Peaceful Burma (ျငိမ္းခ်မ္းျမန္မာ)平和なビルマ

Peaceful Burma (ျငိမ္းခ်မ္းျမန္မာ)平和なビルマ

TO PEOPLE OF JAPAN



JAPAN YOU ARE NOT ALONE



GANBARE JAPAN



WE ARE WITH YOU



ဗိုလ္ခ်ဳပ္ေျပာတဲ့ညီညြတ္ေရး


“ညီၫြတ္ေရးဆုိတာ ဘာလဲ နားလည္ဖုိ႔လုိတယ္။ ဒီေတာ့ကာ ဒီအပုိဒ္ ဒီ၀ါက်မွာ ညီၫြတ္ေရးဆုိတဲ့အေၾကာင္းကုိ သ႐ုပ္ေဖာ္ျပ ထားတယ္။ တူညီေသာအက်ဳိး၊ တူညီေသာအလုပ္၊ တူညီေသာ ရည္ရြယ္ခ်က္ရွိရမယ္။ က်ေနာ္တုိ႔ ညီၫြတ္ေရးဆုိတာ ဘာအတြက္ ညီၫြတ္ရမွာလဲ။ ဘယ္လုိရည္ရြယ္ခ်က္နဲ႔ ညီၫြတ္ရမွာလဲ။ ရည္ရြယ္ခ်က္ဆုိတာ ရွိရမယ္။

“မတရားမႈတခုမွာ သင္ဟာ ၾကားေနတယ္ဆုိရင္… သင္ဟာ ဖိႏွိပ္သူဘက္က လုိက္ဖုိ႔ ေရြးခ်ယ္လုိက္တာနဲ႔ အတူတူဘဲ”

“If you are neutral in a situation of injustice, you have chosen to side with the oppressor.”
ေတာင္အာဖရိကက ႏိုဘယ္လ္ဆုရွင္ ဘုန္းေတာ္ၾကီး ဒက္စ္မြန္တူးတူး

THANK YOU MR. SECRETARY GENERAL

Ban’s visit may not have achieved any visible outcome, but the people of Burma will remember what he promised: "I have come to show the unequivocal shared commitment of the United Nations to the people of Myanmar. I am here today to say: Myanmar – you are not alone."

QUOTES BY UN SECRETARY GENERAL

Without participation of Aung San Suu Kyi, without her being able to campaign freely, and without her NLD party [being able] to establish party offices all throughout the provinces, this [2010] election may not be regarded as credible and legitimate. ­
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon

Where there's political will, there is a way

政治的な意思がある一方、方法がある
စစ္မွန္တဲ့ခိုင္မာတဲ့နိုင္ငံေရးခံယူခ်က္ရိွရင္ႀကိဳးစားမႈရိွရင္ နိုင္ငံေရးအေျဖ
ထြက္ရပ္လမ္းဟာေသခ်ာေပါက္ရိွတယ္
Burmese Translation-Phone Hlaing-fwubc

Sunday, October 5, 2008

As China rises, pollution soars

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/25/asia/26china.php

BEIJING: No country in history has emerged as a major industrial power without creating a legacy of environmental damage that can take decades and big dollops of public wealth to undo.

But just as the speed and scale of China’s rise as an economic power have no clear parallel in history, so its pollution problem has shattered all precedents. Environmental degradation is now so severe, with such stark domestic and international repercussions, that pollution poses not only a major long-term burden on the Chinese public but also an acute political challenge to the ruling Communist Party. And it is not clear that China can rein in its own economic juggernaut.

Public health is reeling. Pollution has made cancer China’s leading cause of death, the Ministry of Health says. Ambient air pollution alone is blamed for hundreds of thousands of deaths each year. Nearly 500 million people lack access to safe drinking water.

Chinese cities often seem wrapped in a toxic gray shroud. Only 1 percent of the country’s 560 million city dwellers breathe air considered safe by the European Union. Beijing is frantically searching for a magic formula, a meteorological deus ex machina, to clear its skies for the 2008 Olympics.

Environmental woes that might be considered catastrophic in some countries can seem commonplace in China: industrial cities where people rarely see the sun; children killed or sickened by lead poisoning or other types of local pollution; a coastline so swamped by algal red tides that large sections of the ocean no longer sustain marine life.

China is choking on its own success. The economy is on a historic run, posting a succession of double-digit growth rates. But the growth derives, now more than at any time in the recent past, from a staggering expansion of heavy industry and urbanization that requires colossal inputs of energy, almost all from coal, the most readily available, and dirtiest, source.


“It is a very awkward situation for the country because our greatest achievement is also our biggest burden,” says Wang Jinnan, one of China’s leading environmental researchers. “There is pressure for change, but many people refuse to accept that we need a new approach so soon.”

China’s problem has become the world’s problem. Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides spewed by China’s coal-fired power plants fall as acid rain on Seoul, South Korea, and Tokyo. Much of the particulate pollution over Los Angeles originates in China, according to the Journal of Geophysical Research.

More pressing still, China has entered the most robust stage of its industrial revolution, even as much of the outside world has become preoccupied with global warming.

Experts once thought China might overtake the United States as the world’s leading producer of greenhouse gases by 2010, possibly later. Now, the International Energy Agency has said China could become the emissions leader by the end of this year, and the Netherlands Environment Assessment Agency said China had already passed the milestone.

For the Communist Party, the political calculus is daunting. Reining in economic growth to alleviate pollution may seem logical, but the country’s authoritarian system is addicted to fast growth. Delivering prosperity placates the public, provides spoils for well-connected officials and forestalls demands for political change. A major slowdown could incite social unrest, alienate business interests and threaten the party’s rule.

But pollution poses its own threat. Officials blame fetid air and water for thousands of episodes of social unrest. Health care costs have climbed sharply. Severe water shortages could turn more farmland into desert. And the unconstrained expansion of energy-intensive industries creates greater dependence on imported oil and dirty coal, meaning that environmental problems get harder and more expensive to address the longer they are unresolved.

China’s leaders recognize that they must change course. They are vowing to overhaul the growth-first philosophy of the Deng Xiaoping era and embrace a new model that allows for steady growth while protecting the environment. In his equivalent of a State of the Union address this year, Prime Minister Wen Jiabao made 48 references to “environment,” “pollution” or “environmental protection.”

The government has numerical targets for reducing emissions and conserving energy. Export subsidies for polluting industries have been phased out. Different campaigns have been started to close illegal coal mines and shutter some heavily polluting factories. Major initiatives are under way to develop clean energy sources like solar and wind power. And environmental regulation in Beijing, Shanghai and other leading cities has been tightened ahead of the 2008 Olympics.

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Nuclear bond for North Korea and Myanmar

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/JJ04Ae01.html


By Norman Robespierre

YANGON - A recent flurry of high-level contacts between North Korea and Myanmar raises new nuclear proliferation concerns between the two pariah states, one of which already possesses nuclear-weapon capabilities and the other possibly aspiring.

At least three delegations led by flag-level officers from Myanmar's army have traveled to Pyongyang in the past three months, hot on the heels of the two sides' re-establishment last year of formal diplomatic relations. According to a source familiar with the travel itineraries of Myanmar officials, Brigadier General Aung Thein Lin visited North Korea in mid-September.

Before that, other Myanmar military delegations visited North Korea, including a group headed in August by Lieutenant General



Tin Aye, chief of the Office of Chief Defense Industries, and another led in July by Lieutenant General Myint Hlaing, the chief of Air Defence.

