Showing posts with label Media GNS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media GNS. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Motion by Unelected Members of Parliament (aka) Representative of Occupation Force


1) Burma army remains to be an occupation force in Kachin since it lacks public mandate or representation of Kachin people. Not a single Kachin Officer or Kachin serviceman is in Tatmadaw's Northern Command (excluding drug-running militia forces) should be clear testament that it is an ethnocentric monolithic armed force run by one ethnic and a singular religious group since 1962.
2) There is only one-side to this conflict. Since June 9th, 2011; war only erupted in response to military attacks/provocations by Burma Army. So was in Danai, last month or Kasung, last week.
3) Burma Army which sold Myitsone Mega-Hydropower Dam (size of Singapore) constructed on the Irrawaddy river that is depended by major Burmese cities and communities to a foreign government state-owned entity is truest breach of national sovereignty.
4) Granting National ID to illegal foreign nationals in Mandalay, Kachin, and Northern Shan is a threat to national security.
5) Hpakant is dummy-proof example of Burma Army's belligerence stance on environmental issue. Nearly all of jade mines in Hpakant are operated by the Army's very own UMEHL, army-partnered enterprises, or ran by Army families and their cronies. Few native businessmen who run jade mines are either forced to partner with the army personnels or concede their lucrative mining lots to army surrogates.
6) As promised during founding of this Union, Kachin army has no right to be in Yangon, Mandalay, or Naypyidaw; but we have every right to be in our native land. It's our home and indigenous right.
7) If Tatmadaw deem itself to be representative of all people, strip the top 10 posts, all Burmans/Buddhists, and replace them with major ethnic nationalities and allow each ethnic to take rotational leadership based upon merit.
8)Parliment should pass a bill to force current and former army generals to reveal their domestic and foreign holdings and exchange for amnesty in return of stolen national wealth. The country may witness drastic uptick in GDP.
9) If Burma Army accuses ethnic armed organizations of committing crimes, they should invite ICC or UN investigators, and trial any perpetrator of war crimes from both sides of the conflict. Would they welcome it?
10) If Burma Army is dearly keen on public welfare, security, and properties; they should turn-in all woefully seized or confiscated land and town-down properties to farmers and citizen owners. This phenomenon has left many Burmese homeless.

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Saturday, May 20, 2017

1870 Frontier Area Map. Jinghpaw/Singhpo Tribe Territory

US Department of Geology.Map

1870 ning Frontier Area Map. Jinghpaw/Singhpo Tribe Territory ginra: Lapee Singhpo (Lahpai Ga), Kakhyen (Gahkyen Ga), Mauroo (Lhao Vo), Khamti Sam, Kadoo. 
Ndai labau hpe shaprai mayu nna masu chyu masu shakut ai ni hpe ja ja ninghkap ra ai gaw anhte amyu sha ni lit re. 
Tara ai lam hta ja ja tsap nna.
Mung up ai ni a ga madat mara ra ai nga tim, n-tara ai Ekutu Hkau Hkam ni kaw na shalawt ai Karai re hpe mung adum nga ga.

Myen Dap gaw Shanglawt hpe n-tara ai hpung masat mayu ai. 
Kachin ni hpe minority hku nna masat mayu ai ngu gaw ndai labau ni hpe jasan kau mayu nna re. 
Teng man ai hku dara hkat yang sum wa na hpe chye majaw,
 lu malu ladat rau anhte amyu sha ni a ginra, ginru ginsa labau ni hpe shaprai shakut nga ai re.
Teng Man ai labau hpe nteng man ai ladat rau gasat nga ai hpe asum n-hkam ga.
By: Gum San Nsang ( FB post )

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Friday, November 25, 2016

Many who are eager what President-elect Trump's policy with relation to Burma.

