EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Wisconsin Bill Would Treat Organic Milk, Sharp Cheddar, Brown Eggs as "Junk Food"
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Climate Change's 'Evil Twin': Ocean Acidification
- Disaster Capitalism Strikes as Hedge Funds Circle Near-Bankrupt Municipalities Like Vultures
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Wisconsin Bill Would Treat Organic Milk, Sharp Cheddar, Brown Eggs as "Junk Food"
- Climate Change's 'Evil Twin': Ocean Acidification
- In 'March Toward Disaster,' World Hits 400 PPM Milestone
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
Popular content
Today's Top News
Activists: Burma Deaths Higher Than UN Estimate
CANBERRA - The death toll from a democracy crackdown ordered by Myanmar's ruling junta was much greater than U.N. estimates and scores of people were still missing, activists just back from the reclusive country said on Friday.
A delegation of Buddhist witnesses who entered Myanmar posing as tourists to document the aftermath of September's monk-led uprising said secret talks with activists pointed to a death toll of at least 70, far above United Nations estimates of 31.
"The regime is at pains to paint the situation as being back to normal, and it is anything but, because there is so much pressure and security," Australian delegate Jill Jameson from the Buddhist Peace Fellowship told Reuters.
The crackdown on peaceful protests -- the biggest since 1988 -- drew international condemnation and provoked calls for more sanctions on the isolated country once known as Burma.
U.N. special rapporteur Paulo Sergio Pinheiro this week said at least 31 people were killed when Myanmar's military rulers tried to suppress the demonstrations. Official media have said only 10 people died.
Jameson entered Myanmar with two Thais and an American priest, talking to rights activists, monks, aid groups and social workers in Yangon and on the Thailand-Myanmar border.
"We were told by a reliable source that there were 70 people who were killed after the demonstrations, while they were being detained," she said. "We were told crematoriums were operating in the early hours of the morning between 1am and 4am."
SUSPICIOUS CREMATIONS
The stories, she said, tallied with Pinheiro's description of corpses, some seemingly the bodies of monks, being burned in suspicious circumstances at a Yangon crematorium, in an apparent attempt to hide the number of those killed.
"An English teacher monk at a monastic school and orphanage for 500 said there were now 15 monks, 35 novices, 12 teachers and 80 resident children," Jameson said.
"Prior to September, there were 200 monks and novices who have not been heard of since their participation in the "revolution"," she said.
Before the crackdown, there were an estimated 500,000 monks and novices in Myanmar. Many are now missing, rights groups say.
Human Rights Watch this month said security forces fired into crowds using live ammunition and detained thousands of people in official and unofficial jails, citing witness reports.
Jameson's group heard bystanders who applauded protesting monks, offered water or simply stood by and watched demonstrators were arrested and held in jails for up to a month.
"Neither army, police or beggars were evident, but we heard from 'Aung Myint' that beggars and the homeless had been taken to detention centers, and that some of the army were dressed as monks and others were in plain clothes," she said.
Myanmar has been under military control since 1962. The army held elections in 1990, but refused to hand over power after being outvoted by the opposition National League for Democracy.
© 2007 Reuters
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

10 Comments so far
Show AllSadly this doesn't surprise me.
http://www.umavidapelavida.com.br/docs_eng_int.html
Spiritual communities are beginning to stand up worldwide for human rights. The Brazilian Conference of Bishops on Monday will vigil in solidarity with Bishop Dom Luiz Flavio Cappio on hunger strike since Nov for the millions who would be impacted by the transposition project of the Rio São Francisco. Speaking truth to power.
Does anyone know if there is there a website for the monks?
What IF we could telepathically
Imprint this message into the very synapses of 300 million?
________W A I T __ W E __ C A N __ D O __ T H I S ________
Let's choose a time, say 6 pm EST on 25-Dec-2007, and send a real
Christmas present to all of the World as well.
