From editor@burmanet.org Fri Nov 22 20:39:32 2002 From: editor@burmanet.org (editor@burmanet.org) Date: Fri, 22 Nov 2002 15:39:32 -0500 (EST) Subject: BurmaNet News: November 21-22 2002 Message-ID: <58599.207.10.94.131.1037997572.squirrel@webmail.pair.com> November 21-22 2002 Issue #2126 INSIDE BURMA Newsweek: Not so warm a welcome DVB: Veteran politicians call for political dialogue to resume without delay Xinhua: Myanmar says national reconciliation process moving forward AP Worldstream: More than 100 political prisoners including 51 Suu Kyi supporters released Kaladan: The remaining 162 persons released, except 4 Rohingya youths detained at Maungdaw Irrawaddy: Leading figures not among released INTERNATIONAL AFP: Myanmar’s leaders should ‘hang their heads in shame’: top US official DRUGS Washington Post: US may take Burma off ‘major’ drug list MONEY DVB: Buy our seeds and pay in time Myanmar Times: Border trade change for beans, pulses Business Week: Making a federal case out of overseas abuses STATEMENTS AAPP: Another political prisoner dies in custody Amnesty International: Myanmar: AI Calls for release of all prisoners of conscience SWAN: Campaign for ‘ending sexual violence against women and girls in Burma’ _____INSIDE BURMA____ Newsweek November 25 2002 Not So Warm a Welcome By Brian Palmer Burma's military junta brushes off the U.N. and cracks down on critics--even as it woos foreign visitors and pleads for aid Ismail Razali pushed hard for a meeting with the head of Burma's military government. The U.N. secretary-general's special envoy hoped to restart talks between the regime and Aung San Suu Kyi, the opposition leader released in May from house arrest after months of intense diplomacy. But in Rangoon last Thursday, Burma's leaders--Senior Gen. Than Shwe, Gen. Maung Aye and Gen. Khin Nyunt--gave the Malaysian diplomat only 15 minutes before showing him the door. "It was not a good sign," says Josef Silverstein, a noted Burma expert. "The meeting was hardly long enough to sit down and pick up a cup of tea." Actually, it was a bitter disappointment. Since the spring, the government has released more than 350 members of the opposition National League for Democracy party--as well as scores of prisoners from other groups. Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi has been granted permission to travel within the nation's borders and has reopened more than 65 NLD offices. But opponents of the regime say that these concessions are beginning to look like little more than window dressing: Suu Kyi has reported no progress in talks about expanding democracy in Burma, and repression in the countryside is as bad as ever. "If it just goes on and on, I may decide to step down," Razali told a Malaysian journalist two weeks ago. It's obvious why the regime may be stalling. Per capita income, reported months ago to be about $300, is in free fall. The price of rice, the staple of the Burmese diet, has tripled outside Rangoon, according to the NLD. The United Nations says that one in 50 Burmese adults is infected with HIV, one of the highest rates in the world. The government had hoped that its concessions would relieve the country's international isolation and draw desperately needed foreign aid and investment. Rather than follow through with real reforms, though, the generals have tried simply to put their limited moves in the best possible light. In May, just after Suu Kyi's release, the regime signed a one-year deal with DCI Associates, a Washington lobbying and public-relations firm. Exile groups say DCI's efforts landed Burma's drug czar an invitation to high-level meetings with Bush administration officials in July. In Rangoon the regime has been doing some lobbying of its own. It has hosted a parade of U.N. dignitaries, downplaying human-rights abuses and pumping them with pleas for greater humanitarian aid even while continuing to crack down on critics for offenses as small as possessing exile publications. That approach has worked, to a degree. The regime recently inked two trade pacts at the annual meeting between members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and economic giants Japan and China. And more and more foreign-aid groups say politics should be set aside in order to get help to long-suffering Burmese. "It is by no means certain that attempts to work with the government to avoid a health disaster will succeed," Robert Templer of the International Crisis Group wrote recently. "[But] what is certain is that the country cannot stem the tide without immediate, substantial and sustained financial and technical support." The problem, say NLD activists, is that without continued international pressure, the group may end up as a relatively toothless social organization, allowing the government to relieve pressure at the grass-roots level without giving up any power at the top. Some Burma watchers fault Razali for his naivete in dealing with the traditionally intransigent generals. "Razali miscalculated," says a Bangkok-based Burma watcher. "He