1 min ·

Here's one of Trump-Pence stand when it comes to 2012 US-Burma normalization straight from their campaign page:
The Daily Beast Reported On Major Corporate Donors To The Clinton Foundation That Successfully Lobbied The Clinton State Department To Look Past Human Rights Abuses And Open Burma Up To U.S. Businesses.
In May 2012 Clinton Lifted The Investment Ban In Burma For American Businesses. “On May 17, 2012, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made a quietly consequential move: She announced that American businesses would soon be able to invest in Burma.” (Betsy Woodruff, “Hillary Clinton ‘Went To Bat’ For Chevron,” The Daily Beast, 10/6/16)
“More Than Two Dozen Corporations Who Donated” To The Clinton Foundation “Have Moved To Invest In Burma Since The Investment Ban Was Lifted.” “The Business and Human Rights Resource Centre tracks foreign investment in Myanmar. The Daily Beast cross-referenced their list with Clinton Foundation donors and found that more than two dozen corporations who donated to the foundation have moved to invest in Burma since the investment ban was lifted.” (Betsy Woodruff, “Hillary Clinton ‘Went To Bat’ For Chevron,” The Daily Beast, 10/6/16)
“Many Of Those Corporations Lobbied The State Department During Clinton’s Tenure There” To Lift The Burma Sanctions. “And many of those corporations lobbied the State Department during Clinton’s tenure there, and many are board members of the National Foreign Trade Council, whose project USA*Engage advocated energetically for the roll-back of American sanctions on Burma.” (Betsy Woodruff, “Hillary Clinton ‘Went To Bat’ For Chevron,” The Daily Beast, 10/6/16)

Donald J. Trump is the very definition of the American success story, continually setting the standards of excellence in business, real estate and entertainment. Show support for his presidential campaign here.
WWW.DONALDJTRUMP.COM



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Saturday, November 5, 2016

Burma claims to be a democracy but lacks freedom of speech

GSN
This is what we get for subscription to tutelary democracy of 2008, the greatest enigma of Burmese politic. I could be in jail for majority of my posts on my Facebook if I were in Burma, but I shall indulge as my liberty permits.
Burma claims to be a democracy but lacks freedom of speech. It brags for its freedom of press yet murdered journalist like Ko Par Ji and now fired Myanmar Times' Ms. Fiona MacGregor by using executive power. It requests the global community for funds to effectuate Nationwide peace efforts, but barred some groups from entering. Ceasefire Agreements were signed but shortly accompanied by military onslaught. It holds Nationally televised events in the moniker of Federalism but ignores the very founding document of Burmese Union, Pang Long Agreement. It showcases its diversity yet inter-marriage and inter-faith laws were passed to protect the purity of 88% of population's race and religion.
Demands Ethnic Armed organizations to abandon arms during democratic era, yet its Tatmadaw cannot abandon its trigger-happy habit of using violence and state-sponsor terror to acclimate into new political paradigm. Unlike some of my friends, I see threat against Mr. Myo Yan Naung Thein as a threat to the future of the country. Like many NLD supporters, I grew up aspiring DASSK, I remember the very day she came into our quarter in Myitkyina. As a seven year-old, I ran close to half a mile behind her white Toyota Corolla SE on April 27th, 1989 and listened intently from star-apple tree to campaign speech at Duwa Zau Awng's residence. I attended nearly all of her Saturday rallies at 54 University Ave in 1996. The only difference between them and us is that their struggle ends on 54 University Ave, but our destination carries onto full realization of Pang Long, genuine Federalism. When once asked after her release, DASSK too couldn't denounce the armed struggle of her comrades at ABSDF; likewise, we are impossible to denounce our own right to defend against any occupation forces. When British forces came to Kachin Hills in 1892, I do not recall any Burmese forces defending Kachin Hills like Sadung and Sumprabum.
Some discredit me for writing these while I live thousands miles away, but I could also say how could a person from the wealthiest hamlet of Rangoon understands nearly 70 years of misery we face in ethnic states? I can attest to the fact that many of my friends still can't deal with the fact that their army still torches civilian homes, uses rape as weapon of war, recruits child soldiers for the frontlines, and uses narco trade for state-building apparatus. One has to wonder how could the army with ethnic composition of Officer corps over 60% in the 50s are down to nearly 0% in 2016?
There are over 140,000 Kachins and Shans in makeshift camps with close to 0 aid from the govt, and the army uses all its power to stop international aids from crossing over to border area IDP camps.
Before emancipation, colored people were considered 3/5th of a person; today, Burmese civilians aren't too different either: our vote still counts as 3/4th in a parliament which the army controls 25% of all the Union's and States' seats.
I thank activists who helped to change our world, people who faced censure of their colleagues to advanced the lives of many. Without them, our mothers and sisters would still not be able to vote, and we would still be denied of basic rights. Now, if NLD insider like Mr. Myo Yan Naung Thein could be arrested, just can't fathom how our life could be for criticizing Burma army for its crimes.

