ကိုယ္စားလွယ္ အဖြဲ႕ နွင့္ ကရင္နီ တိုးတက္ေရး ပါတီ (KNPP) မွ အတြင္းေရးမွဴး (၁)

KNPP_13ျပည္ေထာင္စု ၿငိမ္းခ်မ္းေရး ေဖာ္ေဆာင္ေရး လုပ္ငန္း ေကာ္မတီ ဒုဥကၠဌ ၀န္ႀကီး ဦးေအာင္မင္း ေခါင္းေဆာင္ေသာ
ကိုယ္စားလွယ္ အဖြဲ႕ နွင့္ ကရင္နီ တိုးတက္ေရး ပါတီ (KNPP) မွ အတြင္းေရးမွဴး (၁) ျဖစ္သူ ခူဦးရယ္ ေခါင္းေဆာင္ေသာ ၉ ဦးပါ ၿငိမ္းခ်မ္းေရး ကိုယ္စားလွယ္ အဖြဲ႕ တို႔သည္ ဇြန္လ ၉ ရက္ေန႔တြင္ ကယားျပည္နယ္ လိြဳင္ေကာ္ၿမိဳ ႔၌ ဒုတိယ အႀကိမ္ ထပ္မံေတြ႔ဆံုၾက မည္ဟု (KNPP ၏  အတြင္းေရးမွဴး ၂ ျဖစ္သူ ဦးေအာင္ဆန္းျမင့္က ေျပာပါသည္။

“အဓိက ကေတာ့   ျပည္နယ္ အဆင့္ ေဆြးေႏြးပဲြတုန္းက ေဆြးေႏြးပြဲမွာ တင္ျပထားတဲ့ အခ်က္ ၂၀ ဟာ အစိုးရဘက္က အတိအက် တုန္႔ျပန္ၿပီး အေျဖေပးတာမ်ဳိး မရွိေသးဘူး။ အဲဒီအခ်က္ ၂၀ ကို အေျခခံျပီး ဆက္ေဆြးေႏြးသြားမယ္ ျပီးေတာ့ တပ္ပိုင္း ဆိုင္ရာကိစၥ ၊ လူထုအတြက္ ဘ၀ အာမခံခ်က္ ကိစၥ၊ အပစ္ခတ္ရပ္စဲ ေရး တည္ေဆာက္မွဳ လမ္းစဥ္ မွာ ခိုင္မာေအာင္ နွစ္ဦးနွစ္ဖက္ ဘယ္လိုတည္ ေဆာက္သြား မလဲဆိုတာ ထည့္သြင္းေဆြးေႏြးသြားမွာ ျဖစ္တယ္လို႔” ေျပာပါသည္။ Continue reading “ကိုယ္စားလွယ္ အဖြဲ႕ နွင့္ ကရင္နီ တိုးတက္ေရး ပါတီ (KNPP) မွ အတြင္းေရးမွဴး (၁)”

Suu Kyi to visit France on June 26

Aung San Suu Kyi will visit France for four days starting on June 26 at the invitation of new President Francois Hollande, French officials announced on Tuesday.

“This visit will provide an opportunity to pay homage to her fight for democracy and human rights and to reaffirm France’s desire to continue to support the political transition” it said in a statement.

The Nobel peace prize laureate made a six-day trip to Thailand in May-June, her first foreign trip in over two decades since she was thrust into the spotlight during protests in 1988. Her trip comes amid sweeping reforms by a new regime in Burma that includes her election to parliament in April.

Her visit to France will be part of a five-country European tour, which will include an address in Geneva and a trip to Oslo to finally accept her Nobel Peace Prize. From there she will travel to Britain and Dublin, where she will be awarded an Amnesty International prize by the rock singer Bono.

http://www.mizzima.com/news/breaking-and-news-brief/7268-suu-kyi-to-visit-france-on-june-26.html

DASSK Press Conference -Comment on current affairs 6.june 2012.-video

Speaking at a press conference in Rangoon on Wednesday, Burmese pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi defended herself against criticism directed at her for comments she made at the World Economic Forum in Bangkok last week.

“I had given my views very openly at the forum and I heard that some were unhappy about that,” she said. “I gave my frank opinion so that people can make a correct assessment of the country.”

