Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Urge UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to Visit Burma and Make the Release of Political Prisoners His Top Priority

I received the mass email below this morning from the U.S. Campaign for Burma‘s Aung Din, Jeremy Woodrum, Jacqui Pilch, Jennifer Quigley, and Mike Haack. Please read it and do their urgent action–it only takes a few seconds, and it might actually do some good for the people of Burma.

    You might have already seen the articles on this in the Washington Post and New York Times.

    Over the past few weels, Burma’s military regime has sentenced over 100 of the country’s leading human rights activists to very long terms in prison. Most of those imprisoned are young, prominent human rights activists who participated in last year’s Saffron Revolution in Burma (during which hundreds of thousands of monks took to the streets calling for an end to dictatorship in Burma).

    Meanwhile, the military regime continues its attacks on ethnic minority civilians in eastern Burma, destroying 12 villages and driving 2,000 people from their homes in the past two weeks. The regime’s scorched-earth ethnic cleansing campaign has forced over 1 million people to flee in recent years, and an additional 1/2 million who struggle to survive as internally displaced persons

    We and others have been pressing governments around the world to take action. Already, Canada, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States have condemned the arrests. Two days ago, the European Union Foreign Ministers met and called for the release of all political prisoners.

    UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is due to visit Burma in December, but there are fears he may back out of the visit because of the difficulties in negotiating with the regime. These prison sentences make it all the more important that Ban Ki-moon goes ahead with his visit. There have been 37 visits to Burma by low-level UN envoys, but things have only got worse. We need the Secretary General’s personal engagement on Burma.

    Take action. Please send an email to the UN Secretary General urging him to visit Burma and make the release of political prisoners his top priority.

Sign the petition here.

Burma News (11.13.08)

[This post has been updated as of 1:50 p.m. EST on 11.13.08.]

Well, perhaps this post should actually be titled “Junta News”…

  • The United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Germany have all condemned the junta’s recent and harsh sentencing of several advocates for democracy.
  • Time Magazine reflects on the junta’s “insecurity.”
  • The San Francisco Chronicle reports on how “business ventures start with the military” in Burma.

  • Tibet News (11.13.08)

    Here are the current headlines about Tibet:

  • The Associated Press covers the meeting of Tibetan leaders in Dharamsala to discuss new approaches to China.
  • Reuters reports that Continental Minerals is “awaiting central government approval for a planned $520 million copper and gold mine in Tibet, which will utilize a new railway to ship ores to a smelter in inland China.”
  • The Australian reports on “Tibet’s looming eruption.”
  • Lastly, at Phayul, Phurbu Thinley offers “proof of Tibet’s independence” in the form of the Tibet-Mongolia Treaty of 1913. “The treaty begins with Tibet and Mongolia attesting to their having emerged from under Manchu domination and constituted themselves as independent states,” he writes.

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