believed the [regime's] assurances. He took for granted that they mean what they say. The generals served him a trayful of platitudes, and he ate it up." The NLD is struggling to make the best of a bad situation. On a recent Tuesday at the party's tiny headquarters in Rangoon, indigent mothers and infants gathered for the weekly health screening--and not least for the free lunch. Two women carefully set out Burmese-language HIV/AIDS pamphlets. A box of generic condoms remained discreetly closed, but easily available. The crowd is a welcome change from the situation of just a year ago, when the office operated with a skeleton staff in the absence of its leader. And Suu Kyi's low-key barnstorming trips to Mandalay, Karen state and, most recently, northeastern Shan state--where rights groups have documented systematic rapes by the Army--have begun to re-energize activists outside the capital. But NLD brass are frustrated with how fragile even this limited freedom remains. A circumspect Suu Kyi refuses interviews when she passes through the headquarters. "If we make one mistake, this will be the finish," explains U Lwin, the party's 78-year-old spokesman. Even if they don't, though, the regime still doesn't seem ready for a new beginning. _____ Democratic Voice of Burma November 19 2002 Veteran politicians call for political dialogue to resume without delay Veteran politicians who participated in the struggle for independence held a meeting yesterday to discuss a proposal by UN envoy Razali on holding a new National Convention. The meeting agreed on the need to start holding talks as soon as possible between the two sides (National League for Democracy, NLD and State Peace and Development Council, SPDC) without preconditions. Thakhin Thein Pe, who is responsible for holding the meeting, told DVB that the official announcement [of the meeting] will be issued tomorrow. Here is the interview between Thakhin Thein Pe and our DVB correspondent. Thakhin Thein Pe : We all think that holding talks is the most important issue although other matters were raised by Razali and others. The most important thing is to hold talks. We believe that after the talks are held, the answer will emerge. Therefore, we have called for the holding of talks without setting any conditions. The answer will come out after the talks are held. We want the talks to be held as soon as possible. The longer it takes, the more the country will suffer. DVB correspondent : Do you mean to say that what Razali said about the National Convention could only be possible after holding talks? That it is first and foremost that the talks must take place? Thakhin Thein Pe : Yes, if the talks are to take place based on the other side not setting any condition and to hold unconditional talks. We believe that the only way to get a solution is to hold the talks. If they are thinking of conditions and suggesting holding a new National Convention, a new convention convened before holding the talks will become insignificant. We fear the discussions will take too long. The economic situation of the country is getting worse each day. The answer will come once the talks take place. DVB correspondent : You mentioned the economic situation in the country just now. How bad is the economic situation facing the people now? Thakhin Thein Pe : Oh yes, it has become worse. In particular, due to poor nutrition from inadequate food, the people have poor health. The local prices of medicines have gone up four, five times higher. A bottle of Burplex is now 600 kyats which the people find difficult to afford. We asked a farmer to find out the real situation. He said this year we are not so fortunate. Normally paddy is ready for harvesting a little before October or October when they harvest the paddy, thresh and send to the rice mills. He said the luck of the country is such that because of heavy rains the paddy was not ripe and harvesting time was late which added more difficulties to the people. DVB correspondent : Yes, I understand. I would like to ask something. At yesterday's USDA [Union Solidarity Development Association] meeting there was nothing significant mentioned in Sr Gen Than Shwe's speech. We had heard that there would be something significant in his speech this year. Did you also hear about that? Thakhin Thein Pe : What Sr Gen Than Shwe mentioned in his speech was progress of their endeavours only. He did not say a word about the National Convention Convening Commission. However, in his speech given earlier on Armed Forces Day - Resistance Day - it was quite comprehensive. He said that people have progress in a democratic country, earn more income, discuss among themselves when there are problems and solve political problems. The democratic methods are so good that they SPDC are marching towards democracy and for that reason they are giving training to the people. I still have the newspaper cutting of his speech. However, no word on democracy was included in news; just the work of the USDA was revealed. What we expected to hear was on