Yangon, Myanmar — The party of Myanmar’s detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi decided Monday to boycott the military-ruled country’s first election in two decades after the Nobel laureate blasted new electoral rules as “undemocratic.” (more…)
Monday, March 29th, 2010
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Inside Burma
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Inside Burma
Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar – The leader of Myanmar’s military junta on Saturday warned against foreign meddling in upcoming elections and said “divisive acts” could spark anarchy and derail the transition to democracy. (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Inside Burma
The detained leader of the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) party has said that civilians and soldiers in Burma should unite in order to develop the country. (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Inside Burma
A bus company in military-ruled Burma has been told to stop caning drivers and conductors for letting too many passengers on buses, a local newspaper reported Monday. (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Inside Burma
Burma’s junta chief warned Saturday against “divisive” and “slanderous” election campaigning as a senior official said the controversial polls would be held by early November. (more…)
French Firm Secretly Worked on Junta Internet System
Paris-based international telecommunications giant Alcatel-Lucent has admitted it has been secretly helping the Burmese junta build a telecommunications infrastructure that allows it to monitor Internet traffic, according to a French news magazine report. (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Regional
Tokyo will not expand economic aid to Myanmar as earlier proposed unless the junta ensures the participation of democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and others in the country’s general election this year, Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada said. (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: International
Washington – The United States on Monday blamed Myanmar’s junta for the opposition’s decision to boycott upcoming elections, saying the regime missed an opportunity to move forward. (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Opinion,Other
THE MESSAGE could not have been clearer. On Armed Forces day, as soldiers marched through Naypyidaw, Burma’s Senior General Than Shwe set out his vision for “disciplined democracy”. A moment that could have been cause for celebration is instead a cause for concern and regret. (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Opinion,Other
The call by Tomas Quintana, the United Nation’s human rights monitor to Burma, to consider the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry into possible crimes against humanity and war crimes in Burma is welcome, if long overdue. But just how probable is a high-level UN inquiry into serious international crimes in Burma, an investigation that could potentially result in a recommendation for a Security Council referral to the International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor to initiate an investigation? (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Opinion,Other
The new election laws passed just a few weeks ago appear to have been the final straw for the party led by Aung San Suu Kyi, writes Kate Allen. (more…)
Mon 29 Mar 2010
Filed under: Press Release
Today at Jakarta, the ASEAN Inter-governmental Commission for Human Rights (AICHR) rejected the request of civil society organisations from the Solidarity for Asian Peoples Advocacy Taskforce on ASEAN Human Rights (SAPA TFAHR) to meet with them. The purpose of the requested meeting was to present the civil society proposal for the AICHR Rules of Procedures (RoP) as AICHR meets to draft the RoP. Representatives of civil society organizations from Cambodia, Indonesia, Burma, Malaysia and Thailand went to the ASEAN Secretariat to present the civil society proposal but were disappointed to be informed that the AICHR would not be meeting them. (more…)