Departments
Suu Kyi birthday (Sunday, June 19)
by Richard S. Ehrlich
June 23, 2005
BANGKOK, Thailand -- The world's most famous political prisoner, Burma's Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, will not be celebrating a happy birthday on Sunday (June 19) when she turns 60, because she is locked under house arrest.
Suu Kyi -- pronounced "Soo Chee" -- languishes behind spiked gates which guard her spacious garden and tranquil, two-story, lakeside villa in Rangoon, the capital of impoverished Burma.
In what has become depressingly routine, the U.S. State Department and other monitors reiterated their condemnation of Burma for its grim human rights record.
London-based Amnesty International said at least 1,350 political prisoners are locked up in the Southeast Asian country.
To score diplomatic points, the regime occasionally releases some inmates, but later arrests more dissidents.
Suu Kyi has spent more than nine of the past 16 years in detention.
Her latest sentence of house arrest began on May 30, 2003 after deadly clashes erupted between government supporters and her National League for Democracy (NLD) party sympathizers.
The unelected regime says it keeps her away from the public to ensure she will not be assassinated, and to keep Burma safe from brawls between supporters and opponents of the military government.
Suu Kyi insists the government fears her overwhelming popularity after she led her NLD party to a nationwide, landslide victory in a 1990 election, which the military regime ignored.
The thin, demure politician is usually referred to simply as "The Lady" -- because mentioning her name aloud could result in unwanted attention by ubiquitous plain clothed police and informants who eavesdrop on Burma's majority Buddhist, yet sinisterly Orwellian, society.
"It is hereby declared, that effective November 27, 2004, the authorities have extended, for one more year, the house arrest imposed on the National League for Democracy Secretary-General, 'Daw' Aung San Suu Kyi, under Section 10b of the Law Safeguarding the State from the Dangers of Subversive Elements," the frustrated NLD said at the time.
American and European economic sanctions against Rangoon -- designed to push the junta toward democracy -- have also punished workers in Burma's garment industry and other labor-intensive sectors, which now have problems exporting their goods abroad.
With no immediate solution in sight, Burma's woes are expected to worsen despite international praise for Suu Kyi, who has suffered health problems and difficulty in preventing squabbles within her skeletal NLD party.
"Despite her reputation among many as a saint, she has no power to manipulate the government, and serves more as a figurehead than a viable opposition leader," said an editorial in the Burmese exile community's respected, Thailand-based Irrawaddy magazine, which receives U.S.-government funding.
"Aging opposition leaders refuse to acknowledge the ideas of younger party members -- even expelling them," said the magazine which seeks an end to Burma's military rule.
Burmese rallying cries for democracy are now made only by those in self-exile.
"I left Burma in 2003 because I was afraid I would be sentenced for the third time," said San San, an elected NLD Member of Parliament, in an interview on Thursday (June 16) in Bangkok.
San San said she had already served five years in jail for "high treason" because she demanded democracy and supported Suu Kyi.
"Our election result was not honored by the junta, but we Members of Parliament tried to set up a federal government," San San said.
"The future is not bright. I don't think the Burmese people can do anything now, because they are always afraid of the government because they have guns, and every time there is a [democracy] movement, they stop that movement by gunning down the students," San San said.
"I call on the people -- the Chinese, the Laotians, the Indians, the Bangladeshi Bengali people -- to oppose their governments that support dictatorship" in Burma, said Thailand's Senator Kraisak Choonhavan in a Thursday (June 16) speech honoring Suu Kyi's birthday.
"Burma, I'm afraid, has put the entire region to blackmail," Kraisak said.
India, Bangladesh and Thailand have to support Burma, or else Rangoon will push refugees over the border and burden those countries, the Thai senator said.
Peace with Burma also means doing business with the regime to circumvent the sanctions, Kraisak said.
America also has loopholes in its sanctions, which mostly block new investment.
California-based oil giant, Unocal, continues to pump natural gas through a pipeline across Burma because the deal was negotiated before sanctions came into effect.
