs. Suu Kyi before, nor referred to her as “Nobel laureate” as he did Thursday.
“As a Myanmar citizen, I would like to congratulate her for the honors she has received in this country in recognition of her efforts for democracy,” he said.
Later speaking at the Asia Society in New York, he said Mrs. Suu Kyi had played a “crucial role in the reform process.”
“She’s been a good colleague,” Thein Sein said, according to the interpretation of his comments, made in the Burmese language. “I believe she will continue to work with us to complete all the things we need to achieve in the country.”
Mrs. Suu Kyi is currently visiting America, and last week met President Obama and was presented with Congress’ highest award. She attended a meeting on global education on the sidelines of the General Assembly on Wednesday.
Read more: In U.N. stunner, Myanmarese leader praises Suu Kyi - Washington Times http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/sep/27/in-un-stunner-myanmarese-leader-praises-suu-kyi/#ixzz27rWQszvF
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Tokyo meeting to pledge $1 bln for Myanmar: report

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/tokyo-meeting-to-pledge-1-bln-for.html [/postlink]


Lenders will pledge $1 billion for Myanmar when they huddle in Tokyo next month, a report said on Thursday, as the one-time pariah nation is increasingly welcomed back into the world community.
The report came as the United States said it was lifting the last major sanctions on the country, which is rapidly opening up following years of isolation.
Japanese business daily Nikkei said international bodies were readying the ground for the large-scale resumption of aid loans ahead of a meeting on the sidelines of the IMF in Tokyo early next month.
The World Bank, the IMF and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) are considering extending loans worth up to $900 million to support Myanmar's democratisation and economic development, the paper said.
The Japan Bank for International Cooperation and other Japanese banks will likely offer bridging loans to Myanmar so that Yangon can repay past debts, it said.
The total amount of fresh loans will reach about $1 billion, the paper reported.
Financial organisations such as the World Bank and the ADB were not able to offer aid to Myanmar as representatives from the United States opposed such plans in their board meetings, the Nikkei said.
Washington in July gave the green light to companies wanting to invest in Myanmar including in oil and gas, a largely undeveloped sector that is being eagerly eyed around the world.
On Wednesday Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told Myanmar leader Thein Sein the US was easing an imports ban, when the two met.
Japan, as the largest single creditor country, will sponsor the loan scheme and call for the World Bank, the ADB and other creditors to waive part of their past loans to Myanmar, the Mainichi Shimbun earlier reported.
Tokyo in April agreed with Myanmar that it will forgive 300 billion yen ($3.9 billion) of the 500 billion yen it is owed.
Resource-poor Japan, with its export-reliant economy, is looking to foster growth in the resource-rich Mekong region, a part of the world that is also being courted by China.
Myanmar was long a global outcast, but has been rapidly rehabilitated since polls that saw the election of a nominally civilian government.
Last week, democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who was detained by the country's military junta for the best part of two decades, began her historic visit to the United States by calling for an end to sanctions.

Hilary Clinton announces US easing of Burma import ban

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/hilary-clinton-announces-us-easing-of.html [/postlink]



US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said the US will ease its import ban on Burma that had been a key plank of remaining American economic sanctions.
"In recognition of the continued progress toward reform and in response to requests from both the government and the opposition, the United States is taking the next step in normalizing our commercial relationship," Ms Clinton said.
She made the announcement during a meeting with President Thein Sein on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
"We will begin the progress of easing restrictions on imports of Burmese goods into the US," she said.
"We hope this will provide more opportunities for your people to sell their goods into our market."
The announcement follows the Obama administration's resumption of normal diplomatic relations and the suspension of a US investment ban.
"We are very grateful for the actions of the United States," Thein Sein said.
Wednesday's third ever face-to-face between Ms Clinton and Thein Sein was warm, a US State Department official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
It began with the Burmese leader handing Ms Clinton a letter to President Barack Obama.
Ms Clinton offered US help in Burma's efforts for peace with its different ethnic minorities and in clearing mines from the country.
She also urged the end of Burma's military relations with North Korea.
   

Shining example of leadership; let's hope Suu Kyi's spirit is infectious

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/shining-example-of-leadership-let-hope.html [/postlink]
 Aung San Suu Kyi, center, last week received the Congressional Gold Medal from House Speaker John Boehner, left, as former first lady Laura Bush, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell watched.
Jacquelyn Martin — AP


One of the world's most inspiring political figures, Aung San Suu Kyi, acknowledged the long and outspoken support she received from Sen. Mitch McConnell with a speech Monday at the University of Louisville, where she also dined amidst the colorful kitsch of Lynn's Paradise Cafe.
It really is a small world.
Suu Kyi was in the United States to accept honors she received during the 15 years a military dictatorship kept her under house arrest in her native Burma. On a 17-day American tour, she said she hoped Burma's fledgling democracy can learn from the U.S.
But, really, we need to learn from her.
Suu Kyi has reached out to her former jailers, the military junta that cut off Burma from the world, snuffed all dissent and inflicted great suffering on her and her family.
"We are beginning to learn to work together," she said at the U.S. Institute of Peace. "We are beginning to learn the art of compromise, give and take, achievement of consensus. It is good that this is beginning in the legislature and we hope this will spread and become part of the political culture of Burma."
We'd love to know what Senate Republican Leader McConnell, grand master of division and obstruction, thought when he heard that.
At a time when American political culture has been poisoned and Congress all but paralyzed by knee-jerk partisanship, let's hope McConnell and his colleagues took some inspiration from Suu Kyi's remarkable spirit of reconciliation.
McConnell has said he became interested in Burma after reading a newspaper article in 1990 about Suu Kyi being kept under house arrest after her political party won 80 percent of the seats in Parliament.
McConnell became one of Suu Kyi's most important allies in Washington and helped ratchet up the economic pressure on the Southeast Asian nation's dictatorship.
McConnell was one of the first Americans to visit her in Burma after her release. And, along with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, he was among those flanking her as she received the Congressional Gold Medal. He praised her "luminous heroism."
Suu Kyi is now a member of parliament and leads an opposition party that could take power in upcoming elections. She is second in power only to President Thein Sein, the former general who, bowing to international and internal pressures, initiated democratic reforms and released her in late 2010.
A Nobel laureate, she has said: "It is not power that corrupts, but fear. Fear of losing power corrupts those who wield it and fear of the scourge of power corrupts those who are subject to it."
If Suu Kyi can reach out to those who brutally repressed her and her fellow Burmese, you have to wonder: Would it kill McConnell to reach out to a Democratic president every once in a while?
Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2012/09/27/2352093/shining-example-of-leadership.html#storylink=cpy

Britain, Canada to share Rangoon embassy

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Canada and Britain have agreed to share embassy space in Rangoon, officials announced in Ottawa on Monday. Currently, Canada has no embassy in Burma.
Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said the space-sharing agreement would also apply to selected embassies and consulates around the world.
“Each country will continue to have complete independence on policy," said Baird, who said the move allows Canada “to focus on smart diplomacy without spending large amounts of taxpayers' dollars on bricks and mortar.”
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said that the diplomatic partnership is “about speed, flexibility and practicality,” and is "not about diplomats working for two countries at the same time.”
“Canada will continue to pursue a strong, principled, value-based, independent Canadian foreign policy,” said Baird in response to a question from Official Opposition Leader Thomas Mulcair.
Britain is reportedly trimming US$ 162 million from its Foreign Office budget, while Canada is cutting $174 million from its Foreign Affairs departmental budget.

