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Voices from Burma’s Borderlands

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“Hnoung Eain Thin”

Guest Contributor

Please believe me. I don’t know what will happen in your countries. It is strange to be considered a thief in our country. In many countries, taking property without the knowledge of the owner is considered a thief. Not so with us. He is only a thief if he steals a few things. If you steal a lot of things, you are no longer a thief. Especially state-owned resources such as mineral gems, If they steal forests, etc., they are no longer thieves. In addition to not being thieves, they are respected as state authorities. There have been more than 60 years of incidents of big thieves catching and imprisoning small thieves in Myanmar. No matter which department of the government you look at, they are full of thieves. I want to tell you an example. An engineer responsible for paving the road had already built his new house before the road was finished. There is one more thing. The cops in charge of areas dominated by drug cartels get rich instantly. Drugs are destroying the future of young people. In order to sell these drugs easily, the sellers bribed the police with money. Police across the country are desperately trying to serve in these areas. This is the bottom staff. I will continue to talk about the big thieves in the upper part. The regime’s leaders and relatives are very rich. 

People who work long hours in the sun to earn a family’s worth of rice. Children who drop out of school because they can’t stay in school are selling flowers at traffic lights. Children become conductors. Children who become waiters at tea shops, While the bottom layer, such as the children who had to go down to the fields, were battered people. As for those who are involved with the military leaders, they spend the money like water. They sell a lot of resources such as natural gas… and put the dollars that can be sold into their pockets. People were so hungry that they started shoplifting, robbery, etc. Just think about how hungry they can be. If they had to watch their children go hungry again, anyone would conspire, steal, and rob. At that time, the military leader’s subordinates arrested him and put him in prison. This reminds me of the phrase “big thief catches little thieves” and “big robber catches little robbers”. 

I still want to tell you about education under the junta. From Kindergarten to 9th grade, there are automatically pass and then there are 4th, 8th, and 10th graders who are checked by Government. This is an amazing exam system.Many university students study almost a month before the exam and when they are about to pass, the teachers tell them the questions they will ask. But if you don’t attend tuition from them, you can’t get it at all. Such a battered education system, when more people graduate, there is no way to become educated young people who can benefit the country. Then no other country recognizes the degree from Myanmar. They had to stand in the middle of the world as people with low education. But the military leaders and their relatives and friends are not like that. They have been going to school abroad since they were young, otherwise they were only placed in high-ranking schools where only military leaders and relatives and friends could attend. In this way, the country began to operate with uneducated graduates and went to the bottom of the world. When uneducated teachers teach, they become uneducated students. Uneducated parents could not teach their uneducated children. They couldn’t tell you about democracy and human rights. They don’t know themselves. 

How poor the people were, they had to eat only broken rice and boiled vegetables. Finally, they couldn’t stand it and protested for democracy and human rights. In the 1988 Uprising and the 2007 Saffron Revolution, the students were brutally killed by military leaders. After that, the military leaders gradually began to hide their identity while covering up the crimes they had committed. 

The 2008 Constitution, which they drafted according to their wishes, brought long-term benefits to the well-being of soldiers and their families. Then, the National League for Democracy, led by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, won the election and became the government. We only got a half democracy. Judiciary, interior and all armed departments were held by the Chief of the Armed Forces. According to the provisions of the 2008 Constitution, 25% of the parliament must be representatives of the military. Whether you’ve not heard of it, whether you know it or not, it’s the laws set by the golden wisdom of military leaders who don’t exist in the world. The government led by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi only worked for the development of the country in the small area that was given to them out of pity. When the country has reached the stage of recovery, the students and people population has only smelled the smell of democracy’s cuisine. The modern-day military leader, who admired the military leaders of the past, accused the government led by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi of cheating and stealing votes, and started a coup d’état. Like previous protests, the students were brutally killed again. 

