Tag: NLD

  • Prominent Muslim Lawyer And Legal Adviser To NLD Assassinated At Yangon Airport

    Prominent Muslim Lawyer And Legal Adviser To NLD Assassinated At Yangon Airport

    A prominent Muslim lawyer and legal adviser to the National League for Democracy was shot and killed at the Yangon airport yesterday afternoon, according to a senior member of the ruling party. Police believe the shooting was a targeted assassination. A taxi driver was also reportedly killed while trying to chase down the gunman.

    U Ko Ni was returning from Indonesia where he was part of a delegation attending a senior leadership meeting in Jakarta. He was waiting at the taxi station just in front of the airport terminal at around 4:30pm when he was shot in the head from close range and killed immediately.

    “It is a very sorrowful thing for Myanmar, and a very big loss for the country, I have to say,” U Win Htein, a member of the NLD’s central executive committee, told The Myanmar Times yesterday.

    According to a police report obtained by The Myanmar Times and signed by Police Officer Myo Naing, the suspected shooter is a 53-year-old man from Mandalay. The suspect has been arrested and is being questioned by police. No motive has been identified for the murder.

    The 42-year-old taxi driver, U Nay Win, was shot and critically injured while pursuing the shooter. He later died in the hospital, according to his wife. He is also survived by his three children, including a 45-day old baby.

     

    Source: www.mmtimes.com

  • Stop The Extra-Judicial Killings Of Rohingyas In Myanmar

    Stop The Extra-Judicial Killings Of Rohingyas In Myanmar

    TERORIS….

    bentuk terorisme yg paling biadab adalah terorisme yg dilakukan oleh negara…

    buddhist-terror-1

    jadi saksikan lah…Wahai manusia yg mengaku islam…lihat betapa keji.kejam dan brutal mereka…membunuh.memperkosa dan menganiyaya bukan hal tabu untuk mereka…

    buddhist-terror-2

    MAKA..siapakah yg paling layak kita sebut TERORIS…saudare…

    #SAVEROHINGYAPEOPLE
    #STOPEXTRAJUDICIALKILLING

     

    Source: Adnan Khair

  • Myanmar Army Fires On Rohingya Villages In Rakhine Region

    Myanmar Army Fires On Rohingya Villages In Rakhine Region

    State media say two soldiers and six attackers died in clashes after an ambush on troops, which led to air support being called in.

    There are reports of villages burning in the northern region of Rakhine.

    Photos released by Human Rights Watch seem to show charred villages, with the group reporting 430 burnt buildings.

    The satellite photos were taken between 22 October and 10 November, following reports of fighting and civilians fleeing last month.

    rohingya-1

    Rohingya activists say the government is trying systematically to drive the Muslim minority from their villages.

    rohingya-2

    Attacking the Rohingya is a popular move for the military, the BBC’s Jonah Fisher reports from Myanmar’s largest city, Yangon.

    They are disliked by many, if not most, Burmese who consider them illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, our correspondent says.

    Media barred

    The latest outbreak in fighting was triggered by an attack on three police checkpoints just over a month ago.

    The Burmese government is not allowing independent journalists into Rakhine, so it is impossible to verify claims about the scale of the fighting.

    According to the latest official statement on Saturday, troops were ambushed and then clashed several times with armed men, presumably Rohingya Muslims, equipped with guns, knives and spears.

    At one point, when faced by about 500 men, the soldiers called in air support and two helicopter gunships fired on the Rohingya village.

    BBC map

    Casualty figures vary widely, our correspondent says.

    Brad Adams, the Asia director for Human Rights Watch, said the new photos showed “widespread destruction” that was “greater than we first thought”.

    “Burmese authorities should promptly establish a UN-assisted investigation as a first step toward ensuring justice and security for the victims,” he said.

    The government – led by Aung San Suu Kyi – talks of “clearance operations” as part of the search for the attackers.

     

    Source: www.bbc.co.uk

  • Would Myanmar Nationals Want A Government Like Singapore’s?

    Would Myanmar Nationals Want A Government Like Singapore’s?

    I read with amusement how Myanmar nationals are hoping for change and that the Myanmar junta would be replaced by a government like Singapore’s PAP.