Mizzima News

US wants India, Burma to share good relationship

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/us-wants-india-burma-to-share-good.html [/postlink]

The United States wants India and Burma to share a good relationship for furthering their economic interests, a top Obama Administration official has said.
“We want a good relationship between Burma and India and Burma and its other Asian interlocutors. It sits at an important crossroads. It will continue to play a vital role,” Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell said in his address to a Washington-based think tank.
Campbell’s remarks came a day after a top State Department official said India and the US need to look for economic partnership with Burma.
“The development of trade and transit links between Southeast and East Asia has been hindered for decades by poor regional infrastructure connectivity, isolation of the Burmese Government, and political mistrust between India and its neighbours,” Under Secretary for Economic Growth, Energy and Environment Robert Hormats had said in his address to the India Investment Forum in New York on Monday.
“However, Burma’s recent political and economic reforms along with continuing efforts by India and Bangladesh to improve bilateral relations have generated new opportunities to promote US and Indian business interests and regional economic development.
Given the vast potential, we should look to partner in this emerging region,” Hormats said.
Responding to a question in his appearance before the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Campbell said US supports a good relationship between China and Burma.
“In almost all of our engagements, with the Government, with the Opposition, there is a very strong view, a view which we support, that Burma-Myanmar wants and needs a good relationship with China.
They want an equitable, strong relationship on commercial grounds, they want to be respected and engaged appropriately politically and to work closely in diplomatic channels.
And I think we support that, and we think that is in the best interests of both countries,” Campbell said.

School Bomb Injures Four in Thai Deep South

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/school-bomb-injures-four-in-thai-deep.html [/postlink]
 
Police officers inspect the site of a car bomb attack in southern Thailand’s Sai Buri District in Pattani Province on Friday. (Photo: Reuters)mosaic by BCJP

PATTANI, Thailand—Suspected Muslim insurgents have detonated a small bomb at a school in Thailand’s violence-prone south, wounding two principals and two soldiers.
Police Lt Thammanoon Klaewthanong says the improvised explosive device went off on Monday at a shelter at the entrance of a public school in Narathiwat province’s Bacho district.
The school was holding a meeting of school directors from surrounding villages when the attack occurred.
Thammanoon says the remote-controlled bomb was hidden in a paint bucket under an outdoor marble table set where the two principals and two soldiers were sitting. The injured were sent to a district hospital to treat minor wounds from the explosion.
On Friday, a car bomb killed six people in Pattani Province’s Sai Buri District after businesses received warnings against opening on the Muslim holy day.
The suspects opened fire on a gold shop, hurting no one and fleeing, Police Col Asis U-mayee said. When security forces arrived at the scene, a bomb hidden in a gas canister in a nearby pickup truck went off, he said.
A border patrol volunteer, an administrative official and four civilians were killed. Twelve police officers were among the 44 people wounded. Security officials said the pickup truck containing the bomb had been stolen in a Sept. 7 attack in which three women were killed.
Friday’s explosion set fire to buildings on both sides of the road in the town’s commercial area, damaging rows of wooden shop houses.
Authorities said insurgents had distributed flyers in the past two weeks to warn local traders against operating their businesses on Fridays.
The attack came after a recent high-profile surrender of nearly 100 Muslim militants to the Thai authorities.
Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat are the only Muslim-dominated provinces in the predominantly Buddhist country. More than 5,000 people have been killed in the region since an Islamist insurgency erupted in 2004.

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/14804

Dr Jacques Leider said Rohingya is not an ethnic concept.

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/dr-jacques-leider-said-rohingya-is-not.html [/postlink]
 Dr Jacques Leider (France)


Q: Are the Rohingya an ethnic group of Burma?

A: My answer is that Rohingya is not an ethnic concept. Okay, they can stand up and say we are an ethnic group inside Myanmar. But I think that is not the best way. When you argue we are Muslims and we have been living in Rakhine for several generations, nobody can deny it. For me, Rohingya is the term, which is an old word that has been claimed as above all as a political label after the independence of Myanmar. For the moment, I do not see that all the people there readily submit to one and a single label. When I was in Bangladesh, people pointed out Muslims to me who originally lived in Rakhine. They have now moved to Bangladesh and when you ask them, “are you Rohingya coming from Rakhine?” they say, “no, we are Muslims who live in Rakhine, we do not take for us the label Rohingya.”

Chit Coco fb

UN secretary calls Suu Kyi 'global symbol'

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/un-secretary-calls-suu-kyi-symbol.html [/postlink]


Nobel Prize winner praised on US tour

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki Moon met with Burmese democratic activist Aung San Suu Kyi Friday.
Suu Kyi, a 67-year-old Nobel Prize winner, is in the United States for a 17-day tour.
The two smiled and shook hands for photographers.

She was held on house arrest in her native Myanmar, also known as Burma, for the better part of 20 years for her political activism. She was freed in November 2010 and is now a member of Myanmar's parliament.
This isn't the first time Ban and Suu Kyi have met. He met her while visiting Myanmar in May.
"When I visited Myanmar she welcomed me very kindly," he said. "I invited her to visit the United Nations."
Ban praised Suu Kyi's "commitment to peace, security and human rights."
"She has become a global symbol" of progress, he said.
Ban turned to her and said, "Let us walk together" in helping Myanmar on a path toward democracy.
Myanmar's President Thein Sein is expected to give a speech at the U.N. General Assembly next week.
A reporter asked Suu Kyi about whether she is concerned about possibly "outshining" Thein because she is so globally famous and beloved.
"I don't think we should think about this in terms of personalities," Suu Kyi answered. "I think we should think about it as a common goal. If we all want to achieve genuine democracy for Burma, we have to learn to work together and not think about our impact as personalities, either in our country or in the world at large."
Since beginning public appearances this week, Suu Kyi has met with President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as well as numerous other senior lawmakers.
She'll travel to Kentucky, and then next week arrive in Fort Wayne, Indiana, where there is a large population of Burmese expatriots.
At the U.N. Friday a reporter asked her to describe her meeting with Obama and how she feels about the lifting of sanctions against Myanmar.
She politely declined to describe her talk with Obama, explaining that she doesn't normally disclose private discussions.
"I was happy to meet him and I consider it a good meeting," she said.
"I am happy that sanctions have been lifted because as I've been saying, rather ad nauseam, that the Burmese people (need) to take responsibility for the democratization" of the country.
Earlier this week Suu Kyi accepted the U.S. Congressional Gold Medal.
She called the ceremony in Washington one of the most moving days of her life.
"From the depths of my heart, I thank you, the people of America, and you, their representatives," she said to the gathered members of Congress, "for keeping us in your hearts and minds during the dark years when freedom and justice seemed beyond our reach."
Sen. John McCain was overcome with emotion when he, among other political heavyweights in Washington, praised Suu Kyi.
McCain called Suu Kyi "his personal hero."
"They did all they could to break her," the Arizona Republican said of the military junta that detained her. McCain, who was a POW in Vietnam, choked up, his voice breaking.
"Aung San Suu Kyi didn't scare a damn," he told the crowd.

Suu Kyi addresses Fort Wayne audience

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/suu-kyi-addresses-fort-wayne-audience.html [/postlink]


Political activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi told a Fort Wayne, Ind., audience Tuesday she hopes expatriates will return to Burma.

Referring to her homeland by its former name, Burma, instead of its current name, Myanmar, Suu Kyi said if those who left the country wish to return, she would "do my best to achieve this goal." She also thanked the Fort Wayne community for hosting and educating Burmese refugees and said the United States, "the greatest democracy in the world," was teaching her country how to be a democracy, through discussion, debate and compromise.

