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Junta “eliminating” soldiers who fired on monks

An article in Asia News on 17th November, 2007, reports on the junta's continued propoganda campaign and the efforts they are taking to eliminate all evidence and witnesses of the September repression.

November 17, Asia News
Junta “eliminating” soldiers who fired on monks

The generals are trying to get rid of evidence and witnesses to the late
September repression should they be called to account some time in the
future. Meanwhile arrests continue as do pro-government demonstrations
organised by the military regime. Some ethnic Burmese are dressed up in
ethnic minorities clothing to show minorities’ support for the government
against the West. ASEAN only expresses support for UN initiative, refuses
to implement sanctions against the junta.

Repression in Myanmar is now turning against the army that carried it out.
Reliable sources in the country told AsiaNews that rumours are circulating
Mandalay and Yangon according to which the junta is physically
“eliminating” the soldiers that shot at monks and protesters in late
September in anti-regime demonstrations in order to get rid of evidence
and witnesses should they be called to account for ordering the violence.

In a brief announcement on state TV, the junta said that people involved
in the demonstrations caused by fuel price hikes are still being detained.
Out of 2,927 people arrested, 468 remain in prison. However, these numbers
refer only to people taken into custody on September 26 and 27 when
tension was at its peak. Since then the military has continued to arrest
opponents by using photos taken during the marches to identify people.
Unofficial estimates put the number of those in prison at over 6,000.

Along with arrests and torture, the military’s propaganda campaign
continues. By organising pro-regime rallies, the junta is trying to turn
the population against Western countries, which it holds responsible for
the crisis and the monk-led movement.

“The authorities are forcing every village to send 400 to 500 residents to
join these [pro-junta] rallies,” said some farmers from the area Sagayng
area, just north of Mandalay. “Anyone who tries to avoid taking part in
the march runs the risk of spending months in jail or paying stiff fines.
This happened yesterday to us, but we still won’t shout the slogans the
military imposed on us.”

Sometimes people are summoned in stadiums or public spaces at 5 am and
forced to wait until 8 am “when some officials arrive to read speeches
full of attacks against Europe and pro-democracy activists in order to
educate participants.”

During these rallies in the city of Monywa, some ethnic Burmese were
forced to wear clothes identifying them as members of local ethnic
minorities in order to show that these groups supported the government.

Many monks have found refuge in villages which are now surrounded by
soldiers days and night. “Some monks are wearing civilian clothes to avoid
visibility,” some residents in the Mandalay area said. “But they also wear
a yellow string as an arm band to show that they are not giving up their
role.”

The international community also continues to put pressure on the generals
to stop arrests, release prisoners and start talking to the opposition.
Japan, one of the junta's biggest aid donors, announced it was cutting off
US$ 4.7 million in funding. The European Union has also increased its
sanctions. And US President George W. Bush is threatening new measures
against the junta.

Thailand, where UN envoy Ibrahim Gambari began his new Asia tour, has
proposed a regional forum with China and India to push the Burmese
government to implement democratic reforms.

Yesterday in Malaysia Gambari only got “support” from the members of the
Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) for the UN Myanmar
mission.

Malaysia Foreign Minister Syed Hamid Albar said there would be no threat
of sanctions or suspension from ASEAN.

http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=10578#