what they discussed with Razali and our hopes on holding talks. But nothing on that was included. DVB correspondent : Yes, I understand. Since all the news is same and nothing was included, it seems they have no plans whatsoever. Thakhin Thein Pe : Yes, it seems so. People are saying that they do not hold talks because they do not want to transfer the power. In reality, it should not be this way... _______ Xinhua News Agency November 21 2002 Myanmar says national reconciliation process moving forward A Myanmar government spokesman said Wednesday that his country's national reconciliation process is moving forward. In a statement extending the government's appreciation to a recent visit to Myanmar by UN Special Envoy Razali Ismail, government Spokesman Hla Min described Razali's efforts in the process as "persistent and patient". Noting Razali's balanced approach and determination to assist in the ongoing dialogue in the process, Hla Min said, "Razali's frank discussion with State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) Chairman Senior-General Than Shwe, Vice Chairman Vice-Senior General Maung Aye and Secretary-1 of the SPDC General Khin Nyunt helped clarify issues and continued to expand confidence". "We very much appreciate the hard work of UN special envoy Razali and hope that friends of Myanmar worldwide will support this process with patience and understanding of the complexity of the situation," he went on to say, adding that the government is encouraged after Razali's five-day visit last week. Hla Min cited one of the facts that since 1990, the Myanmar government has achieved much in its progression toward national unity, concluding agreements with 17 anti-government armed groups and bringing them into the legal fold. He pledged the government's commitment to working with all national races to ensure an enduring national reconciliation and steady progress toward building a more unified and peaceful nation. In a renewed effort to speed up Myanmar's national reconciliation process, Razali made an official visit to the country from Nov. 12 to Nov. 16, which was also the ninth since his appointment as the envoy in April 2000. During his trip, Razali also met opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi (ASSK), General Secretary of the National League for Democracy (NLD), in addition to the government leaders. However, no details of their talks were disclosed by both sides. At the end of his visit on last Saturday, Razali said he was disappointed with little progress in restoring dialogue between the government and the opposition, adding that "I can't expect good results all the time." He expressed continued belief that "dialogue on substantive issues is essential if lasting endurable national reconciliation in Myanmar is to be achieved". Razali was believed to have initiated the confidence-building talks between the two sides since October 2000 which resulted in the release of ASSK and 334 NLD members and its activists. However, no timetable has been set by the government to further the talks after ASSK's release despite repeated calls by the NLD to start a substantive dialogue on the future of the country. Meanwhile, the international community including the UN has also been calling for such a dialogue between the government and the opposition to bring about national reconciliation in the country as early as possible. The NLD won a landslide victory in the 1990 general election sponsored by the military, gaining 396 parliamentary seats out of 485. However, the NLD complained that it has not been allowed to take office until now although the election has ended for more than 12 years. Meanwhile, the government insists that it is a care-taker or transitional one with no intention to hold on to power for long. __________ Associated Press Worldstream November 22 2002 More than 100 political prisoners including 51 Suu Kyi supporters released By Aye Aye Win Myanmar's military government has freed 51 members of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi's party as part of the large-scale release of 115 political detainees under an ongoing reconciliation process, party officials said Friday. Most of the 51 party members freed Thursday were youth members of the National League for Democracy, party spokesman U Lwin told The Associated Press. An official statement late Wednesday had announced that the government would free on Thursday 115 prisoners including NLD members. Government officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, claimed on Friday that all have been released. They did not give details. U Lwin confirmed the release of 51 NLD members whose names were given to him by authorities. He said they were freed from various prisons in central Myanmar, the delta region and Yangon's main Insein prison. This is the biggest batch of political prisoners to be released since the government began reconciliation talks with Suu Kyi in October 2000 following mediation by United Nations envoy Razali Ismail. Razali ended a five-day visit to Myanmar