Sunday, March 28, 2021

CC News Letter 28 March - Junta Kills Over 100 in Myanmar

 

Dear Friend,


While Myanmar’s military celebrated Armed Forces Day on Saturday with a parade through the capital, the ruling junta’s security forces killed more than 100 people elsewhere throughout the country in the deadliest crackdown on peaceful pro-democracy protesters since last month’s coup.

Kindly support honest journalism to survive. https://countercurrents.org/subscription/

If you think the contents of this news letter are critical for the dignified living and survival of humanity and other species on earth, please forward it to your friends and spread the word. It's time for humanity to come together as one family! You can subscribe to our news letter here http://www.countercurrents.org/news-letter/.

In Solidarity

Binu Mathew
Editor
Countercurrents.org


Junta Kills Over 100 in Myanmar
by Kenny Stancil


While Myanmar’s military celebrated Armed Forces Day on Saturday with a parade through
the capital, the ruling junta’s security forces killed more than 100 people elsewhere throughout the country in the deadliest crackdown on peaceful pro-democracy protesters since last month’s coup.

While Myanmar’s military celebrated Armed Forces Day on Saturday with a parade through the capital, the ruling junta’s security forces killed more than 100 people elsewhere throughout the country in the deadliest crackdown on peaceful pro-democracy protesters since last month’s coup.

According to Myanmar Now, soldiers and police had killed at least 114 people, including children, nationwide as of 9:30 pm on Saturday in Myanmar.

“The military celebrated Armed Forces Day by committing mass murder against the people it should be defending,” said Tom Andrews, the United Nations special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar. “The Civil Disobedience Movement is responding with powerful weapons of peace.”

“It’s past time,” Andrews added, “for the world to respond in kind with and for the people of Myanmar.”

Saturday’s brutal massacre, which came just one day after a regional human rights group reported that the total death toll since the military regime seized power on February 1 had climbed to 328, was widely condemned by diplomats around the world.

“This bloodshed is horrifying,” said U.S. Ambassador Thomas Vajda. “Myanmar’s people have spoken clearly: they do not want to live under military rule.”

The European Union’s delegation to Myanmar tweeted: “This 76th Myanmar Armed Forces Day will stay engraved as a day of terror and dishonor. The killing of unarmed civilians, including children, are indefensible acts.”

British foreign secretary Dominic Raab said that “today’s killing of unarmed civilians, including children, marks a new low. We will work with our international partners to end this senseless violence, hold those responsible to account, and secure a path back to democracy.”

In a statement issued Thursday, Andrews had warned that “conditions in Myanmar are deteriorating, but they will likely get much worse without an immediate robust, international response in support of those under siege.”

“It is imperative that the international community heed the recent call of U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres for a ‘firm, unified international response,'” Andrews said. “To date, however, the limited sanctions imposed by member states do not cut the junta’s access to revenue that help sustain its illegal activities, and the slow pace of diplomacy is out of step with the scale of the crisis.”

Andrews noted that “the incremental approach to sanctions has left the most lucrative business assets of the junta unscathed. It needs to be replaced by robust action that includes a diplomatic offensive designed to meet the moment.”

“Without a focused, diplomatic solution, including the hosting of an emergency summit that brings together Myanmar’s neighbors and those countries with great influence in the region, I fear the situation of human rights in Myanmar will further deteriorate as the junta increases the rate of murders, enforced disappearances, and torture,” he said.

Andrews’ fears were realized Saturday as the military escalated its use of lethal violence against anti-coup demonstrators and other civilians.

“They are killing us like birds or chickens, even in our homes,” resident Thu Ya Zaw told Reuters in the central town of Myingyan. “We will keep protesting regardless… We must fight until the junta falls.”

The resolve of pro-democracy protesters is evident. According to Al Jazeera, citizens defied a “military warning that they could be shot ‘in the head and back'” in order to take to “the streets of Yangon, Mandalay and other towns.”

Kyaw Win, the director of the Burma Human Rights Network in the United Kingdom, told BBC News that the military had shown it had “no limits, no principles.”

“It’s a massacre, it’s not a crackdown anymore,” Win added.

In his statement released prior to Saturday’s wholesale killing, Andrews emphasized that “it is critical that the people of Myanmar… the duly elected illegally deposed parliamentarians who make up the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw, and opposition leaders and activists see that the international community is working towards a diplomatic solution in support of the peaceful Civil Disobedience Movement.”

“This combined course of action—domestic peaceful resistance, sustained pressure, and international diplomatic momentum—will have a greater chance for success than taking up arms,” Andrews continued, “and will save untold numbers of lives.”

“Member states have an opportunity to demonstrate this alternative, but the window in which this can be achieved is closing rapidly,” he said, adding: “I fear that the international community has only a short time remaining to act.”

That warning has become even more urgent since it was first shared.

Originally published in Common Dreams



China signals possible greater Middle East engagement
by Dr James M Dorsey


Two initiatives send the clearest signal, yet, that China may be gearing up to play a greater political role in the Middle East. Touring the region this week, Foreign Minister Wang Yi laid out five principles Middle Eastern nations would need to adopt to achieve a measure of regional stability.



The Farruggio Plan , Part A, for Saving our Economy
by Philip A Farruggio


Sadly, as with most of the so called ‘ Progressive Democrat’ plans, it seems that they just cannot stray too far from their corporate masters. I say this not
proudly at all. It seems that the very Super Rich they say they want to hold more ‘ accountable’  always are able to pull back on the reins. Do you think that Jeff Bezos is going to cry for very long, knowing that he will still be way ahead in the tax game? How would he have felt in 1961, or even in Ronald Reagan’s 1981, having to fork over much more of his wealth?



The rush to book people under sedition for plain dissent
by Justice Kamaljit Singh Garewal


A democratically elected government should be pleased when it faces dissent as this tells it what is going wrong with its administration and how to rectify wrongs. Instead, dissent is being handled in an imperial way by the police.



Is the economic impact of the lockdown over?
by Dr Arun Kumar


The centre’s estimates are flawed and give the
impression that the economy has not only weathered Covid-19 but overcome pre-existing difficulties. But in reality, demand is short, dampening economic revival.



Thoughtless Destruction of Trees For Projects of Dubious Merit Should  Stop
by Bharat Dogra 


Unfortunately even areas of crucial ecological significance are not spared. What could be more ecologically crucial than the catchment area of the Ganga river in Uttarakhand Himalayan region, but here a very large number of trees have been felled and even more are threatened for dam construction and road widening work which is not really needed and has been harmful in other important contexts also



Resolving Water Sharing Disputes Should Not Lead to Hurried Construction of Dams
by Bharat Dogra


The
generally perceived attitude regarding inter-state water disputes in India has been that these should be resolved as soon as possible so that the many-sided potential of various river-valley projects can be realized as early as possible by taking up the construction of dams, canals and hydro power plants.




No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

Trump Gets MERCILESSLY BOOED Before He Even ARRIVES

  MeidasTouch 2.39M subscribers MeidasTouch host Adam Mockler reports on Donald Trump receiving a chorus of boos upon his tardy arrival ...