Sunday, November 13, 2011

Myanmar to free more prisoners on Monday: Officials



The Sunday Times
YANGON (AFP) - Myanmar is to declare a new prisoner amnesty on Monday that will include political detainees, government officials in the military-dominated country said on Sunday.

'Some prisoners will be released on Monday,' an official who did not wish to be named told AFP, without giving further details.

Another official added that 'some prisoners of conscience from prisons outside Yangon' would be among those freed.

The regime pardoned about 200 political prisoners in a much-anticipated amnesty in October but critics said the gesture did not go far enough as most of the country's political detainees are still locked up.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

How Burma Can Prove It Has Changed Its Ways

Fred Hiatt, The Jakarta Globe: November 8, 2011

Life in the new Burma: Fifteen political prisoners who embarked on a hunger strike to protest their confinement have been denied water as punishment. Eight of them, according to Amnesty International, have been sent to cells built for dogs, which have no light, no mats or bedding and insufficient space for humans to stand.

In the past year, more than 100,000 ethnic minorities have been forced to leave their homes by brutal army tactics, including gang rapes.

U Gambira, a Buddhist monk serving 63 years in prison for his role in a peaceful 2007 movement for democracy, is rapidly deteriorating, according to Amnesty International, the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma) and his elder sister, Ma Khin Thu Htay. The monk, 32, apparently has not recovered from being tortured in 2009 and is being given narcotic injections to silence him rather than appropriate medical care.

None of this would have been surprising in the past, because Burma, a nation of 50 million or so in Southeast Asia, has long been ruled by one of the world’s most brutal regimes (which calls its country Myanmar). But in recent months, there have been signs of change and, along with those, arguments in the West about how to respond.

Longtime opponents of pro-democracy sanctions have urged a rapid easing of those. The International Crisis Group, for example, in September proclaimed a “major reform underway:” “President Thein Sein has moved rapidly to begin implementing an ambitious reform agenda ... strong signs of heralding a new kind of political leadership in Myanmar ... a completely different tone for governance.”

Among the changes: Aung San Suu Kyi, leader of Burma’s foremost pro-democracy political party, has been freed from house arrest and allowed to meet with diplomats and Burmese leaders. Her photograph has emerged in many Rangoon homes from its hiding place beneath mattresses or between book pages. Her party, now banned, may be permitted to reregister.

Domestic media remain strictly controlled, but Internet access has been eased. A dam construction project, which would have displaced thousands, has been suspended.

That decision not only cheered Burma’s beleaguered environmentalists but also angered neighboring China, which was helping finance the project and would have received almost all of the electricity generated. That, in turn, suggests that Burma’s leaders, like those of other countries in the region, are chafing under China’s increasingly peremptory attitude toward its near-abroad. Chinese businessmen in Burma buy property, claim natural resources and export young girls to become forced brides in Chinese villages.

Indeed, a leading argument against sanctions has been the opening they would give China to a strategically located, resource-rich country. Now it seems the sanctions — and Burma’s desire for someone to play a counterbalancing role — may be one factor swaying the regime toward the pro-reform steps it knows the West will insist on.

If that’s the case, the logical response is assurance that true reform will lead to Western engagement — but no premature removal of the incentives for change.

How to define premature? There is no single yardstick. But one basic requirement would be freedom for all political prisoners (1,700 or so), including the 120 suffering from severe health problems — among them U Gambira.

Four years ago, while he was on the run inside his country, the monk published an op-ed on this page in which he “welcomed the strong actions of the United States to impose financial and travel restrictions on the regime and its enablers.”

“Burma’s Saffron Revolution is just beginning,” U Gambira bravely wrote. “The regime’s use of mass arrests, murder, torture and imprisonment has failed to extinguish our desire for the freedom that was stolen from us so many years ago. We have taken their best punch.”

The regime set out to prove him wrong. According to his sister, he was beaten on the head with a stick “every 15 minutes for the entire month of April 2009.”

“He was beaten in this manner for requesting permission to walk for his health,” she wrote in a recent letter to Burma’s president. “While he was being beaten, his hands were placed behind his back and handcuffed, and he was forced to wear iron shackles. In addition, he was hooded with a black cloth bag and pieces of cloth were forcefully put in his mouth ... he was fed meals with a spoon by prison guards . . . and [had to] urinate or defecate on the chair.”

