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Wednesday, May 7, 2008

[vinnomot] Burma: Waves of suffering wash over my land

Article# 1
Waves of suffering wash over my land
By Dr Zar Ni
Dr Zar Ni is a visiting research fellow at the Department of International Development at Oxford University
The last time Burma hit the headlines it was during the bloody crackdown on Buddhist monk-protesters. This time it is Cyclone Nargis.

In their typically superstitious collective psyche, the Burmese would most certainly view Nargis as a bad omen for the entire nation. Seen through Burmese eyes thus, all this devastation and carnage is nothing but the direct result of extreme greed and delusion, utter lack of loving kindness, and concern for public welfare on the part of the regime's leadership. In short, the Burmese may read Nargis as a form of collective punishment for a society where the rulers have violated Buddhism and the Buddhist order, the society's sacred foundation. The devastation is so great that even the media-shy generals have been forced to declare an emergency in the worst-hit areas and, more importantly, indicate their willingness to receive international aid.

The regime's new-found "openness" is to be acknowledged and encouraged. But one discouraging sign is that the 10 May referendum [on a new constitution that promises to further strengthen the military's hold on the country] is set to go ahead. Immediately, the regime's friends in the region, namely China and India, should urge the senior leadership to put off the vote.

In the midst of prosperity and dynamic transformation in Asia, the Burmese reel from one wave of suffering after another. The list of Burma's woes includes an ongoing civil war , an endless series of political conflicts that have killed an estimated two million people on all sides, chronic rice shortages in the land once dubbed "the rice bowl of Asia" and the epidemic of HIV/Aids and other curable tropical diseases such as malaria.

As if war, poverty and repression are not enough, the country's impotent, if widely celebrated, opposition has maintained its support for prolonged sanctions by the US, Canada and the EU. It is ironic that President Bush had just signed another round of sanctions just hours before Nagris struck. The cyclone should serve as a wake-up call to anyone, from Burmese soldiers and civilians, from Burmese democrats and autocrats to pro-sanction Western governments or pro-engagement Eastern neighbours, to help end the Burmese days of repression, poverty and disaster.

Published: The Independent, May 7, 2008.

 
Article# 2
Hated Burma junta is facing one hell of a challenge to its isolation
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