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Tuesday, October 18, 2016

BURMA ARMY ON WARPATH

GSN
Bang bang here. . . Bang Bang there. . . I feel like Bang bang guys are taking back the country.
52 millions are ready but 25% guys aren't ready for the 21st Century Pang Long's result.
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BURMA ARMY ON WARPATH: Why Aung San Suu Kyi is unable to deliver?
Posted By: Sai Wansaion: October 11, 2016In: OpinionsNo Comments Print Email
Sai Wan SaiOn the heels of the massive anti-war demonstration in Myitkyina, involving thousands of demonstrators, United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC) issued a seven point statement on 8 October, condemning the Burma Army or the military of its offensives on the Ethnic Armed Organization (EAOs) using various pretext, which could derail the peace process and have already devastated the livelihood of the ethnic population on a massive scale.
Simultaneously, the Kachin Independence Organization/Army (KIO/KIA) also issued a statement stressing that the outcomes stemming from the offensives on the EAOs and ethnic states would be solely the responsibility of the military.
The military has been on its warpath, opening war fronts in Kachin, Shan and Karen States, more intensively in the aftermath of the Aung San Suu Kyi initiated 21st Century Panglong Conference (21CPC), also known as Union Peace Conference (UPC), which was held from 31 August to 3 September. The second conference of its kind is scheduled to be held within six months, earmarked for the coming February.
Of the three military fronts opened by the Burma Army, the one in Kachin State seems to be the fiercest, employing thousands of troopers, combined with air-strikes, in what amount to be the operation to overrun the KIA garrisons and outposts.
According to the Kachin, the strategy seems to be to drive a wedge between between the different KIA Brigades that protect the rebel headquarters in Laiza, while in western Kachin State, the Burma Army has focused its forces on the mining town of Hpakant, where the Kachin rebels have their main source of revenue through jade-mining and trading.
The cardinal and fundamental question to be asked here is why is the peace process situation deteriorating instead of improving, right after the grand opening of ambitious 21CPC, under the directive of democracy icon Suu Kyi?
Many, who are quite well-informed, are at a loss to find a reasonable answer to this critical question, needless to say for those with just a faint idea of how Burmese politics really works. But before going further, let us first look at the current prevailing situation, in order to make a better assessment.
Offensive wars in ethnic states
Generally speaking, a reasonable approach to conduct peace process would be to first stop shooting, as without peaceful atmosphere or at least absence of armed conflict, it is impossible to hold all-inclusive negotiations that would lead to further consolidation of nationwide ceasefire and eventual political settlement, that would pave way for a lasting-peace. Instead, against this accepted concept, exactly the contrary scenario has been unfolding in Burma, as the military is not committed to the fair process of negotiation, but intentionally unleashing military offensives to pressure and cow the EAOs into accepting its terms or preconceived ideas of “surrendered peace” and not a compromised one that is central to every conflict resolution undertaking.
Kachin State
The on and off armed engagement between the KIA and Burma Army has been going on since 2011, when the ceasefire agreement of seventeen years broke down.
According to Kachin sources, on 23 August the Burma Army raided and seized the KIA held Nhkram Bum Post. But on 26 and 27 August, the KIA retook Nhkram Bum Post and since that date onward there has been daily fighting.
The military started its intentional attacks on KIA position around Laiza headquarters on 16 August. In its offensives not only infantry troops, counting in thousands, were used but also air-strikes were employed, beginning 23 September. Recently, on 7 October, KIA outpost of Gidon and Nhkram were repeatedly strafed by four jet fighters in rotation.
Lamai Gum Ja of Peace Creation Group (PCG) said: “The government (military) started strafing (KIA positions) using four jet fighters this morning at 9:07 hours. It is known to be already the sixth time. Now besides air-strikes, ground forces are also used in the ensuing armed engagement, with twenty battalions involving some two to three thousands troopers.”
The KIO information officer Lt-Col Naw Bu also said: “We can confirm that [the Burma Army] attacked with four jet fighters for about an hour from 8 am. I have not yet received information about the situation on the ground, so I have no comment about that.”
On the same day, in Mansi township, south of Kachin State and along Hpakant-Mokaung road, battles have reportedly occurred between the KIA and Burma Army.