The new Burma regime is, perhaps, not responsible for the crimes of May 2009. But one would think that a “completely different tone for governance” will include freedom for the dictatorship’s most damaged victims and an end to its most appalling crimes.

Fred Hiatt is the editorial pages editor of The Washington Post.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Political prisoners on hunger strike in Insein Prison, demanding remission

Chiang Mai (Mizzima) – Fifteen political prisoners in Insein Prison in Rangoon started a hunger strike at noon on Wednesday, demanding remission of their sentences, according to a statement by the Helping Network for Families of Political Prisoners (HNFPP).

Political prisoners refused to have lunch and informed chief prison official Win Naing, according to the statement.

Although ordinary prisoners have received remission, or early release, political prisoners have not received remission since 1997, said Aung Zaw Tun, one of the HNFPP leaders.

“We have announced that they will continue their hunger strike until their demand is fulfilled. The length of the strike will depend on how the authorities respond,” said Aung Zaw Tun.

Section 347 of the Constitution says, “The Union shall guarantee every person enjoys equal rights before the law and shall equally be provided legal protection.”

A prison manual of the Directorate of Prison says that all prisoners, except prisoners who received a death sentence or life, can be given remission.

The Thailand-based Assistance Association for Political Prisoners-Burma labeled the recent amnesty a “so-called amnesty.” It said there are about 1,700 political prisoners across Burma, including 100 political prisoners who are in ill health. According to figures compiled by AAPP-B, about 200 political prisoners were released on October 12.

Officials with the National League for Democracy said 218 political prisoners were included in the 6,359 prisoners released starting on October 12. The government has provided no official figures of the number of persons released. The amnesty was granted after approval by the National Defence and Security Council.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Burma’s Prisoner Release Concluded


By THE IRRAWADDY Thursday, October 13, 2011

The Burmese Ministry of Home Affairs said that all of the 6,359 prisoners subject to the amnesty program announced this week by President Thein Sein were released on Wednesday.

The prisoners released included 220 political prisoners, which activists say is a small number compared to the around 2,000 political prisoners being held in Burmese prisons at the time of the release.

An official from the Ministry of Home Affairs, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that the released political prisoners were not given any special instructions and the ministry can’t say when there will be another amnesty in the future.

Toe Kyaw Hlaing, one of the leaders of a Rangoon-based group that is organizing a signature campaign for the release of political prisoners, said that many of the political prisoners that were released on Wednesday were close to finishing their sentence.

He also said that many prominent pro-democracy activists and ethnic leaders are still behind bars, and his group will make a survey of the political prisoners who remain incarcerated and will submit their results to pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

“The remaining political prisoners could be a barricade to the government reforming and bringing democracy to the country, so we will start the signature campaign and submit the petition to President Thein Sein,” said Toe Kyaw Hlaing.

Four members of the 88 Generation Students group were included in the release on Wednesday: Ko Ko Gyi (aka) Thein Than Tun, Zaw Htet Ko Ko, Lay Lay Mon and Myint Lwin Oo (aka) Thar Gyi.

The Thailand-based Assistance Association of Political Prisoners (AAPP) released a statement on Thursday stating that the Thein Sein administration attempted to appease the international community by offering its second so-called amnesty. The statement said that although on the 11th of October the announcement was made that 6,359 prisoners would be released, no public information about the actual numbers released has been made accessible.

“AAPP has been monitoring the October 12 prisoner release and we have learned that 220 political prisoners have been freed so far. Many other prominent political prisoners such as Min Ko Naing, U Khun Tun Oo, U Gambira and so on were not included among those released,” the statement said.

The AAPP also said that the prisoner release was not satisfactory and that “we would like to urge the international community to persuade U Thein Sein’s government for the recognition of the existence of political prisoners, and for the unconditional release of all political prisoners under a dignified way.”

Meanwhile, Mr. Tomas Ojea Quintana, the UN special envoy on human rights in Burma, told Reuters that some of the most important dissidents had not been released, more than 1,000 prisoners of conscience remained behind bars and many more prisoners need to free before the end of the year.

