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DVB Reads: Mayco Naing on “Burma Spring: Poetry & Photography in Resistance” (Book Launch)

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Burmese artist Mayco Naing discusses co-editing “Burma Spring: Poetry & Photography in Resistance.” The book features 14 poets and seven photographers from Burma, either in exile, imprisoned, or killed since the 2021 military coup. This episode contains Mayco Naing reciting a poem from a Rohingya poet in Burmese:

An Ox for a wad of paan
Thida Shania

What does this air suffer from?
My lungs suffocate when I breathe.

Why does the sun look so desolate?
There is twilight without dawn.

How can I satiate hunger?
An ox swapped for a wad of paan.

Where can I hide my body?
Corpses, everywhere in every house.

How can I die in my land?
My kin have been buried alive.

How can I cross the border?
Rivers bleed human blood.

What happened to the Queen of Justice?
I search for her everywhere–
nowhere do I find her.

DVB Reads (Podcast) is on-demand to stream or download on listening apps: SoundCloud, Anchor FM, TuneIn Radio, Amazon Music, Audible, Stitcher, Spotify, Apple & Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0…

IFJ Report: Japanese video journalist released amid prisoner amnesty in Burma

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Myanmar’s military junta announced the release of Japanese documentary filmmaker, Toru Kubota, and three other foreign nationals on November 17, as part of an amnesty of 5,774 political prisoners. The International Federation of Journalists condemns the junta’s ongoing flagrant violations of human rights and calls for all political prisoners jailed by illegitimate military courts to be released immediately.

Japanese journalist Toru Kubota is welcomed by his supporters upon his arrival on November 18, 2022 at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport after being released from a Myanmar prison. Credit: Kazuhiro Nogi / AFP

The junta announced the prisoner amnesty under Myanmar’s Code of Criminal Procedure, Section 401, Sub-Section (1), with the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) confirming the release of 53 identified prisoners by the evening of November 17.

The released included foreign nationals Toru Kubota, Australian economic advisor Sean Turnell, former British diplomat Vicky Bowman and American Kyaw Htay Oo. Kubota returned to Japan on a commercial flight on November 18.

Kubota, who has contributed to international media outlets including the BBC, Al-Jazeera and Vice Japan, was arrested on July 30 while covering an anti-junta protest in Yangon. The filmmaker was sentenced to 10 years in jail for two charges on October 6, found guilty of violating Myanmar’s electronic transactions law, with a charge of seven years in prison, as well as a further three for incitement.

Independent media outlet, Myanmar Now, said the release of the prisoners was announced to mark Myanmar’s National Day. According to analysts, the amnesty may be in response to increased pressure from government leaders at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit from November 10-13, who criticised the military junta’s lack of progress on the bloc’s Five Point Consensus peace plan agreed in 2021.

The mass release comes as the military continues to attack unarmed civilian targets, including schools, churches, hospitals, and festivals, amid the ongoing nationwide civil war. The previous day, on November 16, three Burmese citizens were killed and four injured as a shell exploded in Chaung Tu Village, Rakhine State. Shelling in Maungdaw Township’s Gyake Chuang Village the same day also killed 11 local civilians and injured 24 others.

The IFJ’s report, The Revolution Will Not Be Broadcast – Myanmar: IFJ Situation Report 2022, highlights the inadequacy of global action, including ASEAN’s Five Point Consensus, to reject the junta and restrict the suppression and brutal campaign of aggression against Myanmar’s citizens. As of the report’s release on November 2, 59 journalists and media workers were incarcerated by the junta in Myanmar.

The IFJ said: “The release of video journalist Toru Kubota and other political prisoners is a distraction to legitimise illegal coup leaders and divert attention from the ongoing human rights atrocities being committed across Myanmar. The junta must release the thousands more political prisoners, including over 50 journalists, sentenced through sham military courts under draconian legislation. The IFJ calls on the international community to increase pressure on Myanmar’s military junta to guarantee the safety of all Burmese citizens and call for a return to democracy in the war-torn country.”

For further information contact IFJ Asia – Pacific on [email protected]

The IFJ represents more than 600,000 journalists in 140 countries

Twitter: @ifjasiapacific, on Facebook: IFJAsiaPacific and Instagram

Diaspora communities in Canada and Australia stage anti-military junta rallies

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FROM THE DVB NEWSROOM

Burmese-Canadians, and supporters, rally alongside special guest Han Lay at Toronto City Hall’s Nathan Phillips Square on Nov. 19.

