DOWNLOAD
BJPC Form - (English)BJPC Form - (Burmese)
Referendum Survey in 2008
----------------------------
KNG mini drugs report
BNI Latest News
- Nasaka steps up harassment in Maungdaw
- Junta reinforces troops in ceasefire regions
- Two NLD offices opened in Arakan
- NLD office in Arakan demolished
- One killed, five injured in bus accident
- KIO delegates meet junta brass for the twelfth time on BGF
- Aye Lwin denies taking financial help from junta
- Election analysis barred in Burmese publications
- US ‘deeply disappointed’ with Burma’s electoral law
- Private tea plantations more productive than regime’s
Most Read in 7 days
- BUILDING AN EDUCATION: NGO WORKS WITH CHILDREN OF MIGRANT CONSTRUCTION WORKERS
- Thailand’s political unrest cuts down timber exports, traders in Three Pagodas Pass claim
- Motorcycles to be back on Rangoon roads
- Burma's electoral laws undemocratic: Indian experts
- Bangladesh seeks UNHCR help to repatriate Rohingya refugees
- Bangladesh to import 25,000 tonnes of rice from Burma
- Amid growing unemployment rates, Burmese women turn to prostitution to survive
- Chair of ASEAN Burma Caucus visits Mae Tao clinic and Karen camps
- Children die of starvation in Bangladesh refugee camps
- Families of deported migrant workers fear grim job prospects
ListServ Subscription
| Junta seeks to obscure historic union monument: Report | | Print | |
| News - Shan Herald Agency for News | |||
| Wednesday, 18 November 2009 13:54 | |||
|
A new report released yesterday, “Forbidden Glimpses of Shan State” said the Burmese junta is attempting to erase ethnic culture, religion and the history of the country, saying the Panglong historic monument in Shan State South’s Panglong, built by ethnic leaders of Burma, has been overshadowed by junta’s newly built Shwedagon pagoda replica.” The report was documented by Shan Women’s Action Network (SWAN). It said ‘it was built directly in front of, and vastly overshadows, the monument commemorating the site where the agreement was signed.’ Panglong is where ethnic leaders and Aung San, representative of proper Burma signed an agreement to form a union in order to gain independence from British rule in 1947. Ying Harn Fah, SWAN’s spokesperson said, “Houses around the pagoda were forcibly relocated by local junta authorities.” Furthermore, people were forced to move out to make way for the new pagoda, she said. The pagoda is called ‘Maha Rahtarbhithamaggi’ (Great State Unity). It is 135 feet (1+3+5=9) high and was built in 2002 on the orders of junta supremo Senior General Than Shwe and completed in 2006. The report also said, “Burma’s military regime is erasing the last remaining palaces of the 34 former Shan principalities.” The historic Kengtung palace was demolished in 1991 and was reconstructed as a 500 million Kyat modern hotel called “Kyaing Tong Hotel” in 1994 despite protests by local monks and local people. Moreover, the Palace of Yawnghwe was re-designated as a historical museum and now a Buddhist museum. The Palace of Hsipaw was closed in 2005, and its custodian arrested. At the same time, the regime is also erecting new monuments in strategic locations in honour of former Burmese monarchs, according to the report. It said the military erected a signboard in Kengtung’s well-known landmark, a 228-feet high tree on the One-Tree-Hill (Thid Ta Pin Taung) in the southern section of the town saying it was planted by King Alaungpaya, a Burmese monarch in 1744. “Actually, the King had never been to the town,” Ying Harn Fah quoted an elder as saying. The destruction of architectures of former Shan rulers, contrasted with the regimes’ construction of new monuments that extol ancient Burmese kings and numerous replicas of the ‘Shwedagon’ pagodas across Shan State. In Shan State, over nine Shwedagon replicas were constructed by the junta. Another SWAN spokesperson Mawn Keng said, “We have not only been robbed of our rights, lands and resources by the regime, our culture and history have been also robbed.”
|
