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The full horror of Burmese junta's repression of monks emerges

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T.Ruth2power Donating Member (371 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 01:59 PM
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The full horror of Burmese junta's repression of monks emerges
Only now, the full horror of Burmese junta's repression of monks emerges
By Rosalind Russell
Published: 11 October 2007

Monks confined in a room with their own excrement for days, people beaten just for being bystanders at a demonstration, a young woman too traumatised to speak, and screams in the night as Rangoon's residents hear their neighbours being taken away.

Harrowing accounts smuggled out of Burma reveal how a systematic campaign of physical punishment and psychological terror is being waged by the Burmese security forces as they take revenge on those suspected of involvement in last month's pro-democracy uprising.

The first-hand accounts describe a campaign hidden from view, but even more sinister and terrifying than the open crackdown in which the regime's soldiers turned their bullets and batons on unarmed demonstrators in the streets of Rangoon, killing at least 13. At least then, the world was watching. The hidden crackdown is as methodical as it is brutal. First the monks were targeted, then the thousands of ordinary Burmese who joined the demonstrations, those who even applauded or watched, or those merely suspected of anti-government sympathies.

"There were about 400 of us in one room. No toilets, no buckets, no water for washing. No beds, no blankets, no soap. Nothing," said a 24-year-old monk who was held for 10 days at the Government Technical Institute, a leafy college in northern Rangoon which is now a prison camp for suspected dissidents. The young man, too frightened to be named, was one of 185 monks taken in a raid on a monastery in the Yankin district of Rangoon on 28 September, two days after government soldiers began attacking street protesters.

More at:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/article3047606.ece
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TomInTib Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 02:06 PM
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1. I have friends in myamnmar who I still have not heard from.
They, however, are not Burmese.

They are Aussies, and very involved in the Art of Burma. I just saw them in San Francisco a few months ago and they were very worried about the situation in Myanmar. And they have a five year old daughter.
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