last week, saying he expects the government to free more than 200 political prisoners by the end of this year. But he has expressed disappointment at the slow progress of the reconciliation talks, which have not moved beyond the so-called confidence-building stage. The junta, which has been in power since 1988, refuses to step down and has not held any substantive dialogue with Suu Kyi on restoring democracy. Suu Kyi's party won the 1990 general elections but was not allowed to take power. The only positive outcome of the reconciliation process has been the piecemeal release of prisoners and Suu Kyi's release from 19 months of house arrest in May. With the latest releases, the government has freed 383 NLD members. About 350 more non-NLD political detainees have also been freed. But about 1,000 more political prisoners are estimated to remain in jails. The United Nations, human rights groups, Suu Kyi and Western governments have demanded their unconditional and immediate release. According to NLD figures 111 party members including 16 elected representatives of the 1990 election remain in prison. ______ Kaladan Press November 22 2002 THE REMAINING 162 PERSONS RELEASED, EXCEPT 4 ROHINGYA YOUTHS DETAINED AT MAUNGDAW The remaining 162 persons including the 4 women were released at the end of October 2002, with a bribe of Kyats 10,000 to 70,000 for each and 4 main accused Rohingya youths still kept in police custody of Maungdaw, Arakan State, according to our correspondent. According to Our sources, Haji Ghoni is one of the member of detainees was released on payment of Kyats 70,000/- on 21st October. The rest had to take time to set free till last October. The sooner you give the sooner you will release. Bribe money has been given to the authorities according to the status of the detainees. The unpleasant incident of 10th October 2002, was under the joint instigation of Military Intelligence (MI)-18 and the police to extort money and upset the Muslim villagers and to create hatred policy between two sister communities, said our correspondent. The police have been unable to find any trace of Mohamed Yunus, who remained absconding since October 10, 2002. The two Rakhaing Buddhist girls who involved in the event of 10th October are not thevillagers of Rwa Thaya of Maungdaw Township. They are the inhabitants of Rathedaung, another town of Arakan State with bad characters called by Maung Lun, the village Peace and Development Council Chairman, to design a plot against the Baggona villagers of Maungdaw Township, said our sources. _______ Irrawaddy November 22 2002 Leading Figures not Among Released By Kyaw Zwa Moe Both dissidents and observers acknowledge that the large-scale release yesterday of political prisoners by Burma's military government would draw international appraise, but they continue to remain skeptical of the regime. National League for Democracy (NLD) spokesperson U Lwin said that 51 of the 115 freed prisoners were NLD members, and that the majority were younger party members. He said the release fell short of the number they had hoped. "We requested that the authorities release 400 political prisoners, including prominent figures, from both the NLD and other groups," U Lwin said today from Rangoon. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan welcomed the release in a statement issued today. The statement said: "The secretary-general hopes this first large-scale release will provide fresh momentum for the national reconciliation process in that country." Despite calls from the Burmese opposition to release all of the remaining 18 incarcerated Members of Parliament (MP), none were freed yesterday during the regime’s largest general amnesty for political prisoners since secret talks began in October 2000. Opposition sources also said many of them remain on parole. Some of the released said they had to vow not to break the law in the future, and if they did authorities said they would have to serve the remainder of their original sentence. The release comes on the heels of UN special envoy to Burma Razali Ismail’s ninth trip to Burma, which ended on Saturday. He reportedly urged the military leaders to free more than 200 political prisoners by year’s end—including student leader Min Ko Naing and journalist U Win Tin, both of whom have been in prison for over 13 years. The prisoners were released yesterday from Insein, Tharawaddy, Taungoo, and Khamti Prisons, however, approximately 1,500 political prisoners remain in detention in Burma, including two Rangoon law students who were sentenced this month to seven and 14 years in prison for protesting against the government. ____INTERNATIONAL_____ Agence France-Presse November 22 2002 Myanmar's leaders should "hang their heads in shame" : top US official Myanmar's leaders should "hang their heads in shame" over their broken economy, a senior US official said in the Bush administration's most fiercely critical outline yet of its policy towards the military-ruled state. James Kelly, the State Department's senior Asia