Saturday, March 13, 2010

No more statements ,Thank you ျပည္တြင္းေရး အေနအထားေပၚ ျပည္ မွကူညီေထာက္ပ့ံရန္ျပင္ဆင္ၾကေလာ့

လက္ရွိဗမာျပည္အေရးက ဆိုး၀ါးဖို ့ဘဲရွိပါတယ္။ျပည္သူေတြ အကုန္လံုး ေဒ၀ါလီခံဖို ့က လြဲရင္တျခားလမ္းမရွိပါဘူး။ အစစအရာအရာ ျပင္ဆင္ၾကဖို ့လိုပါလိမ့္မယ္ ။ ျပည္ပေရာက္ေနသူေတြ ထုတ္ျပန္ခ်က္ ေၾကျငာခ်က္ေတြ ရပ္ၾကပါေတာ့ ။ နအဖ က ဘုန္းၾကီးတေစၦထက္ဆိုးပါတယ္။

၂၀၀၇ ေရႊ၀ါေရာင္ အေရးအခင္းကိုသင္ခန္းစာ အျဖစ္ယူၾကပါ ။ ၂၀၀၇ အေရးအခင္းအခ်ိန္အတြင္းမွာ ျပည္ပက ေအာ္ေနတဲ ့သူေတြ ဘာမွ ျပည္တြင္းကို မေထာက္ပံ့ေပးခဲ့ၾကပါဘူး ထုတ္ျပန္ခ်က္ေတြဘဲ ထိုင္ထုတ္ ေနခဲ့ၾကတယ္။ ျပည္သူလူထုက သိပ္နာေနပါျပီ။ အေၾကာင္းေၾကာင္းေၾကာင့္ အေျပာင္းအလဲ ျဖစ္ခဲ့ရင္ ျပည္ပ ကဘယ္လိုပံ့ပိုးမယ္ဆိုတာ စုစည္းျပီးျပင္ဆင္ထားၾကဖို ့လိုပါလိမ္ ့မယ္။ ျပည္တြင္း အကူအညီေပးမယ့္ အဖြဲ ့အတြက္ ေခါင္းေဆာင္ေနရာ ထပ္လုေနရင္ ျပသနာရွိပါတယ္။တကယ္ေစတနာမွန္နဲ ့ ျပည္တြင္းကို ကူညီေပးေစခ်င္ပါတယ္ statement ထုတ္ေနတာနဲ ့မျပီးပါဘူး။ အန္တီစုေနရာကျဖစ္ျဖစ္ ေထာင္တြင္း ႏိုင္ငံေရး အက်ဥ္းသားေတြေနရာက တညေလာက္ေနရာယူေတြ းျပီး အိပ္ၾကည့္ၾကပါ။ ကိုယ္ခ်င္းစာေပးၾကပါ ၊ ျပည္ပက လူေတြ အက်ိဳးမဲ ့တိုက္ခိုက္တာေတြရပ္ၾကပါေတာ့လို ့ဆႏၵျပဳရင္း။

DTM

ဆက္ဖတ္မယ္္ဆိုရင္....

Friday, March 12, 2010

အထူးသတင္းႏွင့္ အထူးေၾကျငာခ်က္

ေလးစား အပ္ပါေသာ ရဟန္းရွင္လူ ေက်ာင္းသား တပ္မေတာ္ ျပည္သူ အေပါင္းတို႔ ခင္ဗ်ား…

ယခု အခ်ိန္အခါတြင္ ကြ်ႏ္ုပ္တို႔ ျမန္မာ ႏိုင္ငံေတာ္ႀကီးသည္ အဆိုး၀ါးဆံုး၊ အၾကပ္တည္းဆံုး၊ အခက္အခဲဆံုးႏွင့္ အျပင္းထန္ဆံုးေသာ ႏိုင္ငံေရး စိန္ေခၚမႈ တစ္ခုကို စတင္ လိုက္ပါၿပီ။ နအဖ စစ္မိစၦာေကာင္ သန္းေရႊ အုပ္စုသည္ လူထုေခါင္းေဆာင္ ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ကို ျမန္မာ့ ႏိုင္ငံေရးထဲမွ အၿပီးပိုင္ ဖယ္ထုတ္ရွင္းလင္းဖို႔ လုပ္ေဆာင္ လိုက္ရံုမက ၁၉၉၀ ျပည့္ႏွစ္တြင္ ျပည္သူ လူထု တစ္ရပ္လံုး တစ္ခဲနက္ မဲေပးေထာက္ခံခဲ့ေသာ အမ်ိဳးသား ဒီမိုကေရစီ အဖြဲ႔ခ်ဳပ္ကိုပါ အျပတ္ရွင္းဖို႔ အခ်က္ေပး ေခါင္းေလာင္း ထိုးလိုက္ၿပီ ျဖစ္သည္။