The rapid-fire visits have gone beyond goodwill gestures and the normal diplomatic niceties of re-establishing ties. Rather, the personalities involved in the visits indicate that Myanmar is not only seeking weapons procurements, but also probable cooperation in establishing air defense weaponry, missiles, rockets or artillery production facilities.

The secretive visits are believed to entail a Myanmar quest for tunneling technology and possible assistance in developing its nascent nuclear program. Tin Aye and Myint Hlaing, by virtue of their positions as lieutenant generals, are logical choices to head official delegations in search of weapons technology for Myanmar's military, while Brigadier General Aung Thein Lin, current mayor of Yangon and chairman of the city's development committee, was formerly deputy minister of Industry-2, responsible for all industrial development in the country.

Prior to 1998, the minister of Industry-2 also served as the chairman of the Myanmar Atomic Energy Committee. This came to an end when Myanmar's Atomic Energy Act of 1998 designated the Ministry of Science and Technology as the lead government agency for its aspirant nuclear program. However, the Ministry of Industry-2, by virtue of its responsibilities for construction of industrial facilities and the provision of equipment, continues to play a key supporting role in Myanmar's nuclear program.


Myanmar's stagnant nuclear program was revitalized shortly after Pakistan's first detonation of nuclear weapons in May 1998. Senior general and junta leader Than Shwe signed the Atomic Energy Law on June 8, 1998, and the timing of the legislation so soon after Pakistan's entry into the nuclear club did little to assuage international concerns about Myanmar's nuclear intentions. Some analysts believe the regime may eventually seek nuclear weapons for the dual purpose of international prestige and strategic deterrence.

Myanmar's civilian-use nuclear ambitions made global headlines in early 2001, when Russia's Atomic Energy Committee indicated it was planning to build a research reactor in the country. The following year, Myanmar's deputy foreign minister, Khin Maung Win, publicly announced the regime's decision to build a nuclear research reactor, citing the country's difficulty in importing radio-isotopes and the need for modern technology as reasons for the move.

The country reportedly sent hundreds of soldiers for nuclear training in Russia that same year and the reactor was scheduled for delivery in 2003. However, the program was shelved due to financial difficulties and a formal contract for the reactor, under which Russia agreed to build a nuclear research center along with a 10 megawatt reactor, was not signed until May 2007.

The reactor will be fueled with non-weapons grade enriched uranium-235 and it will operate under the purview of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations' nuclear watchdog. The reactor itself would be ill-suited for weapons development. However, the training activities associated with it would provide the basic knowledge required as a foundation for any nuclear weapons development program outside of the research center.

Constrained reaction
The United States' reaction to Myanmar's nuclear developments has been somewhat constrained, despite the George W Bush administration referring to the military-run country as an "outpost of tyranny".

After Myanmar's 2002 confirmation of its intent to build the reactor, the US warned the country of its obligations as a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). After the contract was formally announced in May 2007, the US State Department expressed concerns about the country's lack of adequate safety standards and the potential for proliferation.

The warming and growing rapport between Myanmar and North Korea will likely further heighten Washington's proliferation concerns. Myanmar broke off diplomatic relations with Pyongyang in 1983, after North Korean agents bombed the Martyr's mausoleum in Yangon in an attempt to assassinate the visiting South Korean president, Chun Doo-hwan.

The explosion killed more than 20 people, mostly South Korean officials, including the deputy prime minister and the foreign minister, and the South Korean ambassador to Myanmar. Four Myanmar nationals perished and dozens more were wounded in the blast. Myanmar severed ties with North Korea after an investigation revealed the three agents responsible for planting the bomb spent the night at a North Korean diplomat's house before setting out on their mission.

However, common interests have brought the two secretive nations back together. The famine in North Korea in the late 1990s and Myanmar's military expansion ambitions, including a drive for self-sufficiency in production, have fostered recent trade flows. While Myanmar has the agricultural surplus to ease North Korean hunger, Pyongyang possesses the weapons and technological know-how needed to boost Yangon's military might. There is also speculation Myanmar might provide uranium, mined in remote and difficult-to-monitor areas, to North Korea.

As testament to Pyongyang's willingness to supply weapons to the military regime, more North Korean ship visits have been noted at Thilawa port in Yangon, one of the country's primary receipt points for military cargo. During one of these visits in May 2007, two Myanmar nationals working for Japan's News Network were detained outside Yangon while covering a suspected arms delivery by a North Korean vessel.

Growing bilateral trade has helped to heal old diplomatic wounds and eventually led to a joint communique re-establishing diplomatic relations in April 2007. The emerging relationship is also a natural outgrowth of the ostracism each faces in the international arena, including the economic sanctions imposed and maintained against them by the West.

While it is possible the recent visits are related to Myanmar's nascent nuclear program, the evidence is far from conclusive. Nevertheless, Myanmar has undoubtedly taken notice of the respect that is accorded to North Korea on the world stage because of its nuclear weapon status. Unlike North Korea, Myanmar is a signatory to the NPT.

Myanmar has publicly stated it seeks nuclear technology only for peaceful purposes, such as developing radio-isotopes for agricultural use and medical research. Yet two well-placed sources told this reporter that North Korean and Iranian technicians were already advising Myanmar on a possible secret nuclear effort, running in parallel to the aboveboard Russia-supported program. Asia Times Online could not independently confirm the claim.

The lack of participation by Myanmar's Ministry of Science and Technology in the recent trips to Pyongyang would seem to indicate that nuclear developments were probably not the primary focus of the high-level meetings. The regime is also known to be interested in North Korea's tunneling technology (see Myanmar and North Korea share a tunnel vision, Asia Times Online, July 19, 2006) in line with the ruling junta's siege mentality and apparent fears of a possible US-led pre-emptive military attack.

The junta and others have no doubt noted the extraordinary problems tunneling and cave complexes have caused US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, not to mention the success North Korea has enjoyed in hiding underground its nuclear facilities. Bunkers are rumored to underlie several buildings at Naypyidaw, where the regime abruptly moved the national capital in 2005. The ongoing construction of a second capital, for the hot season, at Yadanapon, is also believed to have tunnels and bunkers integrated into its layout.

Whether the visits are related to arms procurement, military industrial development, tunneling technology or nuclear exchange, they foreshadow a potentially dangerous trend for Myanmar's non-nuclear Southeast Asian neighbors and their Western allies, including the US.

As the true nature of the budding bilateral relationship comes into closer view, the risk is rising that Pyongyang and Yangon are conspiring to create a security quandary in Southeast Asia akin to the one now vexing the US and its allies on the Korean Peninsula.

Norman Robespierre, a pseudonym, is a freelance journalist specializing in Sino-Asian affairs.

(Copyright 2008 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)

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Aftermath of a Revolt: Myanmar Lost Year


Khin Maung Win/Agence France-Presse ・Getty Images
THE ECONOMY Burmese jade, boycotted in the West, remains in demand in Asia.

October 5, 2008
The World
Aftermath of a Revolt: Myanmar’s Lost Year
By DANIEL PEPPER
NEW DELHI — Myanmar is a country of uncommon beauty, full of dilapidated colonial structures slowly crumbling amid the damp swelter of the tropics, each surface and crevice losing ground to the organic pastels of mosses and molds. At night, on low stools beneath the crowded umbrellas of Yangon’s downtown teashops, men sit closely and strum loud acoustic folk melodies, their songs filled with tradition rather than protest. Usually, the only things exploding are the stall piles of papayas, pineapples and mangoes in the heat.