policymaker, said in a strongly worded speech Thursday that signs of tentative progress in a government-opposition dialogue over the past six months stood out only because the country's plight was so "bleak." Kelly granted the regime marginal credit for allowing democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi to travel around the country, but savaged the Yangon junta's treatment of dissidents and handling of claims that its troops were involved in mass rapes. He told a closed-door reception of academics and Myanmar experts, scheduled to include Myanmar's ambassador to the United States Kyaw Win, that he had hoped to attend the forum with "significant good news to share and even new acquaintances to make." "But it was not to be. I think it fair to say that Burma represents a most frustrating challenge for American diplomacy," Kelly said, according to a copy of a speech at a School of Advanced International Studies forum on Myanmar. Sources in Yangon said earlier this week that Myanmar Deputy Foreign Minister Khin Maung Win and junta spokesman Colonel Hla Min would travel to Washington for the forum among other officials. But they did not arrive, and US officials refused to confirm or deny whether they had been refused visas by the US government. The junta's US-based lobbying firm also declined to comment. "I break no new ground when I observe that Burma was once poised to be one of the most prosperous countries of Southeast Asia," Kelly was due to say in remarks obtained by AFP. "Now its broken economy has trouble feeding itself. This is a man-made, not a natural phenomenon, and Burma's leaders should hang their heads in shame," he said, in US custom using Myanmar's former name, which was changed by junta leaders. "The picture presented by events in Burma over the past year is decidedly mixed and it is a measure of how bad things are in Burma that even a mixed record represents some progress, but progress exceeded by disappointment," Kelly said. "Unfortunately, conditions inside the country for the Burmese people remain dire and the optimism generated by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's release on May 6th has diminished as the regime continues to delay its dialogue with Daw Suu and her party." ____DRUGS______ Washington Post November 22 2002 U.S. May Take Burma Off 'Major' Drug List By Glenn Kessler State Department officials are close to recommending Burma's removal from a list of "major" drug producers, allowing the Southeast Asian nation to press for significant counternarcotics funding, according to sources on Capitol Hill and people who have spoken with State Department officials. A decision by the Bush administration to reward Burma's counternarcotics efforts would be an important psychological boost for the repressive government, experts said. Burma's ruling military junta, which has been condemned for human rights abuses, has long sought to use its counterdrug efforts to gain greater international recognition. "This would bring the regime a great deal of prestige," said David Steinberg, director of Asian studies at Georgetown University. A State Department recommendation would need to be reviewed by the White House, and officials at the bureaus involved in the recommendation refused to discuss the issue. But, in a speech last night, Assistant Secretary of State James A. Kelly pointed to Burmese efforts on drugs as one of the few bright spots in a "most frustrating challenge for American diplomacy." "Burmese cooperation with the international community on narcotics issues has continued to improve in real terms," Kelly said. Removing Burma from the list of major drug producers likely would prompt fierce complaints from members of Congress, such as incoming Senate Majority Whip Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who favor keeping the pressure on the Burmese leadership. "This would be a very controversial decision," one congressional staffer said. He said Burma continues to have an ongoing narcotics problem, while the Burmese government "will view this as a broader blessing for their approach." Adding to congressional anger, a State Department investigation has corroborated reports over the summer that the Burmese military uses rape as a "weapon of war" against ethnic civilian areas on a widespread basis, a department official said yesterday. Kelly last night said the United States is pressing for an international investigation of the rape allegations. The administration has maintained economic and political sanctions on the Burmese government, despite the release this year of Burmese democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest. But Steinberg said he had detected a distinct shift in tone by the State Department this year, suggesting a greater willingness to move toward better relations with Burma. The Burmese government also hired a high-powered lobbying firm, DCI Associates, to press its case in Washington. The key lobbyist on the Burma account, Charles Francis, is a friend of President Bush. The State