Suu Kyi, leader of Myanmar's political opposition party, was among the world's most prominent political prisoners, under house arrest by authorities for 15 of the 21 years between 1989 and 2010. She won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991.

The audience of 5,000 at Fort Wayne's Memorial Coliseum included Mayor Tom Henry and Sen. Dan Coates, R-Ind., the Fort Wayne, Ind., Journal Gazette reported.

Myanmar’s Fragile Democracy

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/myanmars-fragile-democracy.html [/postlink]


Now that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s revered opposition leader, has given the go-ahead, the United States should further ease sanctions against that country, which is beginning to embrace democracy. Sanctions are intended to encourage positive change and will have value only if affected governments trust that the penalties will be lifted as they make progress.       

During her visit to Washington this week — the first since she was freed from 15 years of house arrest — Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi did not specify what sanctions should be eased. But among the sanctions now in place is a ban on virtually all Myanmar imports to the United States.
Myanmar’s democratic progress has been substantial. Since taking office last year, President U Thein Sein has pushed aside officials who don’t support reforms and allowed Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi and her party to run for Parliament. He has freed hundreds of political prisoners and begun to carry out economic and political reforms, including a new law relaxing press censorship.
Still, there is reason to be on guard against backsliding toward authoritarianism. Mr. Thein Sein and his national security council have too much power, including authority to declare a state of emergency at any time. There is a need for land reform, a professional military under civilian control and an end to human rights abuses.
Mr. Thein Sein, who is scheduled to attend the United Nations General Assembly next week, deserves recognition for what has been achieved since 2011. For that, the Obama administration has already relaxed some sanctions, allowing American companies to invest in many parts of the Myanmar economy. On Wednesday, it removed him and another official from a list of sanctioned individuals, thus allowing Americans to do business with them and giving them access to once-blocked assets. The administration should also consider supporting aid to Myanmar through international institutions and lifting the import ban.
American and international businesses will have important roles to play, too. When they invest in Myanmar, they could adopt stringent rules against the use of forced labor and other human rights abuses, as Amnesty International has recommended. Despite huge challenges, Myanmar, in significant ways, is a model of effective collaboration on the path to democracy — between Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi and Mr. Thein Sein and, in the United States, between Republicans and Democrats. Through the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations, top officials and lawmakers supported sanctions and Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi, and, when they saw an opening in 2011, agreed to engage with Myanmar on a step-by-step basis. That’s worth noting in this era of dysfunctional politics.

HISTORY, ISSUES, AND TRUTH in ARAKAN/RAKHINE STATE, WESTERN BURMA

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/history-issues-and-truth-in.html [/postlink]

HISTORY, ISSUES, AND TRUTH in ARAKAN/RAKHINE STATE, WESTERN BURMA

by Rick Heizman

I am disturbed to see that there is so much deception, fraud, and manipulation of the media about the situation in Rakhine State, Burma. So many people - even those who seem to know a lot about Burma - don’t know the history, and the truth and reality of the Buddhist Rakhine people. I am writing this to explain the real reasons, and the truth about what is happening in Rakhine State, in the western part of Burma/Myanmar. This is based on the history of the region, and upon real experience in Rakhine State.I was last there about 8 months ago - November, 2011.
Rakhine, (also spelt Rakhaing), and Arakan basically mean the same thing, and refer to the culture, language, ethnicity, and continuously populated homeland of the Buddhist people of the area. Rohingya is a new name for the more recent Muslim immigrants who were formerly called Bengali Muslims, or Chittagong Muslims (which indicate their roots).
Rakhine State of Burma borders Bangladesh. The capital of Rakhine State is Sittwe (old name Akyab). The largest historical archeological site is Mrauk U, the last great Rakhine capital (1430-1784) at it's time one of the richest cities in Asia.
Bangladesh is a new country (1971), originally part of various ancient 'Indian' Hindu or Buddhist kingdoms, later Muslim conquests brought Islam, then it became part of the British Indian Empire, gained independence in 1947 as East Pakistan (as one country linked with West Pakistan 1000 miles away) and became independent as Bangladesh in 1971.

THE BASIC TRUTH
The basic truth (explained below with real history and facts) is that the Buddhist Rakhine people are under a real and brutal campaign to seize their centuries old cultural homeland and turn it into an Islamic State, without other people or religions tolerated. This has already happened in parts of Rakhine State near the Bangladesh border in the area of Maungdaw and Buthidaung. The Rakhine have never taken over or invaded other lands - they have lived in their ancient homeland continuously. The Buddhist Rakhine people have suffered massive slaughters, and been forced and burned out of hundreds of towns and villages in the last 100 years. They know - from bitter experience that the Muslims have NO respect for the Buddhist people and culture, and will destroy any Buddhist temples, monasteries, and holy places - as has happened already in parts of Rakhine. Below, I will explain why even Bangladesh hates the Rohingya, and will not help them, or let them live in Bangladesh.
The Rakhine people are in engaged in a struggle that is similar to other struggles in the area:
Southern Thailand: about 5000 Thai Buddhist - including Buddhist monks tortured and beheaded - killed in recent years by fanatic Muslims trying to drive out and eliminate the Buddhist population, and turn southern Thailand into an independent Islamic state.
Southern Philippines: constant kidnappings, beheadings, and killing of Christian Filipino's, goal to make an independent Islam-only separate country.
Non-Muslim parts of Indonesia: hundreds of Christian churches burned and destroyed, Christian school girls beheaded walking to school; currently imams and leaders are calling for Indonesians to go wage holy war on the Burmese.
Bangladesh: fifty years ago it was about 28% Hindu, after forcing millions of Hindus to flee the Hindu population is less than 9%, and still becoming smaller. The small Buddhist population is treated terribly, and Buddhist temples and monasteries and homes are looted and burned. All the ancient temples, stupas, and ruins from nearly 2000 years of Buddhist kingdoms have been completely destroyed.

THE HISTORY
The Rakhine area has a history of kings and kingdoms dating back over 2000 years. It has had a deeply Buddhist tradition from the early centuries AD. The second largest ruined city and temple site in Burma - Mrauk U - is in Rakhine State, and is the spiritual center of the Rakhine identity.
Now I'll skip up to the British days, and how the British, unknowingly, helped create the present problems.
The British, in Burma, Malaysia, Singapore, and other places, brought in Indian and/or Chinese men to be the plantation or other business managers. The British brought many Muslim Indians from Bengal to Rakhine because Bengal was close and convenient. These managers - instead of hiring local Rakhine people to work - sent for thousands of their fellow Muslim Bengalis to come and work. Most of these Bengalis were influenced by the Islamic Faraidi movement in Bengal at that time (late 1800s) which was based on the ideology of the Wahhabis of Arabia (this is before the Saudi tribe took over and named Arabia after themselves). The Bengalis were instructed to build their own - Muslim only - villages near the water resources (so that they could later control the water, and deny it to the Buddhist). And, they were told to prepare to wage a holy war (jihad) when their leaders felt they were ready and strong enough.
In the Maungdaw Township alone, around 1910, only 15 Muslim managers brought in thousands of Bengali workers - starting a huge population shift - and began the campaign against the Buddhist.
In 1939 The British established a Commission of Inquiry to investigate the rapid increase of Bengali Muslims in Arakan from roughly 30,000 in 1825 to 220,000 in 1930. That Commission concluded that there would be violence in the very near future if the relentless Bengali Muslim movement across the border wasn't stopped or at least restricted.
And the Commission was right.

