[Dialogue] Only Now, The Full Horror of Burmese Junta's Repression of Monks Emerges
Harry Wainwright
h-wainwright at charter.net
Sat Oct 13 14:45:08 EDT 2007
Published on Thursday, October 11, 2007 by The
<http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/article3047606.ece>
Independent/UK
Only Now, The Full Horror of Burmese Junta's Repression of Monks Emerges
by Rosalind Russell
Monks confined in a room with their own excrement for days, people beaten
just for being bystanders at a demonstration, a young woman too traumatised
to speak, and screams in the night as Rangoon's residents hear their
neighbours being taken away.
<http://www.commondreams.org/archive/wp-content/photos/1011_02.jpg>
Harrowing accounts smuggled out of Burma reveal how a systematic campaign of
physical punishment and psychological terror is being waged by the Burmese
security forces as they take revenge on those suspected of involvement in
last month's pro-democracy uprising.
The first-hand accounts describe a campaign hidden from view, but even more
sinister and terrifying than the open crackdown in which the regime's
soldiers turned their bullets and batons on unarmed demonstrators in the
streets of Rangoon, killing at least 13. At least then, the world was
watching.
The hidden crackdown is as methodical as it is brutal. First the monks were
targeted, then the thousands of ordinary Burmese who joined the
demonstrations, those who even applauded or watched, or those merely
suspected of anti-government sympathies.
"There were about 400 of us in one room. No toilets, no buckets, no water
for washing. No beds, no blankets, no soap. Nothing," said a 24-year-old
monk who was held for 10 days at the Government Technical Institute, a leafy
college in northern Rangoon which is now a prison camp for suspected
dissidents. The young man, too frightened to be named, was one of 185 monks
taken in a raid on a monastery in the Yankin district of Rangoon on 28
September, two days after government soldiers began attacking street
protesters.
"The room was too small for everyone to lie down at once. We took it in
turns to sleep. Every night at 8 o'clock we were given a small bowl of rice
and a cup of water. But after a few days many of us just couldn't eat. The
smell was so bad.
"Some of the novice monks were under 10 years old, the youngest was just
seven. They were stripped of their robes and given prison sarongs. Some were
beaten, leaving open, untreated wounds, but no doctors came."
On his release, the monk spoke to a Western aid worker in Rangoon, who
smuggled his testimony and those of other prisoners and witnesses out of
Burma on a small memory stick.
Most of the detained monks, the low-level clergy, were eventually freed
without charge as were the children among them. But suspected ringleaders of
the protests can expect much harsher treatment, secret trials and long
prison sentences. One detained opposition leader has been tortured to death,
activist groups said yesterday. Win Shwe, 42, a member of the National
League for Democracy, the party of the detained democracy leader Aung San
Suu Kyi, has died under interrogation, the Thai-based Assistance Association
for Political Prisoners said, adding that the information came from
authorities in Kyaukpandawn township. "However, his body was not sent to his
family and the interrogators indicated that they had cremated it instead."
Win Shwe was arrested on the first day of the crackdown.
It was the russet-robed Buddhist clergy, not political groups, who had
formed the backbone of demonstrations during days of euphoric defiance and
previously undreamed-of hope that Burma's military regime could be brought
down by peaceful revolution. That hope has been crushed under the boots of
government soldiers and intelligence agents and replaced by fear and dread.
A young woman, a domestic worker in Rangoon, described how one woman
bystander who applauded the monks was rounded up. "My friend was taken away
for clapping during the demonstrations. She had not marched. She came out of
her house as the marchers went by and, for perhaps 30 seconds, smiled and
clapped as the monks chanted. Her face was recorded on a military
intelligence camera. She was taken and beaten. Now she is so scared she
won't even leave her room to come and talk to me, to anyone."
Another Rangoon resident told the aid worker: "We all hear screams at night
as they [the police] arrive to drag off a neighbour. We are torn between
going to help them and hiding behind our doors. We hide behind our doors. We
are ashamed. We are frightened."
Burmese intelligence agents are scrutinising photographs and video footage
to identify demonstrators and bystanders. They have also arrested the owners
of computers which they suspect were used to transmit images and testimonies
out of the country. For each story smuggled out to The Independent, someone
has risked arrest and imprisonment.
Hein Zay Kyaw (not his real name) received a telephone call last week
telling him to be at a government compound where the military were releasing
42 people, among them Mr Kyaw's friend, missing since he was plucked from
the edge of a demonstration on 26 September. Mr Kyaw told the aid worker:
"The prisoners were let out of the trucks. Even though now they were safe,
they were still so scared. They walked with their hands shielding their
faces as if they were expecting blows. They were lined up in rows and sat
down against the wall, still cowering. Their clothes were dirty, some
stained with blood. Our friend had a clean T-shirt on. We were relieved
because we thought this meant that he had not been beaten. We were wrong. He
had been beaten on the head and the blood had soaked his shirt which he
carried in a plastic bag."
The United States yesterday threatened unspecified new sanctions against
Burma and called for an investigation into the death of Win Shwe.
White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said in a statement: "The junta must
stop the brutal treatment of its people and peacefully transition to
democracy or face new sanctions from the United States."
The scale of the crackdown remains undocumented. The regime has banned
journalists from entering Burma and has blocked internet access and phone
lines.
Mark Farmaner of the Burma Campaign UK says the number of dead is possibly
in the hundreds. "The regime covers up its atrocities. We will never know
the true numbers," he said.
At the weekend the government said it has released more than half of the
2,171 people arrested, but exile groups estimate the number of detentions
between 6,000 and 10,000.
In Rangoon, people say they are more frightened now than when soldiers were
shooting on the streets.
"When there were demonstrations and soldiers on the streets, the world was
watching," said a professional woman who watched the marchers from her
office.
"But now the soldiers only come at night. They take anyone they can identify
from their videos. People who clapped, who offered water to the monks, who
knelt and prayed as they passed. People who happened to turn and watch as
they passed by and their faces were caught on film. It is now we are most
fearful. It is now we need the world to help us."
C 2007 The Independent
Article printed from www.CommonDreams.org
URL to article: http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/11/4468/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://wedgeblade.net/pipermail/dialogue_wedgeblade.net/attachments/20071013/79db06b8/attachment-0001.html
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: not available
Type: image/gif
Size: 6731 bytes
Desc: not available
Url : http://wedgeblade.net/pipermail/dialogue_wedgeblade.net/attachments/20071013/79db06b8/attachment-0001.gif
More information about the Dialogue
mailing list