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Support Min Ko Naing and his fellow democracy activists

Information Release
Date: October 18, 2010

Support Min Ko Naing and his fellow democracy activists

Min Ko Naing’s 48th birthday
Assistance Association for Political Prisoners
18 October, 2010

Today Min Ko Naing will spend his 48th Birthday imprisoned and cut off from the people of Burma. This will be the 19th year that he has spent a day, meant for celebration, in incarceration.

Min Ko Naing has become one of the most prominent and outspoken opponents of the military regime, expressing his political dissent through poetry and most recently ‘Rear View Mirror’ a novel written after his first release and published by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners in 2009.

Min Ko Naing has put Burma’s fight for democracy before any other interests and in doing so risked his freedom and safety. He has been stripped of his basic human rights yet fought back again and again each time with more determination. To the people of Burma Min Ko Naing is an inspiration and a symbol of strength and courage.

‘True courage can be seen in those who, armed with nothing more than their superior moral position, stand up to a brutal armed regime; and persistently defy their order; refuse to cower under their threats; to simply demand the rights that should be available to all humans…that is true courage’. Jim McNalis.

In August 1988, Min Ko Naing was elected Chairperson of the All Burma Federation of Student Unions. After the military brutally crushed the popular uprisings in August 1988, thousands of students and other activists escaped to safety. However, Min Ko Naing refused to flee, choosing instead to remain inside Burma to continue his pro-democracy work.

Min Ko Naing was eventually arrested in March 1989 and arbitrarily sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment. He was released in November 2004 after spending 16 years in solitary confinement. In an interview following his release, he
said, “It gave me confidence in prison to know that although my journey is rough and dark, I am not alone, and I am with my comrades. As a result, I have finished the long journey”.

In August 2007, Min Ko Naing led peaceful demonstrations against the regime’s economic mismanagement, hikes in fuel and commodity prices, and the falling standard of living. This later became know as the Saffron Revolution. Min Ko Naing and his fellow leading activists were arrested for their roles in organizing the demonstrations and handed down sentences of 65 years.

Min Ko Naing has been presented with several awards by the international community for his work towards a democratic Burma and for highlighting the regimes’ absolute denial of freedom of expression; a basic human right and fundamental element within a democratic society.

Let us wish this courageous leader a happy birthday and assure him and his fellow activists that they are not alone in their fight for democracy in Burma.

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Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma)

For more information –

Bo Kyi (Joint Secretary); +66 (0) 819 628 713

Tate Naing (Secretary): +66 (0) 812 878 751

   

Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic received a delegation of the representatives of Burmese opposition

On September 23, the First Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic, Mr. Jiri Schneider, received a delegation of the representatives of Burmese opposition.

The current alarming situation in BurmND-Burma Representatives meeting withDeputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the  Czech Republica/Myanmar was discussed during the meeting.
   

ND-Burma Releases Periodic Report on the Human Rights Situation in Burma

For Immediate Release
22 September 2010

ND-Burma Releases Periodic Report on the Human Rights Situation in Burma

The Network for Human Rights Documentation - Burma (ND-Burma) today released its latest Periodic Report documenting human rights violations in Burma from January to July of this year.

   

Press Release - ND-Burma Arbitrary Taxation Report on 1st Sept 2010

New report reveals ‘The Hidden Impact of Burma’s Arbitrary and Corrupt Taxation’

The Network for Human Rights Documentation- Burma (ND-Burma) released its first report, “We have to give them so much that our stomachs are empty of food: The Hidden Impact of Burma’s Arbitrary and Corrupt Taxation.”  Based on 342 interviews, the report reveals how widespread, arbitrary taxation damages the country’s economy, exacerbates poverty, and contributes to the ongoing and systematic violation of the people’s most basic right to an adequate standard of living, housing, and education.

   

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Network for Human Rights Documentation - Burma
PO Box 67, CMU Post Office, Chiang Mai 50202, Thailand
T/F - +66 (0) 53 408149
E- office@nd-burma.org