Burma’s diaspora communities in Canada and Australia held rallies over the weekend to raise awareness about the junta’s brutal war against the people of Burma. Burmese model and Miss Grand International Myanmar 2020 winner, Han Lay, attended and spoke at the protest in Toronto, Canada on Nov. 19. The Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH) and National Unity Government (NUG) Support Group in Queensland, Australia held a protest in Brisbane on Nov. 19. Those in attendance lit candles and prayed for all civilians killed since the 2021 military coup. 

The NUG opens its new diplomatic mission in Washington, DC with the support of Burma’s Permanent Representative at the UN.

The National Unity Government (NUG) unveiled its Ministry of Foreign Affairs office in the U.S. capital of Washington, DC. Burma’s Permanent Representative at the United Nations, U Kyaw Moe Tun, joined the NUG Communications, Information and Technology Minister, U Htin Lin Aung, and Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister, U Moe Zaw Oo, at the new Ministry of Foreign Affairs office on Nov. 18. The NUG has opened diplomatic offices in the U.K., Australia, Czechia (also known as Czech Republic), Japan, and South Korea.

The UN General Assembly approved a draft resolution titled the “Situation of human rights of Rohingya Muslims and other minorities in Myanmar.” The draft resolution was confirmed by all members at the 3rd committee meeting of 77th UN General Assembly held on Nov. 17. It called for the Burma Army to halt all violence against ethnic nationalities and for the junta to be held accountable for the crimes it is committing against the people of Burma.

News by Region

KACHIN—Almost all gas stations in Hpakant have closed due to the lack of fuel and some stations are only selling 92 octane for K22,000 [$10.50 USD] per gallon. “They restricted cargo and fuel trucks that supplied goods to the town. We are facing shortages of food and basic commodities. Because of those restrictions, legitimate jade mining companies are afraid to operate normally and have caused hardship to people who rely on mining for living,” a local told DVB. Internet services in Hpakant have been cut off for more than a year. | BURMESE 

A Burma Army squadron commander was reported killed at a hotel on Hpakant-Lonekin road in Lonekin village tract of Hpakant Township on Nov. 19. “The injured one is not able to survive,” hotel staff told DVB. The attackers wore masks and drove into the hotel with a Toyota surf vehicle, according to witnesses.

KAREN—Four villagers were killed when a Border Guard Force (BGF) opened fire on Mikayin village in Hpa-An Township on Nov. 17. “Three, including a young girl, were killed instantly and another died at the hospital due to blood loss,” a local said. DVB is still trying to confirm which BGF is responsible for the attack. Locals in Mon and Karen states are concerned about the outbreak of potential clashes due to the increasing Burma Army presence in the regions.

MANDALAY—A man was killed in an explosion near Mya Taung monastery, located between 35, 85th and 86th roads in Maha Aung Myay Township, on Nov. 17. “The sound of the explosion was very loud and even the ground shook,” a resident told DVB. Soldiers, and people dressed in civilian clothes with weapons, blocked off the area and cursed at local residents. Another explosion occurred near a cemetery in Bagan Tat village of Patheingyi township on Nov. 17. A member of the village administration was injured.

A member of the ward administration was shot dead in Mahaaungmyae Township on Nov. 19. The Generation Z Power (GZP Mandalay) claimed to have carried out the attack. The Burma army arrested at least six locals, accusing them of being involved.

SHAN—Smuggling of “all types of wood” is occurring in the forest of Pyin Oo Lwin Township and Naung Hkio Township, a local told DVB. It has been reported that valuable wood, including teak, has been smuggled out of the forest. Reports of illegal mining and logging have increased since the coup.

TANINTHARYI—Myeik District People’s Defense Force (PDF) announced on Nov. 17 that its two section commanders were killed. “There was an accident with artillery when our comrades fired shells at the camp,” a spokesperson said. The spokesperson added that the PDF is “extremely sad” over the deaths and that they will honor “comrades that risk their lives.”