ထိုတြင္မက ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ႏွင့္ အမ်ိဳးသား ဒီမိုကေရစီ အဖြဲ႔ခ်ဳပ္ ေခါင္းေဆာင္မ်ား၊ ကိုမင္းကိုႏိုင္ႏွင့္ ၈၈ မ်ိဳးဆက္ ေက်ာင္းသား ေခါင္းေဆာင္မ်ားကို အျပတ္ရွင္းလင္းရန္ လုပ္ေဆာင္ ေတာ့မည္ဟု ၾကပ္ေျပး စစ္အထူး သတင္း ရပ္ကြက္မွ သိရွိရပါသည္။ သန္းေရႊ အုပ္စုသည္ အႀကံ ပက္စက္ရံုမက ကမၻာ့ အယုတ္မာဆံုး လူသား အျဖစ္ အာဏာ တည္ျမဲေရး အတြက္ ဘာမဆို လုပ္ေဆာင္၀ံ့သူ အျဖစ္ ထင္ရွားေက်ာ္ၾကားခဲ့သည္မွာ အထူး ေျပာစရာ မလိုေတာ့ေပ။ တိုင္းျပည္၏ ေသေရး ရွင္ေရးတစ္မွ် အေရးႀကီးေနေသာ ယခု အခ်ိန္အခါတြင္ ရဟန္းရွင္လူ ျပည္သူလူထု၏ စုေပါင္းညီညြတ္မႈ အားသည္သာ ကြ်ႏ္ုပ္တုိ႔ ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံ၏ တစ္ခုတည္းေသာ ထြက္ေပါက္ လမ္းေၾကာင္း ျဖစ္သည္ကို သေဘာေပါက္ဖို႔လိုအပ္ေနပါၿပီ။

ကြ်ႏ္ုပ္တုိ႔ ယံုၾကည္ကိုးစား အားထားရံုမွ်မက တစ္ကမၻာလံုးကပါ ေလးစား ဂုဏ္ယူရသည့္ သားေကာင္းရတနာ ဗိုလ္ခ်ဳပ္ေအာင္ဆန္း၏ သမီး ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ႏွင့္ အဖြဲ႔ခ်ဳပ္ ေခါင္းေဆာင္ႀကီးမ်ား၊ အႏွစ္(၂၀) လံုးလံုး ကိုယ္က်ိဳးစြန္႔ အနစ္နာခံကာ တိုင္းျပည္ အတြက္ ေပးဆပ္ခဲ့ၾကေသာ ၈၈ မ်ိဳးဆက္ ေက်ာင္းသား ေခါင္းေဆာင္ ကိုမင္းကိုႏိုင္ႏွင့္ ေက်ာင္းသား ေခါင္းေဆာင္ႀကီးမ်ား၏ အသက္ အႏၱရာယ္မွာ အစိုးရိမ္ရဆံုး အေျခအေနသို႔ ေရာက္ရွိေနၿပီျဖစ္သည္။

ျပည္သူ႔ ဘံုရန္သူ နအဖသည္ ၾကဴငုတ္စစ္ဆင္ေရး ဟု အမည္ေပးထားေသာ အျပတ္ရွင္းစနစ္ကို စတင္ အေကာင္အထည္ ေဖာ္ေဆာင္ ေနၿပီ ျဖစ္ပါသည္။ သုိ႔ပါ၍ ရဟန္းရွင္ လူျပည္သူ လူထုႏွင့္ မ်ိဳးခ်စ္ တပ္မေတာ္သား အားလံုး အနာဂတ္ ျမန္မာျပည္ သူရဲေကာင္းမ်ား လက္လြတ္ အဆံုးရႈံး မခံရေစေရး အတြက္ ကိုယ္ကိ်ဳးစြန္႔ အနစ္နာခံ၍ စုေပါင္းညီညြတ္စြာ နအဖ စစ္အာဏာရူး လူတစ္စုအား အျမစ္ပါ မက်န္ စုေပါင္း ေတာ္လွန္ၾကပါရန္ အထူး တိုက္တြန္း ႏိုးေဆာ္ လုိက္ပါသည္။ မိမိတို႔ ေသြးေသာက္ ေတာ္လွန္ေရး ေက်ာင္းသား ရဲေဘာ္မ်ား အေနျဖင့္ ရရာ လက္နက္ စြဲကိုင္ကာ ရသည့္နည္းျဖင့္ နအဖ စစ္အာဏာရူး လူတစ္စုအား အေသခံ တိုက္ပြဲ၀င္ ေတာ္လွန္ ေတာ့မည္ ျဖစ္ပါေၾကာင္း စစ္ေၾကျငာ သတိေပး အပ္ပါသည္။