Furthermore, on 1 October, the Burma Army shelled a Kachin village in northern Shan State, killing a two-year-old infant and injuring two children, 5 and 6 years old, who were taken to a hospital in nearby China, according to Kachin activist Khon Ja.
At this writing the Burma Army’s bombardment, air-strikes and ground troops attacks on KIA positions are still in progress.
Shan State
The military as if to demonstrate its hard power and who is really calling the shots in peace process involving the EAOs, attacked the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army (RCSS/SSA) on 1 October, under the pretext and assumption of recruiting new soldiers, followed by the bombardment of the Shan State Progress Party/Shan State Army (SSPP/SSA) positions in Mong Hsu township. RCSS is a signatory of Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA), while the SSPP is not, but had signed a union-level ceasefire agreement since a few years back.
On 1 October, Burma Army launched an offensive against the RCSS/SSA in Mong Kung Township.
Burma Army battalion 292 attacked a drug relief center in Wan Boi village, Donglao village-tract, in southern Shan State’s Mong Kung Township, including other RCSS outposts.
“This relief center was initiated by local people and our armed group,” he said. “We set up the facility to treat drug addicts – we have about 50 addicts in the program,“ according to RCSS spokesman, who added that some 2,000 local villagers have to flee their homes because of the fighting.
Further clashes occurred around the areas of Namlan and Mong Kung Townships.
On 7 October, Burma Army pounded SSPP/SSA position in Loi Lan area of Mong Hsu Township, supporting its infantry troops, according to General Sao Khun Seng.
Khun Seng reportedly went to Eastern Central Command in Kho Lam to complain about the attacks, but was denied meeting, although the commander was said to ask for the meeting to clear things out.
On the same day, armed clashes between the RCSS and Burma Army’s Light Infantry Division 422 occurred in Tong Lau, near Kung Hsar village, Mong Kung Township. Causality figures were not known from Burma Army side, while RCSS said it was unscratched.
Karen State
The recent conflict in Karen State between the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army – Kyaw Htet (DKBA-KH) and the Government’s Karen Border Guard Force (KBGF), has resulted in over 4,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) and a number of refugees fleeing to the Thai side of the border.
In the process of the conflict, the KBGF trying to encroach on the Karen National Union (KNU) controlled territory of Hat Gyi, with the backing of the Burma Army, where a dam is scheduled to be built, is seen as a threat that could widen the war between the Burma Army and the KNU, a signatory of NCA, as KBGF is an organ of the Burma Army.
The leadership of the KNU which oversees the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), have all agreed from the outset to oppose any large development projects in Karen State until a “stable peace” has been reached with the Burmese Government.
The KNLA commanders were said to be against the project and have made it clear that any territorial violation would be met with decisive military retaliation.
Myitkyina demonstration
Two separate protests, on 3 and 6 October, came after months of escalating clashes between the Burmese military and ethnic armed groups, and the death on Oct. 1 of a 2-year-old girl who was hit by mortar fire, in Pu Wang village, Mung Koe Township, close to the Chinese border.
The usual denial of Maj. Gen. Aung Ye Win, a spokesman at the Ministry of Defence, was that the Burma Army forces were not involved in any clashes on that day, as far as he was concerned and refused to give any further comments on the events.
The KIA spokesperson, dispelling the speculation that it might be the rebel’s fire, also said there were no rebel troops stationed in or around Pu Wang village at the time of the shelling.
Thousands of demonstrators, estimated to be some 20,000 to 30,000 according the NGO sources, on 6 October demanded an end to Burma Army offensives against ethnic armed groups in Kachin State and around the country. The rally in the Kachin State capital began around 8 am at the town’s Manau festival grounds, where a similar gathering took place also on 3 October.
The anti-war protesters later marched through the streets of Myitkyina chanting slogans calling for peace. The rally was held with official permission from the town’s police, according to organizers.
“We the people of Burma demand that the Burmese army cease its offensives in Kachin state and the rest of Burma, and end atrocities that are the result of the civil war, such as displacement, rape and human rights violations against local people,” said Tang Gon, one of the organizers of the event.
The armed conflict in Kachin and Shan States, that has started since 2011 when the ceasefire agreement of seventeen years broke down between the KIA and the military, resulted in mass forced relocation of nearly 100,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) spread over in 165 camps.