One year ago a social upheaval, sparked by a rise in fuel prices, inspired hope that a chapter would be closing on the world’s longest-running military regime. But the Buddhist clergy and common citizens were quickly beaten back with batons and bullets, and the world moved on.

Last week was the anniversary. During it, a bomb explosion in downtown Yangon wounded four; Web sites run by dissenters and exiles were attacked and shut down; and about 100 monks filed silently through the streets of a western fishing town to commemorate the crackdown. But this seems hardly dramatic enough to undo the disillusionment that set in after the defeat of the Saffron Revolution. In some ways, it only underscores it.

Two years ago — 11 months before the monks’ rebellion — I sat in one of the few, cramped Internet cafes in Yangon, the former capital, and glanced at my neighbors’ screens — all soft-core porn and foreign news Web sites. When I returned this summer, I found the cafes had become diverse and diffuse, packed with young people gabbing away on G-talk, checking out the social-networking sites Orkut, Hi5 and Friendster. Signs posted openly, even in small towns, explained how to circumvent government censors through proxy servers hosted at www.yoyahoo.com and www.bypassany.com.



Myanmar is like that. Change perspectives and its lost-in-time quality suddenly shifts as well, with a lurch forward. As always against the backdrop of the 2,500-year-old golden Swedegon Pagoda, teenagers now post photos on Facebook while Korean soap operas compete with English Premier League soccer for people’s attention. Cellphone stores proliferate, despite the cost of new connections — $1,500 — from the single, government-owned provider, Myanma Post and Telecommunications. (Black market connections start at about $2,500.)

But the spirit of protest is almost silent.

In fact, the State Peace and Development Council, as the military government renamed itself in 1997, is stronger now than a year ago, having profited from high global food and fuel prices. A few signs of conspicuous consumption by the small urban middle class — satellite TV dishes, hip-hop music and fashions — are seeping down from the much smaller class of multimillionaire businessmen directly tied to the junta’s chairman, Than Shwe.

Meanwhile, the broad mass of 50 million people remain among the poorest in the world. Myanmar ranks 132 out of 177 countries in the 2007 United Nations Development Program’s Human Development Index. Most experts, who doubt the government’s statistics, think the reality is worse.

Myanmar is also one of the only countries to be publicly denounced for human rights abuses by the otherwise confidential and neutral International Committee of the Red Cross. According to Amnesty International, more than 2,100 political prisoners languish in Myanmar’s jails, about 1,000 having been locked up in the past year.

But more than ever, satellite TV and the Internet are making people aware of their government’s glacial pace of progress. One young woman told me that during last year’s uprisings, she was on the streets one day, shouting antigovernment slogans, and the next day stayed in, fearing a stray bullet, as she watched the blood-soaked crackdown live on Al Jazeera television.

Democracy advocates in exile hold out hope that China, which is Myanmar’s largest trading partner and its ally on the United Nations Security Council, could become the linchpin for changes in the regime.

But most Burmese I spoke with on my two-week visit didn’t think China would ever yield to Western pleading for it to play such a role. Business with China is booming, in fact, partly because tighter Western sanctions have made the junta more dependent on China for diplomatic support, as well as arms and consumer goods.

Despite being awash in foreign currency, Myanmar’s government has yet to invest heavily in manufacturing. Instead, Myanmar’s big-ticket industries are based on extracting natural resources. Last year, sales of natural gas brought in about $3 billion, sales of jade an estimated $400 million. But the major enterprises operate in deep secrecy, and recently Transparency International once again listed Myanmar as one of the world’s most corrupt countries.

In essence, the country runs like a mafia, from the languid tea shops of Yangon to the remote jungle areas of Kachin state in Upper Burma, where the mining town of Hpakant provides much of the world’s jade. There I met Sai Joseph, a gregarious and entrepreneurial family man who manages one midsize jade company. “There are only a few wealthy people in Myanmar,” he told me, “those who get in with the political people, the authorities who have power.”

Hpakant is connected to the outside world by a single crumbling road, 16 hours through the jungle to the closest transport hub during the rainy season. Along the way abandoned wooden oxcarts litter the road between shuttered towns. Red road signs announce, like a cruel joke, “Government has arranged for road repair from each company in Hpakant.”

Hpakant itself is set among denuded hills that are slowly eaten away by the mining town machinery. Green plant life bursts forth where it can among these scars, but most of the landscape is an excavation site, undulating for miles, with perhaps 3,000 separate mines. More than 450 private companies operate there, as well as about 100 joint ventures, most of them owned by Burmese of Chinese heritage. Like many once-illegal activities, jade mining now enjoys the full support of the junta, which takes a cut of the profits while leaving miners diseased and destitute. As I tried, without success, to confirm reports that jade miners are paid in heroin, I was quickly apprehended, marched back to the regional capital and eventually deported.

In one sense, things have improved in recent years. Once a scene from Dante’s hell — the few outsiders who visited sometimes described thousands upon thousands of half-naked men, women and children clawing into the rock in search of jade — the mining is now a largely mechanical process executed by industrial backhoes and dump trucks. A few mines still employ human diggers, and earlier this year one such site collapsed, killing 20.

Just before the Beijing Olympics, President Bush signed the Burma Jade Act, adding Myanmar’s jade and rubies to the long list of goods that cannot be imported legally to the United States. But jade sellers in Yangon largely shrugged off the ban, citing booming business with China, India, Thailand, Singapore and Arab Gulf states.

Late last month, Earth Rights International, a Thailand-based environmental and human rights organization, issued a report detailing the investments of 69 Chinese multinationals in 90 hydropower, oil, gas and mining projects. “The regime has successfully convinced these companies that nothing will compromise its grip on political power,” says Matthew Smith, an Earth Rights project coordinator.

So for now, Myanmar’s people struggle with their daily lives, negotiating the labyrinth of power and money. New gadgets and fashions filter through to a few people in the main cities, but even they, like the bulk of Burmese, simply work and wait, patient and passive.

Who, after all, could be expected to choose the immediate prospects of a firing squad over the distant promise of an MP3?

Daniel Pepper is a freelance journalist based in New Delhi.


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JAC-WEEKLY MOVEMENT-29-09-2008 TO 05-10-2008

(29-09-2008) IKEBUKURO (15;00 ~ 17 ; 00)
( BDA )

(30-09-2008) IKEBUKURO (15;00 ~ 17 ; 00)
(ALD )

(1-10-2008) SHINJUKU (15;00 ~ 17 ; 00)
( LDB )

(2-10-2008) SHINJUKU (15;00 ~ 17 ; 00)
( DPNS-JPB)

(3-10-2008) SHIBUYA (15;00 ~ 17 ; 00)
( NLD-LA-JP )

(4-10-2008) SHIBUYA (15;00 ~ 17 ; 00)
( SND )

(5-10-2008) IKEBUKURO (15;00 ~ 17 ; 00)
( CNC )


JAC
( 28-09-2008)

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'No regrets' for Myanmar dissident after record jail sentence

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jv53_i-d0admC-ZitPtAxG4sRxXg



YANGON (AFP) — With the colour fading from his hair and lines wrinkling his face, Myanmar's newly freed political prisoner, Win Tin, still manages to defy his 79 years.

Despite suffering numerous serious ailments while locked away for 19 years in Yangon's notorious Insein prison, the former journalist remains spry and said he has never regretted his move into politics.

"I never regret leaving journalism to become a politician," Win Tin told AFP in an interview at his friend's home where he is staying.

