The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom Public Hearing
"After the Saffron Revolution: Religion, Repression, and the U.S. Policy Options for Burma"
Rayburn House Office Building 2200
December 3, 2007, 2:30-4:30 PM
Testimony of Aung Din
Executive Director, U.S. Campaign for Burma
Mr. Chairman, Commissioners,
Thank you very much for holding this public hearing to discuss the situation in my country,
Please note that the Saffron Revolution is not an isolated event of
The military junta persists in crushing all opposition to its rule and prohibiting any freedom of assembly, association, expression, and movement as well as religious freedom. Currently, about two thousand political detainees remain behind bars, including the Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. The use of torture and other cruel, inhumane and degrading punishments, exploitation of prisoners as forced laborers and death in custody remains widespread.
Moreover, the military junta continues to target ethnic minorities through its "Four Cuts" policy, aimed at cutting off all supplies of food, funds, recruits and intelligence to ethnic resistance groups. Forced relocations, forced labor and all forms of abuses against the ethnic population are an essential part of the junta's systematic campaign to control ethnic areas in the country. One of these abuses is forcing ethnic populations; many of them are mostly devotees of Christianity and other religions, to convert to Buddhism and destroying Churches and other places of worship.
To date, over 3,200 villages in ethnic areas have been destroyed, resulting in the displacement of over 500,000 ethnic populations inside Burma, as well as the exodus of more than a million refugees to neighboring countries. In areas of armed conflict in eastern
According to the Thailand Burma Border Consortium, the military junta stations 273 battalions, with over 150,000 soldiers which is 30% of its total strength, in Eastern Burma alone, which is the home of Karen, Shan, Karenni, Mon and other ethnic groups. In 2007 alone, TBBC reported that about 76,000 ethnic populations were forced to leave their homes and at least 167 villages were destroyed by the military junta. These reports have been corroborated by high resolution commercial satellite imagery taken before and after the villages were destroyed. These images have been taken by the American Association for the Advancement of Science since late 2006. AAAS has obtained and analyzed high-resolution commercial satellite imagery covering about 2,000 square kilometers of Papun, Toungoo, and Dooplaya Districts in
Mr. Chairman, Commissioners,
As I mentioned earlier, the Saffron Revolution is just a part of an ongoing campaign of the people of
My particular recommendation for the United States Congress is to approve two legislations, Senate Resolution S. 2257, known as Burmese Democracy Promotion Act of 2007, introduced by Senator Biden and McConnell and House Resolution H. 3890, Block Burmese JADE (Junta's Anti-Democratic Efforts) Act of 2007, introduced by Congressmen Tom Lantos, as soon as possible. These resolutions will help strengthen the current
My recommendations to the US Administration are as follows.
(1) To implement sanctions, economic sanctions and targeted financial sanctions, effectively and to coordinate with Governments of the EU,
(2) I also would like to suggest the U.S. Government target more businessmen in
(3) We are seeing the policy shift among Governments of China,
Thank you,
Aung Din
Executive Director
U.S. Campaign for
1440 N Street, NW, Suite #A2
Tel: (202) 234 8022
Fax: (202) 234 8044
aungdin@uscampaignforburma.org
www.uscampaignforburma.org
0 comments:
Post a Comment