Burma’s Military Regime Labels Bush A Murderer
Burma’s Military Regime Labels Bush A Murderer
BANGKOK, Thailand -- America's
war on terrorism is an excuse allowing the "bloodthirsty
murderer" to invade Afghanistan and Iraq, kill innocent
people, and strip survivors of their human rights, according
to Burma's military regime.
Burma's newest tirade
against the United States comes amid a month-long campaign
by the repressive, hermit nation which is desperately
defending itself against Washington's attempt to bring Burma
to the United Nations' Security Council for punishment.
Virtually daily throughout October, Burma has also
condemned former Czech president Vaclav Havel and South
Africa's retired archbishop Desmond Tutu for demanding the
Security Council investigate widespread reports of forced
labor, torture, opium production, child soldiers and mass
rape in Burma.
Burma's economy has been shattered by
U.S.-led international sanctions, widespread corruption
among the military leadership, and a nonsensical use of
"lucky numbers" to fix financial problems.
As a
result, inflation is reeling, its kyat currency is
depreciating, and the unelected junta has displayed
increasing nervousness over American, British and other
foreign attempts to pressure the generals to release Nobel
Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who has spent 10 of the
past 16 years under house arrest.
The generals insist
Suu Kyi, 60, must remain in detention so she cannot
destabilize the country with demands that her National
League for Democracy party be allowed to govern.
Her
NLD party won a landslide election victory in 1990, which
the regime refused to recognize by claiming that the
military must oversee the writing of a new constitution
before any politicians can take office.
After 15
years, no constitution has been written, partly because Suu
Kyi has boycotted the drafting procedure, amid complaints
that the document would endorse the military's right to rule
and grant them immunity from prosecution.
Washington's current bid to put Burma in the UN
Security Council's dock has caused jitters among the
generals, as evidenced by the lengthy complaints in the
government-controlled media.
Burma, also known as
Myanmar, is majority Buddhist, a close ally of China, and
mainland Southeast Asia's biggest country.
The
regime's mouthpiece is its New Light of Myanmar newspaper,
which publishes daily in English for domestic and
international consumption.
"Behind the word
'anti-terrorism' is convincing evidence of all forms of
suffering and adversities [which] the peoples of Afghanistan
and Iraq are experiencing," the paper said on Thursday (Oct.
27).
"Without knowing the hideouts of the terrorists
at all, the invaders are using force to launch attacks in
these nations at will, killing a great number of innocent
people.
"So the word 'anti-terrorism' serves as an
armor for bloodthirsty murderer and militarist," it said.
"'Human rights' and 'democracy' are two beautiful
words the militarist bloc is widely applying to mislead the
world's people about its invasion, and interference in the
internal affairs of other nations, under the pretext of
anti-terrorism."
Ironically, Burma warned against
"the loss of all human rights of innocent people in Iraq and
Afghanistan," while claiming that the Burmese military was
enforcing law and order so human rights and democracy could
flourish at home.
Al Qaeda-style, Islamist terrorist
groups are not active within Burma.
But the regime
has blamed "terrorists" for exploding a handful of small
bombs in recent months in the capital, Rangoon, and points
to Burma's minority ethnic guerrillas who have been fighting
for autonomy or independence since British colonial rule
ended after World War II.
Despite a lack of evidence,
the generals have tried to link Suu Kyi indirectly to the
bombings and occasional clashes between the military and the
guerrillas, but she consistently claims her struggle for
democracy is non-violent.
Burma earlier criticized
U.S.-based DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary, a legal services
company, for helping Havel, and Nobel Peace laureate Tutu,
publish their 70-page document titled, "Threat to the Peace:
A Call for the UN Security Council to Act in Burma."
"There is no basis whatsoever to its claims," the
foreign ministry said in a 1,270-word statement published in
the New Light of Myanmar on Sept. 3.
"Myanmar has on
several occasions officially denounced those allegations
that it engages in rape, forced labor, child soldiers,
refugees' outflow, forced relocation, etc.," the foreign
ministry said.
Burma, ruled by the military since
1962, is among the world's worst abusers of human rights,
according to London-based Amnesty International, the U.S.
State Department and other monitors.
In January, U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice named Burma as one of
the "outposts of tyranny" which must be challenged, along
with Cuba, Belarus and Zimbabwe.
*****
Richard S. Ehrlich, a freelance journalist
who has reported news from Asia for the past 27 years, is
co-author of the non-fiction book, "HELLO MY BIG BIG HONEY!"
-- Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing
Interviews. His web page is
http://www.geocities.com/asia_correspondent/
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