ေသြးေသာက္ ေတာ္လွန္ေရး ေက်ာင္းသားရဲေဘာ္မ်ား
(ေအာက္ဗမာျပည္)

ဆက္ဖတ္မယ္္ဆိုရင္....

( ၂၂ )ႏွစ္ေျမာက္ ကိုဖုန္းေမာ္ႏွစ္ပတ္လည္ ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံ လူ ့အခြင့္အေရးေန ့ႏွင့္ တံတားနီႏွစ္ပတ္လည္


ဒီဇိုင္း..ပန္းခ်ီ ကိုမ်ိဳး

ဆက္ဖတ္မယ္္ဆိုရင္....

ျဗဟၼစိုရ္တရား လက္ကိုင္ထားမွ (ေက်ာ္သူ)



ဆက္ဖတ္မယ္္ဆိုရင္....

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

ငါေနတဲ ့ေနရာ (ကိုေကာင္းကင္ကို)

ငါေနတာ လင္းတလွည္ ့မွိန္တလွည္ ့ၾကယ္ျမိဳ. ေလး တျမိဳ ့မွာ
ငါေနတာ မီးလင္းေနရင္ ဘယ္လိုမွမအိပ္တတ္တဲ ့ဇီဇာေၾကာင္တဲ ့ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ
ငါေနတာ “ဧည့္သည္လာရင္ မၾကည္ျဖဴတဲ့အိမ္ရွင္မ” နဲ ့တူတဲ ့ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ
(ဧည္ ့စာရင္း တိုင္ရတယ္္ေလ)
ငါေနတာ တစ္နာရီေလာက္ ငရဲခံဖို ့အေရး ၁၀၀ က်ပ္္ေပးရတဲ ့ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ
ငါေနတာ သန္ ့႐ွင္းေစခ်င္လို ့မိုးစက္ေတြနဲ ့ေရခ်ိဳးေပးကာမွ တကိုယ္လံုးက အနာေတြစို႐ႊဲျပီး ပိုညစ္ပတ္သြားတဲ ့ ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ
ငါေနတာ ပေထြးကမဆင္လို ့ တေန ့တျခား စုတ္ျခာလာတဲ ့ “သူဆင္းရဲမ”ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ
ငါေနတာ ပေထြးကို႐ြံလို ့ပတ္ဝန္းက်င္က ဝိုင္းၾကဥ္ထားတဲ ့ “အထီးက်န္မ” ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ
ငါေနတာ နာတာ႐ွည္ႏိုင္ငံေရးေဝဒနာတေန ့တျခား ဆိုး႐ြားလာတဲ “့လူမမာမ” ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ။
ငါေနတာ မႏွစ္ကမွ လင္ဆိုးၾကီးနဲ ့ကြာရွင္းခြင္ ့ရလိုက္တဲ ့ “တခုလပ္မ” ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ (ပ်ဥ္းမနားေျပာင္းသြားျပီေလ)
ငါေနတာ ေနပူေနတာေတာင္ “ခေမာက္”ေဆာင္းၾကည္ ့ခြင္ ့မရခဲ့တဲ ့ျမိဳ ့ေလးမွာ

Rest of your post

ဆက္ဖတ္မယ္္ဆိုရင္....

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

အေကာင္းဆံုး ဓါတ္ပံုေရြးခ်ယ္ျခင္း (ပံု ၂)

[An undocumented immigrant boy from Myanmar collects plastic at a rubbish dump near Mae Sot late lasy month. — Reuters pic]
ျမန္မာေရြးေကာက္ပြဲေၾကာင့္ ဒုကၡသည္ပိုမိုမ်ားျပားလာႏိုင္ဖြယ္ရွိ။
Myanmar election could spark rise in refugees ၉ မတ္လ ၂၀၁၀ သတင္း

An undocumented immigrant boy from Myanmar collects plastic at a rubbish dump near Mae Sot late lasy month. — Reuters pic
MAE SOT, Thailand, Jan 7 — The rubbish dump outside the Thai town of Mae Sot steams with rancid rotting fish and other debris, a squalid haven for hundreds of refugees from Myanmar that aid groups say could swell in size this year.