It doesn't matter (much) if your belief, faith and hope
of this is diminished by rational thought
- just do it ANYWAY (for the heck of it), as it certainly
cannot make anything any worse - RIGHT?
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed »
U.N. has no credibility when it comes to Iraq, so why should anybody believe what they have to say about Burma.
And anyways who needs 500,000 monks.
It makes me sad when human cruelty is termed "bestial."
Nature is a cruel mistress, it is true, but it is mainly a case of survival. Creatures are killed for food, or in self defense or defense of a litter. Sometimes during rut, but usually that is just a show of strength, with little damage.
Man is the only creature that kills, maims and tortures for pleasure, for power, for wealth. Only man could complacently watch as millions starve so grain could be used to power his automobiles. Only man could smile at hundreds of thousands consigned to disintegrating slums, jobless, homeless, reduced to preying upon each other to feed their families, as long as it improves his bottom line enough to buy another penthouse.
The occasional animal that seems to kill for fun, such as the wolverine or the martin, should perhaps be referred to as "humanish."
LIBERTAS FUGIT -- So true, our vocabulary is representative of our limiting anthropomorphizing (up scaling to the Gods). You properly request that we consider down scaling (sizing) the appropriate motivations, as if animals could act as badly as humans do everyday.
Likely has something to do with the implicit connection and balance within nature, that was a governor that we slipped off of millennium ago.
Odd coincidence that word "governor", as used here: a device that limits an engine racing to its destruction?
BTW, I'm hardly an expert, but I thought the wolverines were just overly territorial and tenacious, so that they would follow one home to be sure that the proper message was fully understood (possibly for several more generations).
Do wolverines somehow smile while ripping open someone's throat that they really "hate"?
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed »
Nspire, I don't really know that wolverines are so bad, though they do have a bad reputation for being tough, aggressive, and gluttons. I was rather pressed to find an animal with "humanish" traits. I guess there are, occasionally, "stock killers" that will kill a bunch of sheep, or chickens, etc., beyond feeding needs, but not too often and that always seems to get more press.
Wolves, for instance, have a fine social order, and given a choice, have very little impact on man. However, I sometimes think that the powers that be have read Little Red Ridinghood too many times, for they now want to exterminate the wolves that have been reintroduced in the lower 48, and Alaska is once again doing their aerial hunting, where some rich guy rents a chopper and pilot and runs a wolf or wolf pack to exhaustion, then kills it or them with a burst of gunfire from the air, then is landed to have his photo taken with his kill. Sort of a modern upgrade on the tiger hunter who sits in a comfortable platform in a tree, downwind from a crippled, tethered goat until a tiger investigates to see what is bleating. Boom! The brave mighty hunter strikes again. Nope, definitely humanish.
I actually have always had an odd affinity to them [ Wolverines, Wolves, and even Lobo Marinas {aka sea lions to us, sea wolves for Galapagos} ], probably because I am so civilized and well integrated into society's structures.
Back in the '50's I was stationed on an island that had a huge population of Sea Lions and I used to dive at the rookery every chance I got. Wonderful! Like an underwater ballet and clown show. When the pups whelped and began swimming, they were literally underfoot. You would dive down to check a ledge for lobster and there would be four or five pups looking over your shoulder to see what you were looking for. I was always getting a whisker tickle. I very rarely speared fish, unless someone asked me to get them a dinner fish to take home on liberty. At the rookery, it was a lost leader because every time you tried to aim, you had a pup looking back up the spear at you. Whatcha doin'? Huh? Huh?
I dove for hundreds, perhaps thousands of hours at the rookery. One of my life's peak experiences, like diving with dolphins. That's another.
When I sailed to Bikini Atoll in 1956 for the H-Bomb tests, the sea teemed with life all across the pacific. When I retired in 1991, I sailed an old Baltimore Clipper to Singapore and the sea was a virtual desert. What we have done to our beautiful planet. Definitely humanish.
"One of my life's peak experiences"
ditto