WORLD WAR II DAYS
In early 1942, as the Japanese were advancing towards Arakan, the British formed a battalion of Muslims - called the Bengali V Force - and gave them weapons. The British knew them as better fighters then the Rakhine. As the British suddenly retreated - the Bengali Muslims quickly used the weapons - not against the Japanese - but they used them to slaughter thousands and thousands of Buddhist and burned down all of the Buddhist villages, pagodas, temples and monasteries in the Maungdaw and Buthidaung areas. About 30,000 Rakhine Buddhist were killed in this absolute genocide, and tens of thousands were ethnically cleansed from their ancestral lands. By late 1942 the whole Maungdaw-Buthidaung region was firmly in the hands of Bengali Muslims - who were now well armed with abandoned Japanese and British weapons.
Since they controlled the border now, the movement of Muslims immigrants greatly increased - and this area, which had been almost entirely Buddhist for centuries was violently emptied of Buddhist in a very short time, and became nearly entirely Muslim - and with plans to take more land, and to make it entirely Muslim.
This is quoted from a British officer, at that time in 1942, who wrote a report: "I have been told the harrowing tales of cruelly and suffering inflicted on the Arakanese (Buddhist) villages in the Ratheedaung area. Most of the villages on the west bank of the Mayu river have been burnt and destroyed by the (Bengali-Muslim) V Force. The enemy (Japanese) never came near to these villages. Hundreds of villagers are said to be hiding in the hills. It will be the Arakanese who will be ousted from their ancestral land and if they cannot win over (the Muslims) in time, then there can be no hope of their salvation."
After the Japanese were driven out, Bo Yan Aung, one of the 'Thirty Comrades' was sent to Arakan to set up the administration in Sittwe district, and to stop the violence. He sent his two lieutenants, Bo Yan Naung and Bo Myo Nyunt to Maungdaw to negotiate with the radical Muslim leaders. Instead of talking to them the Muslim leaders killed both of them.
They wanted this land to be their own and they wanted to create a Dah-rul-Islam - an Islamic kingdom that will join with others, as Muslims eliminated the non-Muslims everywhere - and eventually create a world of pure Islam.
Now the Buddhist really saw what was happening - that they were going to lose their lives, their culture, their ancestral homeland, and their history if this kept going.

THE KORAN JUSTIFIES TAKING LAND FROM INFIDELS (NON-MUSLIMS)
Qur’an 33.27 And He made you heirs to their land and their dwellings and their property, and (to) a land which you have not yet trodden, and Allah has power over all things. Qur’an 21:44 Do they see Us advancing, gradually reducing the land (in their control), curtailing its borders on all sides? It is they who will be overcome.
As World War II ended, the British took control again, but the Muslims would not accept the Buddhist to come back to and live in their native villages (that they were forced out of). They now believed that they had their own area now that was to be a strict Muslim land ruled by Sharia Law, and they would not accept being in a country ruled by infidel British or infidel Burmese (infidel means non-believer, or non-Muslim). Instead they planned to join the soon-to-be Islamic country of Pakistan. As the British were preparing to give independence to Burma, the Muslim leadership -represented by the Jami-atul Ulema-e Islam party - made connections with the Muslim leaders of soon-to be Pakistan and formed an insurgency army - which would invade Arakan and attach it to East Pakistan (now known as Bangladesh). In 1946 they formed the Muslim Liberation Organization (MLO) and started their war. In 1948 they changed the name of the party to Mujahid Party and the insurgency then became known as the Mujahidin Insurgency. (Mujahadin means: Muslim fighters engaged in a Jihad). (Jihad means: holy war in the name of Islam).
In August of 1947 the Commissioner of Arakan wrote a report after an official was brutally murdered by Muslims in Maungdaw. He wrote: "The assassins were suspected to be employed by the Muslim Police Officer, and have been organizing strong Muslim feelings and dominating the whole area. This is a direct affront and open challenge to the lawful authority of the Burma Government, by the Muslim community of Buthidaung and Maungdaw Townships……Unless this most dastardly flouting of the government is firmly and severely dealt with, this alien community will try to annex this territory, or instigate Pakistan to annex it."

AFTER BURMA GAINED INDEPENDENCE
On January 4, 1948, Burma became independent. This meant nothing to the Muslims - they had other plans. On June 9, 1948 the Mujahid Party sent a letter to the new government of The Union of Burma. It was a list of demands, including:
1. The areas between the Kaladan and Naaf rivers must be recognized as the National Home of the Muslims of Burma (and this is the land they had ethnically cleansed of Buddhist in the last 6 years!)
2. The Mujahid Party must be granted legal status as a political organization in the new government of Burma (and this party preaches holy war against the Buddhist who have lived there for centuries!)
3. The Mujahidin fighters who had been captured and jailed (for slaughtering Buddhist, and burning and destroying villages, temples and monasteries) must be unconditionally released. and those were just three of the demands…..
The new central government, still trying to recover from the assassination of Bogyoke Aung San, refused these outrageous demands, and quickly the Muslims in northern Arakan declared jihad (holy war) on Burma.
The Mujahadin launched a vicious campaign and destroyed all the Buddhist villages in northern Maungdaw Township (the southern parts had been destroyed 6 years earlier). On July 19, 1948 they attacked Ngapruchaung, and villages around it, and used a new tactic - kidnapping Buddhist monks, and holding them as hostages, and killing them if they didn't get the money or conditions that they demanded.

U NU MISTAKINGLY FUELS THE PROBLEM
During the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, most of Burma was tangled in rebellions, communist insurgencies, and much strife and confusion. The new government (after Bogyoke Aung San's assassination in 1947, and up to the coup and takeover by Ne Win in 1962) of the 'Union of Burma was barely in control and was in danger of collapsing entirely. The leader - U Nu - at a critical time, was in danger of the parliament issuing a 'vote of no-confidence' and stripping him of power. To survive, he needed all the help he could get. He could not count on support from the Rakhine parliamentarians, because the Rakhine supported the opposition against U Nu. There were some Muslims in the parliament, and U Nu was willing to promise them anything if he could get their much needed votes of confidence. In June 1958, U Nu's faction of the government, survived the very close vote, because he got the Muslim and Mon (and some others) to vote for him - because he promised to create states for the Mon people (on the east side of Burma) and for the Muslims (on the west side of Burma), and to grant citizenship to the 'Bengali Muslims' in Burma. (The word 'Rohingya' was still not widely known or used).
On July 31, 1958, U Nu offered an amnesty to all Mujahid insurgents who would surrender. Some Mujahid surrendered. They and other Bengali settlers asked for citizenship, but other events were quickly beginning to unfold. In September, 1958, high ranking officers of the Burma Army went to U Nu's residence and gave him an ultimatum - give up his power and accept the transfer of power to the military or there will be a military coup against him (which could imprison or kill him), and in fact these officers already had their troops take the airport and townships less than 10 miles away.
U Nu had no choice - he was out of power, and his promises of statehood and citizenship were out (and realize that these promises were calculated and made in desperation in order to stay in power). A military care-taker government, led by General Ne Win took over and promised elections in two years, and in 1960 held the promised elections - which actually voted U Nu back into power! He had to give those who helped him quick thanks, and he forced the reluctant Voice-of-Burma radio to broadcast a regular program in Bengali language to partly satisfy the Muslim Parliamentarian members who helped him.
They wanted more. Thousands and thousands of illegal Bengali Muslims demanded and received Burmese Identity Cards. And he established the Maungdaw Special-Border-District which would be controlled by the Muslims - which meant that the Muslims would now control the border! It's like the fox being told to guard the chickens!
Now the Bengali Muslim leaders tried to have their people defined as an 'indigenous ethnic group of Burma' like Kachin, Mon, Pa-O, Chin, Palaung, etc., and therefore be eligible for citizenship. Now, instead of using the terms Bengali-Muslim or Chittagong-Muslim (which indicate that they came from outside Burma) they generally used the term 'Arakan Muslims' to deceive people, and convince the world that they, also, are part of the Arakan identity.
The obvious problem was that all the other ethnicities had deep roots and long history in their homelands, but the 'Arakan Muslims' did not, and were the only ones who came in huge waves of immigrants, fought with and took land and property from the real indigenous people, and had an agenda to have only their own fellow Muslim people in a purely Islamic State that would not be a part of the infidel union of Burma. Their demands for recognition as an 'indigenous ethnic group' was turned down, on the grounds that they were never part of the indigenous people of Arakan, and that they were quite simply - recent, or recent enough (a generation or two) immigrants settling on land they had never been part of. The term 'Arakan Muslim' failed it's sly purpose, and now the term 'Royingya' started to be used.
U Nu was, once again, tangled in power struggles, and in the promises he made but couldn't or wouldn't fulfill.
On March 2, 1962, General Ne Win used this situation as reason to stage a military coup and seized power. The constitution was suspended, the Voice-of- Burma radio program in Bengali language (and in Mon language) were quickly stopped, and U Nu was imprisoned.
And, the name 'Rohingya' disappeared for 10 years.