What is different about the previous revolution is the people’s political horizon. In 1988, people had no human rights, so when the revolution failed, they returned to a life where they had nothing. Now, in the 21st Century, they have felt the vapor of democratic human rights. As I said above, they don’t want to return to the bad past. Then, the education system has started to rise. There are educated children, they have knowledge and science, and their ideas are better because they have opened up contact with the world. The tide is no longer the same as in 1988. There, the struggle between the dictator and the people has become more intense than before, the teenagers called Generation Z know the taste of freedom, and they don’t want to return to the military dictatorship. That’s where they began to fight desperately. When they found out that the coup had taken place, the young people experienced what they had read in the history books. In Mandalay, I heard that the group led by Dr. Tayzar San has started to show its will, so many young people in our town, including me, are active. 

I would like to tell you a little about the spring revolution in the town that I personally experienced. The night before the seizure of power, I went to my grandfather’s house to take care of him when grandfather was sick. After giving my grandfather medicine at night, I went to sleep. At six in the morning, the phone rang, and it was from my lovely Nyein saying, “There has been a coup d’état, and Daw Su and U Win Myint were arrested at three in the morning.” The phone lines went dead. I quickly got up and told my grandfather. Some people in the city are saying that there has been a coup d’état. I went to see a friend quickly. I don’t know what to do with him. I know how it feels. I feel like I can’t tell. I have come to the realization that democracy and human rights have been destroyed. Then I recalled the years of military rule that were full of tragedies. 

Thus, the telephone lines and television lines were cut off. Six days later, I was prepared to do something. Together with three other Student Union leaders, a decision was immediately made to organize motorcycle ride protests across Taungoo. I led the troop of riders in protest as we held up the three-finger salute of resistance and shouted slogans.

In the days that followed the coup, the motorcycle protest transformed into a march and acts of civil disobedience. Hundreds of thousands of people had joined the movement from all sorts of professions like education, the health sector, banking and universities. Self-designed pamphlets were distributed to coordinate a night-time pots-and-pans-banging protest against the coup.

A few weeks after the coup, we created a Steering Committee for protests with different leaders representing a variety of professional backgrounds. We held committee meetings every night to reach a consensus on the details of the next nonviolent action (gathering place and time as well as route, if for a march). We also formed volunteer medical teams to assist protesters in case of a brutal crackdown.

On March 8 last year, a large anti-coup protest we organized at No. (1) Taungoo Street and No. (6) Taungoo Street was brutally repressed by the military and police using tear gas and ammunition. Hundreds of protesters including myself had to cross a nearby river and hide in a forest until the military troops left. Amid this crisis, I had to hide in different places to stay the night. In my absence, close friends told me that my house was raided five times by military and police and was under surveillance for quite some time. When one of my fellow activists was arrested following the March protest, interrogators asked him if he had recently communicated with me. They showed him my photo and mentioned my name as the leader of the anti-coup protest. The interrogators also labeled me as the main supporter and propagandist of the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH), a democratic parliament in exile that opposes the junta.

Moreover, I was told that anti-coup activists were even tortured if my name or pen name was found on their phone contact list. When the military raided the hotel LaMin Aine, where we hid for some time, we had to hide in the penthouse pool for about one hour keeping our heads under the water as much as possible. Shortly after the hotel was raided, many of my fellow activists were arrested. I was lucky enough to escape, though I am still on the wanted list issued for Taungoo anti-coup protests. All of these are just a few of my experiences. Details will be given later.

In the current situation, the health of our country is very bad and it is deteriorating from side to side. The problem of raising prices The problem of fuel scarcity has started to affect the lives of the people. What will be done if these incidents have only lasted for many years like in the past? The country cannot imagine. Master U Aung Thin once said that if education and health are not good in a country, that country is ruined. As Master said, I am really worried that it will be a long time. I would like to urge world leaders and organizations like the United Nations to help Burma carefully. Let us all try not to live under a dictator for many years.

Daily Briefing: Friday, September 23, 2022

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Burmese beauty queen Han Lay remains stranded at Suvarnabhumi Airport as the junta has canceled her passport.

FROM THE DVB NEWSROOM

Miss Grand International Myanmar Han Lay held in Bangkok

The UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) to visit Burmese beauty queen Han Lay, real name Thaw Nandar Aung, at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport after being denied entry into Thailand and refusing to board a return flight to Vietnam, where she had been on holiday. Read more here. 