The protest particularly highlighted the plight of the IDPs, caused by the restriction of aid delivery to be lifted on humanitarian grounds.
Meanwhile the 21st Century Panglong Civil Society Organizations’ (CSOs) Preparatory Interim Forum issued a statement on 6 October demanding that the Tatmadaw stopped the war in ethnic states, where even young children have to die and suffer. The statement went on to demand that bilateral ceasefire declaration, both by the military and the EAOs, so that the peace process would not be derailed.
On 8 October, about a hundred persons from twenty-seven CSOs that were concerned about the peace process demonstrated in front of the Rangoon City Hall to immediately stopped the war.
The officially allowed protest shouted out slogans such as “Stop the war immediately”, “Justice for the child killed by artillery shell”, “Your wars are correct, only the citizens are wrong”, and “ Emergence of federal union through peaceful means”.
The US and EU also issued statements urging to stop the Burma Army offensives, during the week.
What now?
This brings us back again to the point why the National League for Democracy (NLD) and its leader Suu Kyi, who is supposed to deliver the goods of peace and development has been totally powerless and could hardly instill a climate of peaceful atmosphere, not to mention her all-inclusiveness commitment and eventual political settlement.
For her part, she seems to be handling the situation appropriately, where give-and-take between her and the military is concerned. Several private meetings with the Commander-in-Chief Min Aung Hliang abound, no one really knows what kind of deal has been cut between them. And if the latest US lifting of the remaining sanctions, that benefited the military top brass and company, which Suu Kyi has made it necessary by coaxing President Obama, is part of the deal is also not clear.
People naturally wonders that one day after the return of Suu Kyi from the US, when its Ambassador to Myanmar Scot Marciel visited Kachin State and the urged the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) to sign the NCA is remarkable, if not strange. But the point to be noted is that whether there is a connection to the wars in Kachin, Shan and Karen States, which have notably heightened and the peace process, on the verge of being collapsed.
Whatever the case, one could hardly blame Suu Kyi for not being able to deliver, as her helplessness hinges on the political structure that empower the military more than her election-winning NLD government on one hand and the other, her ability to push through her party’s policies depends largely on the largesse and political will of the military to cooperate.
The undeniable and stark reality is according to the military-drawn, 2008 constitution, the military is allotted with twenty-five percent appointed seats in all states, regions and union parliaments, plus the control of home affairs, defense and border affairs ministries, which makes the military more powerful than the NLD regime.
Apart from this, the military has been making its own policies and discharge them according to its liking. In other words, it has a monopoly in decision-making, particularly where ethnic states and EAOs are concerned.
It could not be in the interest of the NLD to agree with the military in escalating the war in ethnic states, when it is pushing hard for all-inclusiveness and nationwide ceasefire, so that its 21CPC could be held in a positive light. Sadly, there is nothing that the NLD could do to stop the military from its warpath march.
This explains the deterioration of peace process that is fast leading to the stage of collapse and the helplessness that Suu Kyi has to endure and confront.
For the time being, the military’s objectives are pinned on occupation of more territories and winning small wars. Economic gains and incentives could come from more territorial control coupled with natural resources extractions, while at the same time it could also undercut the ethnic rebels support base financially.
But one thing that the military is not yet ready to tackle is the holistic political solution that encompass all the ethnic nationalities, Bamar included, along the line of equitable power and resources sharing, unless it is according to its prescription.
To sum up, it now looks like that the military is determined by all means to push through its committed and convinced mode of “surrendered peace”, where its preconceived ideas of military guided democracy and its leading role are guaranteed and not a noble, “compromised peace” that promotes “unity in diversity” with a high degree of power devolution and decentralization, which is anchored in an acceptable form of genuine federalism.
On the heels of the massive anti-war demonstration in Myitkyina, involving thousands of demonstrators, United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC) issued a…
ENGLISH.PANGLONG.ORG

