Showing posts with label Myanmar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Myanmar. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Aid workers keen to return to tense western Myanmar

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Aid workers keen to return to tense western Myanmar

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Group says Myanmar army uses rape as weapon of war









FILE – In this Sept. 15, 2013 photo, a woman who claims she was raped by Myanmar security forces stands in her home in Ba Gong Nar village, Maungdaw, northern Rakhine state, Myanmar. Myanmar’s transition to democracy following five decades of brutal military rule has won widespread international praise, but rights’ groups say little has changed in resource-rich border areas, where the army continues to grapple with stubborn ethnic insurgencies. As in the past, the use of sexual violence against civilians is widespread and systematic, said Tin Tin Nyo, general secretary of the Women’s League of Burma. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe, File)






FILE – In this Sept. 15, 2013 photo, a woman who claims she was raped by Myanmar security forces stands in her home in Ba Gong Nar village, Maungdaw, northern Rakhine state, Myanmar. Myanmar’s transition to democracy following five decades of brutal military rule has won widespread international praise, but rights’ groups say little has changed in resource-rich border areas, where the army continues to grapple with stubborn ethnic insurgencies. As in the past, the use of sexual violence against civilians is widespread and systematic, said Tin Tin Nyo, general secretary of the Women’s League of Burma. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe, File)






(AP) — A soldier in full uniform saw the 7-year-old in her front yard soon after her parents left to tend to their rice paddies in Myanmar’s restive state of Shan. She said he ordered her inside the family’s bamboo hut.


“He hit me and told me to take off my clothes,” the girl told the tightly packed courtroom in a whisper, as her alleged assailant, Maung Win Htwe, looked on, stone-faced.


“Then … he raped me.”


Rights activists in Myanmar, also known as Burma, say the army continues to use rape as a weapon of war nearly three years after President Thein Sein’s nominally civilian government ended a half-century of brutal military rule. On Tuesday, the Women’s League of Burma released a report documenting more than 100 rapes, almost all in townships plagued by stubborn ethnic insurgencies.


Nearly half were brutal gang rapes, several of the victims were children, and 28 of the women were killed or died from their injuries, said Tin Tin Nyo, the league’s general secretary. She warned that there is little hope for change until the government amends Myanmar’s constitution, which gives the military the right to independently administer all its affairs.


Ye Htut, the government’s top spokesman, did not respond to phone, email and Facebook messages seeking comment.


The report said most of the attacks occurred in border areas, particularly in the states of Shan, where the 7-year-old lives, and Kachin. Perpetrators are rarely, if ever, punished.


Though it handed over formal control of the country, the army continues to heavily influence almost all facets of government, and holds a quarter of all seats in parliament.


Few prominent officials have criticized the military over sexual violence — not even opposition leader and Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who spent more than 15 years under house arrest under the former ruling junta.


Last month, at a press conference in the main city of Yangon, Suu Kyi was asked if she was concerned about the lack of accountability when it comes to the use of rape as a weapon of war. Instead of criticizing generals, she pointed out that insurgent groups also are responsible for sexual violence.


“This has to do with rule of law. And that has to do with politics, and the position of the army as it is in a particular political structure,” she said. “I think you are well aware of the fact that military armed groups which are not official armies also engage in sexual violence in conditions of conflict.”


Suu Kyi wants to run for president in next year’s elections, but the army has the power to block those ambitions, and she’s showing increasing reluctance to criticize.


The U.S. State Department said it was aware of the report, and urged the Myanmar government and military to investigate and prosecute all allegations of rape and sexual assault.


Spokeswoman Marie Harf said Wednesday that despite “tremendous progress” in Myanmar in the past three years, “significant challenges remain, including further improving the country’s overall human rights situation.”


Tin Tin Nyo said the cases her group was able to document are “just the tip of the iceberg.” She said the information gathered for the report comes almost exclusively from victims or witnesses dared to speak out, and that researchers were unable to reach some areas because of security concerns.


The league’s report, compiled by 12 member organizations spread across the country, said in most cases attacks were carried out by soldiers who were carrying weapons and dressed in uniform. They included officers — such as captains, commanders and majors — and at least one major general.


Many of the rapes were carried out in front of the woman’s husband or others, seemingly as a way to make communities too fearful to support ethnic militias.


“These crimes are more than random, isolated acts by rogue soldiers,” the report’s authors wrote. “Their widespread and systematic nature indicates a structural pattern: Rape is still used as an instrument of war and oppression.”


The government sees on-and-off conflicts along northern and eastern borders, where armed ethnic groups have long battled for greater autonomy, as one of the biggest obstacles to a planned nationwide cease-fire agreement. The region is home to several strategic development projects, including a gas pipeline that stretches to China’s Yunnan province.


The report said most cases never make it to court, and those that come before military tribunals usually result in immediate acquittals.


The alleged Nov. 11 attack on the 7-year-old is an exception. The soldier accused of raping her, Maung Win Htwe, was ordered to go to trial in a civilian court.


Lawyer Brang Di said the first witnesses appeared at Lashio District Court last week, including the girl, her parents and neighbors in a tiny Shan village near Thein Ni town.


Brang Di said authorities agreed to try Maung Win Htwe in a civilian court only after a loud public outcry. “We are trying our best to have a fair judgment,” he said.


____


Associated Press writer Matthew Pennington in Washington contributed to this report.


