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DICTATOR WATCH
www.dictatorwatch.org
Contact: Roland Watson, roland@...
"I AM NOT WILLING TO LIVE IN THIS WORLD ANYMORE."
10 June 2004
Nan Bway Poung was a 22 year old Wa woman and she had been married for about a
year. She lived in Kyaukyi township, Nyaunglabin District, Karen State, Burma.
Two years ago today, on 10 June 2002, she was the only woman in a group of
villagers out looking for vegetables that was captured by SPDC Light Infantry
Battalion 349. Later that day the group, excluding Nan Bway Poung, was released.
She returned home the following day and told her husband and father-in-law that
about 20 Burmese soldiers at the Burma Army's Pah Klaw Hta Camp raped her. She
said, "I was raped by column commander Captain Ye Htut first, then he ordered
his soldiers to rape me." He said to his soldiers, "You all must rape this
woman, those who refuse to rape will be shot and killed." Nan Bway Poung was
very ashamed and said, "I am not willing to live in this world anymore." Then
before anyone noticed, she drank poison and committed suicide, the same evening
she arrived back.
Source: "Shattering Silences, Karen Women speak out about the Burmese Military
Regime's use of Rape as a Strategy of War in Karen State," prepared by the Karen
Women's Organisation, available online at www.womenofburma.org.
Than Shwe, Khin Nyunt and Maung Aye, and their subordinate officers such as Ye
Htut, are savages - the equivalent of rabid dogs. Dictator Watch is firmly
opposed to the death penalty, in part because it is in no way a sufficient
balance to, or punishment for, such crimes. However, in this case we would make
an exception. When Burma is free, the country should hold a Nuremberg-style
trial. The generals of SPDC/SLORC should be eradicated from the face of the
earth.
The fact that they remain in power, and commit such atrocities, is now fully the
responsibility of the International Community. The people of Burma must continue
their struggle, but at present they cannot win freedom on their own. The
International Community could easily step in - the SPDC is weak - and end their
suffering.
In December 2003, a senior U.S. State Department official said to me, "The U.S.
has done enough." I beg to differ. As an American, I want the government to do
much, much more. U.S. policy towards Burma is half-hearted and politically
calculated. And, it is focused solely on the National League for Democracy.
There is little concern and no aid at all for those who are suffering the most,
the ethnic nationalities of the country, particularly internally displaced
persons who have been driven from their homes. The implementation of economic
sanctions is the absolute minimum that the United States should do.
Refusing to do something ("negative action") is not as significant as taking the
next step, as actually doing something ("positive action"). The U.S. cut off new
investment and trade, which is negative action in the sense that it refuses to
allow new business between the country and the SPDC. But it has yet to force
Halliburton, Unocal, Caltex and others to disinvest from Burma, or to take other
stronger steps such as the initiation of U.N. Security Council proceedings.
The European Union is doing nothing, at least nothing of any consequence - in
either sense - towards the goal of achieving democracy. The member states and
the European Council and Parliament have learned nothing of substance from the
continent's tribulations with the Nazis, of what genocide means and how it must
be fought.
Japan, regarding Burma, is still pursuing its former Imperial ambitions. It too
has learned nothing from its own savage past.
The United Nations, again regarding democracy, is useless. In fact, it is worse
than useless. It seems dedicated to preventing action where it is needed most.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan is a failure, the Neville Chamberlain of the
Twenty-First Century, not because he ignores one threat, as with Chamberlain and
the Nazis, but because he ignores - he refuses to act on - so many.
Secretary-General, for Burma, it is time to expel the SPDC from the U.N.!
To Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and the NLD, as courageous as you are, please do more.
There is an asymmetry of suffering in Burma. The ethnic nationalities experience
disproportionate levels of abuse. Please speak out strongly and frequently on
their behalf. Further, may I suggest a follow-up action to the tremendous
leadership that you exhibited in boycotting the National Convention. I believe
you should now request the governments of the world, by diplomatic channels or
publicly if you are willing to take the risk, to treat the generals of the SPDC
as the pariahs that they are, and to intervene - in one way or another - to stop
Burma and its people from being destroyed.
To Nan Bway Poung, we beg your forgiveness, for allowing the world to be as
terrible as you experienced it.
Nan Bway Poung can no longer speak, so we must speak, and act, as a fitting
response - from Humanity - to her final words.