Department, in a report in March, said that Burma last year became the world's largest producer of illicit opium. Burma is also the primary source of amphetamine-type stimulants in Asia, producing an estimated 800 million tablets per year. But in testimony before a congressional committee in June, Deputy Assistant Secretary Matthew P. Daley appeared to lay out steps that the Burmese needed to take to win what is known as "certification" of its antidrug program, such as enforcing money-laundering laws and targeting high-level drug traffickers. He said it was possible to "pursue better communication and cooperation with Burma [on drugs] without diminishing our support for political reform and national reconciliation." State Department officials appear to believe Burma has met the requirements laid out in Daley's testimony. But Bertil Lintner, an expert on the Burmese drug trade, said substantial evidence shows the government is linked to major drug traffickers, including joint ventures with the military and frequent meetings between traffickers and junta leaders. ___MONEY______ Democratic Voice of Burma November 20 2002 Buy our seeds and pay in time It is reported that the local authorities at Yekyi Township, Irrawaddy Division are forcibly selling corn seeds to unwilling farmers. The local members USDA and authorities are touring around the villages and forcing the farmers to but their seeds at the rate of a tin of seeds to an acre of marshland. The same tin of seeds costs 350 kyats at the independent dealers but the farmers are forced to pay 4000kyats to the authorities. Those who refuse are threatened with arrest and charge of rebellion against the state and the confiscation of their farms. A villager has already been arrested for refusing to buy the seeds. Further more, those who bought the seeds, have to pay the expense within this month. If they couldn’t, interests will be charged. They also have to promise in a signed document that they will sell the resulting harvests to the UDSA only. _______ Myanmar Times November 18-24 2002 Border trade change for beans, pulsesBy Myo Lwin THE government has introduced a new payment system for border transactions of beans and pulses, an official from the Border Trade Department under the Ministry of Commerce said last week. Under the change which took effect early this month, the international payment system was being accepted for trade in beans and pulses, the official said. The system requires traders across the border to pay for transactions through either letters of credit or telegraphic transfers, he added. The official said the directive applied only to beans and pulses but was likely to be extended to cover fisheries products. He said the new system would enable the country to increase its foreign exchange earnings, adding that illegal transactions might have been taking place before the change. Beans and pulses have been exported through border trade to China at Muse crossing in Shan State, to Thailand at the Kawthoung and Myawaddy crossings in Tanintharyi Division and to India through the Tamu crossing in Sagaing Division. The department said the value of border trade last year was more than US$500 million, or about 10 per cent of the total foreign trade volume of $5.3 billion. The government levies a tax of 10 per cent on exports. It allows traders to spend 80 per cent of their export earnings on imports regarded by the government as essential. Traders are allowed to spend the remaining 20 per cent of their export earnings on non-essential imports from which they can expect to earn higher profits. _______ Business Week November 22 2002 MAKING A FEDERAL CASE OUT OF OVERSEAS ABUSES By Paul Magnusson Should U.S. multinationals be held liable for the human-rights abuses of foreign governments? Victim advocates charge, for instance, that Burma's military rulers forced peasants at gunpoint to help build a pipeline for Unocal Corp., torturing and killing those who resisted. The company knew and approved, they claim. Unocal denies it. This emotional issue lies at the heart of a dozen lawsuits that seek to hold companies liable if they work with repressive regimes. Plaintiffs in several of these suits, including the one against Unocal, recently have made strides in establishing legal grounds for such claims under an arcane 1789 statute called the Alien Tort Claims Act. Early courtroom victories have set off alarms among business groups, which worry that the likes of IBM, Citibank, and Coca-Cola may be socked with huge jury damages for the misdeeds of Third World governments. Ultimately, up to 1,000 U.S. and foreign companies could be named as defendants in the pending suits, experts on both sides say. To head them off, business groups have called a closed-door strategy session in Washington on Nov. 18 to consider everything from possible legislation to filing a slew of amicus curiae briefs. Already, some companies have been lobbying the Justice Dept. to intervene. Last summer, the State Dept. warned a judge that a case against Exxon