Protesting Burma's Brutality

"Hey man! Guess what? I'm in front of history here. There's a protest!…It's awesome!"

That is what an excited passerby said on his cell phone while watching the Amnesty International Free Burma protest in front of the Permanent Mission of the Union of Myanmar (Burma) to the United Nations on 77th St. today.

First off, Burma or Myanmar? Which is it? The official name, according to both the United States and Britain, remains Burma. The current regime of military strongmen led by Than Shwe changed the official name from Burma to Myanmar. But since the US and UK do not officially recognize the regime of military strongmen as the legitimate government of the nation, that change is not officially recognized.

In reality the two words are, believe it or not, synonymous. According to BBC News:

The two words mean the same thing and one is derived from the other. Burmah, as it was spelt in the 19th Century, is a local corruption of the word Myanmar.

They have both been used within Burma for a long time, says anthropologist Gustaaf Houtman, who has written extensively about Burmese politics.

"There's a formal term which is Myanmar and the informal, everyday term which is Burma. Myanmar is the literary form, which is ceremonial and official and reeks of government. [The name change] is a form of censorship..."

Richard Coates, a linguist at the University of Western England, says adopting the traditional, formal name is an attempt by the junta to break from the colonial past.

"Local opposition groups do not accept that, and presumably prefer to use the 'old' colloquial name, at least until they have a government with popular legitimacy. Governments that agree with this stance still call the country Burma.

So, for those who agree that a military junta that orders the massacre of peaceful protestors should not be legitimized, let's call it Burma.

In Manhattan today, a small group of protesters joined Amnesty International to protest in front of the Burma UN Delegation. Since someone else was using the microscope I needed at work, I snuck away to join in. When I first arrived there were only about 50 people. But ultimately it grew to about 100-150, spilling out of the tiny area originally allocated by the police. The police at first tried to keep the road open, but eventually decided to close off the block.

Unlike the passerby, I am more jaded when it comes to protests. I have been to too many and they tend to blend together. There are only so many times you can hear "What Do We Want? (Fill in the Blank)! When do we want it? Now!" before it starts to lose its thrill. This protest, in itself, was not different except for the handful of people who were actually from Burma. To them, the protest was clearly extremely important and that made it more meaningful to me.

And that got me thinking. Why was the violence in Burma getting to me as much as it was? I keep track of so many horrible situations around the world, reporting on some of them, but there is something about the current situation in Burma that has been nagging at me.

First off was the image of the Japanese reporter, shot, seemingly deliberately, by the Burmese military.


(Image also from BBC News)

When I first saw that image I remembered the first time I saw someone really shot on television. The situation was parallel. In 1979, ABC reporter Bill Stewart was stopped at a checkpoint by the brutal National Guard of Nicaragua under the dictator Somoza. As his cameraman filmed the incident, the Nicaraguan Natioanl Guardsman made Bill Stewart kneel...then lie down. Then, on camera, the Guardsman shot Stewart. I remember watching this, seeing Stewart's body jerk and lie still. The camera then jerked away as the cameraman got away. Off camera, Stewart's interpreter was also shot.

That moment, shown over and over on television, turned America against Somoza, allowing the Sandinistas to oust him. Reporters are killed all the time, sad to say. I dated a woman whose father was killed by a Contra landmine (probaly supplied by the US to some of the same National Guardsmen who supported Somoza) on the border between Nicaragua and Honduras. A reporter being killed doesn't change much. But when it happens on camera for all to see, it tends to turn people against the regime responsible.

Deep down, I am feeling like the deliberate shooting of Kenji Nagai by Burmese troops on camera may ultimately do to the Burmese dictators what the deliberate shooting of Bill Stewart on camera by Nicaraguan National Guardsmen did to Somoza. I have no reason to believe this will be so. But my brain is superimposing these events and I can only hope that we are seeing the beginning of the end for Than Shwe and his fellow thugs.

The second thing that has made the current situation in Burma get to me is the slaughter of the Buddhist monks. Look. I am not terribly religious. But when clergy of any religion in any country is being slaughtered for peacefully protesting, something is pretty messed up. Burmese troops shot down protesting monks in cold blood (warning: disturbing picture). Now thousands of surviving monks are being rounded up to be imprisoned for their role in the protests.

Finally, there is the quiet, serene face of Aung San Suu Kyi, leader of the Burmese democracy movement and Nobel Peace Prize winner. A regime that is afraid of Buddhist monks and a 62 year old woman whose main inspirations are Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, jr. is a regime that deserves no legitimacy.