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Respect 4 solidarity!

By GSN
Shutting down commerce for demonstrating solidarity is beyond words respect.
Hpu Nau Hkang ni galaw ai gaw maigan mung nkau hta galaw ai sut masa mung masa ninghkap ai ladat rai nga ai.
America Alabama Mungdaw hta Latin American masha ni hpe gyit hkang ai tara State Asuya shapraw wa ai shaloi Mexican ni bungli nsa mat ai ladat hku nna ninghkap lai wa sai. Dai aten hta lam ntsa municipal bungli galaw na masha n-nga mat, lu sha seng manam jarawp ni hta ban kashin maza seng ya na masha ni pyi n-nga mat ai. Dai hpang State Asuya tara bai sharai ra mat ai.
Pengtut KhengLawt added 2 new photos.
Today is not Sunday but all market places are shutting down in Hakha. The peoples of Hakha are gathering and going to Wun Thu Maung stadium to protest Kachin war!!! Be peace in Kachin and the country!!!!

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Friday, October 14, 2016

MPs. What have you done with my vote to stop this war?

Today is the day Kachins, Shans, and Karens in Burma have to ask hard question to their representatives in Parliament, MPs. What have you done with my vote to stop this war? If you haven't done anything, please step down as my refund.
Let the army sit alone in Parliaments. The world will clearly see this is a hostage democracy.
Daini gaw Kachin, Shan, hte Karen amyu sha ni tinnang a Rapdaw Slg ni hpe ga san san ra na n-htoi rai taw sai. Anhte jaw da ya ai sinda pa lekmat ni hpe gara hku dinghku majan jahkring lu na matu galaw sai kun? N-galaw lu shi yang gaw 'mae' bai n-htang jaw ai hku nna bungli kawn hkring sa ya rit ngu nna hpyi shawn ra sai.
Hpyen Dap ni sha Rapdaw kaw dung nga mu ga. Shawa hpe man yawng ai Asuya nga ga sadi jaw da lai wa ai majaw tsun ai ga re.
Ps: this is not targeted against any individual or party. Kadai hpe gara wuhpung hpe ngu nna tsun mayu nre.
By 
GNS

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Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Let the army sit alone in Parliaments. The world will clearly see this is a hostage democracy.