In March, Unocal agreed to compensate Burmese villagers over alleged abuses committed by Burmese guards during the construction of the 62-km (39-mile) Yadana natural gas pipeline, amid charges of murder, rape and enslavement along the route.
|
 |
Recent International Issues Articles
The arrogance of power, per annum December 27, 2005 Michael Winship
Rice authorized National Security Agency to spy on UN Securit December 27, 2005 Jason Leopold
Beware Iraqization December 26, 2005 Mike Ferner
US Russia warplanes December 22, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Thoughts from the heartland December 10, 2005 Glenn Yeagley
Bush finds soul mate in Russia's bloody Beria December 7, 2005 Mark Anderson
An international peace movement building December 4, 2005 David Swanson
CIA’s “Torture Taxi” in the spotlight November 23, 2005 Mike Ferner
America's corporatacracy says "No MAS" November 20, 2005 Jason Miller
Leaks can be good: secret government sucks November 15, 2005 Stephen Crockett
American euthanasia November 8, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Sweet dreams for America's ruling elite and their sycophantic loyalists November 6, 2005 Jason Miller
War Keyensianism November 6, 2005 John H. St.John
Rove and Cheney caught in Fitzgerald's web. Will they go down too? October 30, 2005 Jason Leopold
Where is the Grand Inquisitor when you need him? October 27, 2005 Jason Miller
Burma U.S. military October 25, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Koran Muslims October 21, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Was the vote on the Iraqi constitution fixed? A rotten foundation is hard to build on October 21, 2005 Kevin Zeese, DemocracyRising.US
Surrender is not an option October 18, 2005 Jason Miller
Dissent isn’t taken lightly down under October 6, 2005 Scott Parkin
Bringing the war home to the Pentagon September 27, 2005 Mike Ferner
Katrina Tsunami September 7, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Rev. Jackson comments on personal meeting with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez August 30, 2005 Rainbow/PUSH
Hopping off ears August 12, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Halliburton Sold Iranian Oil Company Key Nuclear Reactor Components, Sources Say August 10, 2005 Jason Leopold
George Bush Knows Why They Hate Us August 10, 2005 Jason Miller
Superstitious women July 19, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Bin Laden Souvenirs July 13, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
George and Tony Get their al-Qaeda Fix July 13, 2005 Greg Palast
Interview with Norman Solomon: “War Made Easy” July 8, 2005 Adrian Zupp
CIA Hmong July 8, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Turkey is Not a Role Model for the Middle East July 1, 2005 Gene C. Gerard
Suu Kyi birthday (Sunday, June 19) June 23, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
Terrorism threat and Press Freedom June 18, 2005 Kamala Sarup
Pope's comments are saddening and painful to millions of Catholics June 8, 2005 Jay Smith Brown
French fried Friedman June 8, 2005 Greg Palast
CAFTA's hollow reforms May 28, 2005 Cyril Mychalejko
Radio Havana Interviews Chomsky April 24, 2005 Noam Chomsky
Capitalist Globalization and Resistance in Guatemala April 21, 2005 Cyril Mychalejko
Vanunu faces new prison term: will they bury him? Dan Ellsberg calls fellow whistleblower "a prophet" April 17, 2005 Mark Gaffney
A kick in the pants... April 17, 2005 Sheila Samples
Is the US Navy vulnerable in the Gulf? The myth of US invincibility April 17, 2005 Mark H. Gaffney
Senior Advisor at the United Nations Foundation to address the international state of women April 13, 2005 Patrick Terrien, President and CEO, Columbus Council on World Affairs
An existential struggle April 6, 2005 Mazin Qumsiyeh
International Women's Day: Honoring the Lives of Women in Perilous Times March 1, 2005 Lucinda Marshall
Dictators of the 21st Century February 15, 2005 Dr. J. Alva Scruggs
First North American Heroin Maintenance Study Now Underway in Vancouver February 11, 2005 DRCNET
Editorial: A Cautious First Step February 11, 2005 David Borden,Executive Director DRCNET, borden@drcnet.org
Exit stage Baghdad February 7, 2005 Cynthia L. Butler, Esq.
Read International Issues Articles by Year: 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 |