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Campaign News

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Calls mount for EU resolution on Myanmar rights at UNGA

September 20, 2016

Our call for the EU to continue the UN General Assembly resolution on human rights in Burma is covered by the Myanmar Times:

Pressure is growing on the European Union to again table a UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolution critical of Myanmar’s human rights record, after the EU signalled last week that the 28-nation bloc was dropping the motion for the first time in a quarter century.

“Only one of the 17 different calls for action to improve human rights made in last year’s resolution has been met,” the European Burma Network, a coalition of nine groups across six European countries, said in a statement yesterday.

More here.


Mark Farmaner joins calls for tough line on human rights at UN

September 16, 2016

Mark Farmaner, director of Burma Campaign UK, joined calls for maintaining a tough line on human rights at the UN General Assembly.
“Discontinuing the resolution will encourage the military to believe they can continue to commit human rights violations and block constitutional reform without any consequences,” he told The Myanmar Times.

Read full article


One prisoner of conscience is one too many

September 14, 2016

More than 100 political prisoner remain in jail. Take action here.

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Business community pins sanction hopes on State Counsellor’s visit to US

September 14, 2016

This article in Myanmar Times quotes Zoya Phan, Campaigns Manager at Burma Campaign UK:

“The US imposed sanctions in response to human rights violations, and they are still taking place,” Zoya Phan, a political activist from the Burma Campaign UK, told The Myanmar Times. “Lifting sanctions will just encourage the Myanmar military to think they can keep committing human rights abuses and keep blocking constitutional reform and get away with it,” she said.

Read the full article here.


At the TUC

September 12, 2016

At the TUC working with our trade union brothers and sisters in solidarity on human rights abuses in Burma.

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Watchlist enumeration forces teacher to return to exile in the US, even as govt pledges to trim roster

August 3, 2016

From The Myanmar Times:

“Several staff members from Burma Campaign UK believe they are still enumerated on the list as they have not yet been informed of their removal. In June, Burma Campaign UK wrote to the government asking for confirmation of which staff members remain on the roster and which have been removed.

“The NLD-led government should publish the blacklist and explain why human rights activists remain on it. Most governments have some form of blacklist to stop criminals or people who are a threat to the country, but people should not be blacklisted just because the government doesn’t like what they say,” Mark Farmaner, director of Burma Campaign UK, told The Myanmar Times.” ‪

The full article is here.


Speaking at University College London

July 21, 2016

Zoya Phan, Campaigns Manager at Burma Campaign UK, with students and professor from University College London (UCL), after a talk on human rights in Burma‬.

Zoya at UCL


Myanmar’s Best Chance for Internal Peace

July 15, 2016

Interesting article in the Asia Sentinel:

“We need to learn from the history of the KIO’s 17 years ceasefire agreement with the Burmese military,” said Lum Zawng, a lawyer and General secretary of All Kachin Youth Union. “They [the army] always demanded to disarm first and accept the 2008 Constitution, but no ethnic armed organization wants to disarm first. They have always said that talks and a political agreement should come first.”

“Attacks on the TNLA by the RCSS highlight a nationwide problem of how main ethnic groups will address concerns and demands of smaller ethnic groups within their states,” said Mark Farmaner, the Director of Burma Campaign UK, a human rights advocacy group. “These problems will be very complex to work through.”

The full article is here.


Human Rights Groups Call for Investigation into Destruction of Mosques

July 12, 2016

In Karen News:

A group of 19 community based organizations has called for an official investigation into the destruction of religious buildings in Burma.

The statement was signed on behalf of a range of ethnic and human rights groups both local and international including Burma Campaign UK, Fortify Rights, and the Kachin Women’s Association of Thailand.

The statement comes after a spate of violent attacks against Muslim places of worship. On June 1, a violent mob attacked and destroyed a Muslim prayer hall in Kachin State, and another mob destroyed a Mosque in the Bago region.

More here.


Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi: Falling star or beacon of hope

July 9, 2016

Burma Campaign UK quoted in the Daily Mail:

“Meanwhile, the generals continue to wage war against several ethnic groups, who rose up against the central government following Myanmar’s independence from Britain in 1948. Mark Farmaner, director of Burma Campaign UK, said his group has received more reports of atrocities by the military in Kachin and Shan states in recent months than similar periods last year under the military-dominated government.

… Farmaner said that while Myanmar’s deeply systemic problems are obviously going to take a long time to solve, “it doesn’t take time to release political prisoners. This can be done immediately. Or lift humanitarian aid restrictions on the Rohingya, Kachin and the Shan. That can be done immediately, and this has not been done.” More than 60 political prisoners are still behind bars with 140 awaiting trial.”

 

Read the full article here


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