Wednesday, November 14, 2007


Burmese protesters residing in Japan hold placards during a march demanding for
more action from the international community against their country's military junta
at Tokyo on November 11. [Photo: Reuters]

Burma Continues Arrests of Activists
By The Associated Press November 14, 2007

Burma's military junta arrested three more activists Wednesday, witnesses said, surging ahead with a crackdown even as it hosted a UN human rights investigator and insisted that all arrests had stopped.
The latest to be nabbed were at least three people handing out anti-regime pamphlets at the busy Thiri Mingalar fruit and vegetable market in Rangoon, shoppers and other witnesses said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they feared reprisals from the government.
"I saw at least three young men in white shirts being arrested by market security officials,'' said one of the witnesses, a market worker. The leaflets included a statement from the United Nations and one saying that forcing people to take part in pro-junta rallies violated the Geneva Conventions.
The incident followed earlier arrests of two prominent dissidents. One came Tuesday as UN human rights envoy Paulo Sergio Pinheiro met with Cabinet ministers in the junta's remote, jungle capital Naypyidaw.
Pinheiro's five-day visit is part of an investigation into widespread allegations of human rights abuses since the regime's violent crackdown on pro-democracy protests in September. He was "given assurances'' by the junta that he would be able to interview detainees before leaving, the UN said in a statement.
Pinheiro was to confer with the government's foreign and labor ministers before returning to Rangoon on Thursday.
At a UN Security Council meeting Tuesday, the United States and other Western countries deplored the arrests of the two dissidents, saying they raised doubts about the ruling junta's sincerity in moving toward democracy and cooperating with the United Nations.
Su Su Nway, a prominent female activist who has been on the run for more than two months, was arrested Tuesday morning in Rangoon as she tried to place a leaflet near a hotel where Pinheiro was staying, exiled Burmese dissidents in Thailand said.
U Gambira, a Buddhist monk who helped spearhead the pro-democracy demonstrations in Rangoon was arrested several days ago, said Stanley Aung of the Thailand-based dissident group National League for Democracy-Liberated Area.
U Gambira, also known as U Gambiya, was a leader of the All-Burma Monks alliance, a group established to support pro-democracy protests after small demonstrations began in August.
The junta had placed him on a wanted list, announcing on state television in early October that he was one of four monks it was hunting down for leading the protests.
Monks inspired and led the movement until it was crushed September 26-27. The authorities began their crackdown by raiding several monasteries in Rangoon in the middle of the night and hauling monks away.
The Thailand-based Assistance Association for Political Prisoners urged Pinheiro to try to meet with U Gambira in prison.
"I am very worried about U Gambira,'' Bo Kyi, the head of the association said in an e-mail to The Associated Press."I fear he will be tortured.''
Other dissident groups also reported the monk's arrest, though details differed. Some said he was arrested November 4, while others said November 10.
Addressing the UN Security Council, Burma's Ambassador Kyaw Tint Swe insisted Tuesday there ``had been no further arrests in connection with the demonstrations.'' He made no mention of Su Su Nway or U Gambira.
The government acknowledged detaining almost 3,000 people but says it has released most of them. Most of the prominent political activists, however, remain in custody.

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