"The passion for informing people, for wanting their prosperity and to free them of problems is the same. Both require sacrifice. So I have no sorrow at all," he said with a smile.


Win Tin was Myanmar's longest serving political prisoner when the military junta released more than 9,000 inmates from its jails on September 23 in an amnesty ahead of elections promised for 2010.

He became a newsman in 1949, aged 19, working as a reporter and sub-editor for national and international newspapers, and turned to politics during the 1988 pro-democracy uprising against the ruling military that has governed the country since 1962.

Win Tin was one of the founders of the pro-democracy opposition National League for Democracy party together with Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who remains detained at her lakeside home.

But he never witnessed the party's landslide victory in 1990 elections -- a win never recognised by the junta -- because he was imprisoned in July 1989 for his role as Aung San Suu Kyi's advisor, and for his letters to the then-United Nations envoy to Myanmar.

Nineteen years locked away have taken their toll on Win Tin's health. He now suffers from heart disease, a hernia, and has lung and eye problems, yet he said he will continue to work for the NLD.

"I have no health problems recently. I have to keep my spirits strong," he said.

He said he was tortured in prison -- hooded during long interrogations, deprived of sleep and subjected to beatings. He had been kept in solitary confinement since 1996, only seeing his family for 15 minutes every fortnight.

On his release last month the NLD welcomed him to their 20th anniversary meeting, chanting "Long Live U Win Tin" as he arrived.

The NLD ruling committee invited him to rejoin the board, and while he has not yet decided to accept, he said he will stay in politics.

"I'm now a politician. I have to continue my duties inevitably," he said. "I have my duty as I founded a political party, I cannot leave it. I had to apply my beliefs and spirit during my 19 years in prison."

Campaigners say around 2,000 dissidents remain in Myanmar's prisons and Win Tin now wants to focus on their release.

"Many people have sacrificed their lives. Many people are still in prisons. I can not tolerate my sorrow for these people," Win Tin said.

"We have to continue our mission. We have to acknowledge their gratitude, sacrifice and fighting," he said.

"I have told the authorities they can re-arrest me if they do not like what I am saying."

But Win Tin believes dialogue between the authorities and the pro-democracy group is the best way to secure the prisoners' release and pursue democratic reforms ahead of 2010 elections.

The junta won a widely-criticized national referendum in May, allowing the government to change the constitution and paving the way for 2010 elections that bar Aung San Suu Kyi from standing. She has been under house arrest for most of the past two decades.

Win Tin said he would seek the help of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon in pushing for the prisoners' release and securing talks with the junta, when he visits Myanmar in December.

"Dialogue is the only way forward ahead of 2010 (elections). If the elections go ahead as planned, it cannot be a success," he said.

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Lose weight without dieting

http://www.self.com/health/articles/2008/09/0922loseweightwithoutdieting?printable=true¤tPage=all

Nine ways to drop a dress size and not stress over a single bite
By Hallie Levine Sklar
From the October 2008 issue

Great news! You can ditch your diet for good and still hit your happy weight. Science has finally proven what you've probably suspected for years—that following a restrictive food plan can make you more likely to overeat. Researchers at the University of Toronto tempted a group of women who were cutting their calorie intake with a plate of cookies and then put the same treats in front of women who weren't trying to lose. Not only did the dieters dig in, but they ate 66 percent more goodies than their nondieting peers. "Women end up feeling so deprived on weight loss plans that they break down and binge," says Tracy Tylka, Ph.D., associate professor of psychology at Ohio State University at Marion. We at self have a better way to slim down: nine simple lifestyle switches that will help you shrink your waist effortlessly!

Eat more good stuff
Instead of obsessing about tasty bites you want to banish, focus on healthy foods you can feast on. Women who do so tend to lose more weight than those who ruminate on restricting calories. Fill up with fiber-rich fruit, vegetables and whole grains. "High-fiber foods expand in your stomach, so you're less likely to overeat," says Madelyn Fernstrom, Ph.D., director of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Weight Management Center. Fiber also inhibits your body's absorption of fat, says Dave Grotto, R.D., author of 101 Foods That Could Save Your Life (Bantam Books). There are easy ways to sneak in more fiber: Stir 1 tablespoon of flaxseed into oatmeal, add 1/2 cup of beans to a green salad or snack on small portions of dried fruit and nuts.

Go to the dogs
Volunteering at the pound could help you lose pounds. People who signed up to walk shelter dogs for an hour a week lost about a pound in four weeks, early research from the University of Missouri at Columbia showed. That's 12 pounds a year you could shed without skipping a single dessert! In fact, other research by study author Rebecca Johnson, Ph.D., revealed that people who walked a dog (either their own or a loaner hound) 20 minutes a day for five days a week lost on average 14 pounds after a year. Best of all, dog walking turns out to be an easy commit­ment to keep. "We had a 72 percent adherence rate, which is unheard of in most exercise programs," Johnson says. "Some volunteers enjoyed it so much, they stayed longer to walk more animals." Find a shelter near you at PetFinder.com.

Sleep it off
Getting enough shut-eye can keep your body from storing fat, scientists at Laval University in Quebec note. Night owls who log fewer than six hours of sleep are 35 percent more likely to gain weight—on average, 11 pounds over six years—than those who get seven to eight. "Sleep deprivation increases cravings for sweets and starches," says James Gangwisch, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City. "It also causes your body to produce more of the stress hormone cortisol, which is linked to belly fat." To snag more sack time, set a radio alarm to sound 30 minutes before you want to go to bed, suggests Michael Breus, Ph.D., author of Beauty Sleep (Plume). When it goes off, head to your room and relax with stretches or light reading (avoid anything agitating, such as the news). After a half hour, it's time to dream of a slimmer you.



Spice things up
Cooking your meals with garlic and pepper could help curb overeating, according to research presented at The Endocrine Society's annual meeting in San Francisco. Overweight people who sprinkled their food with zero-calorie spices lost an average of 30 pounds in six months, compared with 2 pounds in a control group. "The flavors made people focus on the sensory characteristics of the food—its smell and taste," explains study author Alan Hirsch, M.D., founder of the Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago. "The foods were more enjoyable, so people felt fuller faster and didn't eat as much." Sniffing the dishes was key, Dr. Hirsch says, because 90 percent of what you taste is determined by what you smell. The spices used in the study tasted like cheddar, onion, ranch dressing, taco sauce and Parmesan, but many no- and low-calorie seasonings in your kitchen, such as garlic and horseradish, will work as well, he says. To maximize the slimming impact of these ingredients, spend a moment enjoying the aroma of your food before every bite.

Give yourself props
You raked leaves all afternoon? Pat yourself on the back. It might sound hokey, but simply applauding your everyday calorie-­burning activities can help you shed pounds. Researchers at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, told half a group of female hotel housekeepers that their job provided enough exercise to improve their health and left the other half in the dark. A month later, those in the know had lost an average of 2 pounds, lowered their body fat percentage and blood pressure and improved their waist-to-hip ratio, compared with those who were clueless about their calorie burn. What's more surprising? "The women did not make healthier choices because of the information—there was no change to their eating or working habits," study author Ellen Langer, Ph.D., says. "The only difference was the women's mind-set." Previous research suggests that having a positive attitude may help reduce overall stress levels—which can make eating healthy easier. So tell yourself that you're burning calories all day when you deliver a message in person, scrub the tub or walk from store to store in search of beautiful new boots.

