Friday, August 29, 2008
Tara n-nga mungdan kata na WP sha ni
Tara n-nga ai mungdan kata kaw nga pra ra ai anhte WP sha ni a shoi chyum sha ai lam ni rai nga ai.
Ndai zawn rai roi rip hkrum ai lam ni hpe nang ngai gara hku hkam jan lu na?
Lai sai ten ni hta mung anhte na lu ai, "Wunpawng Rawang numsha ni roi hkrum ai da!"
Rap ra ai tara hte teng man ai lam hpe gara hku tam mu lu na ta?
15 Year-Old Schoolgirl Gang-Raped And Mutilated by Burmese Soldiers
15 Aug 2008
Pictures available.
Burma Campaign UK sources have confirmed that Burmese Army soldiers have gang-raped and mutilated a 15 year old schoolgirl in Kachin State Burma. No action has been taken by the Burmese authorities to investigate and arrest those involved.
The incident took place on 27th July 2008 near Nam Sai Village, Bamaw District, Kachin State, northern Burma. The schoolgirl, Nhkum Hkawn Din, was attacked and killed on her way to bring rice to her brother, who was working on a paddy field on the family farm. Her family only realised that Hkaw Din was missing after her brother came back from the farm and asked his parents where she was. They searched for her all evening and reported her missing at 9pm.
After a three-day search her naked and mutilated body was found 200 meters from an army checkpoint. They first found her clothes, and then her slippers together with the basket that she carried on that day. A local witness testified that they had seen Burmese Army soldiers follow Hkaw Din on her way to the paddy field. After her body was found other witnesses testified that they had seen soldiers leave that area after the time she had disappeared.
http://www.burmacampaign.org.uk/pm/weblog.php?id=P381
$500 Compensation to Family of Kachin Schoolgirl Raped and Killed
23 Aug 2008
The Burma Campaign UK has received reports that the family of a 15 year-old schoolgirl who was gang-raped, mutilated and killed by Burmese Army soldiers has been offered around $500 plus some food staples as compensation for the murder.
Local army commanders have now admitted that one of their soldiers carried out the attack, which took place on July 27th. However, local people are reportedly angry that the regime is pinning the blame on just one low ranking soldier, witnesses saw more than one soldier following the schoolgirl, including a local colonel. That colonel has now apparently been reassigned to another area.
http://www.burmacampaign.org.uk/pm/weblog.php?id=P385
Sunday, July 6, 2008
Hkungga jaw dat ai.
Amyu a matu share shagan ni nan rai nga ai.
Kani, nang hpam lusha koi gam ga!
No.4, Heroin, an enemy for us!
Kachin lands are for Kachins!
Stop building dam!
Stop force labor!
Monday, June 23, 2008
Jinghpaw ga hpe gara hku makawp maga nga ai kun?
Makawp maga na gaw nang ngai a lit!
Friday, June 20, 2008
Donate Rice, Fight hunger and learn English
The sponsor you can see below the page will donate rice grains to World Food Program.
Isn't it cool? Just click the link to start fighting the hunger.
http://www.freerice.com
ndai kaw shang ginsup ai shaloi matsam mayan ni hpe karum ai hte rau English vocabulary mung jat wa na re. Shang chyam yu ga!
Monday, June 9, 2008
Website Chronicles Refugee Lives in Malaysia
A 16-year-old Kachin girl:
In Malaysia, the broker sent me to a Malay restaurant. “There were 5 other males. I was the only female. I worked from 7 in the morning till 11 at night, washing plates and cleaning up. They didn’t pay me any money apart from some pocket money once in a while”.
“One day, when the boss was away, one of the male workers tried to hug and kiss me. I screamed but he told me not to scream. The other workers heard my scream and came to my assistance. That night, I couldn’t sleep. I was shivering with fear”.
Fortunately, she had made friends with a Myanmarese who delivers vegetables to her restaurant and told him what happened to her the night before. This man took pity on her and told her to meet him later and so she ran away with him. He brought her to the UNHCR office, and they in turn contacted her organisation.
That was 10 days ago. Her future remains uncertain. I asked how she is finding life at the moment. For a long time she thinks.
“I don’t know what to say. I don’t have any documents. I can’t work. I can’t go out. I am afraid all the time”.
A 42-year-old Kachin woman:
“It is most difficult when the children get sick” she said.
“When the children get sick, I usually have to borrow money from the other families. My elder child has asthma, and each treatment costs RM100. Each visit to the clinic would cost RM50. We just don’t have the money. The UNHCR told us to go to the free clinics provided by NGOs, but I don’t even have money for the taxi.”
“If my husband is sick for even one day and cannot go to work, then there is big problem. Life becomes very difficult. The worst is when I have borrowed money from the other families for my son’s medical fees, and then their children get sick. What do I do?”.
Finding Refuge
click for more
http://thestar.com.my/youth2/story.asp?file=/2007/6/20/youth2/20070619185502&sec=youth2
Burmese Refugees
click for detail
http://www.hrdc.net/sahrdc/resources/burmese_refugee.htm
Cyclone Nargis
Burma was ranked as one of the poorest countries in the world before Nargis hit. (See Burma: A New Way Forward). Though comprehensive assessments in the aftermath of the cyclone have yet to get underway, the delays in response are raising fears of cholera, malaria, malnutrition, and even starvation in isolated parts of the delta.
click for more
http://www.refugeesinternational.org/content/article/detail/10607
Refugees face increasing threats
click for more
http://www.refugeesinternational.org/content/article/detail/10005/