ASEAN continues to support
the SPDC
(Is ASEAN encouraging Burma's regime to
continue oppressing its people?)
Since the May 30th premeditated attack on the Nobel Peace Laureate
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and followers of her National League for Democracy
party (NLD) in Burma, hundreds of democracy advocates have been
killed, arrested or have disappeared. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi herself
and many of the top NLD leaders have also been detained. Owing to
international pressure for her release, the SPDC regime has allowed
delegates of the International Committee for Red Cross and the U.N
Special Envoy Razali Ismail to meet Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi under "protective custody". But it has
denied requests from other foreign diplomats to meet her.
The present political progress of Burma has halted as the regime
completely ignored the will of the Burmese people in 1990 (when
they voted overwhelmingly for NLD in favor of democracy). Instead,
over 13 years later, the SPDC has announced a new 'Roadmap' which
covers the transition of the country towards Democracy although
when this will happen, nobody knows. It is surprising that, compared
to the reality, the Bali summit of ASEAN has stated: "ASEAN
welcome the recent positive developments in Myanmar [Burma] and
the government's pledge to bring about a transition to democracy
through dialogue and reconciliation".
It was a noteworthy irony that on May 6th, 2002, the day when Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi was released from house arrest for the second time,
the regime released an online information sheet titled "Turning
of a New Page", which allowed its citizens to participate in
the political process. But the recent May 30th massacre indicates
that the junta never keeps its promises. This is the normal practice
of the military regime: making promises and destroying those promises,
pledging and ignoring those pledges.
We would like to inform you that the reality is contrary to the
meaning of freedom, meeting with everyone, moving around freely,
as Daw Aung San Suu Kyi has been incommunicado since the May 30th
attack, U Aung Shwe, chairman of the National League for Democracy,
has been under house arrest and U Tin Oo, vice chairman, is in a
remote prison. Moreover there are over 1,600 political prisoners
in Burma's various prisons. All the arrests were
because of participation in the country's political process.
Hence, we would like International governments, especially the
ASEAN leaders, to take note of the following excerpt from the report
presented by the Secretary General Kofi Annan on August 28th, 2003
at the United Nations general assembly. "(12) As a result of
the events of 30 May and subsequent developments, the three-year-old
home-grown process of national reconciliation, as understood by
the United Nations, has come to a complete halt. The longer the
detention of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and other NLD leaders goes on
and the longer sustained absence of substantive dialogue continue,
the harder it
will be to revive the process. Despite this prognosis, the Secretary-General
continues to believe that dialogue remains the answer to the challenges
confronting Myanmar today and that there is still a small window
of opportunity at the present moment to save the process."
Arrest and release is the regime's policy for buying time and deceiving
the International community. When they arrested Daw Aung San Suu
Kyi, they received a lot of International pressure. If they cannot
handle the International pressure, they release her again. When
they release, they receive applause. It has been a theory used by
them as a good weapon to oppress its people and to try and trick
ASEAN and the International Community.
As long as her members and ethnic opposition parties (including
cease-fire groups) cannot meet with Daw Aung San Suu Kyi freely,
we declare that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi is under arrest. To be able
to bring back political normalcy in Burma, we believe that the SPDC
regime must stop all human rights violations and release Daw Aung
San Suu Kyi, U Tin Oo and all other political prisoners immediately
and unconditionally.
AAPP
October 9th,2003
More Information
66-1-2878751 or 66-1-3248935
|