Moonsigns
|
Band Guide
|
Blogs
|
Adult
Boston
|
Portland
|
Providence
News
Flashbacks
|
Letters
|
Media -- Dont Quote Me
|
News Features
|
The Editorial Page
|
This Just In
Bollinger’s rebuke to Ahmadinejad blows up in his face
Democracy you can taste — and smell
This Just In
Student activists vow to keep pressure on the Junta
Burma
By
TE-PING CHEN
| October 10, 2007
Weeks after thousands of red-clad Burmese monks and civilians protesting in the streets rocked world headlines, students across the United States are determined not to let the spotlight on the issue slip.
Two weeks ago, a scarlet sea of 300 Brown students rallied to support the Burmese protesting the country’s military regime, which seized control nearly two decades ago and has ruled through force ever since. According to Thelma Young, grassroots coordinator for the DC-based
US Campaign for Burma
, more than 100 college campuses have hosted similar events, with more to come. (Brown’s gathering was among the first and largest.) Meanwhile this weekend, global demonstrations took place, from India and Thailand to France.
Momentum on Brown’s campus owes much to Andrew Lim, co-founder of Brown’s newly launched US Campaign for Burma chapter. Lim, whose parents emigrated from Burma 25 years ago, calls his first visit to Burma in 2001 an “eye-opener.” He remembers how government spies trailed his family, and how swaths of the city had gone unchanged for decades — it was like stepping into a timewarp. “Everything was so controlled,” he says.
For a brief window last month, it seemed the military junta’s control was finally crumbling. Burmese activists turned cellphones and Internet cafés into tools of international appeal, uploading footage of their resistance around the globe, including shots of unarmed protesters being beaten. Up to 100,000 Burmese took to the streets — a staggering display of defiance against a regime that Human Rights Watch has classified as among the most oppressive in the world.
Last week, however, the military shut down Burma’s Internet service providers as part of a concerted media clampdown. The last time the regime faced wide-scale resistance was in 1988, when troops killed more than 3000 civilians in retaliation. The same will happen, Lim fears, once the world is looking the other way.
Accordingly, organizers at Brown say they plan to maintain their pressure through petitions and educational outreach. While decades of sanctions against Burma have stripped the US of direct influence over the country, organizers are pushing the US to use its powerful moral leverage to embarrass China — a country with considerable material ties to Burma — into acting before the 2008 Beijing Olympics. (To date, every UN resolution in support of international action in Burma has died because of a Chinese veto.)
“A lot of times in today’s college culture, you forget how much power universities have,” says Brown senior Patrick Cook-Deegan, the Northeast Regional Coordinator for USCB. But he argues that students played an “integral role” in South Africa’s anti-apartheid movement and in reversing China’s opposition to peacekeepers in Darfur — and that the same influence can be wielded for Burma.
Lim says action is necessary, and that the world owes it to the monks who have put themselves on the line. “The protesters know the military is going to keep power at all costs,” says Lim. “They know they can’t change the regime.” What protesters are trying to do, he argues, is “galvanize the international community to act — however we can.”
Related
:
Q is for quagmire
Letters to the Boston editor: March 31, 2006
The dictator slayer
East Boston's Gene Sharp is soft-spoken, but he makes bad guys from Caracas to Beijing cringe
What about Tibet?
The Olympics may prove to be China’s Achilles’s heel
More
Q is for quagmire
Letters to the Boston editor: March 31, 2006
The dictator slayer
East Boston's Gene Sharp is soft-spoken, but he makes bad guys from Caracas to Beijing cringe
What about Tibet?
The Olympics may prove to be China’s Achilles’s heel
The 10th Annual Muzzle Awards
Silencing free speech
Tsongas for Congress
Plus, those scary Republicans running for president
The Ninth Annual Muzzle Awards
Our annual New England roundup of those who undermined freedom of speech and civil liberties. But first, a word about George W. Bush.
Say it loud
‘Dissent!’ at Harvard, ‘Media Machines’ at Tufts, ‘Fashion Show’ at the MFA, and Michael Smith at MIT
The song remains the same
Did last weekend’s march on Washington mark a new surge in street activism or the waning of an old-school protest style?
Cheap thrills
Paw Sox, Penny Slots, and Ponies — so cheap, it might cost you
Happy feet
From butoh to Swan Lake and back
Less
Topics
:
This Just In
,
Civil Unrest
,
War and Conflict
,
Protests and Demonstrations
,
More
,
Civil Unrest
,
War and Conflict
,
Protests and Demonstrations
,
Summer Olympics
,
Olympic Games
,
Sports
,
Dictatorships
,
Colleges and Universities
,
Education
,
Higher Education
,
Less
Share
:
Rss
Email
Print
Comments
Add a Comment
MOST POPULAR
Most Viewed
Most Emailed
PLEASE RELEASE ME
The Big Hurt: The week in awful press releases
NIGHT MUSIC
The Pops aces Sondheim
LINE UP
Katy Fischer at Proof, ‘Paper Quilt’ and Rainey at the Essex Art Center, and ‘Ink & Steel’ at Space 242
BIGMOUTH STRIKES AGAIN
Immortal Technique goes on the offensive
TESTOSTEROWNED
Only Living Witness at the Middle East Downstairs, June 21, 2008
WERNER’S WORLD
Herzog’s End justifies his means
HOT TOPICS
Barack Obama
,
Hillary Clinton
,
John McCain
,
Mitt Romney
,
George W. Bush
,
Deval Patrick
,
Mike Huckabee
,
U.S. Republican Party
,
Tom Menino
,
John Edwards (Politician)
,
Major League Baseball
,
Boston Police Department
,
Rudolph Giuliani
,
Salvatore DiMasi
,
Stephan Cowans
,
AL East Division
,
Bill Clinton
,
American League (Baseball)
,
Ed Davis
,
Boston Red Sox
More Topics
. . .
Featured Articles in This Just In
:
Ricochet ruling
Supreme Court makes Mass gun laws target for debate
Naked in the public square
Freedom Watch
Unappealing zoning
No live/work lofts for Lowell
Alma Obama
Understated understudy
Sharing an Apple
Adapt or Die Dept.
Saturday, July 05, 2008
|
Sign In
|
Register
thePhoenix.com:
Home
Listings
Editor's Picks
News
Music
Film + TV
Food + Drink
Life
Arts
Rec Room
Video
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
Boston Phoenix
Portland Phoenix
Providence Phoenix
StuffAtNight
People2People
MassWeb Printing
G8Wave
About Us
Contact Us
Advertise With Us
Work For Us
Sitemap
RSS
Mobile
StuffAtNight Latest:
Private dancer
A toy story
FNX Latest:
Internets and WTF?
Gia Rules
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2008 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group