Monday, April 27, 2009

Nsam myu 5 a lam Nang gara hku chye na lu a ta?


yellow,
Black,
white,
Red,
Green,


Message by Dr.Wnni ZanHta 25/04/2009
hugawng@gmail.com 
chyeju hte sanglang dan rit,hugawng a blog aw bai post galaw dat na nngai

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Ye mase hta nga

Hugawng mung mungkan a sut masa hkrat nga ai ten hta ndi nda rai jut hkan she matsut hkawm nga ra mat ang sai.Blog ten manman pyi nlu ka mat sai.
hugawng a manang ni gaw lani hte lani mai gan kaba de lahkam mat wa,nkau myi gaw buga de hting nut mat wa.nkau myi gaw ngai 
hugawng zawn ndinda rai gumrawt hkawm nga rai nga ang sai.hugawng maigan ga nga hkawm mat ai 10ning jan mat sai.Daini 
ten du hkra madi madun na myi hpa nnga.amyu ningli matut ya ai Karai wa jaw ya ai shadang sha ngai lu ai hta jan nna hpa myi nnga ai hku re.
moi hpakan mawga e gaw ngai zawn re ni gaw Mawchya re mat sai.Ya ngai hugawng mung maigan mawchya rai ang sai.ngai hugawng zawn re manang 
ni mung naw nga na nhten?Nan hte gaw hpawa myi galaw nga myit ta?ngai hugawng gaw Ya ten mungkan sut masa a majaw Myeza gasum pum hkan na Ye mase nlung hta hkawm ai ten rai nga nngai law.

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Saturday, April 11, 2009

Hugawng a manang wa hting gaw hte nawng USA de htawt sit sai lam shiga.


Saara GUM SAN has sent you a message 

An Nu Wa ni karai kasang a laksan Chyeju hte sha USA de march 20,hta du shang lu saga ai.
001 972 533 5732 kaw mai matut ai.

To reply to this message, click here: http://wpzupra.ning.com/profiles/message/listInbox
sara Gumsan gaw malaysia kaw shaning na na nga nna ya na zawn USA mungdan de tsinyam masat lekmat hte rau hkawm sa lu ai re.
sara Gumsan Malaysia mung dan hta e naw nga yang,myusha lam,Makam Masham lam MKBC hta e mung hpung tau sara hku nna shawng daw de ap nawng lai wa sai re.Wunjat Kachin unity ngu ai myusha hpaji shalat group hta e mung ahkyak ai shara myihta ap nawng lai wa sai re.Malaysia mungdan dunga ai ten htawng mung 2lang rawng ga sai lam chye lu ai,Ram ma ni hpe tang du hkra lam woi awn lai wa sai sara langai mung re.bai nna ya USA sa na mahka du hkra shi jan mai kawng buga hpung kaw na ram ma ni hpe zin lum let (JANMAIKAWNG CENTER) ngu nna setarpark kaw e hpaw ninghtan shalat da ya sai lam chye lu ai.

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Friday, April 10, 2009

10+1 things about Kachin ( by http://pulitzercenter.typepad.com/)


Tim Patterson and Ryan Libre ,ndai yan ka ai Kachin a lam hti yu ga.

In the interest of clarity, here are 11 key points that will help a general audience make sense of the drama unfolding in the Himalayan foothills of northern Myanmar

1.  The Kachins are a group of six tribes.

 Each of the six tribes collectively known as ‘Kachin’ has their own language, but they share a common origin myth and many cultural traditions. 

Foreign influence on the part of Christian missionaries and British officials, along with the continued threat posed by the Burmese military, helped unify the Kachins as a single nation. 

These days most Kachins can understand Jinghpaw, the language of the most populous Kachin tribe, in addition to their own tribal language and Burmese. 

 The word ‘Kachin’ is actually a term used by ethnic Shan and Burmese; Kachins use the term “Wunpawng”. 

2.  Blame the British. 

Like many ethnic conflicts worldwide, the Kachin struggle for freedom has its roots in the collapse of the British Empire. 

Historically, the Burmese kings never controlled what is now Kachin state.  After the British Empire collapsed, the new country of Burma included lands, like Kachin, that were outside the historic range of Burmese control.  

The Kachins agreed to join the new federation of Burma by signing the Panlong agreement in 1947, which promised them autonomy and the option to secede from the Burmese federation after ten years.  After the military seized power in Burma, however, the provisions of the Panlong agreement went out the window and the guerrilla war began. 

3.  Kachin state is rich in natural resources. 

Kachin state is lightly populated, but rich in natural resources, which include timber, gold and the world’s only significant deposits of high quality jade.  Most of these resources are exported to China, which is the biggest provider of arms to the Myanmar military. 

Hydropower is another valuable resource in Kachin state.  Several dams are under construction near the headwaters of the Irrawaddy River.  The electricity from these dams will go to China, with the Myanmar military reaping the profits.  

4.  The Kachin struggle is separate from Burmese opposition to the military government.

Kachins see their freedom struggle as separate from political opposition on the part of the ethnic Burmese majority.  Even if a democratically elected government were to replace the junta, the Kachins doubt any Burmese government would respect their cultural and political autonomy.  

