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Burmese Angry @ Army track this thread

Started by Jaks; Last updated by Imperator | View history

Burmese Angry @ Army

Local Burmese angry army intercepting aid

Stories

20 Stories

  • September 2008
    • Young Burmese Monks Ready to Take Up Arms

      Young Burmese Monks Ready to Take Up Arms

      (Newser) - After seeing nonviolent protesters killed or detained in last year’s protests against the ruling junta, younger segments of Burma’s Buddhist monks are becoming more radical, embracing armed resistance and overt dissent, the Christian Science Monitor reports. "We need weapons,” one young monk said. “That is the only way we can bring down this regime." More »

  • August 2008
    • Suu Kyi Rejects Food Deliveries, Sparks Rumors of Hunger Strike

      Suu Kyi Rejects Food Deliveries, Sparks Rumors of Hunger Strike

      (Newser) - Myanmar's detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has refused food deliveries to her house for two weeks, prompting speculation that she is on a hunger strike against the government, the AP reports. Supporters say she's grown increasingly frustrated with the UN's failure to intervene in the junta-ruled nation—the Nobel Prize laureate refused to meet with UN envoy Ibrahim Gambari during his visit last week. More »

  • May 2008
    • Monks Provide Myanmar Relief

      Monks Provide Myanmar Relief

      (Newser) - In the wake of Burma’s cyclone, Buddhist monks have become the only source of comfort—both “material” and “spiritual”—for many thousands of homeless and destitute who have been abandoned by the government, the New York Times reports. “Monks are like parents to us. The government wants us to shut up, but monks listen to us,” says one cyclone survivor. More »

    • Burma Relief Effort Belies Need

      Burma Relief Effort Belies Need

      (Newser) - Burma's junta would have one believe it's got the situation under control in the wake of Cyclone Nargis, and even has a test-case diorama as evidence for foreign envoys, the Times of London reports. Sinkan refugee camp hosts 180 well-fed, healthy inhabitants in clean blue tents—while 10 minutes down the road, destitution, sickness and homelessness are everywhere. More »

    • Burma Junta: No Freedom for Opposition Leader

      Burma Junta: No Freedom for Opposition Leader

      (Newser) - The Nobel Prize-winning leader of the Burmese opposition will spend another year under house arrest, the country's military government announced today. Hopes that international pressure, along with the national crisis in the wake of Cyclone Nargis, might lead the junta to release Aung San Suu Kyi were dashed by a 10-minute official visit to her Rangoon home this morning. More »

    • World Toes Junta's Line as Burmese Die

      World Toes Junta's Line as Burmese Die

      (Newser) - The leaders of the Burmese junta don’t want you to think about the victims of Cyclone Nargis, writes Tom Jenkins for the Guardian , and the world and the media are only too happy to oblige. The Chinese government’s heroics in Asia's other natural disaster focuses attention on victims receiving help, while the Burmese who desperately need outside intervention die off-camera. More »

    • Myanmar Junta Claims Win on Constitution

      Myanmar Junta Claims Win on Constitution

      (Newser) - Burmese voters overwhelmingly approved a constitution legitimizing military rule, the junta announced to widespread skepticism today. The vote held Saturday did not include two cyclone-ravaged areas where aid to victims is still largely being blocked by the government, but state media said those votes couldn't change the outcome. Turnout elsewhere was pegged at 99%, with 92.4% voting yes. More »

    • Cyclone's Toll Worsens

      Cyclone's Toll Worsens

      (Newser) - The UN today nearly doubled its estimate of the number of people "severely affected" by the cyclone in Burma to up to 2.5 million and said they were in dire need of immediate aid, Reuters reports. The frustrated UN chief urged the creation of a "high-level pledging conference" of donor nations and said it was sending a top diplomat to meet with Burmese leaders to try to convince them to allow in more aid and relief workers.  More »

    • Thailand, UN Seek Aid Route as New Burma Storm Builds

      Thailand, UN Seek Aid Route as New Burma Storm Builds

      (Newser) - Thailand and the United Nations are working to open a land route from northern Thailand into Burma to get desperately needed help to cyclone survivors, reports the Wall Street Journal . The frantic efforts to deliver aid quickly have been stepped up as the UN's weather center is warning that another tropical storm is developing near Burma and could develop into a full-fledged cyclone within 24 hours. More »

    • Junta Hinders Cyclone Coverage