    People from third world countries like Myanmar, Philippines and Malaysia admire the Singapore government for the outer facade it presents: strong Sing dollar currency, non-corruption (we Singaporeans know better how truly corrupted the Singapore government is the legal way), safe (unless you offend the wrong group), ample employment opportunities, number of shopping centers (oh you be surprised they gauge how wealthy a country is by the number of shopping malls it has) and etc. These foreign nationals mistakenly believe that Singapore is a pride of Asia and that an “Asian” country can be as good as any first world countries.

    Unfortunately, due to the vast gap in understanding democracy and the real definition of a first world country, they fell under the false impression Singapore is an ideal country which they wish their government would be like so. Perhaps in their eagerness against the very evils of their own governments, they sought relief from a new country where its government constantly lie about non-corruption, citizens-first and with-you-for-you war cries. They teared along when they heard Lee Kuan Yew died; knowing nothing of the evils the dictator did. Singapore is their utopia and Singaporeans who complain were told they are more than happy to trade their Prime Ministers for Lee Hsien Loong.

    Blinded and frustrated by the sorry state of affairs in their homeland, foreigners who praise the Singapore government are honestly those with very shallow and backward mindsets, with their understanding of governance and societies at superficial levels and knowing nothing about macro-economics, political dynamics, sustainability, positioning and the very dangerous consequences of having the kind of leadership Singapore has. In their point of view, Singapore is on the right track and there is nothing to worry about Singapore and even so for the next 50 years. Including new citizens and PRs, they were not brought up through the Singapore system and were largely ignorant of the sacrifices and trade-offs of being a Singaporean.

    After all, people who reached maturity do not make flippant suppositions like trading their Prime Ministers for Lee Hsien Loong. Take up the Singapore citizenship, Lee Hsien Loong will make sure you take back your words. Till then, good luck hoping for change in Myanmar.

    Alex

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

  • Muslims From Violence-Hit Rakhine Show Support For Aung San Suu Kyi

    Muslims From Violence-Hit Rakhine Show Support For Aung San Suu Kyi

    THANDWE, Myanmar – Muslim supporters of Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi said on Saturday they hoped a government lead by her National League for Democracy (NLD) would improve their lives in Rakhine State, where many still face discrimination after violence in 2012 and 2013.

    The Muslims have put their hopes in the NLD even though the party did not field a Muslim candidate on its lists of over 1,100 hopefuls standing in the Nov. 8 election and has been criticized for not speaking out against their marginalization.

    The campaign ahead of what is billed as Myanmar’s first free and fair election in 25 years, which started a month ago, has seen a spike in tensions stoked by anti-Muslim hardline Buddhist group Ma Ba Tha, which has sharply criticized the NLD.

    On Saturday, Suu Kyi spoke in Thandwe, where in October 2013 five Kaman Muslims were murdered during a flare-up in religious violence.

    Many Muslim residents of Thandwe and surrounding villages who came to see Suu Kyi said they still supported her and hoped the NLD would help to end their discrimination and foster reconciliation between Buddhists and Muslims.

    “We have a little hope,” said Win Naing, 41. “We don’t have equal rights. I hope that if Mother Suu wins the election, we will get equal rights,” Win Naing said.

    Another supporter, Tun Win, 48, from a village outside Thandwe, said Muslims faced bullying from Buddhists and that many Muslims had been denied national identity cards by the government, curbing their freedom of movement. He hoped the NLD would make obtaining them easier.

    “They say, ‘go to Yangon,’ but we can’t because we don’t have any identity cards,” he said. “We come and go around here and it is like a prison.”

    Suu Kyi made no mention of the violence in Thandwe during her speech on Saturday. During a speech in the nearby town of Tongup on Friday she also did not mention the 2012 killing of 10 Muslims, who were pulled from a bus by a mob in the town.

    While avoiding references to specific incidents, Suu Kyi made broader points about religious tensions and violence.

    “It is very important that all people regardless of race and religion living in our country must be safe,” she said. “We can have peace in our country only if the people feel safe both mentally and physically,” she said.

    Unlike the marginalized Rohingya Muslims, who also live in Rakhine, the Kaman from Tandwe are one of Myanmar’s 135 recognised ethnic groups. The Rohingya live predominantly in Sittwe and northern Rakhine, where 140,000 were displaced by violence in 2012.

    Suu Kyi will not visit Sittwe or northern parts of Rakhine during her three-day trip through the western state. The Nobel peace laureate has been criticized for saying little about the Rohingya’s plight.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com