Eat when you're hungry
Think suffering with a growling tummy is the way to drop pounds? Wrong! Women who eat when hungry and stop when satisfied have a lower average body-mass index than those who eat for other reasons, a study by Tylka finds. Try to tune in to your body's signals. "If your hunger comes on suddenly, then it's probably being triggered by an emotion or event," Tylka says. Instead of raiding the fridge, ask yourself what you're truly feeling. If you're stressed, call a friend or hit the gym for a fun class. Bored? Start a Sudoku puzzle or plan your next vacation. And give yourself a little love. Other research by Tylka concludes that women who are satisfied with their body are more likely to eat when they're hungry, and vice versa. Each morning when you look in the mirror, praise (out loud) one thing you like about your body, instead of focusing on flaws.

Breathe away weight
Inhale, exhale and then step on the scale. Women who took a weekly meditation class shed about a pound a week, say scientists from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. "People often eat when they're stressed and sleepwalk through an entire meal," study author Brian Shelley, M.D., explains. Meditating before and during meals helped the dieters eat less and enjoy their dishes more. A one-minute trick: Before you dig in, sit and take a few deep breaths. Notice the food and think of it as nourishment, not as calories. Take a bite and focus on the food's taste and texture. After you swallow, take a deep breath. There's no need to consume all your meals this meticulously, but starting off with a few mindful bites could help curb overeating.

Surrender the saltshaker
Salt may be calorie-free, but it can still contribute to body fat—and not only because it piggybacks on greasy snacks such as fries and chips. A review in Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases reports that as salt intake increased by more than 50 percent in the United States since 1985, so did consumption of sweet beverages such as soda and juice. Salt leads to thirst, which Americans tend to quench with big sugary drinks. Seek out packaged products labeled low-salt or low-sodium, which means they have less than 140 milligrams per serving. (Your daily limit is 2,300 mg.) And if you indulge in something salty, wash it down with sparkling water or unsweetened iced tea instead of sweet sips.

Savor a good laugh
Consider this license to be a couch potato: Cracking up at Kenneth on 30 Rock can help you trim down. Watching a funny show caused adults to experience a 20 percent jump in heart rate and resting metabolism in a study at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. "Laughing uses up a lot of energy because it engages a variety of muscle groups, including your abs," study author Mac Buchowski, Ph.D., says. The metabolic boost that comes from chuckling for 15 minutes a day could add up to 14,600 more calories burned per year. Watch funny movies and sitcoms, read irreverent blogs and chitchat with pals and coworkers to fit in your 15 minutes and laugh off the pounds for good.


Levi Brown

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Body of Work: Walk it off

http://shine.yahoo.com/channel/health/body-of-work-walk-it-off-276973/


by Anne Fitzgerald, Elastic Waist, on Thu Oct 2, 2008 7:35am PDT

It took a few days before I figured out what it was--why I felt so tired, why my legs were kind of sore, my ankles felt a little throbby, my butt was looking a little more taut, maybe, or that could have been wishful thinking, and I was so very, very tired all the time. The walking. All the walking I did. I haven't walked like that, and sometimes in four-inch heels, since, well, since I lived in a city where you can walk everywhere and to everything.

Bike riding is marvelous and it gets you everywhere quickly, but there is really nothing in the world like your own two feet, heaving your butt all the way through the world. There's a reason doctors recommend weight-bearing exercise as the most healthful and calorie burning, and that is because your carcass is a big damn chore to haul across the surface of the earth. Your legs have to not only pump and move and propel you forward, but they've also got to support you and keep you upright and balanced and provide finely tuned direction and steering. Your arms are there for stability and extra momentum, your ankles are taking on a lot of the weight and much of the steadying chores, and your shoulders are moving and your entire body is engaged in the process of throwing you forward and out into the world and up the hills and down the street and it is hard damn work.


Turn your typical walking workout into supercharged steps by adding a few smart strength moves.

I walked from the car when E dropped me off at the airport, through to the check-in terminals over to baggage and through the security line, down the concourse and from store to store, stocking up on supplies and trying to decide between magazines and a book, candy or chips or maybe both or maybe just pretzels or perhaps a bowl of soup and let's go back and check this store and oh, they're boarding and all the way back at a gallop to the gate, down the ramp and through the mysterious halls of the SLC airport and across the tarmac and up the stairs. Then a break, and all over again, out of the plane and up the ramp and through the airport to baggage claim, over and through the parking lot to the AirTrain to the BART, and then from BART to the MUNI, from the MUNI stop down a block and up a hill and over a block and up the stairs and through hugs and bouncing a baby and out the door for coffee and hanging out and shopping.

You walk a baby when the baby is fussy, through the living room and into the kitchen and back around through the bedroom and then you strap her into a baby sling and take her out around the block and out for more coffee and up to meet her daddy when he gets off the bus from work. You walk your bags out of the house, down the stairs, back down the hill to the train and off the train and up the escalator and then the stairs and into the hotel. You stand in line at check in, you walk over to the baggage check and then you walk back out the door and down the street to meet people you miss, then walk back to the hotel and then back out the door to the next destination, and the next and the next. (Just how many calories are you burning with all this walking? Find out here.)

You walk to all the coffee dates and all the parties and you walk around the parties. You walk to the corner to catch a cab, but then you spend the rest of your night on your feet, walking up and down the stairs, dodging other guests and thinking that your feet are like cumulus clouds swollen with pain and your knees ache and your hips haven't seen this much swiveling since college and maybe the human body wasn't designed to be this mobile and all you really want in the world is maybe a Segway or a piggyback ride and what the heck is going on, and oh, yeah, right, you haven't sat down for more than ten minutes at a time for a week and no wonder you are hungry every ten minutes.

It's good for me and healthy to be happy and mobile and up and about and full of energy, but all I can think about is how sitting on a plane for two solid hours, doing nothing at all, sounds like a beautiful dream, and then oh, how I will spend the rest of my week perfectly still and silent and at rest.

Related: 9 ways to avoid beating your feet

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7 anti-aging super foods

http://shine.yahoo.com/channel/health/7-anti-aging-super-foods-272163

Healthy LivingSunday, October 5, 2008
Subscribe to This BlogAdd to My Yahoo!RSS7 anti-aging super foods by EatingWell Magazine, on Fri Sep 26, 2008 10:53am PDT Read More from This Author » 80 Comments Post a Comment Report Abuse


Chocolate & Nut Butter Bites
A few weeks ago I was using my flat iron and when I looked in the mirror to admire my ’do, I discovered my first gray hair (gasp!). It was the first time I was visibly confronted with the reality that, surprise, I will age, and I’m not 18 anymore no matter how good I feel.

I already have the exercise part down, so on my quest for a fountain of youth I’m paying more attention to research on how to eat to age healthfully. The best information I’ve found? 7 anti-aging super foods and recipes to enjoy them in, from Peter Jaret’s James Beard Foundation award-winning article in EatingWell Magazine, “The Search for the Anti-Aging Diet.”

Read on to find out more about the 7 foods to keep you young:





Chocolate
The Kuna people of the San Blas islands, off the coast of Panama, have a rate of heart disease that is nine times less than that of mainland Panamanians. The reason? The Kuna drink plenty of a beverage made with generous proportions of cocoa, which is unusually rich in flavanols that help preserve the healthy function of blood vessels. Maintaining youthful blood vessels lowers risk of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, kidney disease and dementia.