Detained NLD MP in Kachin State killed during interrogation. Myo Myo Kyaw, a National League for Democracy party MP in Mohnyin Township in Kachin State, was killed during interrogation, sources close to his family told RFA Burmese. “He was arrested on Aug. 24 near 21 Milestone in Myitkyina Township. His body wasn’t returned to the family. His family also does not know what day he died or where he was buried,” Win Naing, Hluttaw MP for Namti Township wrote on his Facebook page this morning. The victim was arrested together with a protest leader at a 20 Milestone checkpoint gate on Aug. 24. According to sources close to his family, he was killed during interrogation when the Burma Army discovered photos of National Unity Government treasury bonds and other information related to the People’s Defense Force on the detainees’ mobile phones during their arrests. The MP’s family initially contacted junta authorities but only found out later about his death as police did not provide any information about Myo Myo Kyaw.

Japan donates to support Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh. Japan donated $3.5 million USD to the UNHCR to provide protection and humanitarian assistance to Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh who fled Burma. The Embassy of Japan in Bangladesh announced on Sep. 21 that the UNHCR and Japanese government had signed an agreement to use the donation to provide key services – including health care and legal protection – to Rohingya living in refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar and Bhasan Char.  

US Embassy funds UN’s fact finding mission for Burma. The US Embassy in Burma announced that it is providing an additional $1 million USD to the UN’s Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM). The statement was issued on Sept.20 and the funds will be delivered through the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement under the US Department of State in support of IIMM’s efforts. 

Prominent resistance leader calls on Burma’s upper class to join the revolution. Bo Nagar, leader of the Sagaing-based local defense force Myanmar Royal Dragon Army, urged rich businessmen to join the revolution and not be “selfish.” He made the comments in an exclusive interview with DVB and claimed that the revolution is not only important for Burma’s working class but also provides benefits and opportunities for the business community. “There are many rich individuals and businessmen who do not help us. The public will be thankful if they take part in the revolution. I’m sure they can save face if they join the revolution that is close to victory,” he said. Bo Nagar’s MRDA primarily operates in Sagaing’s Pale Township and is fighting against the Burma Army.

News by Region

MON—The military council seized more than 80 houses of members of the National League for Democracy, National Unity Government, Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw, and the People’s Defense Force, and activists in Mon State, according to data collected by Than Lwin Times. Over 40 of the houses are in Thaton and another 40 houses are in Mawlamyine District and businesses and other properties were also seized by the regime. The majority of the owners of those properties were charged under the Counter-Terrorist Act, Unlawful Association Act, sedition and treason and some were not even charged under any law. The actual figures of sealed properties are likely much higher. Since the coup, the junta has confiscated 155 houses, properties and businesses of its opponents across the country. According to the NLD’s Central Working Committee, 115 houses of civilians unaffiliated with the NLD were seized by the military council. 

SHAN—Junta administration authorities have ordered refugees in Shan State to dismantle their camps and return to their villages or their relatives’ homes by the end of September, according to sources who aid refugees. On Sep. 17, authorities from Kyaukme Township arrived at the office of Shan Literature and Culture Association (SCLA) – an organization that has accepted and provided aid to refugees – and instructed them to leave the camps. “They [junta authorities] said that if the refugees comply, they will be provided with two weeks of food. They will be escorted to the villages if the refugees want to go home. They said that refugee camps should not exist in the entire country,” a local source who advocates for the rights of refugees told DVB. 

Thousands of people were displaced in Kyaukme Township due to fighting between the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) and the coalition forces of the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) and Shan State Progress Party (SSPP) two years ago. However, the refugees are fearful of returning home because of repeated landmine explosions, lack of rebuilding of villages, and the presence of armed groups in the villages of the region despite the RCSS withdrawing their troops earlier this year. A total of 55 families consisting of 158 people are left in the refugee camps supported by the SCLA and it is difficult to return to their villages. 

In Nammatu Township, the local junta administration has been pressured to demolish refugee camps this month, forcing some refugees to leave the camps. Although they returned to their villages, residents of Nammatu said the township remains volatile and unsafe. Thousands of residents of Nammatu Township were displaced due to clashes between the Burma Army, TNLA, SSPP, RCSS and Kachin Independence Army (KIA) about a decade ago. Hundreds of houses were destroyed in arson attacks during the fighting.