Anti-military protesters in Launglon town were shot at by pro-military thugs on Nov. 19. “We, four people, were shot. After that, the military vehicle came out from the police station and chased us.” The protesters reportedly evaded arrest. 

YANGON—A village administrator was killed in Yoe Kyi village, Kayan Township on Nov. 18. “It was around seven rounds of shots and he was killed at the place,” the source said. The victim was reported to be a member of the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP). The security forces blocked the village and checked residents following the murder.

A man was killed on 38th Street in Kyauktada township on Nov. 18. “He was robbed and stabbed. The robber was not able to loot the phone and money because the people came around,” a local told DVB. Seven people have been killed and four have been injured in attacks so far this month in Yangon.

The Absence of Principles Marks a Half-Century of Burma’s Opposition

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Suu Kyi has been sentenced to 20 years in prison and still faces more charges.

By Maung Zarni

For the last three decades, I have been immersed in Burma’s pro-democratic activism, first as a loyal foot-soldier and grassroots activist for Aung San Suu Kyi’s leadership, and subsequently a highly “controversial” critic of her opposition, its policies and strategies. 

To my deep dismay, the absence of any progressive ideals, personal integrity or commitment to any set of ethical and moral principles, beyond well-crafted rhetoric, on the part of those Burmese who have, for better or worse, occupied commanding heights of the opposition strikes me as a recurring phenomenon.  

In the spring of 2004, I publicly broke my ties with Aung San Suu Kyi, then under her last stint of house arrest for what I concluded were irredeemably ethical, strategic and spiritual failures. Knowing full-well that I was going against the currents, I proceeded to publicly criticize her unrelenting support for what I call “western sanctions orthodoxy” – at all costs to all segments of Myanmar society, including laid-off thousands of garment industry workers, mainly young women, who lost their livelihoods as the result of tightening western sanctions, without any apparent concrete strategic gains for our anti-military mission.

In those days, any public criticism directed at Aung San Suu Kyi, and expression of political and personal disloyalty was not just “controversial”, but a political equivalent of sacrilegious act typically followed by societal ostracism.  As a matter of fact, I did more than criticize the NLD leader but I advocated opening dialogue with her captors, Burma’s generals.  I gave up my political asylum in the USA, returned home as a “guest of the state”, as my military hosts flatteringly told me, resumed my citizenship and advocated for working with the already widely despised Burmese generals, for reconciliation and finding our own homegrown solutions to problems – in the face of no real support from the democratic West.

For the next decade or so, Mother Suu – Aunty, as I once called her with deep affection – continued to remain on her pedestal, both at home and worldwide.  I continued to be in the political wilderness of the opposition. Mother Suu’s framed pictures adorned walls, from East to West, from that of the congregation hall of the ashram (or spiritual compound) of the renowned engaged Buddhist scholar and activist Sulak Sivaraksa in Bangkok and that of the world-famous anarchist intellectual and linguist Noam Chomsky’s office at MIT. Professor Chomsky once told me, “I used to keep her picture in my office.” Senior German diplomats did the same at the Foreign Ministry in Berlin. It also featured prominently in the homes of the millions of her adoring supporters in Burma.  Reflecting the popular Burmese perception of the NLD leader, numerous Western experts were engaged in a hagiographic depiction of Aung San Suu Kyi, in the mould of a female would-be-Buddha. 

In her book review “The Spirit of Aung San Suu Kyi”, Birtukan Midekssa, a former judge and leader of the opposition Unity for Democracy and Justice Party in her native Ethiopia, wrote, “Daw Suu’s admirers call her not a dissident but a boddhisattva (italic added), which in Buddhist terms means one who suffers so that others might experience life to the fullest.”

She was re-quoting the American expert on Myanmar Ingrid Jordt of the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee who observed, “[Aung San Suu Kyi] inspires the populace to recall or imagine a different kind of social contract between ruler and the ruled based on the highest human aspirations of compassion, loving-kindness, sympathetic joy and equanimity: the four sublime states of mind” (380). ​ Midekssa wrote, “Daw Suu, in short, is a living testament to the politics of conscience.”

Of course, the worldwide admiration of Aung San Suu Kyi ended with the moral condemnation of her genocide denial at the International Court of Justice (The Gambia vs. Myanmar genocide case) in the Hague on December 2019. I realize that the moral and spiritual emptiness of the Burmese opposition movements – note the plural –  cannot be explained by the deeds, thoughts and sentiments of one single leader, however influential.   