Associated Press



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Group says Myanmar army uses rape as weapon of war

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Eliane Coates — Buddhist Monks In Myanmar: Driving Religious Intolerance And Hindering Reform

by ELAINE COATES for EURASIA REVIEW on DECEMBER 3, 2013: 


map courtesy of slashnews.co.uk

map courtesy of slashnews.co.uk



TWO HUNDRED Buddhist monks took to the streets of Yangon on 12 November 2013 to protest the visit of a high-level delegation of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC). The delegation, comprising the OIC Secretary-General and senior ministers of seven member states – Indonesia, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Djibouti and Egypt – were met by demonstrations against the world’s largest Islamic bloc. Echoing those of 2012, the demonstrations were led by Buddhist monks demanding that the OIC not get involved in Myanmar’s internal affairs.


The delegation, which was to review the situation of Muslims in Myanmar, came almost 18 months after violence broke out in the western Rakhine state between Muslim Rohingya and Buddhists in June 2012, which developed into widespread clashes all over Myanmar, resulting in the death of 240 persons and the displacement of 240,000 people – the majority being Rohingya Muslims.


FULL ARTICLE


Eliane Coates is a Senior Analyst at the Centre of Excellence for National Security (CENS), a constituent unit of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, in Singapore.



ISLAMiCommentary



Eliane Coates — Buddhist Monks In Myanmar: Driving Religious Intolerance And Hindering Reform

Saturday, November 16, 2013

VIDEO: La UE y Birmania estrechan lazos económicos







En Birmania, Aung San Suu Kyi ha abogado por “un desarrollo económico fundado sobre el desarrollo social y político”. Es lo que ha dicho la líder opositora y Premio Nobel de la Paz en un foro económico organizado por la Unión Europea (UE). La opositora birmana también ha pedido responsabilidad a los inversores extranjeros. “Estoy aquí para animaros a invertir de la manera correcta, de la manera verdaderamente responsable, que es teniendo en cuenta las dimensiones políticas y legales de la inversión”, dijo Suu Kyi. La UE ha anunciado una ayuda al desarrollo de 90 millones de euros anuales, hasta 2020, para Birmania, que continúa con las reformas democráticas emprendidas en 2011, tras la disolución de la última junta militar. “En una asociación no se trata de llegar e imponer, se trata de llegar y decir: esto es lo que sabemos. Representantes de los países europeos, representantes empresariales de toda la Unión Europea saben muy bien el camino que tiene que tomar una nación para ir de la represión a la libertad, y quieren apoyar a este país en ese viaje”, señaló la jefa de la diplomacia europea, Catherine Ashton. Coincidiendo con la visita de la delegación europea, el Gobierno birmano liberó a 69 reclusos por “razones humanitarias”, varios de ellos presos políticos. “La Unión Europea apoya los progresos realizados por el país y ha venido para estrechar los lazos de cooperación económica y política. Sin embargo, esta visita es también para mostrar la preocupación por la violencia interétnica y los nuevos informes de detenciones de activistas de derechos humanos”, dijo la enviada especial de euronews a Birmania, Isabel Marques da Silva.













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VIDEO: La UE y Birmania estrechan lazos económicos

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Order restored after fresh Myanmar religious unrest

HTAN KONE, Myanmar (Reuters) – Authorities restored order in Myanmar’s northern Sagaing region on Sunday after a Buddhist mob set fire to nearly two dozen Muslim-owned buildings and attacked rescue workers in the latest widening of sectarian violence in the former military-run state.






Reuters: Top News



Order restored after fresh Myanmar religious unrest

Monday, July 22, 2013

Bomb during sermon by radical Myanmar monk wounds five

YANGON (Reuters) – A bomb exploded meters away from a radical Buddhist monk as he delivered a mass sermon in Myanmar, police said on Monday, the latest flare-up as inter-religious tensions simmer.



Reuters: Top News



Bomb during sermon by radical Myanmar monk wounds five

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Muslims and Buddhists clash in northern Myanmar



YANGON | Tue May 28, 2013 1:17pm EDT



YANGON (Reuters) – Muslims and Buddhists clashed in Myanmar’s northern city of Lashio on Tuesday, witnesses said, as a wave of sectarian violence reached a mountainous region near China’s border.


Phone lines were down in the city of about 131,000 people and the extent of the violence was unclear. Witnesses reported several large fires and said a mosque and Buddhist monastery appear to have been torched.


The violence followed unrest between Muslims and Buddhists in other parts of Myanmar over the past year, including fighting in the central city of Meikhtila in March that killed at least 44 people, mostly Muslims, and razed several Muslim neighborhoods. About 12,000 people lost their homes.


Lashio, capital of Shan State, had been spared from the religious unrest. Known for its strong Chinese influence, it is about 190 km (120 miles) from Muse, a city on China’s border.


Hajji Aung Lwin, a Muslim man from a village on the outskirts of Lashio, said the fighting appeared to have begun after a violent quarrel between a Muslim man and a Buddhist woman. After police detained the man, local Buddhists surrounded the police station and demanded he be handed over, he said.


The mob then tried to set Myoma Mosque, near Lashio market, on fire, he said. A second witness reporting seeing flames in the city and a large building on fire.


Sectarian clashes between Buddhists and Muslims, who make up about 5 percent of the population in the Buddhist-majority country, have erupted several times since a quasi-civilian government took power in March 2011 after five decades of military dictatorship.


The most serious attacks took place in Rakhine State in the west in June and October last year, when Buddhists fought against Rohingya Muslims, who are denied citizenship by Myanmar and seen by many in the country as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. At least 192 people were killed.


(Reporting by Aung Hla Tun and Jared Ferrie; Writing by Jason Szep; Editing by Pravin Char)





Reuters: Top News



Muslims and Buddhists clash in northern Myanmar