Mobil Corp. in Indonesia ''could potentially disrupt'' the fight against terrorism and should be dropped. Business groups fear that further plaintiffs' successes could chill U.S. companies' activities around the globe. ''Large jury awards will send a message that if you are going to do business in a country where the government is violating human-rights or labor standards, you may be sued,'' warns J. Daniel O'Flaherty, vice-president at the National Foreign Trade Council, which represents U.S. exporters. The Alien Claims act on which the suits are based was originally intended to reassure Europe that the fledgling U.S. wouldn't harbor pirates or assassins. It permits foreigners to sue in U.S. courts for violations of ''the law of nations.'' It remained little used until 1976, when a Paraguayan doctor brought suit in U.S. court against a former Paraguayan police official for the murder of the doctor's son. In 1980, a federal appeals court ruled that the law allowed foreigners to bring suit in U.S. court over acts committed abroad. In the early 1990s, human-rights lawyers began applying the law to U.S. corporations. Their contention: that companies can be liable for aiding wrongdoing by authorities or can be ''vicariously liable'' for the damages caused. For example, a Colombian labor union has brought a U.S. lawsuit against Coca-Cola Co. for allegedly hiring paramilitary units that murdered union organizers. And South Africans have sued Citigroup and other as-yet-unnamed companies for allegedly profiteering from apartheid. ''These lawsuits hold the corporate world responsible for the ultimate actions of what their products and money do,'' says Edward Fagan, a New York lawyer helping the plaintiffs. Human-rights activists think they have the best shot in the Unocal case. It was filed in Los Angeles in 1996 on behalf of Burmese citizens who claim that the California energy giant used the army of Burma to force villagers to clear jungle for the company's natural-gas pipeline. A lower court dismissed the case, but in September the often liberal Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals reinstated it. The court suggested that Unocal could be liable if it ''provided practical assistance or encouragement'' to the Burmese military -- or even if Unocal simply knew that crimes were occurring. The case still faces plenty of legal hurdles, but it has progressed to the point where Unocal may soon have to face torture survivors in court -- a publicity nightmare. If that happens, activists are sure to be emboldened to bring more grievances to U.S. courts. ____STATEMENTS______ Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma) (AAPP) November 21 2002 Another Political Prisoner Dies in custody A Burmese activist who had almost completed his seven year sentence died of a heart attack in Tharawaddy Prison last Friday. U Maung Ko, in his 50s, reportedly was not offered any medical treatment. He was expected to be released next month, as the military authorities usually free political prisoners whose prison terms are about to be concluded. U Maung Ko was arrested in 1996 while he was staying in Kyauk Padaung, his native township in Mandalay Division of Burma. According to former political prisoners on the Thai-Burma border, he was tortured for two weeks after his arrest. He was accused of being a communist sympathizer and charged under section 5(J) of the 1950 Emergency Provisions Act. In May, 1997, he was moved to Tharawaddy prison. U Maung Ko is the second political prisoner to die in the notorious Tharawaddy prison this year. Another activist, Aung May Thu, 61, died in September after his release had been denied, despite having completed his prison sentence. "We have found that the death rate of political prisoners is rising rapidly these days, because of poor medical treatment and torture," said Bo Kyi, joint secretary of the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma) (AAPP). U Maung Ko is the 82nd political prisoner to die while in custody, according to AAPP's records. In his report to the 191-nation UN General Assembly, Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN) Kofi Annan on November 1 called on the military authorities to release immediately and unconditionally all the remaining political prisoners in Burma. Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, the Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in Burma, reportedly wrote to the junta in March, giving the names of 104 political detainees who should be immediately released. The list included 19 elected members of parliament, 22 people who had been arrested for communicating with the UN about human rights, and 33 people who had been held after serving their sentences in full. For more information, contact Tate Naing, secretary, phone (01) 287 8751 and Bo Kyi, joint secretary, (01) 324 8935. ________ Amnesty International November 22 2002 Myanmar: Amnesty International calls for release of all prisoners of conscience AI Index: ASA 16/017/2002 (Public) News Service No: 213 22 November 2002 As authorities in Myanmar announced the release of 115 political prisoners, including 50 members of the National League for Democracy (NLD), Amnesty International today called on the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) to take further steps to release all prisoners of conscience. Amnesty International also urged the authorities to protect the right to freedom of expression, association and assembly in Myanmar. "Among those already released are individuals who have served six or more years for acts which would not be considered crimes under international law, such as talking to foreign journalists about torture of political prisoners," Amnesty International said. Reports indicate that many of the prisoners recently released may have to serve the rest of their prison terms if they are arrested again. "We welcome these releases but stress that they are long overdue, and must be followed by the unconditional release of other prisoners of conscience who have been suffering in Myanmar's prisons for too long," Amnesty International said "The SPDC must ensure that these releases are unconditional, and that prisoners are not subjected to harassment after their release," the organization added. Among at least 1,200 political prisoners who remain detained are prisoners of conscience who have been held for all or most of the last thirteen years. These include U Win Tin, a 72 year old journalist, who has been sentenced, inter alia, for allegedly trying to send information to the United Nations about poor prison conditions, Paw U Tun, aka Min Ko Naing, a student leader whose sentence has expired, and U Win Htein, a senior NLD advisor, currently serving a sentence for arranging a press interview about torture and collecting information about a poor rice harvest. Amnesty International is also concerned at the recent sentencing of two students, Khin Maung Win and Thet Naung Soe, to seven and fourteen years' imprisonment respectively, for staging a peaceful demonstration outside Yangon City Hall in August this year. Amnesty International considers Khin Maung Win and Thet Naung Soe to be prisoners of conscience, and urges authorities to release them unconditionally and to stop arresting people for peaceful acts of dissent. Public Document **************************************** For more information please call Amnesty International's press office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566 Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW. web: http://www.amnesty.org ________ Shan Women’s Action Network November 22 2002 Campaign for “Ending Sexual Violence against Women and Girls in Burma” On the 25 Nov, International Day to Eliminate Violence against Women 24-25 NOV 2002 “Licence to Rape,” released in June 2002, reported by the Shan Human Rights Foundation and the Shan Women’s Action Network, revealed using of rapes by the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC)’s troop against the Shan ethnic minority. The report documented 173 incidences of sexual violence against 625 Shan women by the Burmese military from 1996 to 2001. Sexual violence against women and girls through committing systematic rapes seriously violates human rights and is also a war crime and a crime against humanity. The Burmese government has used rape as a weapon of war for many years against the ethnic minorities who have long fought for political rights and freedom in Burma. Although Thailand and Burma are neighboring countries, the Thai society still has limited understanding on Burma. Therefore, the organizers translated the “Licence to Rape” report from English to Thai language in order to make the Thai public to be more concerned about the use of sexual violence on woman and girls as a weapon of war against ethnic minorities in Burma, and to persuade the Thai government to reconsider its policies on Burma such as policies on ethnic minorities. On the 25 Nov, International Day to Eliminate Violence against Women, we organise campaign activities to enable the Thai society to have a better understanding of sexual violence against women and girls in Shan State and to call for ending sexual violence against women and girls in Burma. Organizers: 1. Thai Action Committee for Democracy in Burma 2. Women and Constitution Network (47 organizations) 3. Alliance for the Advancement of Women (39 organizations) 4. Religious groups for PEACE, Thailand Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA) 6. Migrant Assistant Foundation (MAP), Chiangmai For more information: Thai Action Committee for Democracy in Burma. Tel. 02-4249173 or 09-7887138 Nov 24 5 pm. (Bangkok) Stop License to Rape Candle lighting Event at the Burmese Embassy Meeting point: Opposite St. Louis Hospital, Sathon Road Time: 5.00-6.00 pm Dress: Black Public gathering Nov 25 13:00 pm Chiangmai STOP Violence against Women Day Performance: LICENSE TO RAPE (GAB fai Drama group) Book selling money contribution Ceremony to SWAN Panel Discussion: Women.. War and Rape Venue: Women Studies Center, Chiangmai Uni