But the Burmese public by and large remain heavily and unhealthily leader-dependent, at best, and feudalistic at worst as evidenced in the still very relevant Burmese sayings, “if the leading cow fails to walk straight then the herd (following the lead cow) cannot be expected to travel on a straight line” and “if the roof is leaky, no chance of stemming the rain water falling down onto the house floor”.

These metaphoric Burmese problem of “the non-straight walking cow” “leaky roof” is not exclusive to the Oxford-educated Aung San Suu Kyi, who, as a Nobel Peace laureate and Burmese opposition leader, delivered Reith Lectures for BBC in 2011, during which she wove various religio-moral discourses drawn from Gandhian philosophy, Buddhism, Christianity, and normative liberal human rights.

The late Prime Minister U Nu, who was the senior most comrade of Aung San Suu Kyi’s slain father, led the failed armed resistance, and had shown to have remarkably similar leadership failings, morally, politically and intellectually. In the summer of 2018, I was a guest of retired Burmese academic and activist Professor Kyaw Win in his home in the Rocky Mountains outside Boulder, Colorado. There I conducted a long series of interviews on his decades-long anti-Burmese junta activism in the United States, including serving as “the ambassador” or “representative” of the parallel government of U Nu, ousted, imprisoned and exiled by General Ne Win (1962-88).  He gifted me U Nu’s type-written, genuine copy of an internal Burmese language letter – dated 2 March 1973, 11-pages in total – addressed to his (ex-PM Nu’s) revolutionary colleagues.   

Text, letter  Description automatically generated

Page 1 of the letter by the ex-Prime Minister U Nu to his deputies in the War Council of the People’s Patriotic Party, the armed anti-military dictatorship resistance movement of the 1970’s

In the letter, after describing (financial) corruption of some of the top leaders in his resistance movement, the demands for federalist right of secession (from the Union of Burma) by the ethnic minority leaders of the allied resistance organizations (such as the Karen National Union and the New Mon State Party) U Nu stated in no uncertain terms that he was “completely opposed to the right of secession”, a cornerstone in the political foundation of the Union of Burma, enshrined in the Pang-Long Treaty –  or the political blueprint of the post-colonial independent Burma –  of 1947.  

Text, letter  Description automatically generated

Page 11 and concluding page

Besides, on the very same subject, U Nu showed no qualm about spelling out his pre-emptive refusal to accept any outcome of the deliberations within the anti-junta coalition of which his People’s Patriotic Party was a key member.  In his words (my translation verbatim), “because I anticipate that I did not have enough votes on my (anti-secession) side, I had prepared my letter of resignation from my position as the head of the People’s Patriotic Party.” He further stated, “since I assumed the Prime Ministership (of the newly independent Burma in 1948), I had adopted the policy of “absolutely-No-to-Secession” 

Nu and Aung San Suu Kyi, the two anti-junta leaders, iconic both at home and abroad, belonged to two different generations of politicians and dissidents. They both typically – and consciously – exploited the flowery discourses of democracy, federalism and Buddhism – meditation, compassion, freedom from greed, illusions, fear, hatred, attachment, etc. And yet shockingly, neither appeared committed to Buddhist principles of compassion and conscience or the commitment to secular liberal principles of democratic decision-making or federalism as a group power-sharing arrangement.

It was no secret that Aung San Suu Kyi ran her populist National League for Democracy, rather autocratically. She blocked or frustrated any attempts within the party to establish intra-party democratic-decision-making even in the party’s formative years. Such attempts were proposed, to no avail, by some of the capable progressive intellectuals such as the highly respected journalist the late U Win Tin and colleagues.   

The absence of progressive (i.e., non-ethno-nationalistic) and pro-democratic principles has over the last 50-years permeated anti-military resistance groups.  Importantly, the majoritarian Bama or Burmese organizations and movements – from the late U Nu’s People’s Patriotic Party and its war council dominated by the peers of the slain Burmese independence hero Aung San, Suu Kyi’s father, or Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party, and its post-2021 coup offshoot organizations such as Committee Representing People’s Parliament (CRPH) and National Unity Government – have been plagued by what many nationality activists call “Burmese or Bama superiority complex” and its sense of political entitlement, or “majoritarian nationalist chauvinism”.    