By-GNS-FB

Today is the day Kachins, Shans, and Karens in Burma have to ask hard question to their representatives in Parliament, MPs. 
What have you done with my vote to stop this war? If you haven't done anything, please step down as my refund.
Let the army sit alone in Parliaments. The world will clearly see this is a hostage democracy.


Daini gaw Kachin, Shan, hte Karen amyu sha ni tinnang a Rapdaw Slg ni hpe ga san san ra na n-htoi rai taw sai. 

Anhte jaw da ya ai sinda pa lekmat ni hpe gara hku dinghku majan jahkring lu na matu galaw sai kun?

 N-galaw lu shi yang gaw 'mae' bai n-htang jaw ai hku nna bungli kawn hkring sa ya rit ngu nna hpyi shawn ra sai.

Hpyen Dap ni sha Rapdaw kaw dung nga mu ga.

Ps: this is not targeted against any individual or party. 
Kadai hpe gara wuhpung hpe ngu nna tsun mayu nre.

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wondering how were they able to fly along international boundary without entering into Chinese airspace?

GNS
During the five years of civil war in Kachin region, while Burma Air Force keep dispatching its MIGs and attack helicopters to the KIA outposts which sit along Sino-Burma border, I kept wondering how were they able to fly along international boundary without entering into Chinese airspace?
China is currently fighting tooth and nail over maritime disputes of Senkaku, Spratly, Scarborough Shoal, and Paracel islands, which are hundreds of miles away from the shores of Mainland China. President Xi repeatedly claims in international forums that it would allow no nation to compromise its territorial integrity. Reality differs in Kachin war, Burmese Tatmadaw which has been attacking Kachin forces (KIA) are repeatedly using sovereign Chinese airspace of Yunnan Province, on its Mainland, to maneuver its flights.
Unless Tatmadaw obtained an approval from China, it is unimaginable what the consequences of such incursion would be. If similar event were to happen somewhere in South China sea, events like Crimea would have easily erupted. Question now for Burmese public is, what did the Govt of Burma and Tatmadaw give in return for using Chinese airspace?
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Gumgrawng Hkan Naw In according with Joint Press Release between China and Burma's newly government on August of 2016, they get now hand-in-hand again to go forward and to support each other despite the fact that they have many internal conflicts-unlawful judgement - human right violations to tackle with. Need to be more careful about our present position but, perhaps, it may lead us to finding the best solution for our liberation from...., hopefully!
LikeReply14 hrsEdited
Hkun Htoi Layang Miwa rai yang gaw bai Kachin ni American hpe kanu kawa kam ai hku bai shadu ma ai re. Miwa hpe Kachin ni grai nju ai mung shadu ma ai. Anhte gaw shadu ai lapran kaw chya taw nga saga ai. Mahtai tam yu ra.
LikeReply18 hrsEdited
Gumrawng Gumtsa Well what can we do? We tired to say that living together with the hold Burmese is not solution. We need to do something Ever done before like separate country. All our leader must speak up to the world, this is the best way for us Kachin great again.
LikeReply8 hrs
Emma Say Say So sorry for Kachin people!

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This article truly reminds of a country I was born in.

GNS
1. Fascism thrives in militaristic societies. World War I caused a tremendous militarization of a number of countries. Nations like Italy and Germany saw the need to be able to quickly mobilize millions of people to fight wars and provide economic support.
2. Fascists reject liberal democracy, which is basically a representative kind of government where elections are free and competitive, powers between different government branches are separated, and people have more or less equal rights, freedoms and protections under the law.
3. Fascists, on the other hand, prefer totalitarian one-party rule, led by a strong leader (your favorite dictator). This allows the fascist country to have unparalleled national unity of purpose, a very ordered society, generally ready for armed conflict. Such a society is also poised to respond quickly to economic measures, especially in time of difficulties. A fascist country will likely isolate itself, blaming the international economic order for its troubles.
There is one specific condition for fascism to take hold in the United States.
BIGTHINK.COM|BY PAUL RATNER

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