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Lawyers Join Monks to Defy Myanmar’s ‘Forced Politics’

Lawyers in Myanmar t joined forces this week with Buddhist monks to demand national reconciliation and an end to human rights abuse.

The Nation

September 27, 2007

[This dispatch was posted by the Asian Human Rights Commission, based in Hong-Kong.]

The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. At a time when few journalists are reporting from inside Myanmar, this Hong Kong-based organization is a major conduit for information on the unfolding confrontation.

A group of lawyers in Burma have established a new union to introduce “genuine politics” to the country and defy what they called the regime’s “forced politics” as protests continued for a tenth day despite harsh warnings in the media and through loudspeakers on government vehicles.

In a preliminary statement, a copy of which was obtained by the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), the Lawyer’s Union of Burma said that for half a century the country had been repressed and impoverished by the army.

Burma was first brought under interim military rule in 1958. It has been under it continuously since 1962.

The lawyers called for the government to accept the people’s demands for reductions in commodity prices, the release of all political prisoners, and dialogue for national reconciliation.

“We strongly welcome the entry of the lawyers as a profession into this movement at such a critical time,” Basil Fernando, executive director of the AHRC said.

“We know of many lawyers in Burma who have struggled to maintain the dignity of the courts despite the lawlessness of their government and uphold the standards of their profession,” he said.

“It is not surprising that they would feel the need to lend their support to the ongoing protests there,” Fernando noted.

“We salute the lawyers that have formed this union and will do everything that we can to support them,” he concluded.

The Hong Kong-based regional group has in recent years concentrated its work on human rights in Burma through cases that speak to what it has described as the country’s “injustice system”.

Meanwhile, the AHRC received information on Wednesday that a prominent human rights lawyer, who has handled many cases concerning forced labour and land confiscation in Burma, was taken into custody on Tuesday.

U Aye Myint was arrested in Pegu, north of Rangoon, at 2pm. His whereabouts are currently unknown.

“Aye Myint was jailed in 2005 for almost a year after he helped farmers in a fight to get their land back from the government authorities,” Fernando said.

“The ILO [International Labour Organisation] did a great deal of work on his case then to see him released and we hope that despite the difficulties under the current conditions it will quickly try to gain details about his current circumstances and reasons for his arrest,” he said.

In Kale, Sagaing Division, four persons who had spoken at rallies on Monday were also reported to have been arrested in the early morning hours on Wednesday.

The four have been named as U Ba Min, an organiser for the National League for Democracy (NLD) who had also previously been incarcerated, Michael Win Kyaw, U Myint Thin and U Nyo Mya.

The AHRC has also received a copy of a letter signed by the abbot of an urban monastery in Rangoon calling on the head of the military regime to “restore the people’s power to its original owner”.

Saying that the country’s problems had remained unsolved for over 60 years due to corrupt national leaders, the abbot from South Okkalapa urged the army chief, Senior General Than Shwe, to hold talks and find a way out of the impasse.

“Throughout these 60 years, we have argued, quarrelled, blamed and slandered one another. The wastage of human resources is a sad loss. Year by year we sink further and further into the doing of bad rather than good,” U Thangara Linkara said.

The abbot advised that the general set up a body to give guarantees that he and his subordinates would not face reprisals if they surrender power voluntarily.

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