Aid groups are bracing for a rise in refugees from military-ruled Myanmar into neighbouring Thailand and China ahead of its first parliamentary elections in two decades this year, potentially straining ties with its neighbours and worsening crowded refugee camps in Thailand.

Some who fled to Thailand are living in dire conditions. In one settlement, about 300 migrants who crossed illegally into Thailand have taken refuge next to mounds of garbage outside Mae Sot, about 5 km from the border.

Life amongst the rubbish beats what they had back home, they said. Some ethnic minorities have faced a military campaign marked by murder, forced labour, rape and the razing of villages.

“I want to stay here and save some money because I can keep what I earn and no one harasses me, even if the job is hard and dirty,” said Sen Sen, a 38-year-old ethnic Karen.

People run out of makeshift shacks and line up neatly whenever garbage trucks arrive, waiting to dig through the rubbish as it is unloaded in search of goods for recycling. Barefoot boys and girls sort through piles of trash, occasionally distracted by the broken toys and mud-caked dolls they uncover.

Sen Sen earns about 100 baht (RM10.19) a day selling plastic, which she said was enough to live on. In Myanmar she had to give almost all the money she managed to earn to military officers as “protection money” and taxes.

The Myanmar junta has long been accused of persecution of the country’s ethnic minorities, sparking a continuing exodus. Some 140,000 refugees live in official camps along the Thai-Myanmar border, according to the UN refugee agency.

An estimated 37,000 fled into China in August after government forces routed fighters loyal to a Chinese-speaking Kokang ethnic group, earning Myanmar’s generals a rare rebuke from China, a crucial ally and investor.

Thousands fled into Thailand in June when the army clashed with the Karen National Union (KNU), a rebel group that has been seeking independence in the eastern hills bordering Thailand for the past 60 years.

Aid workers say the number of refugees from the former Burma has slowed in recent months but the situation is delicate, with continued low-intensity fighting between KNU rebels and the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA), aligned with the military.

The fighting, they say, suggests little progress in resolving one of the world’s longest-running insurgencies, raising the prospect of more instability and more refugees. It also underscores the fragility of the government’s ceasefire agreements with more than a dozen armed ethnic groups.

“Up here there is fighting every week,” said David Eubank, a relief worker in Myanmar’s northern Karen State and director of the Free Burma Rangers, a Christian group that helps refugees inside Myanmar.

He said there were no large-scale offensives yet but that Myanmar’s military was re-supplying its camps.

Aung Din, executive director of the US Campaign for Burma, an exile group in close contact with Myanmar’s ethnic leaders, said forces loyal to the government were also building up supplies after deadly clashes last month.

“The regime’s troops in Karen State are gathering food and other supplies,” he said.

According to his sources, KNU troops ambushed a regime battalion on Dec 16, killing a tactical commander and 14 solders and wounding 17. This could not be independently verified.

Three days later, two government soldiers were killed and four wounded in clashes in a rebel-held area controlled by the KNU’s sixth brigade.

Myanmar is to hold its first parliamentary election in two decades this year but critics already dismiss it as a ploy to legitimise and extend almost 50 years of military rule.

The regime wants ethnic groups to take part, and their support would help the junta claim the country was fully behind its elections. Critics also say the regime is trying to forcibly recruit rebel fighters for an army-run border patrol force.

They say Myanmar’s army is seeking to neutralise the Karen and other ethnic minorities, in part to seize rich natural resources for logging and mining, a crucial revenue source for the impoverished country, Southeast Asia’s second largest.

Many of the ethnic groups, including predominantly Christian Karens, do not trust the military and its ethnic Burman leaders who they have long resented and feel they have nothing to gain by taking part in the electoral process.

If they disarm and surrender hard-won autonomy, they could lose control over lucrative trade in natural resources and, in some cases, in opium and methamphetamines.

“The situation at the borders is expected to get worse as pressure will be on the ceasefire groups to transform before elections,” said Sally Thompson, deputy director of Thailand Burma Border Consortium, an aid agency that works at Thai government-run refugee camps.

“With the deadline looming for establishing border guard forces, we expect to see an increase in new arrivals of refugees.”