THE INVENTION OF THE 'ROHINGYA' and THE MANIPULATION OF HISTORY AND FACTS
During the 1950's, the term 'Rohingya' was invented, and it started to spread around, slowly becoming a replacement word for Bengali-Muslim, or Chittagong-Muslim, but only much later it became the common name.
In 1960 the Mujahid insurgency was finally defeated by General Ne Win. Then the Muslim leadership realized that they needed a new story about the Muslims in Arakan - and they embraced a new identity - and they now called themselves 'Rohingya'.
This new word helped to make it much easier to manipulate media and opinion. The terms Bengali-Muslim and Chittagong-Muslim obviously indicate that they came from outside Burma, and that they had roots in, Bengal or Chittagong.
The term Rohingya carries no similar meaning, making it much easier to spread the 'new history' which now says that the Rohingya actually have been inhabitants of this land for a long time.

WHY BANGLADESH HATES THE ROHINGYA, AND WILL NOT HELP THEM
When India was granted independence in 1948, the two Muslim areas - on the west side and the east side of India- but not joined - were made into the Islamic country of Pakistan. (The Muslims demanded their own country).
Later, tensions and issues between them blew up into a bloody war and the eastern part fought to become independent from the dominant western part.
In late 1971 the eastern part became the new country of Bangladesh.
The Muslims in Arakan actually - and strangely - supported the far western part (Pakistan), and not the neighboring Bangladesh part, perhaps because they favored the more extreme Islam of Pakistan.
After Bangladesh became independent the Bangladeshis were furious at the Chittagong or Bengali-Muslims living in Burma, and disowned them, and treated them as traitors, and even still, now, Bangladesh will not forgive or forget that, and will not accept them. They ARE the same people - Bengali or Chittagong-Muslims - from the same area, and speak the same language.
There is no tribal or ethnic difference. But if your parents or grandparents supported Pakistan at that time you are not accepted. Many Rohingya manage to sneak into Bangladesh, and are in terrible refugee camps, where recently, Bangladesh has banned foreign aid organizations from helping the refugees!
So, the Muslims of Arakan needed an identity of their own - and a new word - the 'Rohingya' was invented.
And, a bit about Bangladesh, and Pakistan… and India -
Bangladesh and Pakistan are examples of what the Rakhine Buddhist do not want to see. In East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), in 1948, the population included 28% Hindu people. Now it is 9%. Why? Because the Hindus have been slaughtered many times, and threatened and pressured to leave.
In Pakistan, in 1948, there were about 20% Hindu, Buddhist, and Sikh. Now they total about only 1%. India has actually built a 1790 mile long fortified steel and barbed wire fence along it's long border with Bangladesh - for the purpose of keeping out Islamic terrorist, migrant workers taking Indian jobs, and uncontrollable waves of Royingya or other Muslims.
India also has a similar 1000 mile long fence on its border with Pakistan - primarily to keep Muslim terrorist out. Burma has no such border fence on any of its borders.

DURING GENERAL NE WIN'S DICTATORSHIP
The word 'Rohingya’ disappeared when General Ne Win seized power in a coup in 1962, then reappeared in 1972, disappeared again after Muslim demands for an autonomous Islamic State were turned down (again), reappeared briefly in 1978 after a major offensive by the Burmese Army against another Mujahid insurgency (and in 'Ne Win style' it was bloody and severe, with many civilian casualties), and, again, it reappeared in 1991, after a second major offensive by the Burmese Army.
On May 13, 1988, the anniversary of the 1942 Bengali V-Force massacre of 30,000 native Rakhine Buddhist, the Rohingya Liberation Organization (RLO) led 50,000 Bengali-Muslims to try to quickly and violently take over the Maungdaw Township. They first destroyed a big Buddhist Monastery and then began to burn all the wards where Rakhine Buddhist lived, and attempted to kill ALL Rakhine people in this area. But, their genocidal plan was stopped by the local army reinforced police force, and ever since then some Burmese Army units have been permanently stationed there to prevent another genocidal attack by the Bengali-Muslims.
Disturbing to many is the fact that for several years leading up to this, Ahmed Shah, the Chairman of the RLO distributed copies of his cassette tape - for free - urging the Rohingya in Maungdaw township to drive all non-Muslims out of the district, basically calling for the genocide of Rakhine Buddhist, and any other non-Muslims in that area.
The RLO also made and distributed tens of thousands of leaflets - with photos of pretty Rakhine girls - to entice the Bengali-Muslims in Bangladesh to come to Burma, where there was plenty of food, and every Rohingya man should try to marry four Rakhine Buddhist Women and convert them into Islam, and help the bigger plan of making this land an Islamic State for Muslims only.

AL QAEDA AND TALIBAN TRAINING, EXPLOSIVES AND HEAVY WEAPONS COURSES IN AFGHANISTAN AND LIBYA
There have been numerous Rohingya captured in Afghanistan in battle, or at terrorist training camps. Intelligence services of several countries have reported such items as: 90 members of the Arakan Rohingya National Organization (ARNO) were selected to attend a guerrilla warfare course, explosives course, and heavy-weapons courses held in Libya and Afghanistan in August 2001. 5 members of ARNO attended a high-ranking officers' course with Al Qaeda representatives in May 2000. They discussed military affairs, weaponry, and getting financial help from Osama bin Laden. Numerous contacts and connections and assistance from Islamic jihad groups in southern Thailand, southern Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, Bangladesh and others.

MANIPULATION OF MEDIA TO CREATE THE MYTH OF THE POOR GENTLE PEACEFUL MISUNDERSTOOD VICTIMS THAT EVERYBODY TREATS BADLY
By now, anybody who has investigated the 'stories' and 'photos' of recent atrocities against the Rohingya has seen and heard terrible things - BUT – most people, now, are seeing that it is all a game of deception, lies, and agenda. The photos, that supposedly show dead bodies of Rohingya are actually photos taken in Indonesia after the huge earthquake-caused tsunami, and even more sickening than that - there are gruesome photos of piles of bodies said to be Rohingya, BUT ACTUALLY they are CHRISTIAN Nigerians who were killed and burned recently by Nigerian MUSLIMS! Do your own google searches and you will see the wicked deception being used, around the world, and in many languages? (search with the words: Burma, jihad, Myanmar, genocide, Rohingya, fake photos, media manipulation, etc.).

