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Showing posts from January 4, 2012

200 kyat for a family list photocopy

By Kaladanpress Maungdaw, Arakan State: A village administration office staff forced villagers to pay 200 kyat for a photocopy of family list, according to a village administration office member from Maungdaw. “One photocopy cost only 30 kyats in Maungdaw, but collecting 200 kyats for one. Shwezarr is only one mile far awayfrom main Town”

Collecting family list, group photos in Maungdaw

By Kaladanpress Maungdaw, Arakan State: Since January 2, the Immigration of Maungdaw has been collecting family lists and group photos from villagers of Nasaka area No.6 and 5 of Maungdaw Township, said a local trader elder who did not wish to be identified.  Every year, at the beginning of January, the Burma’s border security force (Nasaka) and Immigration separately collect family lists and group photos of Rohingya villagers in north Arakan. 

Nasaka arrests fire victim, extorts Kyat 500,000 in Maungdaw

By Kaladanpress Maungdaw, Arakan State: Burma’s border security force (Nasaka) arrested a fire victim from Maungdaw Township on December 29, and was released today after taking Kyat 500,000, said a close relative of the victim preferring not to be named. “The victim was identified as Abu Sayed (25), son of Jamal, hailed from Naribill west village of Nasaka area No. 6 of Maungdaw Township.”

Suu Kyi expected to announce candidacy soon

By    MIZZIMA NEWS Aung San Suu Kyi has yet to officially announce what parliamentary constituency she will contest, but voters now know they will be casting their ballots in the by-election on April 1. Some sources have said Suu Kyi will file in Kawhmu, a rural township south of Rangoon, but that cannot be officially confirmed. The official election date announcement came on Saturday through the state-media. The National League for Democracy (NLD), led by Suu Kyi, is still waiting for the approval of its application to re-register as a political party. After its approval, she is expected to announce.

Rohingya Refugees and Thailand’s ‘Push-Back’

Panchali Saikia Research Officer The Rohingya refugee crisis is not a new phenomenon, and it has now grabbed the attention of the international media for all the wrong reasons. The Rohingyas, in large numbers, are now trying to escape to Malaysia via the sea route through Thailand, but are being denied entry by Thai authorities and forcibly pushed back. Earlier this year around 91 persons believed to be Rohingyas were rescued near Andaman Island by the Indian Navy and around 129 by the Indonesian Navy in Aceh. The Rohingyas have been sheltered by Bangladesh for nearly three decades. What is the reason for their escape to Malaysia? Why is Thailand forcibly pushing them back to sea? Thailand has provided shelter to hundreds and thousands of other displaced people from Myanmar, why is then expelling the Rohingyas?

Human Rights Advocacy Concerns Over Human Right Violations Against Rohingya in Burma

Diplomats and advocacy groups reaching out to the international community through the media. State College, Pennsylvania, USA.  Ambassador Prof. Dr. Akbar Ahmed calls on U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton “Madam Secretary, Please Don’t Forget the Rohingya”. The resounding calls are coming from dignitaries, diplomats, legislators, government officials, human right advocates, and many other dignified individuals in Washington, New York, and many other cities in the world, in various forms. Despite the inaccessibility of the Northern Arakan State by the international media or monitors, the bits and pieces of reports coming out of Northern Arakan is so alarming that the international community could not remain silent. Regardless of the mission and station of the international organizations, they have one unified voice on Rohingya – human right violations in historic proportions.

Burmese human rights commission statement

By- MIZZIMA NEWS The chairman and members of  Burma’s National Human Rights Commission visited Insein Prison, the Hlay-Hlaw-Inn Yebet Prison Labour Camp and Myitkyina Prison and issued a statement published in  The New Light of Myanma  this week. The full text of the unedited statement is as follows: Statement by the Myanmar National Human Rights Commission on its visits to the Insein Prison and Hlay-Hlaw-Inn Yebet Prison Labour Camp 1. An eight-member team of the Commission, headed by its Chairman visited the Insein Prison on 27 December 2011 and the Hlay-Hlaw-Inn Yebet Prison Labour Camp in Hlegu Township on 28 December 2011. Earlier a four-member team of the Commission visited Myitkyina Prison on 9 December 2011. The visits provided a valuable opportunity to observe at firsthand the daily lives of the prisoners and the general conditions in which they are serving their respective prison terms. In this regard, the Commission is grateful for the full cooperation extended by

Burma orders limited prisoner release

By  MIZZIMA NEWS Burmese President Thein Sein announced a reduction in prisoners’ sentences on Monday to coincide with the country’s 64th Independence Day. A newly released female prisoner and her family members in tears in front of Insein Prison in Rangoon on Tuesday, January 3, 2012. Photo: MizzimaIt is unclear how many political prisoners may be affected by the order, which was announced by MRTV, a state-run TV station, on Sunday. Under the order, death row inmates’ sentences will be commuted to life imprisonment; those serving more than a 30-year sentence will be commuted to 30 years; those serving between a 20 and 30-year sentence will be commuted to 20 years; and those who are serving under a 20-year sentence will be commuted to one-fourth of their sentence respectively.