| Free Burma Activists
Coalition Re-aligns to Face New Challenges
Mizzima News (www.mizzima.com)
9 September 2003: Washington, DC.
The Free Burma Coalition (FBC), the world's largest activist
coalition that links exiled Burmese democracy campaigners
and its supporters, has re-aligned itself to face the challenges
of post-sanctions Burma.
The FBC, in its today statement, announced the completion
of its divestment campaigns directed against foreign investors
with ties to the military-ruled Burma. FBC has also re-aligned
itself to better respond to the needs of the Burma freedom
and democracy movement at large more strategically and effectively.
"With the enactment of the second round of U.S. economic
and diplomatic sanctions, FBC boycott campaigns ended successfully.
One of our original missions was to weaken the regime economically
and to deprive them of much-needed foreign currency. The country,
as well as our freedom struggle is at a crossroads,"
said Dr. Zar Ni, the founder of the coalition and a prominent
Burmese political exile, referring to the Burmese Freedom
and Democracy Act of 2003 signed by US President George W.
Bush this summer.
"The generals have, in effect, challenged the democratic
world, with their official roadmap for Burma. They have absolutely
no intention of bringing about genuine changes in the country.
Our coalition is viewed by Burmese dissidents as the group
capable of taking international Free Burma campaigns one notch
higher than a citizen's boycott and lobby campaign. So we
are stepping up and expanding the scope of our work",
he added.
The coalition's announcement is a direct response to Burma's
ruling military junta unveiling of the so-called "roadmap"
for the democratic transition from dictatorship, a blatant
sham to ease widespread international outcry and demand for
the release of the country's democracy leader and Nobel Peace
prize recipient Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
Since its founding as a campus activist group at the University
of Wisconsin at Madison in the United States eight years ago,
the Free Burma Coalition has grown to become one of the world's
first and largest Internet-based networks and has spearheaded
nearly 100 successful divestment campaigns, including its
illustrious, worldwide Pepsi boycott, which forced the soft-drink
giant to leave Burma in 1997. It also rallied American public's
support for the enactment of economic sanctions laws against
the Burmese regime.
The FBC's today statement shows that the coalition is currently
re-inventing itself as a more politically oriented network
and exploring strategies and venues to strengthen Burma's
freedom struggle.
When asked what the new mission and strategies would be,
"As an umbrella group, we are indeed interested in strategies
and political initiatives that include the end-game solutions
to our country's long-standing political crisis," said
Min Zaw Oo, the new Director of Outreach and Strategy at the
FBC's Washington Office. He stressed, "But that doesn't
mean we will deviate from our commitment to the non-violent
means for genuine political change for Burma."
At 15, Min participated in the Burmese democracy movement
in 1987-88 when he was attending high school in Rangoon. Like
thousands of Burmese student peers, Min joined the armed All
Burma Students' Democratic Front in Burma's rainforests, following
the bloody crackdown of the peaceful nation-wide demonstrations
in 1988. Seven years ago, Min came to the United States as
a refugee student under the US State Department arrangement
and completed his American education in Government and Conflict
Resolutions at the University of Maryland and George Mason
University. He is now working full time with the coalition.
FBC's spokeswoman Naw May Oo said, "one of the new responsibilities
for the FBC is to tell the international community the Burma
story in its entirety and as truthfully and accurately as
it should be."
"We have three pillars in our freedom struggle: Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi and her non-violent efforts inside Burma
for genuine political change through a dialogue; the ethnic
nationalities' armed resistance out of their desperate need
for self-defense; and the Burmese Diaspora's lobby and other
peaceful political campaigns", she added.
The coalition's leaders stressed that it will continue to
do outreach on campuses and amongst grassroots communities
throughout North America, Asia, Latin America, Africa and
Europe. However, they pointed out the real job of freeing
Burma has to be done by the Burmese themselves.
They said the coalition will be working more closely with
leading Burma opposition groups such as the Thai-Burmese border-based
National Council of the Union of Burma, the single largest
coalition of multi-ethnic, pro-democracy organizations carrying
out different political initiatives inside Burma to restore
freedom, ethnic equality, democracy and human rights in that
country.
The Burmese military regime is widely condemned throughout
the world for its human rights violations. The long list of
regime's rights violations include forced labor, the use of
chemicals such as pesticides to destroy whole-sale populations
of indigenous minorities, forced relocation of communities,
holding 1,500 political prisoners throughout Burma.
The current regime came to power in 1988 in a bloody crackdown
of nation-wide, popular democracy uprisings. It held Multi
party-elections in 1990 and has ignored the elections results
according to which Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for
Democracy won 82% of the parliamentary seats.
|