WHY THE 'ROHINGYA' SHOULD NOT BE GIVEN CITIZENSHIP IN BURMA
The Rohingya, as a collective entity, want citizenship, but DO NOT want to live in the country of Burma/Myanmar which is governed and dominated by infidels.
They have no deep history, or cultural artifacts in Arakan - different then the many other ethnicities who DO have deep roots, culture and tradition in their homeland, and importantly, unlike the Rohingya, the other ethnicities do not have the goal of ethnic purity and fanaticism to fight holy war for their goals.
The Rohingya want citizenship, but NOT so they can happily live with other religions and ethnicities around them, and NOT so they can enjoy and participate in the other people’s festivals and traditions. They want citizenship so that they can then DEMAND their own Muslim State (which will quickly push out or kill the remaining infidels) and then DECLARE independence from infidel Burma. In other words, they see citizenship as a way, eventually, to NOT be a Burmese citizen.
Giving them citizenship would lead to a much greater disaster and much more killing, as they believe it is the duty of Muslims to purify their land by driving the infidels out, and destroying the remnants of the infidel history. And, the Muslims would cause the destruction of a recognized and historical Buddhist people and culture, and world class historical sites, such as Mrauk U.
They were born into a way of life which makes them inflexible and intolerant of other people and other faiths. Their faith, which cannot be questioned or criticized, allows them to do nearly anything to any non-believer, including killing them, and raping the women. Rape of Buddhist women is very high in Rakhine State because of this attitude towards infidel women and these ‘holy verses’ of Allah’s words. Qur’an 4.24 "All married women are prohibited to you, except those whom your right hand possesses (a way to say 'Captured') as the prisoners of war, who Allah has assigned to you.
They learn that a person who leaves Islam should be killed.
Al-Azhar (Cairo) Islamic Research Academy endorsed manual of Islamic Law, Umdat al-Salik (pp. 595-96) states: "Leaving Islam is the ugliest form of unbelief (kufr) and the worst....
When a person who has reached puberty and is sane voluntarily apostasizes from Islam, he deserves to be killed. In such a case, it is obligatory...to ask him to repent and return to Islam. If he does it is accepted from him, but if he refuses, he is immediately killed."
Their faith instructs them not to be friends with non-Muslims, and not to recognize or attend their religious festival and ceremonies. Qur’an 5:51 "O You who believe, take not the non-believers (Jews, Christians, Buddhist, Hindu, etc) for friends. They are friends of each other. And who amongst you takes them for friends he is indeed one of them.
And, from a very early age they hear and learn these 'holy' words - direct from Allah (they believe) that they must live by, and pursue to please Allah, and they cannot question or criticize the words of 'Allah':
Qur’an 8:55 “Surely the vilest of beasts in Allah's sight area those who disbelieve.”
Qur’an 8:39 “So, fight them till all opposition ends and the only religion is Islam.”
Qur’an 8:59 “The infidels should not think that they can get away from us. Prepare against them whatever arms and weaponry you can muster so that you may terrorize them. They are your enemy and Allah’s enemy.”
Qur’an 9:29 "Fight those who believe not in Allah nor the Last Day, nor hold that forbidden which hath been forbidden by Allah and His Messenger, nor acknowledge the religion of Truth"
Qur’an 48:29 "Muhammad is the messenger of Allah. And those with him are hard (ruthless) against the disbelievers and merciful among themselves"

THE BUDDHIST HAVE NO SIMILAR TEXT ANYWHERE IN THE BUDDHIST SCRIPTURES
OTHER BUDDHIST CULTURES HAVE BEEN DESTROYED THIS WAY

Remember the 2 giant Buddhist statues carved into a cliff in central Afghanistan, that were blown up by the Islamic Taliban? That area, Bamiyan, was one of the earliest major Buddhist cultures. Other parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan have (or had) ancient Buddhist ruins, statues, cliff carvings, etc. Even Persia (now Iran) especially the eastern parts, had significant Buddhist peoples, temples, monasteries, stupas for many centuries - before the Muslim Arab invasions.
Why are there no Buddhist people in Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan? And, no more Buddhist ruins in Iran and Afghanistan, and the ones still in Pakistan are being destroyed now?
Because the invading Muslims considered the Buddhist to be idol worshippers, infidels, and had no respect for Buddhism, and no need to live together with them. The Buddhist were forced out or killed down to the last one. And, the holy places were destroyed.
Actually, Bangladesh has had a long and deep history of Buddhism – starting about 1000 years before Islam even existed. Based on the Pali texts, Buddhism was thee number one religion of ancient Bengal (also known as Vanga) as early as the 3rd century BC, and continued to be until the 12 century AD. There are detailed records by famous Chinese monk scholars describing many huge monasteries, intricate stone and brick temples and stupas, and many thousands of monks. When Hindu armies came to conquer and rule (and the Hindus, then, were very intolerant of Buddhist) the Buddhist started to leave, and they moved into the hills and jungles of the Chittagong area. Next came Muslim invaders - who destroyed the monasteries and temples, killed thousands of monks, and forced the population to convert to Islam, or die.

WHY THE ROHINGYA SHOULD NOT GET CITIZENSHIP
SIMILARLY, TODAY, IN MAUNGDAW AND BUTHIDAUNG AREAS, ALMOST ALL OF THE MONASTERIES AND TEMPLES HAVE BEEN DESTROYED, MONKS HAVE BEEN KILLED OR DRIVEN AWAY, AND THE BUDDHIST POPULATION OF THESE AREAS CHANGED FROM MOSTLY BUDDHIST............TO ALMOST NO BUDDHIST.
And if the Royingya are given citizenship then the world heritage site of Mrauk-U will fall under their control someday, and be completely destroyed.
WHY SHOULD AN ANCIENT AND DEEPLY ROOTED CULTURE AND PEOPLE HAVE TO LOSE THEIR HOMELAND, THEIR HOMES, THEIR HOLY PLACES, AND THEIR IDENTITY?
THE ROHINGYA SHOULD NOT BE GIVEN CITIZENSHIP, AND THEY DON’T DESERVE CITIZENSHIP, BECAUSE THEY DON’T WANT TO BE A TRUE CITIZEN. A TRUE CITIZEN SEES HIMSELF OR HERSELF AS AN EQUAL MEMBER OF A COUNTRY, AND HAS THE DESIRE TO WORK TOGETHER, LEARN FROM EACH OTHER, AND RESPECT EACH OTHER, AND BUILD A BETTER COUNTRY FOR ALL.
IMAGINE WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF MINORITY BUDDHIST PEOPLE CAME INTO A MUSLIM COUNTRY, AND MADE DEMANDS…..
Let's say Buddhist starting coming into Bangladesh fifty years ago, in large numbers, pushing Muslims out of their villages and towns, slaughtering them, demanding their own independent Buddhist land? What would happen? Muslim armies would have moved quickly and killed every single one of them.