I noticed the embassy was not flying its flag today…out of shame for the killing of monks, one can hope. More likely just to keep a low profile, hoping no one will notice them until people forget about the most recent of many massacres by the military junta of Burma. It is quite likely that they can succeed in brutally suppressing the uprising of the monks and simply ride out the international outrage until the world loses interest and Burma can go back to shamelessly flying its flag in Manhattan.

But I hope not.

Support Amnesty International

Support the US Campaign for Burma

Contact Chevron, one of the companies that provides the most economic support for Burma's military regime, and so is in the best position to tell them enough is enough. Every time you fill up with Chevron gas, you are donating a bit to Burma's dictatorship.

Chevron:
6001 Bollinger Canyon Road
San Ramon, CA 94583, USA
Tel. +1 925-842-1000
comment@chevron.com

Write your Congress Critters urging them to take stronger action against Burma.

And Oct. 5th and 6th are the next days of protest to support the monks in Burma. Go here to see if there is a protest in your area or if you want to plan one in your area.

http://culturekitchen.com/mole333/blog/protesting_burmas_brutality
Mouse over the text to select it, then press Ctrl-C to copy it.
No votes yet
mole333's picture



Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
blog comments powered by Disqus ">
Free Burma's picture

There's a large

There's a large international online awareness campaign also:

About "Free Burma!"

International bloggers are preparing an action to support the peaceful revolution in Burma. We want to set a sign for freedom and show our sympathy for these people who are fighting their cruel regime without weapons. These Bloggers are planning to refrain from posting to their blogs on October 4 and just put up one Banner then, underlined with the words „Free Burma!“.

http://www2.free-burma.org/graphics.php

Please spread the word.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may link to webpages through the weblinks registry
  • You may post code using <code>...</code> (generic) or <?php ... ?> (highlighted PHP) tags.
  • Flash node macros can be added to this post.
  • Insert Flickr images: [flickr-photo:id=230452326,size=s] or [flickr-photoset:id=72157594262419167,size=m].
  • Use [fn]...[/fn] (or <fn>...</fn>) to insert automatically numbered footnotes.
  • You may use [inline:xx] tags to display uploaded files or images inline.
  • Images can be added to this post.
  • Easily link to terms in various wikis. For help, see <a href="/interwiki/1">interwiki</a>.
  • Links to specified hosts will have a rel="nofollow" added to them.

  • You may post PHP code. You should include <?php ?> tags.
  • Use <!--pagebreak--> to create page breaks.
  • You may use <swf file="song.mp3"> to display Flash files inline
  • Textual smileys will be replaced with graphical ones.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • E-Mail addresses are hidden with reCAPTCHA Mailhide.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Tweetbacks

User login

The Publisher
Liza Sabater

Daily servings of political dissent
culturekitchen

Grassroots News and
Activism for New Yorkers

Daily Gotham

Feminist Bloggers
Network

BlogSheroes

A new kind of vouyerism
Voogling

Art + Code + Philosophy
Potatoland.blog

Got any dirt, tips, leads or money for us? Then drop us a line or two at editors [at] culturekitchen [dot] com or use our general contact form to reach everybody in the editorial team ASAP.

Nibble daily on our brainy goodness with our daily syndication digest. You'll receive an email with a list and links to the previous day's posts.



Powered by FeedBlitz

Upcoming events

  • No upcoming events available

QUOTES

Intellectual Property Rights block technology transfer and TRIPS (trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights) promote monopolies on seeds and medicines and piracy of Third World biodiversity and indigenous knowledge.

That is why we had to fight WR Grace and USDA to revoke the Neem Patent, we had to fight Ricetec to prevent them claiming our basmati as their invention. And we have successfully fought

The rules of The World Trade Organization were designed to impoverish poor people and poor countries, transform their biodiversity and water commons into corporate property so that seed multi-national corporations like Monsanto could sell us our seeds for $1 tr. per year and water giants like Suez and Bechtel could sell us our water for another trillion. And the free trade rules of agriculture are robbing Indian peasants of $1 trillion per year through falling prices because of $400 billion subsidies in rich countries distorting trade by distorting prices.

This is not just a recipe for poverty, it is a recipe for genocide. In the free trade world that Bhagwati upholds, peasants sell kidneys to pay debt for poisons, displaced rural women sell their bodies to feed their children, hospitals become centers of organ theft, and India which sold the finest fabrics and tastiest spices to the world becomes the dumping ground for the toxic wste of 9/11 and the exploded and unexploded shells from the war in Afganistan and Iraq.

Free trade is becoming a mechanism to take our wealth, our biodiversity, our minerals, our brains and give us trash and toxic in exchange. It is an exchange of "bads" for "goods". This is not comparative advantage, it is loot. Which is why we say, "Our World is not for sale".

— Vandana Shiva

Poll