As shocking as it may sound, both Aung San Suu Kyi and the late U Nu more or less shared the historical narrative of their common captors, the military dictatorships, from Ne Win to the current dictator Min Aung Hlaing. The anti-military Burmese organizations, movements and leaderships, including Nu and Aung San Suu Kyi and their loyal supporters, will vehemently deny that their leaders were cut from the same self-defeating Bama Buddhist nationalism which rejects the genuinely federalist rights – of which the right to self-determination is an inseparable component – while clinging on to the majoritarian or populist sense of political entitlement to lead – nah, rule autocratically – the Fourth Burmese Republic.   

It bears pointing out the unsavoury fact that Aung San Suu Kyi-loyalists occupy the dominant positions within the National Unity Government.  Only a few years ago, every one of these Bama activist and politician, including the “Minister for Human Rights” in the NUG, publicly stood with “Mother Suu” when she was defending the military against the allegations of genocide at the UN’s highest court in the Hague.  

While their well-documented genocidal complicity may have dampened the international enthusiasm for the overall Burmese democratic movement it is their Bama-centric statist nationalism, a sad trademark of various waves of anti-military dictatorships, over the last 50 years, which has now become the dead weight around their legs as they attempt to climb the uphill of democratic revolution against the genocidal regime openly protected and armed by India, China, and Russia.  

In her acceptance speech for the 1990 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought (dated 1 January 1990), entitled Freedom from Fear, Aung San Suu Kyi stressed, “the quintessential revolution is that of the spirit, born of an intellectual conviction of the need for change in those mental attitudes and values which shape the course of a nation’s development. A revolution which aims merely at changing official policies and institutions with a view to an improvement in material conditions has little chance of genuine success.”

Indeed. 

Maung Zarni is the co-author of Essays on Myanmar’s Genocide of Rohingyas (2012-18). He is a UK-based Burmese exile with over 30-years of first-hand involvement and scholarship in Burma affairs. 

DVB publishes a diversity of opinions that does not reflect DVB editorial policy. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our stories: [email protected]

Kubota arrives home to Japan following his release from prison in Burma

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Toru Kubota convicted of sedition by military court in Burma

The Japanese government confirmed that filmmaker Toru Kubota arrived home on Nov. 18 after his release in a prisoner amnesty in Burma. Kubota, 26, was sentenced to ten years in prison last month. Hirokazu Matsuno, the chief cabinet secretary in Japan’s government, said that the junta falsely stated that Kubota was freed because of pressure from Japanese officials. Japan has called for an immediate halt to all violence in Burma, and for the immediate release of Aung San Suu Kyi and other political prisoners. Japan support’s the ASEAN Five-Point Consensus.

Upon arrival home to Japan, Kubota revealed at a press conference that he was forced to hold a protest sign by junta officials after his arrest. “I was told to hold those signs for photo shoots just after we were arrested,” he said. Kubota said the photos of him holding an anti-coup protest banner, with several others, was staged on July 30, 2022. Junta spokesperson Zaw Min Tun himself displayed these photos and told regime media it was evidence that Kubota was participating in street protests in Yangon. Kubota was convicted of sedition and sentenced to 10 years. He was released in a prisoner amnesty on Nov. 17 and returned home to Tokyo the following day.

DVB English News: Up to 6,000 prisoners released in amnesty, ASEAN Summit recap

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DVB brings you the Weekly News in English: – Up to 6,000 people, including four foreigners, released from prison in amnesty – President Joe Biden commits to dialogue on Burma; Malaysia rejects junta elections plan – Beauty queen Han Lay begins cross Canada tour, starting in Toronto on Nov. 19 – Mayco Naing releases Burma Spring book featuring poetry and photography DVB English News – https://english.dvb.no Follow DVB English on Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/DVB-English-… Follow DVB English on Twitter – https://twitter.com/dvb_english Subscribe to DVB English News Briefing – mail [email protected] Subscribe to DVB Youtube – https://youtube.com/dvbtvnews Follow DVB on Telegram – https://t.me/dvbtvnews Follow DVB on Instagram – https://instagram.com/dvbtvnews

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