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BURMESE VERSION




New Report Slams Junta for Nargis ‘Crimes’


By NEIL LAWRENCE Friday, February 27, 2009

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In stark contrast to an earlier assessment of the Cyclone Nargis relief effort by Burma’s ruling junta and its international partners, a new report released today accuses the regime of widespread rights abuses that “may constitute crimes against humanity.”

The report, “After the Storm: Voices from the Delta,” is the first independent inquiry into the aftermath of Cyclone Nargis, which struck Burma on May 2-3 last year, killing as many as 140,000 people.

A new report says that the Burmese junta’s response to Cyclone Nargis could constitute crimes against humanity. (Photo: www.allmyanmar.com)
Unlike the Post-Nargis Joint Assessment (PONJA) report released last July by the Tripartite Core Group (TCG), consisting of the junta, the United Nations and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), the new report does not shy away from the issue of human rights abuses by the Burmese regime.

“We did not prompt this. We asked a number of questions about relief efforts and agencies, and what kept coming out was people trying to struggle and negotiate their communities’ relationships with the junta,” said Dr Chris Beyrer, director of the Center for Public Health and Human Rights at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, which released the report. 

The report is based on interviews with 90 private relief workers and cyclone survivors conducted between June and November 2008. The interviews were carried out by the Emergency Assistance Team—Burma (EAT), a social organization based on the Thai-Burmese border and staffed by community aid workers from cyclone-affected areas.

The interviews detail a pattern of abuses by the military authorities, including the misappropriation of relief supplies, forced labor and harassment and arrest of local aid workers.

“After one month, they came to the village, saw my supplies and started asking—they sent my information to Yangon [Rangoon] to investigate me. They were asking why there were so many supplies. They think it was anti-government. So I left; I don’t like prison,” recounted one relief worker who was interviewed for the report.

The authors of the report say that such abuses “may constitute crimes against humanity through the creation of conditions whereby the basic survival needs of victims cannot be adequately met,” in violation of Article 7(1)(k) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.

“These allegations, taken together, may amount to crimes against humanity and may need to be investigated,” said Beyrer, adding that the case could be referred to the UN Security Council for consideration.

The report also highlights the international relief effort’s failure to engage community-based groups, and calls for a more thorough assessment of the situation in the cyclone-stricken Irrawaddy delta, including the junta’s role in obstructing aid.

“There are some [international] groups working directly with community organizations, but they have to be very careful about how they work together. It is very risky. That is why we want the UN and Asean to tell the government to allow the community-based organizations to work freely to do their humanitarian work,” said Dr Cynthia Maung, who serves as the chairperson of EAT.

“We would also like to recommend that the UN or the international community do a more thorough assessment,” she added. “Unless we get a proper assessment or report, it may be very hard to continue working to improve the situation [in the cyclone-affected area].”

The report was released as Thai Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya, speaking at the annual Asean summit being held in the Thai resort town of Hua Hin, revealed that the Burmese regime was set to extend the TCG’s role in the delta.
 
It is unclear how the regional grouping, which has generally closed ranks in defense of the Burmese junta in the past, will respond to the report.

“We hope that there is a positive and constructive response, not a response of denial or obfuscation, but rather that people will say, all right, these kinds of practices must cease and desist,” said Beyrer.

“These kinds of allegations simply cannot be ignored. The people of the Irrawaddy delta deserve to have a reconstruction effort that’s free of rights abuses,” he added.



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myanmar Wrote:
28/02/2009
Yes, this is true because there were some donation projects with the name of Nargis victims, but the Burmese government used them for their own needs.

Myanmar Post and Telecommunications (MPT) got lot of donations from Chinese Companies (ZTE, ASB, Huawei) for Nargis victims. The companies’ members said that they donated telecom equipment to Irrawaddy delta, but the MPT minister planned to use it for other regions and corruption.

Within the ceremony for donations, the higher level officials of the Chinese embassy attended and they also got some mobile phones as gifts from the MPT minister.

Myint Thein Wrote:
28/02/2009
I think this kind of report is incredibly irresponsible, bordering on criminal. At a time when there is a desperate need for more funding for aid agencies in the delta, to come up with a report which ignores all the progress since June, is shameful. If the authors think their report will lead to the SPDC being hauled up to the ICC, they are living in fantasy-land. The real result will be less money for aid agencies and more misery for the poorest people in the delta.

Tom Tun Wrote:
28/02/2009
Any matter of human suffering and lost of lives is not acceptable, especially when it comes down to neglect or willingly pushing it to happen.

The UN also is an organization which always neglects people when it comes to the Southeast Asian region. I’d like to give an example: how about the Cambodian genocide? How many of Pol Pot’s war criminals reached the UN war crimes tribunal court? However, in a case such as former Yugoslavia, the UN acted by not wasting even a day. What is the UN policy toward an undeveloped country such Rwanda, Cambodia, Burma and other countries?

It is always good to voice out for unjust and unfair treatment for the weak side. I am afraid the UN will sweep Nargis crimes against humanity under the rug as usual, as it's down to a small unpopular country. It is a good thing to try. I support the idea.

KKK Wrote:
28/02/2009
If this is not a crime against humanity, what it is? Millions of Burmese are living in jeopardy. It seems to me no ones hears their voices or no ones cares about them. Hey World! What are you waiting for? Does it good great to you?

Zam Mang Wrote:
28/02/2009
The military has been committing countless crimes against humanity since 1962. However, this crime is too much to bear. Even gods may not forgive Than Shwe. He deserves to die for his crime.





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