Tens of thousands of refugees from Myanmar have been resettled in third countries in recent years.

About two to three million migrants from Myanmar live scattered across Thailand, many working illegally in low-paid jobs. Many may qualify for refugee status, aid groups said.

Some are simply trying to escape grinding poverty.

“Things are bad there. They would rather live in Thailand on a rubbish dump than return,” said Ashin Sopaka, a monk who raises money to help migrants at the border. “Sound sleep here, but not in Burma.” — Reuters

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ဆက္ဖတ္မယ္္ဆိုရင္....

အေကာင္းဆံုး ဓါတ္ပံုေရြးခ်ယ္ျခင္း ( ပံု ၁ )

REFUGEE: A Karen boy looks through bamboo at Tham Hin refugee camp in Ratchaburi province, Thailand. Over half a million refugees fleeing military violence in Myanmar are creating a humanitarian disaster on Thailand's borders. (Pornchai Kittiwongsakul/AFP/Getty Images)

ဆက္ဖတ္မယ္္ဆိုရင္....

UN cry about terrorist Than Shwe



U.N. chief told Myanmar supremo of worries about vote
Louis Charbonneau
UNITED NATIONS
Mon Mar 8, 2010 1:43pm EST
Myanmar's Chairman of the State Peace and Development Council, Senior General Than Shwe, wipes his head as an aide fans him in the museum attached to the Buddhist Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic, in Kandy, November 13, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Andrew Caballero-Reynolds


Myanmar's Chairman of the State Peace and Development Council, Senior General Than Shwe, wipes his head as an aide fans him in the museum attached to the Buddhist Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic, in Kandy, November 13, 2009 file photo.

Credit: Reuters/Andrew Caballero-Reynolds

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Monday he sent a letter to Myanmar's junta chief to voice concern about the credibility of this year's nationwide election, the country's first in 20 years.

World

Ban said he wrote to Senior General Than Shwe 10 days ago "expressing my concern about this lack of progress" on democratic reforms and emphasizing the importance of ensuring that this year's vote is "most credible, inclusive and transparent."

Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, has long been the focus of global pressure for detaining pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi. Human rights groups say there are more than 2,000 political prisoners in Myanmar, but the military junta says those held are common criminals.

Myanmar's rulers have also been accused of persecuting the country's ethnic minorities, sparking a continuing exodus. Some 140,000 refugees live in camps along the Thai-Myanmar border, according to a U.N. refugee agency.

Ban urged the junta to empty the country's jails of political dissidents so they can take part in a nationwide election planned for this year.

"All the political prisoners, including Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, (should be) released as soon as possible, so that all of them can participate," he told reporters in New York. "That will make the election an inclusive and credible one."

DOUBTS ABOUT ELECTION

The election, a date for which has yet to be revealed, has been widely derided as an attempt by the junta to make the country appear democratic, with the military pulling the strings behind a civilian-fronted government.

The secretary-general was asked about official Myanmar news reports that the southeast Asia country had finally adopted a long-awaited election law. Ban said only that he "took note" of the announcement and was seeking details.

"Without participation of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and all key political prisoners this election will not be an inclusive one," Ban said.

Myanmar's Supreme Court last month rejected an appeal by pro-democracy leader Suu Kyi against her house arrest, a ruling that U.N. officials said privately only cast further doubt on the legitimacy of the planned election.

Suu Kyi, detained for 15 of the past 21 years, was sentenced to a further 18 months of house arrest in August 2009 for allowing an uninvited American to stay in her lakeside home after he swam over to see her.

Ban said at the time that he was "disappointed" that the appeal of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate had been rejected.

Suu Kyi won the country's last election in 1990, but the junta leaders ignored the results.

Last week a group of Nobel Peace Prize winners and rights campaigners said they were urging the U.N. chief to push for Myanmar's leaders to be referred to the International Criminal Court in The Hague for crimes against humanity.

Ban cannot make such a referral himself. That would have to be done by the U.N. Security Council, a body that diplomats say has been unable to take a strong stance on Myanmar because China, a veto-wielding permanent member, is determined to avoid damaging its lucrative commercial ties with its neighbor.

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ပုေထြး ကမေကၽြးႏိုင္ေတာ့ မ၀ေရစာ တတ္ႏိုင္သမွ် ေစတနာနဲ ့ ေပးကမ္းသမွ် ျဖင့္ အသက္ရွင္ေနရေသာ ျမန္မာျပည္သူမ်ား

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