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Buddhist Monks Lead 100,000 In Protest

posted by nsymmonds | 4:53pm Monday September 24, 2007

Associated Press – September 24, 2007
YANGON, Myanmar – Myanmar’s military government issued a threat Monday to the barefoot Buddhist monks who led 100,000 people marching through the capital, in the strongest protests against the repressive regime for two decades.
The warning shows the increasing pressure the junta is under to either crack down on or compromise with a reinvigorated democracy movement. The monks have taken their traditional role as the conscience of society, backing the military into a corner from which it may lash out again.
The authorities did not stop the protests Monday, even as they built to a scale and fervor that rivaled the demonstrations bloodily suppressed by the army with mass shootings 19 years ago. The government has been handling the monks gingerly, wary of raising the ire of ordinary citizens in this devout, predominantly Buddhist nation.
However, on Monday night the country’s religious affairs minister appeared on state television to accuse the monks of being manipulated by the regime’s domestic and foreign enemies. Meeting with senior monks at Yangon’s Kaba Aye Pagoda, Brig. Gen. Thura Myint Maung said the protesting monks represented just 2 percent of the country’s total. He suggested that if senior monks did not restrain them, the government would act according to its own regulations, which he didn’t detail.
Also on Monday, the White House weighed in with the threat of additional sanctions against the Myanmar regime and those who provide it with financial aid. President Bush is expected to announce the sanctions Tuesday at the U.N. General Assembly. The United States restricts imports and exports and financial transactions with Myanmar, also known as Burma.
The current protests began on Aug. 19 after the government sharply raised fuel prices in what is one of Asia’s poorest countries. But they are based in deep-rooted dissatisfaction with the repressive military government.
“I don’t like the government,” a 20-year-old monk participating in the protest in the central city of Mandalay told The Associated Press. “The government is very cruel and our country is full of troubles.”
Ordinary people have similar views, even if they may not act on them.
“I don’t like the government because it only thinks about itself. But there is nothing I can do. If I join the protest, I will lose everything,” said a hotel worker, also in Mandalay. Both she and the monk asked not to be named for fear of the authorities.
The protests over economic conditions were faltering when the monks last week took over leadership and assumed a role they played in previous battles against British colonialism and military dictators. At first the maroon-robed monks simply chanted and prayed. But as the public joined the march, the demonstrators demanded national reconciliation – meaning dialogue between the government and opposition parties – and freedom for political prisoners, as well as adequate food, shelter and clothing.
The fleeting appearance of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi at the gate of the Yangon residence where she is under house arrest squarely identified the protests with the longtime peaceful struggle of her party, the opposition National League Democracy. She has been under detention for 12 of the past 18 years.
In what appeared to be a miscalculation by the junta, a crowd of about 500 monks and sympathizers was let through police barricades Saturday to her home, where she briefly greeted them in her first public appearance in four years.
On Monday, after the crowds marched for more than five hours and over at 12 miles, a last hard-core group of more than 1,000 monks and 400 sympathizers finished by walking up to an intersection where police blocked access to the street where Suu Kyi lives.
Making no effort to push past, the marchers chanted a Buddhist prayer with the words “May there be peace,” and then dispersed. About 500 onlookers cheered their act of defiance, as 100 riot police with helmets and shields stared stonily ahead.
Monday’s march was launched from the Shwedagon pagoda, the country’s most sacred shrine, and 20,000 monks took the lead. Students joined the protest in noticeable numbers for the first time. Security forces were not in evidence for most of the route.
Diplomats and analysts said Myanmar’s military rulers were showing unexpected restraint this time because of pressure from the country’s key trading partner and diplomatic ally, China.
“Beijing is to host the next summer’s Olympic Games. Everyone knows that China is the major supporter of the junta, so if government takes any action it will affect the image of China,” a Southeast Asian diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity as a matter of protocol.
China, which is counting on Myanmar’s vast oil and gas reserves to help fuel its booming economy, earlier this year blocked a U.N. Security Council resolution criticizing Myanmar’s rights record, saying it was not the right forum. Much of the West applies diplomatic and political sanctions against the junta, but Chinese aid – along with the oil and gas revenues – effectively undercuts any leverage they might have had.
However, Beijing has also employed quiet diplomacy and subtle public pressure on the regime, urging it to move toward inclusive democracy and speed up the process of dialogue and reform.
Josef Silverstein, a political scientist and author of several books on Myanmar, said it would not be in China’s interest to have civil unrest in Myanmar, also known as Burma.
“China is very eager to have a peaceful Burma in order to complete roads and railroads, to develop mines and finish assimilating the country under its economic control,” Silverstein said.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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Comments read comments(4)
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Thet

posted September 24, 2007 at 8:59 pm


I think this is bloody awesome.
Governments in this part of the world use Buddhist ideals in a sick way, turning the Dharma into a manifesto for fascism.
The government of Myanmar needs a lesson in compassion and it’s a shame that things had to get so bad that monks have been forced to march the streets to help them understand this.
Our prayers should be with them. People are going to get hurt as with any revolution.



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nnmns

posted September 24, 2007 at 10:46 pm


It seems to be a good thing they are doing.
It’s clearly good that government and religion are on different sides. When they are on the same side there’s too much power, and power corrupts. As we know all too well.



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jestrfyl

posted September 25, 2007 at 10:09 am


A rock in the stream;
Sticks and leaves rush onto it;
Water must swirl or go around.
Protest in peace never dies.



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jestrfyl

posted September 26, 2007 at 10:42 am


It has become increasingly obvious that the monks are clearly right and the government and army are clearly scared. How do I know this? The Gov. & Army are cracking down, invoking curfews, making large gatherings illegal, and shotting into the group of monks as they march. This makes me sad for the loss of these people. But even more, it shows clearly how powerful the monks are and how powerless the authorities are. They may have guns, but that only confirms that they have nothing else – no wit, no mind, no creativity or interest in making appropriate changes. And the people of Myanmar are left in the middle.
Orson Scott Card presented an interesting protest in his book, Ender’s Shadow. One of the characters simply began to carry a rock to the road and drop it. One rock is noticable, two rocks are interesting, three rocks need to be avoided, four rocks mean swerve, five rocks are dangerous, six rocks are a problem, seven rocks require attention, eight rocks mean slow down, nine rocks mean go around, ten rocks mean stop — 100 rocks are a revolution. Perhaps it is time to simply drop a rock in the roads of Myanmar.
Of course, his Bushiness simply looks on, blinks his eyes, and says “O my. Too bad”. Wait, there may be oil there! So Cheney looks and says – “Road trip! Intervention! Bring an oil rig!!” Wait and see.



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