“What I have seen in my last mission in August is that there are real opportunities for change and there are new institutions being built,” Quintana said, adding that he will submit a report to the UN General Assembly next Wednesday.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Myanmar 'to grant prisoner amnesty'

Breaking News: President of Myanmar (Burma) is to grant amnesty to more than 6,359 prisoners, MRTV, the state-controlled media has announced on 1 pm News.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

The First Delivery of the Campaign Postcards

September 27, 2011

Burmese and Thai activists and individuals gathered in front of the Myanmar Embassy (Burmese Embassy) to commemorate the 4th anniversary of the Saffron Movement in Burma at 11 am on September 27, 2011.

The members from the Campaign for Releasing Women Political Prisoners in Burma joined the event and delivered the first collection of the campaign postcards to the responsible person at Myanmar Embassy. The joint statement was released and the activity ended peacefully after an hour.

The Campaign Committee is planning to send more postcards with the written comments to the embassy again on November 7, 2011.



We would like to thank to Ko Myo Thent for sharing some photographs.




Saturday, October 8, 2011

Three Women Awarded 2011 Nobel Peace Prize

The 2011 Nobel Peace Prize is awarded jointly to Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Leymah Gbowee and Tawakkul Karman "for their non-violent struggle for the safety of women and for women’s rights to full participation in peace-building work".

Saturday, October 1, 2011

CRITERIA FOR AAPP’S DEFINITION OF A POLITICAL PRISONER

Information Release
Date: September 30, 2011

AAPP defines a political prisoner as anyone who is arrested because of his or her perceived or real active involvement or supporting role in political movements with peaceful or resistant means. AAPP maintains that the motivation behind the arrest of every individual in AAPP’s database is political, regardless of the laws they have been sentenced under.

The State Law Order Restoration Council and State Peace Development Council denied the existence of political prisoners; a denial reiterated by the current Thein Sein administration. Due to this, those who are in real or perceived opposition to the regime are routinely criminalized. For example, the authorities have repeatedly used false, tenuous, or trumped-up criminal charges to imprison political activists, journalists, students, and those in real or perceived opposition to the regime. To distinguish political prisoners from criminal offenders, AAPP considers the individual’s actions rather than their alleged charges. In short, the motivation behind the arrest must be political.

Rumors of an impending amnesty have been gaining traction after Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin’s recent claims to the United Nations General Assembly that an amnesty will be forthcoming at an “appropriate time in the near future .” His statements make no mention of political prisoners. If the administration is to grant a general amnesty, it must include the unconditional release of political prisoners and a wiping of their criminal records.

AAPP welcomes the release of any political prisoner, but in the absence of the rule of law, in the face of an impartial judiciary and laws that criminalize basic civil and political rights, political activists as well as ordinary people will face the ongoing threat of arrest. A future amnesty must be motivated by genuine political will if the Thein Sein administration were to shore up any credibility in the eyes of the international community.

Note: In support of the national reconciliation process and a genuine democratic transition, AAPP does not discriminate against those who participated in the armed struggle or were wrongfully convicted with criminal charges. AAPP uses the term political prisoner as a blanket phrase for all those who have been imprisoned for participating in the struggle for democracy and national reconciliation.

Downloda >>> Detail & Laws commonly used to arbitrarily detain activists or criminalize dissent
More on AAPPB

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Messages in the Postcards.....

Here are some messages that people from different world wrote in the campaign postcards. We invite anyone to print the postcards from this blog and write something to support the cause. The people from the Campaign for Releasing Women Political Prisoners in Burma, Thai students and other individuals are planning to bring the collected postcards to the Myanmar Embassy (Burmese Embassy) in Bangkok on September 27.

We would like to thank to those who support our campaign in different ways.

CAMPAIGN FOR RELEASING WOMEN POLITICAL PRISONERS IN BURMA

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Burma's parliament calls for release of political prisoners

Members of Myanmar's army-dominated parliament have called for an amnesty for political prisoners after a UN envoy called for the release of prisoners of conscience.

A proposal for a general amnesty was raised in Burma's lower house on Friday.