YANGON—One man was killed and another one was injured in a shooting in Mayangone Township on Sept. 22, according to local sources. The two men were talking at the corner of Aung Thaidhi and Pa Mauk Kha roads when an unidentified gunman shot them. Zwe Thu Aung, 22, died on the spot while Hla Myint Thein was injured. “I don’t know why they were shot. The young man was shot in the head and the other was wounded in his thigh,” a resident told DVB. Security forces investigated the perimeter where the incident took place following the shootings. A total of 30 shootings and explosions have occurred in Yangon this month so far, killing seven people and injuring ten others.

Miss Grand International Myanmar Han Lay held in Bangkok

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Burmese beauty queen Han Lay remains stranded at Suvarnabhumi Airport as the junta has canceled her passport.

Thai authorities detained Burmese beauty queen Han Lay, real name Thaw Nandar Aung, at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport after she was denied entry into the country and refused to board a return flight to Vietnam, where she had gone only for a short holiday. The 23-year-old has been living in Thailand since she spoke out against the February 2021 coup in her home country of Burma.

“I had to spend the night at the airport immigration. I was going to be sent back to Vietnam this morning, but my sister contacted UNHCR [The UN Refugee Agency]. UNHCR told me not to board the plane to Vietnam, [and that] I [could] be sent back to Myanmar.” Han Lay said.

“I did not commit any crimes. I only used my rights to speak out about what I stand against. I still do not feel okay even if I am abroad. I feel more for the people in Myanmar,” she added.

Han Lay told DVB that she was informed by Thai immigration police that her name was placed on an Interpol list by the Burmese junta. She was crowned Miss Grand International 2020 in Thailand one month after the 2021 coup. The beauty pageant had been delayed by one year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Han Lay is an outspoken critic of Burma’s junta and has requested several times for the international community to assist in restoring democracy to her country. If Han Lay were to be forcibly repatriated to Burma she could face charges of sedition under Section 124/1 of the Penal Code. The maximum penalty is up to 20 years in prison. Burma’s junta executed four democracy activists last July.

Thai immigration police have said Han Lay is being held because she does not have a valid visa to enter Thailand. The UNCHR refuses to comment on its cases.

Daily Briefing: Thursday, September 22, 2022

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The junta said that anyone caught donating to resistance groups can face the death penalty.

FROM THE DVB NEWSROOM

Junta threatens it will take severe action against netizens that donate to resistance groups and share anti-regime content. Junta spokesperson Zaw Min Tun threatened action against netizens ‘liking’ or ‘sharing’ content or pages from the National Unity Government (NUG), Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH), or the People’s Defense Force (PDF). He said, if identified or caught, people will face charges of sedition under Sec. 124(b) of the Penal Code, which carries a maximum penalty of up to 10 years in prison. He warned that anyone caught sending funds to resistance groups will be charged under sections of the Counter-Terrorism Act, which carries a maximum penalty of death. State media has issued daily lists of Facebook accounts it accuses of “inciting and spreading propaganda to intentionally destroy the government’s apparatus.” | BURMESE 

Japan will stop accepting Burma Army cadets. Japan’s Defense Ministry will stop accepting Burma Army cadets as students at its National Defense Academy, NHK reported. This was done in response to the execution of four democracy activists last July. The Japanese government will stop accepting the cadets as of April 2023. Eleven Burma Army cadets are currently studying in Japan, and will be allowed to finish their studies. This move comes after pressure from Burmese activists in Japan. 

Migrant workers ask the NUG and CSOs for assistance in labor dispute in Thailand. At least 110 Burmese migrant workers at a Thai cannery factory located in Samut Prakan were fired on Sep. 19, according to the Aid Alliance Committee (AAC) – a labor organization assisting Burmese migrants. “They reached out to our team and asked for help. We also informed the Ministry of Labor of the NUG. We went to the field together with Wai Lin Maung, Burma’s former diplomatic officer for labor affairs who joined the Civil Disobedience Movement, and negotiated for a solution…The factory owner did not want to pay compensation, so the owner replied that the employees would not be fired,” AAC’s Ko Ye Min told DVB. The Burmese migrant workers have demanded that remaining wages and compensation fees be paid, and immigration paperwork be provided. | BURMESE 

Military council revokes the licenses of more publishing houses. The Ministry of Information announced on Sep. 21 that the licenses of two more publishing houses have been revoked. It accused Nyanalin Sarpay and Thanlwin House of printing materials deemed “offensive ethnically, religiously, and culturally.” A junta official from the Ministry told BBC Burmese that the two publishers printed a book on Buddhism and that “the writings in the book would lead to harm for monks and religion.” At least six publishing houses have been shut down since the 2021 coup. The regime has recently banned books about the 2017 Rohingya genocide and the LGBTIQ+ community in Burma. 