WHY REPORTERS AND OTHERS SEEM TO AUTOMATICALLY SIDE WITH THE ROHINGYA?
Most reporters are writers, not historians, and seek the emotional stories of struggle, discrimination, and tragedy. Some may know about Burma, and Burmese things, but hardly any of them know about Arakan and the Rakhaing history, and the real history and massive migration of the Muslims into Arakan.
The ruling generals and their regimes could never be trusted, so it was easy to conclude the story of the Rohingya is the truth - and it had plenty of emotional and tragic stories and photos. Disturbing to the Rakhine people, most Burmese people, and those of us Westerners who know the real situation, is how easily many people believe the incredible propaganda, media manipulation, deception, use of fake photos, fake stories, etc.
And, how easy it is for many people - even those who seem to know a lot about Burma - to quickly blame the Rakhine Buddhist people, and call them racist, violent, the ‘bad’ Buddhist, etc., when it is clear to us who know, that the Rakhine Buddhist people are solidly great people, with deep Buddhist values of compassion, tolerance, and patience, and that they have a remarkable legacy, and a unique place in Buddhist history and world history. But, they are struggling with a force that intends to eliminate them, and erase their history.
There is no indication that Muslims - anywhere in the world - want to learn about, study, admire, or integrate with the Rakhine. Instead, Muslims worldwide are calling for jihad (holy war) on the Burmese and the Rakhine, and even threatening Aung San Suu Kyi.
As the Rakhine now know, THEY CANNOT TOLERATE THE INTOLERANT!
And, few reporters are willing to address the 'elephant in the room' the real force behind what is happening to the Buddhist people in Arakan and southern Thailand, and to the Christians of the Philippines and Indonesia, Lebanon and Iraq, Nigeria and Egypt, and the Bahai and Zoroastrians of Iran - and that force is - Islam.
In all these cases there is Islam - from which is drawn the justification to wage jihad on the god-less Buddhist, and the infidel Christians, and all other non-Muslims. Disturbing to those who know and have seen it, in the towns and villages where the Rohingya have a majority or near majority women must be veiled, and will be beaten if they are not veiled enough (and that includes that non-Muslim women must dress like that also) the parents of young school age girls are pressured and threatened not to send their daughters to school, and many other restrictions on women. Boys are being trained in Islamic madrassa schools in hateful and discriminatory Islamic fundamentalist dogma, and Islamic supremacy, and being thoroughly trained from a young age NOT to question or examine the Koran and the teachings, and that all non-Muslims are to be shunned and eventually eliminated, and the world will be purely Islamic someday soon.
How about some stories on these things?
NOT ALL MUSLIMS ARE THE SAME, NOT ALL BELIEVE THE SAME WAY
Of course, I know that all Muslims are not the same; all Muslims are not extreme, etc. But I have my experience in Muslim parts of the world: Yemen, Egypt, Turkey, Kurdistan, Albania, Indonesia, Malaysia, Muslim part of China and India......... and, yes, I am critical of Islam, and not afraid to examine it, and say so.
Muslims are people that follow a religion. As I see it, the religion has some disturbing elements to it, and it depends on how a person follows these elements or doesn’t follow them.
Most Muslims would not stone a person to death or cut off their heads, but some would, and in some parts of the world the majority would. The role of Islam in the Arakan situation cannot be ignored.
WHO SHOULD ASSIST THE ROYHINGYA? WHERE SHOULD THEY GO?
Bangladesh SHOULD be the country where the Rohingya SHOULD live. But, Bangladesh refuses to let any more of them in, although many sneak in, and now Bangladesh is refusing to let aid organizations help or feed the Rohingya.
Bangladesh should be pressured and even somehow forced to take the Rohingya. There are 57 countries in the Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC), but despite the wealth of some of them, not one of them - so far -is offering to pick up, transport and adopt the stateless Rohingya. What are these Muslim countries doing to help fellow muslims? Nothing. Shame on them.
Instead they are using all the fake photos and stories to stir people up, and imams and leaders are calling for severe action, and jihad against the Buddhist of Burma, and threatening to eliminate the god-less Buddhist.
Already in Malaysia and other places Muslim mobs have burst into Burmese restaurants and businesses, destroying the places and attacking and killing the Burmese. In Indonesia a violent mob nearly broke into the Burmese Embassy, and if it had succeeded it would have destroyed it and killed all the personnel.

THE ROHINGYA SHOULD ONLY BE SETTLED IN A MOSLEM COUNTRY (AND NOT IN A NON-MUSLIM PART OF A MUSLIM COUNTRY)
It is not right to let them live among non-Muslims, if that makes them think that for their own goals the other people have to ‘disappear’. It is not right.
The Rohingya created their own destiny. They must deal with what they created, and take responsibility for their dilemma. It’s possible that they could create a different reality someday. I hope so.
May the Rohingya, and the world know more about Metta (Loving Kindness).
    
Rick Heizman (8/14/2012)
This article is based on the opinion of author and it has nothing to do with the official WTN agenda.
http://www.wontharnu.com/index.php/article/190-history-issues-and-truth-in-arakanrakhine-state-western-burma

The Killer

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-killer.html [/postlink]
 
Mumbai teacher held for uploading 'Burma violence' clip
Sharif Ahmed Bashir Siddiqui

The cyber crime cell of Pune police on Wednesday arrested a Mumbai-based teacher for allegedly uploading a doctored video clip on a website, which is believed to have provoked the recent attacks on students and professionals from the northeast in the city and other parts of the country.

"The teacher, Sharif Ahmed Bashir Siddiqui (38), of Kurar village in Malad, had uploaded the clip from his computer at home. The clip was named 'Burma Riots - Thrilling Pictures 2012'," said deputy commissioner of police (cyber crime) Sanjay Shinde. The cyber crime had earlier arrested three people in Pune for circulating it. The clip, which showed violence in Myanmar, went viral on social networking sites and cellphones, wrongly represented as recordings of attacks on Muslims in the northeast.
The attacks on people from the northeast were reported from Kondhwa, Pune Camp and Hadapsar in the city. Following the attacks, many northeast students and workers left the city last month. While many of them have since returned, a large number have shifted homes from Kondhwa, from where most of the attacks took place, to other parts of Pune.

Earlier, the police had registered two separate cases under the Information and Technology Act for the circulation of doctored video clips with the Pune Cantonment and Kondhwa police stations. The cyber crime cell had arrested four youths for beating up people from Manipur in the Pune cantonment area.

Shinde told TOI that the cyber crime cell was trying to trace the people who had created the doctored clip and uploaded it on the websites. "We had also sought help from Google to trace the suspects. After getting some inputs, we contacted Siddiqui and called him for questioning to Pune. Under sustained interrogation, he admitted to having uploaded the clip on the website," he said.

A senior officer from the cyber crime cell told TOI that investigations so far have revealed that Siddiqui had got the doctored clip on his cell phone. While uploading his daughter's photograph on a website, he had also uploaded the clip.

Police inspector Sangita Alphonso Shinde of the cyber crime cell said Siddiqui is B.Sc. (chemistry) and teaches in a school at Dindoshi in Mumbai. "We will produce him before the court on Thursday," she said.
http://m.timesofindia.com/articleshow/16469098.cms

16 NE-hate clips uploaded from Pak: cyber crime cell
Police arrest Mumbai-based teacher on Wednesday for uploading video that spread discord after tracing IP

Out of the 17 video clips found on different websites spreading anti-Northeasterner sentiment that sparked the recent exodus to the North East (NE), only one has been uploaded in India – the rest were uploaded from out of the nation.
City cyber crime cell officials arrested teacher Sharif Ahmed Bashir Siddiqui (38), a resident of Malad (East) in Mumbai on Wednesday, for allegedly uploading the video clip on a web portal dedicated to videos.
Siddiqui, a BSC graduate, works as a teacher at a primary school in Mumbai. He allegedly uploaded the video clip to spread communal discord in August this year.