Get sweet satisfaction in seconds with delicious chocolate recipes, such as Chocolate & Nut Butter Bites (which include two of the 7 anti-aging super foods!):



Chocolate & Nut Butter Bites

8 1/4-ounce squares of bittersweet chocolate
4 teaspoons almond, cashew or pistachio butter

Top each chocolate square with 1/2 teaspoon nut butter of your choice (almond, cashew, pistachio). Two sandwiches make one serving.

Per serving: 79 calories; 6 g fat (2 g sat, 1 g mono); 0 mg cholesterol; 9 g carbohydrate; 1 g protein; 1 g fiber; 12 mg sodium; 20 mg potassium. What you get: Magnesium, copper, chromium. 1/2 Carbohydrate Serving. Exchanges: 1/2 other carbohydrate, 1 fat.




Blueberries
In a landmark study published in 1999, researchers at Tufts University’s Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging fed rats blueberry extract for a period of time that in “rat lives” is equivalent to 10 human years. These rats outperformed rats fed regular chow on tests of balance and coordination when they reached old age. Compounds in blueberries (and other berries) mitigate inflammation and oxidative damage, which are associated with age-related deficits in memory and motor function. Eat more blueberries with healthy blueberry recipes.




Fish
Thirty years ago, researchers began to study why the native Inuits of Alaska were remarkably free of heart disease. The reason, scientists now think, is the extraordinary amount of fish they consume. Fish is an abundant source of omega-3 fats, which help prevent cholesterol buildup in arteries and protect against abnormal heart rhythms. Eat some tonight with a healthy fish recipe.




Nuts
Studies of Seventh-Day Adventists (a religious denomination that emphasizes healthy living and a vegetarian diet) show that those who eat nuts gain, on average, an extra two and a half years. Nuts are rich sources of unsaturated fats, so they offer benefits similar to those associated with olive oil. They’re also concentrated sources of vitamins, minerals and other phytochemicals, including antioxidants.




Wine
Drinking alcohol in moderation protects against heart disease, diabetes and age-related memory loss. Any kind of alcoholic beverage seems to provide such benefits, but red wine has been the focus of much of the research. Red wine contains resveratrol, a compound that likely contributes to its benefits-and, according to animal studies, may activate genes that slow cellular aging.




Olive Oil
Four decades ago, researchers from the Seven Countries Study concluded that the monounsaturated fats in olive oil were largely responsible for the low rates of heart disease and cancer on the Greek island of Crete. Now we know that olive oil also contains polyphenols, powerful antioxidants that may help prevent age-related diseases.




Yogurt
In the 1970s, Soviet Georgia was rumored to have more centenarians per capita than any other country. Reports at the time claimed that the secret of their long lives was yogurt, a food ubiquitous in their diets. While the age-defying powers of yogurt never have been proved directly, yogurt is rich in calcium, which helps stave off osteoporosis and contains “good bacteria” that help maintain gut health and diminish the incidence of age-related intestinal illness.



By Michelle Edelbaum

Michelle is the associate editor of interactive for EatingWell Media Group. In between editing and writing, she enjoys sampling the tasty results of the easy, healthy recipes that the EatingWell Test Kitchen cooks are working on.

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In Myanmar crisis, an old dissident sees hope


'I trust the power of the people,' says Ludu Sein Win, who spent 13 years in jail, but is heartened by the outpouring of help to cyclone victims by young people in defiance of the military regime.


From a Times Staff Writer
October 4, 2008

YANGON, MYANMAR -- Every breath he takes is a struggle.

Locked in a cell, held without charge because he condemned one of the military government's many brutal assaults on dissent, Ludu Sein Win suffered a stroke 28 years ago. It withered his body, but his defiant voice is still strong.


Still producing opinion pieces scrawled in shaky longhand, the journalist and author nimbly dodges censors by writing under 15 pseudonyms.

On a recent afternoon, he sat on the edge of his bed, steadying himself with frail hands pressed flat against a thin mattress.

Every few words, he paused, and pursed his lips. With all the fight left in him, Sein Win, 69, forced his lungs to wheeze in oxygen pumped through the clear plastic tube that tethers him to a machine softly bubbling at his bedside.




"I have never witnessed a dictator voluntarily relinquishing his power," said Sein Win, who was imprisoned from 1967 to 1980. "The only way to oust this regime is by force."

Many have been locked up for saying much less since the military seized control of the nation 46 years ago. Yet Sein Win refuses to be cowed. He's drawing new strength from what he calls the formidable force of young people who defied the regime to aid the victims of Tropical Cyclone Nargis.

Many believe that the surge of volunteer spirit among young people, and even well-known entertainers, and the subsequent anger over the government's fumbling response to the cyclone have served to strengthen the pro-democracy movement.

But the May disaster also gave the regime a breather. Activists say the 20th anniversary of a 1988 student-led uprising is passing without large demonstrations because they want to focus on helping cyclone victims.

That could change suddenly, some predict, if the cost of rice, fuel and other basic needs remains high.

The cyclone brought pummeling winds and surges of seawater that killed at least 85,000 people, mainly in the southern delta region. Thousands more are still missing, bringing the estimated death toll to 110,000. Five months later, the United Nations says more than 2.1 million survivors depend on food aid and other assistance.

The government relief effort was slow and bungled, and authorities tried to trip up local and foreign aid workers eager to fill the breach. Still, thousands of volunteers, mostly young people, loaded up cars, trucks and boats and headed to the cyclone zone, pushing past checkpoints set up to stop them.

When supplies ran out, they went home with photos and stories that shattered the official line that the ruling generals had everything under control. The volunteers' ranks swelled, along with donations, and the myth of an invincible regime faded a little more.

"I trust the power of the people, and Nargis showed I'm right," Sein Win said.

"If we can properly use this united force of young people, we can easily topple this regime."

Sein Win believes that the people of Myanmar, also known as Burma, have the courage required to bring down the generals.

A year ago, the generals crushed any hopes of a peaceful transition to democracy when security forces opened fire on peaceful protesters, killing at least 31 and jailing thousands more. U.N. efforts to broker an accord between the generals and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi have also failed. Suu Kyi led her National League for Democracy to a landslide election victory in 1990, but the generals rejected the results and threw her in jail. She remains under house arrest.

In mid-August, when U.N. special envoy Ibrahim Gambari made his fourth mediation visit since the crackdown in September 2007, Suu Kyi refused to see him.

According to reports, Gambari's officials shouted over a bullhorn at Suu Kyi's back wall for more than three hours over two days in a failed attempt to speak with her.

With the country's most popular leader silent, Myanmar's people are waiting for someone to rally opposition to the generals.

The regime couldn't stop private relief operations. But its generals still seem determined to keep the volunteers off balance.

Zarganar, a popular comedian banned from the stage for lampooning the regime, led a volunteer cyclone relief operation until authorities jailed him on June 4 for publicly criticizing government aid efforts.

Even movie star Kyaw Thu, an idol to millions, and his wife, Shwe Zee Kwet, have faced difficulty in their efforts to provide disaster aid.

The couple were among the first to mobilize a relief mission through their charity, the Free Funeral Services Society. Like other aid groups, it couldn't get enough trucks and boats to move food and medicine fast and far enough.

The military refused to provide transportation, said Shwe Zee Kwet. "Relief didn't get there soon enough and people died because of that."

The stature of Kyaw Thu and his wife grew last fall when they were imprisoned and interrogated for a week because they delivered food and water to Buddhist monks leading anti-government protests.

Authorities banned him from making movies, so he now devotes his time to the sick and disadvantaged.