While most observers focus on the Burmese opposition, embodied by Aung San Suu Kyi, the struggles of ethnic minorities receive less attention.  The tacit assumption that a change of power in Burma would lead to the resolution of ethnic conflicts seems overly optimistic.

5.  The 1994 ceasefire did not solve the conflict. 

The ceasefire stopped a bloody and brutal conflict, but there has been no attempt at genuine reconciliation.  Effectively, the war is on pause, and most Kachins expect another outbreak of fighting in the near future. 

There is still an impasse between the Kachin demand for autonomy and the Burmese position that Kachin is an integral part of Myanmar subject to the complete control of the central government.  

“We will never surrender,” several Kachins told me.  “We will never give up our arms.”

6.  The Burmese military government controls most of Kachin state. 

Trying to break down who controls what in Kachin state is almost impossible, as the power dynamic is constantly shifting and depends on personal relationships and negotiations between various “big men” in both the military government and the Kachin Independence Organization.

The territory under exclusive KIO control is quite small, limited to a few pockets of land along the Chinese border.  However, the KIO is influential throughout Kachin state, and KIO officers claim almost every family in Kachin state has some tie to the KIO.  

Neither side is shooting at each other these days, but coexistence is tense and the balance of power is never cut and dry.

7.  The Kachins were important American allies in World War II.  

Kachin rangers fought bravely alongside American paratroopers against the Japanese in World War II.  The jungles of Kachin were one of the frontlines of the conflict, and while Burmese accepted Japanese occupation, the Kachins never surrendered.

Even after the British withdrew to India, the Kachins raised the Union Jack in the northern town of Putao.  

The infamous Stillwell Road, a military transport route linking India and China that crossed Kachin state, could not have been built without support from Kachin rangers who provided security for the road construction teams. 

To this day, Kachins speak proudly of their service in World War II and hope their old allies the Americans will return to help them. 

8.  The Kachins are predominantly Christian.

Few Christian missionaries have been as successful as Dr. Hansen, a Swedish-American whose work in Kachin resulted in the conversion of almost the entire population to Christianity.  

Most Kachins are Baptist, although there are also some Catholics and Anglicans.  Christianity helps bind the Kachin nation together and the Church provides social services to the community.   

Although the Church is not actively engaged in politics, many pastors support the independence movement and use parables to organize and motivate their congregations.    

9.  The Kachin Organization is committed to opium eradication.

The Kachins have a reputation as active participants in opium production.  The most revered leader of the KIO, a Baptist headmaster named Brang Seng, was once denied a visa to the United States because of his supposed involvement in the opium trade.  

Although some opium is grown in Kachin, most of it is in areas controlled by the Burmese military.  The Kachins are concerned about drug abuse among their youth, and have made an enormous effort to make Kachin an “opium free state”.

“The KIO are one group that is clearly sincere about eradicating drug production,” says David Mathieson of Human Rights Watch.  “The international community has to recognize the good intentions of the KIO.”

10.  The role of the international community is vital. 

Without active participation by the international community, the conflict in Kachin will not be resolved anytime soon. 

In particular, support for the Myanmar government on the part of China and the ASEAN member nations makes it very difficult for the Kachins to gain traction in their quest for autonomy.  

11.  The elections scheduled for 2010 could spark a new episode of armed conflict. 

The Burmese military has scheduled elections for 2010 that no one expects will be free or fair.  Many Kachins expect the elections will lead to a renewed outbreak of war, because the military will probably use the (fraudulent) results to justify more complete control over Kachin state.  

In particular, the Kachin youth expect more fighting, while the older generation and those who have gotten rich since the ceasefire are more cautious.

“My generation thinks there will be a war,” said a young cadet at the Kachin military academy.  “We don’t know what the leadership will decide.  We will follow their orders.” 

Click here to learn more about this reporting project!

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Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Hukawng bu ni nambat langai lang, htunghking manau nau

http://www.kachinnews.com/kachin ndai kaw na shiga re.

Ndai manau poi hta, labau shang, manau wang, manau nta hte bilat ga hte ngang ngang kang kang galaw ai Manau Shadung hpe mung jun da lu sai re.

Lai wa sai, Munghpawm Myen mung shanglawt n lu shi ai shawng de gaw, Hukawng Pa hpe Jinghpaw mungdu 12 ni kawn garan uphkang sha wa sai re.  Raitim, Myen mung shanglawt lu ai 1948 ning January 4 ya a hpang, 1961-1994 lapran Myen hte KIO/A lapran byin ai Jinghpaw mungdaw na majan pa kaba ni hta, Hukawng Pa mung langai rai nga ai.

2006 ning hta,  Hukawng Pa na lamuga eka sen 2 jan hpe Yangon na Myen hpagala U Htay Myint ningbaw ai Yuzana Company gaw Myen hpyen asuya kawn mari la wa sai lam ntsa, jauman buga masha ni gaw ya ten du hkra n ra sharawng pawt nga ai lam, KNG kawn sagawn chye lu ai.

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