Suu Kyi had been criticized at home and in the state press for apparently warning the international community about investing in Burma at a time when the Burmese government is courting many foreign businessmen and opening the country for trade. Speaking at the Bangkok forum, she cautioned investors against “reckless optimism,” and called on the international community to exercise “healthy skepticism” in its approach to dealing with the Burmese authorities. Continue reading “DASSK Press Conference -Comment on current affairs 6.june 2012.-video”

ABFSU Student Union ‘to Register or Risk Jail’

Phyo Phyo Aung, front row, third from left, sits among fellow members of the ABFSU's organizing committee (Photo: abfsu.net)

Phyo Phyo Aung, front row, third from left, sits among fellow members of the ABFSU’s organizing committee (Photo: abfsu.net)

Leaders of the All Burma Federation of Student Unions (ABFSU) were told on Wednesday to register as an official association by the Rangoon authorities or potentially face imprisonment.

However, prominent members of the umbrella body which represents Burmese student organizations denied this step was necessary as it has no intention to stand for election.

“Dr. Than Aung of the Rangoon Division Administrative Office told us to register the Student Union [ABFSU] because they do not see us as a registered party at the Election Commission,” Phyo Phyo Aung, the secretary of the ABFSU organizing committee, told The Irrawaddy.

“They told us how to register under section two of the Registration Act (6/88) as well as the punishments if the union is not registered,” she added.

But the organizing committee’s members denied that it needs to register as they consider themselves neither a political party nor a social organization. According to the Unlawful Association Act, persons forming illegal organization can be sentenced to five years imprisonment while activists can get three years.

Phyo Phyo Aung argued that they could only decide with the will of all students throughout the whole nation and that “the nationwide student conference will need to agree to this,” which the authorities could not accept.

Than Aung, along with various provincial and township authorities, said that ABFSU’s current existence is “unlawful” under existing regulations, and therefore the union must “register or postpone its activities” until alternative legislation is enacted by Parliament.

“Basically they were warning us even though they said they just ‘informing’ us about the rules,” said Phyo Phyo Aung.

The organizing committee’s nine members were summoned by the Rangoon Administrative Department office on Monday for the meeting on Wednesday. It is the second occasion they have been reprimanded recently after members were also warned to register their O-Way student journal at the Press Censorship Board in April.

The ABFSU, an original hub of the students’ political movement since British colonial rule, has been at the center of major events throughout Burmese history. Burmese independence hero Aung San, the father of current opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, first formed a precursor union in 1931.

Prominent members of the ABFSU including Min Ko Naing were arrested in August 2007 for organizing peaceful demonstrations during the monk-led Saffron Revolution.

Rangoon’s original Student Union Building was demolished on July 6, 1962, by dictator Ne Win after protests against his coup a few months previously. The ABFSU plans to commemorate the building’s demise on its 50th anniversary next month.

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/5990

 

The Burma Army’s attack on SSA may have been a misunderstanding-Lt. Gen. Yawdserk

6.june 2012

Lt. Gen. Yawdserk, leader of the Restoration Council of Shan State (also known as the Shan State Army), downplayed Burma Army’s attack of his men last Saturday during an interview with S.H.A.N. reporters last night.

Despite the current conflict between the RCSS and the Burma Army, Yawdserk tells S.H.A.N. the Burma Army’s attack on his men was not a breach of agreement. He says Infantry 49 (the garrison who attacked) may have been alarmed by the sudden appearance of an RCSS unit in the vicinity, and retaliated with military force as a preemptive measure. In response, the RCSS sent its own besiegers to surround the Burma Army battalion.

 

 

“[The garrison] thought we were going to attack them,” he said.

The RCSS unit led by Captain Sai Lake was camping out on Mot Nang Len hill on its way to participate in a survey to be conducted by the Monghta Operations Command (MOC), led by the Burma Army.

The joint survey was a condition agreed to as part of an agreement signed by both parties last May in Kengtung. Its purpose was to survey the resettlement of thousands of IDPs (Internally Displaced Persons) currently residing near 5 SSA bases located along the Thai-Burma border.

The situation cooled down only after RCSS chief liaison officer, Brig-Gen Sai Lu, contacted Burma Army’s Triangle Region Command based in Kengtung. He explained that Captain Sai Lake’s RCSS unit was on its way to peaceably meet with the MOC to conduct the survey scheduled to take place the next day.

This was not the first armed incident to occur involving the Burma Army and the RCSS.

Saturday’s incident was the 19th armed attack to take place since the ceasefire agreement signed in December of last year. One of the conditions in the agreement was that neither party would attack the other.

The RCSS says it still intends to send representatives into townships along the Thai-Burma border next week to gather feedback from citizens, political parties and militia groups on key political issues.

Still having the ultimate goal of peace in mind, Yawdserk tells S.H.A.N., “[The RCSS] would also want [people] to join the peace monitoring group to be set up in July.”

panglong org