Inside Burma: Land of Fear
1 2015-10-28T05:20:09-07:00 Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191 6684 3 Democracy Uprising in 1988 in Myanmar (formerly Burma) plain 2015-10-28T05:29:22-07:00 YouTube 2012-01-12T18:30:10.000Z 7sERETR1BPg HealBurma Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191This page has annotations:
- 1 media/Flag_of_Myanmar.png 2015-10-28T05:02:19-07:00 Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191 Refugees from Myanmar (formerly Burma) Xinwei Zhang 7 plain 2015-10-28T05:33:42-07:00 Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191
- 1 2015-10-28T05:53:49-07:00 Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191 The Land of Fear Xinwei Zhang 2 plain 2015-10-28T05:54:26-07:00 Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191
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The Aggression of the Military Government
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"Myanmar, also known as Burma, was long considered a pariah state while under the rule of an oppressive military junta from 1962 to 2011." — BBC News
A general introduction to Burmese History
- British Rule and World War II
In 1943, Japanese declared Burma and turned into a fully sovereign state. Under Japanese occupation, 170,000 to 250,000 civilians died. The Japanese were routed from most of Burma by May 1945. After the war ended, the British Governor, Sir Reginald Dorman-Smith returned. The restored government established a political program that focused on physical reconstruction of the country and delayed discussion of independence.- Burma's Independence and Military Rule
After the coup 1962, General Ne Win seized control of the government and imposed iron-fisted military rule. A number of protests followed the coup, and initially the military's response was mild. But then the military started to suppress protests, and in 1963, all opposition parties were banned. Ne Win, the head of state from 1962 to 1981, quickly took steps to transform Burma into his vision of a 'socialist state' and to isolate the country from contact with the rest of the world.
In 1978, a military operation was conducted against the Rohingya Muslims in Arakan, called the King Dragon operation, causing 250,000 refugees to flee to neighboring Bangladesh.- Crisis and 1988 Uprising
Triggered by brutal police repression of student-led protests causing the death of over 100 students and civilians in March and June 1988, widespread protests and demonstrations broke out on 8 August throughout the country. The uprising ended on 18 September, after a bloody military coup causing an estimated 3,000 deaths. During the crisis, Aung San Suu Kyi emerged as a national icon. When the military junta arranged an election in 1990, her party, the National League for Democracy, won 80% of the seats in the government. But the military junta suppressed everything that could have developed from these democratic achievements. Part of the strategy was to place Aung San Suu Kyi under house arrest.
. The military government announced that they wanted foreigners to stop using the words Burma and Burmese. Instead they wanted the world to use Myanmar for the country and its national people. Although the international business community and international organizations like the United Nations have adopted Myanmar as the new name without reser- vation, not everyone has accepted these name changes. Foreigners and Burmese expatriates who oppose the military government, and contest its right to rule, deliberately persist in using the old names, Burmese and Burma, as a symbol of their opposition and defiance.- 2007 anti-government protests
- 2011–present
And since 1988, the army has more than doubled in size and now has a staggering troop-force of almost half a million soldiers, around the same number as the U.S. army. It is estimated that 40% of the national budget is spent on building the army’s strength, while education reportedly receives as little as 1% to 2%.
Therefore, despite these reforms, human rights abuses are still commonplace in Burma. While certain positive developments were reported in a number of fields, such as political engagement, media or foreign investments, the majority of Burma’s people, especially ethnic and religious minorities, still face many challenges.
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Refugees from Myanmar (formerly Burma)
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“The struggle for democracy and human rights in Burma is a struggle for life and dignity.”
- Aung San Suu Kyi
Since Burma’s independence in 1948, various ethnic minority groups have pursued a higher level of autonomy. To fight against the aggression of the military government, ethnic insurgent groups adopted guerrilla-style tactics. In response to this, in the 1960s, the government started counter-insurgency strategy called Four Cuts that was designed to cut four main sources between insurgents, their families and local villagers, including food, funds, intelligence, and recruits. Because of the armed conflicts and political oppression, since 1984, thousands of refugees who fled Burma because of human rights abuse and persecution by Burmese military junta have lived in confined refugee camps in Thailand for over 30 years.
History of Myanmar (formerly Burma)
Although there was no Four Cuts any more after 1993, people in Burma still continue to lose their land because either large-scale agriculture and jade mining or military occupation, which continues to deconstruct communities and forced migration of ethnic groups (South, 2007). Meanwhile, ethnicity/religion is a big problem in Myanmar. Rohingya Muslim minority have been denied Burmese citizenship since 1982 by Citizenship Law and still flee by sea due to communal violence in Burma.
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