In August, Kyaw Thu was ordered to move his charity's headquarters from the Buddhist monastery where its 51 staff members, and 100 volunteers, have worked since 2001. The government offered a new site, but hasn't issued building permits.

"They say the people of this township don't want us here," his wife said. "How can that be? They are happy because they can come to our clinic every day and get everything free here."

Others, such as Sein Win, have found ways to work around the government's restrictions. Since the generals have banned Sein Win from publishing his work, he uses pen names and allegory to straighten things out in opinion pieces that have appeared in about two dozen local weeklies and magazines.

"We use many metaphors, and tricks, to outsmart the censor board," he said.

In one opinion piece, Sein Win says, he took a stealthy shot at the generals by condemning the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. Using one of the government's favorite targets to his advantage, Sein Win called President Bush a cowboy more willing to shoot than seek peaceful political solutions.

"Burmese people know too well what I mean," the writer said. "I'm urging people to use the language of the gun. Don't waste our time on proposals from the United Nations, this 'dialogue,' this 'national reconciliation.' "

The walls of Sein Win's home are decorated with washed-out posters of roses and lined by high shelves stuffed with hundreds of books. Thousands more are stacked in the loft above his bed. They satisfy an eclectic taste; they include titles on art and poetry, a Che Guevera biography and "The Leadership Secrets of Colin Powell."

The stroke he suffered while in prison, where he spent several years in solitary confinement in a 10-by-12-foot cell, has left Sein Win paralyzed on his right side. His heart and lungs are failing. He has been on an oxygen machine for three years.

Yet Sein Win thinks his poor health is his best advantage over the generals.

"They think I'm a dying old man, sitting in his house 24 hours a day," he said, smiling with disdain. "They don't want to be blamed if I die in prison.

"I'm not a brave man," he added. "But one person must be foolish enough to speak out about what's really happening here. Only then will the world know the real situation."






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MYANMAR: Going nuclear?

http://strategytalk.org/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=5021


MYANMAR: Going nuclear?

Quote:
Russia has agreed to build a nuclear research centre in Myanmar according to a statement of the Russian atomic energy agency Rosatom released to the press in May 2007. The centre will comprise a 10 MW light-water reactor working on 20%-enriched uranium-235, an activation analysis laboratory, a medical isotope production laboratory, silicon doping system, nuclear waste system and burial facilities. The time schedule or the location for setting up this facility has not been given out. Rosatom Head Sergey Kiriyenko and Myanmar’s Science and Technology Minister U Thaung signed the deal in Moscow.


Myanmar’s aspirations to acquire nuclear technology can be traced back to as early as November 2001, when it came to light that two Pakistani nuclear scientists (Suleiman Asad and Mohamed Ali Mukhtar ) had moved over to Myanmar in 2001, when US intelligence agencies were investigating the involvement of Pak nuclear scientists with the Al Qaeda network.

In January 2002, the then foreign minister Win Aung had conveyed that Myanmar was committed to developing a nuclear research facility for medical purposes and also possibly to generate nuclear power

Russia was to set up a nuclear reactor under an agreement with Myanmar in 2002. The reactor as per the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) officials was not suitable for nuclear weapons. The deal did not materialize because of financial constraints of Myanmar. However Russia had provided training to Myanmar scientists and military personnel in Russia since 2003 under this agreement. The present agreement again indicates that Russia will be training 300-350 specialists every year.
(...)
Pakistan will be too happy to have Myanmar (another India’s neighbour) as a nuclear power. With the two Pak scientists allegedly continuing to stay in Myanmar in an advisory capacity, Pakistan may also stealthily or otherwise help Myanmar with nuclear material or know-how.

Myanmar is a member of the IAEA and thus the nuclear research centre to be established will be monitored by the IAEA. Will Myanmar stand by its commitments for safeguards and inspection? Myanmar has sufficient oil and gas resources like Iran. Yet will it go the Iranian way? It is too early to say.

The avowed purpose of the centre may be generation of nuclear power and medical research. Knowing the way the secretive military junta functions, the long term goal is perhaps to become a nuclear power. The reactor that is being supplied can not be used for a nuclear weapons programme.

With the close cooperation of Myanmar with the powers inimical to the policies of the west such as North Korea, China and Pakistan, supply of nuclear material and know-how by these powers to Myanmar cannot be ruled out. (...)

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28-May-2004 ,BURMA NUCLEAR PROGRAM: THE PUZZLE ON LOCATION by U Ne Oo


28504:BURMA NUKE PROGRAM:BACKGROUNDER. Body







28-May-2004

BURMA NUCLEAR PROGRAM: THE PUZZLE ON LOCATION by U Ne Oo

Last year the United States, Great Britain and Australian governments illegally invaded Iraq with the pretext of Saddam regime having certain programs of "Weapons of Mbutt Destruction". Nowadays, these governments are hiding their head in the sand for not having found any trace of WMD within Iraq. If it is not for oil, is there any justifiable reason left for the US and its "Coalition of Killings" invading Iraq ? Are these three government prepare to punish any rouge regimes when the threat of proliferating nuclear or any forms of WMD ?

Perhaps, the Burmese military junta's nuclear program has been falling at the blind spot of these governments. Cynically, of course, we can argue all day about why US and the Coalition of Killings -- no, no, not the oil -- justified invading Iraq (let save this debate for other days). Here's a much more profoundly puzzling question about Burma's nuclear program.

Burmese junta suddenly got interest in nuclear technology (1999) soon after the Pakistanis rocked the world with their first Nuclear plant in 1998. Supposedly, the nuclear program-reactor is for use with medical research and developments. In late 2001, Far Eastern Economic Review reported 300 Burmese nuclear technicians were trained in Russia for handling the reactor.

In early 2003, the Democratic Voice of Burma reported the proposed nuclear research facility (reactor) is located at "Kalagok Kyun (Island)" in Mon State. Local population there confirmed the confiscation of few hundred acres of land from farmers for this nuclear project to go ahead.

Here is the question. Why the Burmese junta choose an Island, instead of inland, as a location for this nuclear facility ? The answer would have worth quite a few hundred milion dollars, perhaps.

Regards, U Ne Oo.

---------------

Hoover's online

"Nuclear reactor" equipment reportedly shipped to Burmese naval base April 5, 2003 5:17am

We have learned that two fully-loaded freighters carrying Russian equipment needed for the building of a nuclear reactor arrived at SPDC State Peace and Development Council naval base on Zadetkyi Kyun in Kawthaung Township 31 March. The equipment was shipped via Singapore aboard two freighters, Mandalay, and Pinya.

Democratic Voice of Burma correspondent Myint Maung Maung sent this report.

What is multiculturalism How are we deceived by anti multiculturalists
Rifty Those that love the truth are not afraid to step up and show that they say what they mean and mean what they say. The racists...
Myint Maung Maung The two freighters docked for inspection at No 58 Naval Base on Zadetkyi Kyun on 31 March and proceeded to Rangoon with an escort of naval vessels providing security. The two freighters, Mandalay and Pinya, were reported to be carrying over 5,000 tons of equipment needed to build a nuclear reactor and shipped from Russia.

The equipment presumably will be used to build a nuclear reactor which is being planned on Kalagok Kyun in Mon State.

A group of 32 Russian experts led by a director of the SPDC's Ministry of Energy had been surveying the land and enviroment around Kalagok Kyun from 25 March to 3 April. A report from Mon sources said SPDC Army had confiscated more than 300 acres of farmland belonging to the local Mon people.