The cyber crime cell had been observing several sites supporting the video clips after a spurt of attacks took place in the city against students and professionals from NE. Students staying in Camp and Kondhwa had been beaten up by local youth and investigations revealed some clips had been spreading hatred.
Police monitored several sites and found 17 clips had been downloaded by suspects and were being circulated among local youth via Bluetooth.
Apart from the clip uploaded by Siddiqui, all clips were uploaded from computers in Pakistan. Police located the Internet Protocol (IP) in Mumbai and nabbed Siddiqui for uploading the clip ‘Burma Riots Thrilling Pictures – 2012’. Police are now ascertaining whether Siddiqui is related to any terror group and whether anyone provided funds to him.
They are also probing his intention behind uploading the clip. Acase against unidentified persons was filed at Cantonment police station in August.
Cyber crime cell officers had earlier arrested Shahbaj Sadiq Punjab, Arif Munnawar Khan, Imran Irfan Khan and Mohammed Afzal Abdul Rehman Khan for spreading hatred and forwarding controversial video clips.
A team headed by Deputy Commissioner of Police (Cyber, Economics) Sanjay Shinde and police inspector Sangeeta Alphonso are investigating the case.

http://www.punemirror.in/article/2/20120921201209210903451647d225ccb/16-NEhate-clips-uploaded-from-Pak-cyber-crime-cell.html?pageno=2

Myanmar's democracy advocate Suu Kyi gets Congress' highest honor

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/myanmar-democracy-advocate-suu-kyi-gets.html [/postlink]
Myanmar democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi speaks after being awarded the Congressional Gold Medal at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012. (The Associated Press)

WASHINGTON - Lawmakers united by their respect of Myanmar democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi on Wednesday presented her with Congress' highest civilian honor in a ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda, ahead of a meeting with President Barack Obama.
Suu Kyi described it as "one of the most moving days of my life."
She was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 2008 while under a 15-year house arrest for her peaceful struggle against military rule.
Her long-awaited visit to America finally provided an opportunity for her to receive the honor in person in Congress' most majestic setting, beneath the dome of the Capitol and ringed by marble statues of former presidents.
The 67-year-old Nobel laureate said it was worth the years of waiting, being honored "in a house undivided, a house joined together to welcome a stranger from a distant land."
Previous recipients of the medal include George Washington, Tibetan Buddhist leader the Dalai Lama and Pope John Paul II.
She then met privately at the White House with Obama, another winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. They appeared relaxed and were smiling as they talked in the Oval Office. Neither made formal comments to the photographers gathered to briefly witness the meeting.
The low-key nature of the meeting appeared to reflect concerns that Suu Kyi's Washington visit could overshadow Myanmar's reformist president Thein Sein, who attends the U.N. General Assembly in New York
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next week, and still faces opposition within Myanmar's military to political reform.
At the medal ceremony, House and Senate leaders joined Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton in paying tribute to Suu Kyi. Speaker after speaker at the medal ceremony marveled that this was moment they thought they would never see: Suu Kyi before them, not only free but herself now a lawmaker.
"It's almost too delicious to believe, my friend," said Clinton, "that you are in the Rotunda of our Capitol, the centerpiece of our democracy as an elected member of parliament."
Buddhist monks in saffron robes and women in traditional Burmese dresses crammed into the venue alongside members of Congress, who set aside the intense rivalries ahead of the Nov. 6 election.
Lawmakers talked about years of working together across party lines on the behalf of Suu Kyi's democracy movement. When sanctions against the Myanmar junta were imposed, and over the past year when they have been suspended, Democrats and Republicans alike have set aside their increasingly bitter differences to pass and renew legislation annually.
That's due in large part to their respect for Suu Kyi. Lawmakers who have spoken or met with her, and even those who haven't, speak of her in reverential terms. Her photo adorns some office walls in Congress and her views have been critical in shaping U.S. policy toward the country also known as Burma.
At Wednesday's emotional ceremony, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., lavished praise on a man who is usually his adversary, Republican leader Mitch McConnell, for long being at the forefront of efforts to help Suu Kyi for two decades.
McConnell compared Suu Kyi's path of peaceful resistance to Martin Luther King and Indian independence leader Mohandas Gandhi. "It was impossible not to be moved by her quiet resolve, her hidden yet luminous heroism," the Kentucky senator said.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., often called a hero for the years he endured as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, said Suu Kyi was his hero.
Former first lady Laura Bush said the hope that now grows in Myanmar was a tribute to Suu Kyi. She said the former military regime had encountered an "immoveable object" in the opposition leader and its legitimacy broke against her character.
While speakers paid tribute to Suu Kyi's resolve in the face of oppression, a spirit of reconciliation in Myanmar also pervaded the ceremony - recognition of its recent dramatic political changes after five ruinous and bloody decades of authoritarian rule.
A key aide to Thein Sein attended the ceremony, which Suu Kyi welcomed. The Treasury also announced it was taking Thein Sein off its list of individuals sanctioned from doing business or owning property in America.
Since Suu Kyi won a parliamentary seat in April, the U.S. has normalized diplomatic relations with Myanmar and allowed U.S. companies to start investing there again. The administration is now considering easing the main plank of its remaining sanctions, a ban on imports.
Suu Kyi voiced support for that step Tuesday, saying Myanmar should not depend on the U.S. to keep up its momentum for democracy. Some of her supporters, however, oppose it, saying reforms have not taken root and Washington will lose leverage with Myanmar, which still faces serious human rights issues. Clinton also expressed concern Tuesday that Myanmar retains some military contacts with North Korea.
---
Associated Press writers Jim Abrams, Julie Pace and Ben Feller contributed to this report.

Washington honours Aung San Suu Kyi

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/washington-honours-aung-san-suu-kyi.html [/postlink]


US politicians united by their respect for Burma democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi presented her with Congress' highest civilian honour in a ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda, ahead of a meeting with President Barack Obama.
Ms Suu Kyi described it as "one of the most moving days of my life".
She was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 2008 while under a 15-year house arrest for her peaceful struggle against military rule.
Her long-awaited visit to America finally provided an opportunity for her to receive the honour in person in Congress' most majestic setting, beneath the dome of the Capitol and ringed by marble statues of former presidents.
The 67-year-old Nobel laureate said it was worth the years of waiting, being honoured "in a house undivided, a house joined together to welcome a stranger from a distant land".
Previous recipients of the medal include George Washington, Tibetan Buddhist leader the Dalai Lama and Pope John Paul II.
She then met privately at the White House with Mr Obama, another winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. They appeared relaxed and were smiling as they talked in the Oval Office.
Mr Obama "expressed his admiration for her courage, determination and personal sacrifice in championing democracy and human rights over the years", according to a statement from the White House.
The White House said the president "reaffirmed the determination of the United States to support their sustained efforts to promote political and economic reforms and to ensure full protection of the fundamental rights of the Burmese people".
The low-key nature of the meeting appeared to reflect concerns that Ms Suu Kyi's Washington visit could overshadow Burma's reformist president Thein Sein, who attends the UN general assembly in New York next week, and still faces opposition within Burma's military to political reform.

Obama meets with Aung San Suu Kyi

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/09/obama-meets-with-aung-san-suu-kyi.html [/postlink]


President Barack Obama met Wednesday with fellow Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi in the Oval Office.
Obama and the Myanmar democracy leader held a private meeting and made no formal comments. Earlier in the day, Suu Kyi received Congress' highest honor, the Congressional Gold Medal at a ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda.
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/81412.html

(Also on POLITICO: Photos: Aung San Suu Kyi receives Congressional medal)
http://www.politico.com/gallery/2012/04/photos-myanmar-election/000040-006039.html


A who's who of politicos attended, including former first lady Laura Bush, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Speaker of the House John Boehner, who shed some of his well known tears during the ceremony.

Read more about: Aung San Suu Kyi
http://dyn.politico.com/tag/aung-san-suu-kyi


By HADAS GOLD
http://www.politico.com/reporters/HadasGold.html
 
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