Monday, May 20, 2013

Statements

ND-Burma Periodic Report demonstrates that human rights situation in Burma remains dire

Media Advisory: ND-Burma Periodic Report demonstrates that human rights situation in Burma remains dire
The Network for Human Rights Documentation – Burma (ND-Burma) has released a periodic report which has documented the human rights situations in Burma during the period January – September 2011. The report documents 261 cases of human rights violations committed by the government and its supporters in the 14 states and regions throughout Burma.

   

AAPP CALLS TO BRIDGE THE GAP ON POLITICAL PRISONER NUMBERS

AAPP CALLS TO BRIDGE THE GAP ON POLITICAL PRISONER NUMBERS

Information Release
November 8, 2011

In order for the deep divide on political prisoner numbers to be reconciled, it has become increasingly urgent for there to be a consensus on the number of political prisoners in Burma. The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners – Burma (AAPP) fully supports recent statements by Tomas Ojea Quintana, Special Rapporteur on human rights situation on Burma, that the International Committee of the Red Cross should be allowed independent and regular access into Burma’s prisons with the aim of investigating the political status of each prisoner in Burma[1].

   

The Burma Army must immediately release four women held as sex slaves near Kachin-China border

November 4, 2011
Urgent Appeal from the Kachin Women’s Association Thailand

The Burma Army must immediately release four women held as sex slaves near Kachin-China border

The Kachin Women’s Association Thailand (KWAT) is gravely concerned for the lives of four women being held as sex slaves at a frontline post near Loije at
the Kachin-China border, and calls for the Burma Army to immediately free them, and for foreign envoys in Burma to demand their immediate release.
   

Opium cultivation surging in constituency of Burma’s new ruling party

Opium cultivation surging in constituency of Burma’s new ruling party

A new briefing paper by the Palaung Women’s Organization (PWO) exposes a dramatic increase in opium cultivation in Burma's northern Shan State in the constituency of a drug lord elected into the new military- backed parliament.
   

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Network for Human Rights Documentation - Burma
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