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Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi "No
Secret Deal"
- Pro-Burma
Movement
EDITOR'S
INTRODUCTION | Since 1962, the Southeast Asian nation of Burma has been
run by military-controlled regimes. In 1988, a "people power"
movement demanded an end to the dictatorship; the army responded by
seizing power directly and killing thousands. The democracy leader,
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, who was later awarded a Nobel Peace Prize, was
put under house arrest for five years, and her movement was suppressed.
- Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi: Transcript of Video Message from To the Canadian Auto
Workers' Association on receiving first Nelson Mandela Human Rights
Award
- Why
Burma Must Change by Aung San Suu Kyi The Washington Post, Sunday, July
16, 2000; Page B07
- Transcript
of the Statement by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi to the Community of Democracies
Ministerial Conference
June 26, 2000
- Videotaped
message presented at Capitol Hill, 16 May 2000
- "I
think the case of Burma has become widely known because people outside
Burma have cared enough." - May 12, 1999
- ADDRESS
GIVEN BY THE GENERAL SECRETARY OF THE NATIONAL LEAGUE FOR DEMOCRACY
ON THE OCCASION OF THE 51ST ANNIVERSARY OF INDEPENDENCE January 4, 1999
- Speech
on UN Aid Plan for Burma 4 December 1998
- On
foreign aid 3 December 1998
- Prime
Minister Dr Sein Win interview with BBC Burmese Service 8
February 2005
- Prime Minister Dr Sein
Win vows to keep non-violence tactics please
in Burmese
- Prime
Minister speech at Barcelona: Burma:
Civil-society response to armed conflict 23-27
June 2004
- Dr Sein
Win's Appeal to All Burmese in exile, 26 October 2003 (Read
in Burmese, Read
in English, PDFormat)
- Dr.Sein
Win's letter to The Washington Post
-
Speech
by Dr. Sein Win, Prime Minister of the National Coalition Government
of the Union of Burma, at the Open Forum on "Human Rights, The
Rule of Law, & Independence of the Judiciary" held at the
CALD Conference 2000 in Jakarta, Indonesia (May 12 to 15, 2000)
- Address
to the FDL-AP Conference, Seoul "Democratization of Burma"
By Dr. Sein Win, Prime Minister,National Coalition Government of the
Union of Burma June 22-25, 1999
- PM
thanks Canadian Support for CRPP and honors International Human Rights
Day
Others
- Dangerous
Bedfellows
- Pressure
on Rangoon to return to democracy
-
Remember
Burma ( Washington post ) The
ruling junta is so exceptionally inept, immoral and corrupt, and the
oppressed opposition so exceptionally deserving of recognition, that
only one policy toward Burma is defensible.
- Burma/Myanmar
and Aids: The Silent Crisis By Dr. Thaung Htun, Director, Burma UN Service
Office New York, June 25, 2001
-
Nasty
Regime, Watchword for Burma Vigilance,By Mitch McConnell,The Asian
Wall Street Journal,06/18/2001
- Statement
made by Dr. Thaung Htun, Representative for UN Affairs, NCGUB 21 may,
2001
- Burma
at the Crossroads: Prospect for a political change March 17,19, 2001
- LEADERSHIP
CALLS FOR NATIONAL RECONCILIATION March 7, 9, 2001
- An
Exile Government Fights To Be Heard
-
What
UN General Assembly Resolutions Mean ("Situation of Human Rights
in Myanmar" - a resolution adopted by consensus at the 55th Session
of the UN General Assembly) Comments by Burma UN Service Office
November 13, 2000, New York
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