"They firmly hope that the president would make (an) assessment and release an order of amnesty," the New Light of Myanmar reported.

The plight of around 2,000 political prisoners, many of whom are serving double-digit jail terms, is a key concern of the international community, along with other human rights abuses and democratic reforms.
It is the first time that serving military members of parliament have taken part in a discussion of a general amnesty since a nominally civilian government took over in March. A quarter of seats are reserved for the army.

The regime, which came to power after controversial November elections, appears keen to improve its image and recently held the first talks between democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi and President Thein Sein, a former general.

But the UN special rapporteur on human rights in Burma, Tomas Ojea Quintana, said serious concerns remained as he concluded a visit to the country on Thursday.

The UN envoy, who visited Yangon's notorious Insein jail during his five day trip, voiced fears over allegations of torture during detention and the use of prisoners as porters for the military.

"Of key concern to me and the international community is the continuing detention of a large number of prisoners of conscience," Mr Quintana said.

In a move that rights groups said was woefully insufficient, Burma reduced all current jail sentences by one year in May and commuted the death penalty to life imprisonment.

Amnesty International said that political detainees are imprisoned using vague laws that criminalise peaceful political activists.

They are held in poor conditions and moved to jails far from their homes and families.

Opposition leader Suu Kyi was freed from seven years of house arrest in November shortly after the election, Myanmar's first in 20 years.
Mr Quintana, who also held talks with the Nobel laureate last week, urged Myanmar's parliamentarians, many of whom shed military uniforms to contest the election, to hold "open and inclusive debates on issues of national importance".hare1

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Nobel Aye denied family visits for 'breaking prison rules'

Source Irrawaddy

Hnin May Aung (aka Nobel Aye), a prominent female political prisoner in Burma, has been denied visits by her family for calling on the Burmese government to withdraw a public statement claiming that the country has no political prisoners.

Relatives told The Irrawaddy that when they arrived at Monywa Prison in Sagaing Region on July 7, they were told that they could not see Nobel Aye because she had broken prison rules.

“Her father had no chance to give her the parcel we had prepared for her. When he asked a prison official why he couldn't see her, he was told that a superior official had instructed them to bar family visits, because if someone breaks the prison rules, they should be punished. But the official didn't say which rule my daughter broke,” said Nobel Aye's mother, Aye Myint Than.

Aye Myint Than said that while her husband was waiting to meet with the prison official, he could hear his daughter calling out for her mother, who usually came for prison visits, but was unable to do so on this occasion.
Suffering from jaundice

“I'm so worried about her because she is suffering from jaundice. I haven't been able to sleep well since I heard about her calling for me like that,” she added.

This episode occurred just one day after Nobel Aye submitted a letter to prison officials calling on Vice President Thiha Thura Tin Aung Myint Oo, Foreign Affairs Minister Wunna Maung Lwin and presidential adviser Ko Ko Hlaing to retract their recent reiteration of the government's position that the country has no political prisoners.

Nobel Aye is currently serving her second prison term. She was first imprisoned in 1998, when she received a 42-year sentence for engaging in non-violent political activities together with her mother. She was released under an amnesty in July 2005, following the ouster of Gen Khin Nyunt and the disbandment of his military intelligence apparatus.
Second prison term

She was arrested again on Aug 23, 2007 for taking part in a protest led by the 88 Generation Students group following a dramatic hike in fuel prices that later sparked monk-led demonstrations.

Nobel Aye is not the only political prisoner who has spoken out against the government's claims that there are no political detainees in Burma. Nay Phone Latt, a blogger who is serving a 12-year prison sentence in Pa-an Prison in Karen State, also opposed the government officials' statements.

“They [political prisoners] can't accept this because they have to serve their full prison terms even after other prisoners were granted a remission,” said Aye Aye Than, mother of Nay Phone Latt, who last visited her son in early July.

Meanwhile, five political prisoners in Meiktila Prison in Mandalay Region have also sent a letter to Burma's new president, ex-Gen Thein Sein, calling for their immediate release and a public examination of their cases.

According to the Thailand-based Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, there are 1,994 political prisoners currently serving sentences Burma's prisons, of whom 145 are women.