News by Region

KAREN—Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) forces seized the Kyait Burma Army base camp in Kawkareik Township on Sept. 20, according to the Karen National Union (KNU). Seven troops were killed in the month-long battle and two were arrested with weapons, ammunition and communications devices. Clashes with the Burma Army have escalated in most KNU controlled areas, with the exception of KNU Brigade 7. | BURMESE 

MANDALAY—Protesters wearing t-shirts with the National League for Democracy (NLD) party logo rallied in front of its office in Chan Aye Tharsan Township. The protesters held banners that read ‘May Mother Suu [Aung San Suu Kyi] be healthy’; ‘NLD should condemn terrorist acts and not encourage them’; ‘We condemn terrorist activities committed by the NUG, CRPH and PDF’; ‘Innocent NLD party members have been killed because of the terrorist activities of the NUG, CRPH, and PDF’. Area residents alluded to the fact that these protesters were likely pro-junta. “People know well who can easily and safely protest on the roads at this time. People are not stupid. It is so funny,” a Mandalay resident told Burma Associated Press. 

YANGON—A Thaketa Township administrator was killed in a tea shop at the corner of Aung Yadana and Aung Zayyar roads on Sept. 20, according to locals. “Two men on a motorcycle shot the head of administrator Win Bo twice from the back. The body was later taken away in an ambulance,” a resident told DVB. Security forces checked motorcycles and vehicles at the corner where the murder took place. Six people have been killed and another six have been injured during attacks in Yangon so far this month. | BURMESE 

Depayin Parents Unable to Locate Missing Children

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“Please kill me mom,” Maung Bhone Tayza, age seven, told his mother. He did not want to suffer from his wounds any longer, Tayza’s mother told Myanmar Now. Six students were reported killed in an attack on a school, located inside of a monastery at Yet Kon village, Depayin Township, Sagaing Region, on Sept. 16. Twenty injured children were taken away by the Burma Army, according to parents.

Books, backpacks and other belongings, covered in blood, were scattered across the monastery compound. Witnesses state that the Burma Army attacked the area after allegedly receiving reports that members of a local People’s Defense Force (PDF) were hiding inside. But locals stated only children were there at that time of the attack.

“I think this is inhumane. They took my wounded child away. He was not even 15-years-old. Their aircraft fired for about an hour during study time. We have no choice but to deal with what they did as we are under their control. I haven’t slept and eaten well since that day. I tried to stop them when they started shooting at the school but they didn’t stop,” a father said.

“Some kids lost their eyes and others were even missing limbs. I think at least 15 children were taken away. I found out my son was among those [taken] as soon as they left. They abandoned the bodies. The body of a dead kid was picked up by a soldier and put inside a basket. Children were crying but they told them to stop crying. We were only able to cry and look on as we were unable to stop them,” he added. 

The Burma Army’s Myawaddy news outlet announced that junta forces received intel on Sept. 17 that supporters of the National League for Democracy (NLD) party and PDF members were hiding inside the school. It stated that the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and the PDF were planning to transport weapons and ammunition from Let Yat Kone village. It added that its troops killed seven PDF fighters and seized ammunition.

“We have found ten bodies so far. One of our teammates is still missing. The dead bodies are mostly male but one of them is female. Five aircraft took part in the attack on that day and attack helicopters simultaneously fired at the school,” a PDF member said.  

The National Unity Government (NUG) issued an announcement on Sept. 18 calling for the immediate release of all children and teachers taken by the Burma Army. UNICEF Myanmar expressed its condolences to the parents and families of the children killed, but it did not assign blame. Save the Children called for “International Humanitarian Law to be upheld.” It reiterated that neither schools, nor children, must be targeted. 

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