Source: Democratic Voice of Burma, Oslo, in Burmese 1430 gmt 3 Apr 03

------------

Far Eastern Economic Review: Burma Joins the Nuclear Club Russia Muscles in on China's Turf with a Reactor for Burma

By Bertil Lintner

Issue cover-dated December 27, 2001 - January 3, 2002

Burma is one of the world's poorest and least developed countries, yet it is apparently embarking on a nuclear-power project with the help of Russian and, possibly, Pakistani scientists. And Beijing is none too happy at seeing Moscow muscling in on its turf, according to diplomats.

The project was initiated by Russia's Atomic Energy Ministry, which in February announced plans to build a 10-megawatt research reactor in central Burma.

In July, Burma's Foreign Minister Win Aung, accompanied by the military-ruled country's ministers of defence, energy, industry and railways, travelled to Moscow to finalize the deal. At the time, Russian news agencies quoted Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov as saying that Russia considers Burma a "promising partner in Asia and the Pacific region."

He had reason to be pleased as Russia also managed to sell 10 MiG-29 fighter aircraft for $130 million to Burma. Rival China is Burma's main military supplier, while the West shuns the country.

The ground-breaking ceremony for the nuclear facility is scheduled to take place at a secret location near the town of Magwe in January. The equipment and reactor will be delivered in 2003, while more than 300 Burmese nationals have received nuclear technical training in Russia over the past year, according to Russian diplomats.

Tight secrecy surrounds the fledgling nuclear programme and there is little noticeable activity around the recently established Department of Atomic Energy in Rangoon, residents say. The project is believed to be the brainchild of Burmese Minister of Science and Technology U Thaung, who is reported to believe that nuclear research is necessary for "a modern nation."

But while Burma suffers from a chronic power shortage, it's not clear why it would need a research reactor, which is used mainly for medical purposes.

The programme came under the spotlight recently after two Pakistani nuclear scientists, with long experience at two of their country's most secret nuclear installations, showed up in Burma after the September 11 person attacks in the United States.

According to Asian and European intelligence sources, Suleiman Asad and Muhammed Ali Mukhtar left Pakistan for Burma when it became clear that American officials were interested in interrogating them about their links with suspected person mastermind Osama bin Laden. The U.S. believes bin Laden wants to develop a nuclear weapon.

A Pakistani news agency reported that the duo went to Burma to buttist local scientists in "some kind of research work," leading many observers to believe they had joined the nuclear project.

There is no clear evidence linking them to the Russian-supported nuclear programme. But one Asian diplomat speculates that if the Pakistanis are indeed buttisting Burmese scientists it could be in the field of taking care of nuclear waste.

This is a highly lucrative business, and Burma desperately needs foreign exchange to help to prop up its moribund economy.

--------------------

YANGON

Information Sheet No.A-0778 Date. 27-1-99

War on terror: "Colossal failure
War on terror: "Colossal failure" 1-11-2006 11:12:00 AM GMT Has the WAR ON TERRORISM truly been effective in combating TERRORISM? It is...
(1) Project Formulation Meeting on Maintenance and Repair of Nuclear Instruments Opens

A ceremony to open the Project Formulation Meeting on Maintenance and Repair of Nuclear Instruments co-sponsored by International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and Department of Atomic Energy of the Ministry of Science and Technology was held at International Business Centre on Pyay Road on 25 January. Seven developing nations which are also members of the RCA, the regional cooperative agreement for Nuclear Science and Technology have agreed to participate in a new project to promote the capabilities for Repair and Maintenance of Nuclear Instruments. This new project is sponsored by the International Atomic Energy Agency, which has taken as its responsibility the promotion of nuclear science and technology for human welfare.

Myanmar started quite early, in the 1950s, to promote nuclear science and technology. However, Myanmar has had set-backs due to various factors. She is now starting on new efforts-- this time the commitment of the state is made obvious by the establishment of the Ministry of Science and Technology in 1996 and setting up of the Department of Atomic Energy as a new directorate in 1997. With these new establishments Myanmar efforts for development and applications of nuclear science and technology have started to gather momentum. There are clear indications that Myanmar is getting more and more involved in international cooperation.

Myanmar has nuclear radiation application for promoting agriculture. The IAEA has been buttisting Myanmar with agriculture related projects. There is an ongoing program for new varieties of crops, particularly peas, beans and paddy by using the method of radiation induced mutations. The Veterinary Department is also using nuclear techniques for disease diagnosis in animals and to obtain the best feeding strategies. The best known application of radiation is in the Health Sector. Yangon, Mandalay and Sao San Htun General Hospitals ( Taunggyi, Shan State) have radiation facilities for treatment of Cancer. It is again the IAEA to provide these facilities.

Yangon General Hospital has a Nuclear Medicine Department, reasonably well equipped, to provide nuclear techniques for disease diagnosis as well as treatment of diseases. A tissue bank project, which is not quite well known yet, is now in progress in Kyimyindine Orthopaedic Hospital. Yangon and Mawlamyine Universities are known to have nuclear instruments for teaching and research, which are also the result of IAEA buttistance. Under the Ministry of Science and Technology, the Myanma Science & Technology Research Department (MSTRD) has set up a non-destructive testing (NDT) laboratory which is capable of providing NDT training at the basic level, as well as some NDT testing. The Department of Atomic Energy has a radiation laboratory to provide radiation measurements on environmental and industrial samples, analysis for composition of samples from various sources, an instrumentation laboratory for repair and maintenance and a TLD Lab for personal dosimetry monitoring services. The DAE also has radiation monitoring devices for use in its radiation protection work. There are many more to come in the project pipelines. Mr. T Kita of IAEA and Deputy Director-General of the Department of Atomic Energy made speeches. Representative of IAEA recounted experience of the projects carried out in Latin America and representatives of respective countries on their reports. They then discussed matters related to the reports. The meeting will continue till 29 January.

POST: Dr U Ne Oo, 18 Shannon Place,Adelaide SA5000,AUSTRALIA





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Myanmar's militants intrude Thai border village

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/003200810041334.htm

BANGKOK (Xinhua): Some 100 armed militants of a leading ethnic Karen rebel group from Myanmar entered a Thai northern border village Saturday, and damaged properties in the village head's house in revenge for an earlier conflict with local villagers which caused deaths of two of the group's militants, Thai military sources told Xinhua.

The soldiers from the Karen National Liberation Army, a military branch of the minority-ethnic rebel group Karen National Union (KNU), entered the village in Thai northern province of Tak bordering Myanmar on Saturday and stayed the whole night until the Thai soldiers stationed at the border pushed them back to the Myanmar soil around noon, the sources said.


The rebel Karen soldiers intruded the house of the village head and damaged properties in it including a car. No casualties were caused during the intrusion, except a Thai man slightly injured when he encountered with the Karen soldiers who blocked the road accessing the village head's house. Most villagers have fled their homes ahead of the Karen soldiers' entry.

The intrusion was believed due to a recent conflict in the village in which two soldiers from the Karen group entered the Thai soil to buy supplies and were engaged with a quarrel with local teenagers. The soldiers reportedly turned out a hand grenade, which fell onto the ground and exploded, killing the two soldiers on the spot, according to the Thai military.

The Thai authorities claimed it was an accident, but the rebel group was incited at it and made the intrusion into the village for revenge.

The KNU is a leading armed ethnic rebel Karen group active in the Myanmar-Thai border jungles who has been engaged in guerrilla fight with Myanmar's military government for decades.


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