COLUMNIST: AWZAR THI
Rule of Lords
Awzar Thi is the pen name of a member of the Asian Human Rights Commission with over 15 years of experience as an advocate of human rights and the rule of law in Thailand and Burma. To protect ongoing work in these countries, he prefers not to reveal his identity.
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November 26, 2009Hong Kong, China — Thailand’s deputy prime minister is reportedly planning to use an internal security law to stop upcoming rallies against his government in Bangkok. To help implement this, Police Lieutenant General Santhan Chayanont, known for his persecution of protesters in southern Thailand, has been brought to the capital.
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November 12, 2009Hong Kong, China — A young man in Thailand was shot twice by a drunken policeman during a fight that erupted at a concert. The man survived. The police negotiated a deal with the victim's family and paid them cash to silence the issue. Such police violence is routine and cover up requires no special effort or intelligence.
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October 29, 2009Hong Kong, China — It was obvious from the start that the purpose of the new ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights is not to protect human rights. ASEAN has created the commission so that member governments and their own ineffectual rights institutions can push complaints of abuses outside their borders.
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October 15, 2009Hong Kong, China — Burma’s government claims to welcome complaints about malpractice, inefficiency and corruption against those in public service. But a recent case of a man imprisoned for repeatedly complaining about electricity problems speaks to how easy it is, in an irrational system, for the complainant to wind up in trouble.
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October 01, 2009Hong Kong, China — When the Supreme Court of Thailand found a former deputy minister and two ex-officials guilty in a case of an illegal scheme involving two- and three-digit lotteries, media interest abounded. But in Burma, a similar case involving three teenage girls has attracted no attention at all. The three are now in prison.
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September 17, 2009Hong Kong, China — Last year Burma got a new Constitution, which will take effect when Parliament opens after elections next year. Some analysts see hope for change in this, but in fact, the purpose of the Constitution is to keep things as they are while giving some appearance to the contrary.
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September 03, 2009Hong Kong, China — Thailand’s U.N. representatives cling to the idea that if they turn up at a big get-together and make nice comments about how they cherish human rights, then everyone will think things are fine in the land of smiles. Not surprisingly, they are unhappy when other people tell a different story.
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August 20, 2009Hong Kong, China — A television station in Thailand broadcast an interview with Nuch Phosri, a mother who is raising two sons alone on a meager income. Nuch is having an especially hard time because her 19-year-old son is paralyzed. He wasn’t born that way. He was shot, and then denied prompt medical attention by police.
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August 06, 2009Hong Kong, China — Accompanying all the latest to-do over whether or not Burma’s regime is trying to obtain nuclear weapons has been talk about the menace of its conventional armed forces. Nobody knows the real size or capability of Burma’s army. But we do know that not all of these soldiers are adults.
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July 23, 2009Hong Kong, China — Two years ago a court in Burma sentenced five farmers to four years’ jail for allegedly causing a public disturbance; a sixth man received eight years. On July 24, the five will have served half of their terms. They were imprisoned because they had the audacity to talk about human rights.
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July 09, 2009Hong Kong, China — Political analysts have criticized the visit of U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to Burma last week, calling it ill-advised and fruitless. But thanks to Ban, most folks now understand that the United Nations isn’t going to appear magically and hold the regime to account for its multifarious wrongs.
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June 25, 2009Hong Kong, China — Charges are finally being lodged against six police officers for allegedly torturing a man in their custody. The police hooded him and beat him all over his body to force him to confess to a robbery that he did not commit. All this was five years ago – and it is unlikely the police will ever be punished.
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June 11, 2009Hong Kong, China — It took five years for a court in Songkhla, southern Thailand, to hold an inquest into the deaths of 78 men after they were detained along with over 1,000 others outside the Tak Bai police station in October 2004. Still, the findings handed down on May 29 obscured as much as they revealed.
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May 14, 2009Hong Kong, China — Despite concerns from human rights defenders at home and abroad, Thailand’s upper house on May 1 approved the seven nominees for the country’s National Human Rights Commission. Four of the seven are either ignorant of or opposed to human rights as they are internationally defined.
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April 30, 2009Hong Kong, China — This week the Asian Human Rights Commission issued three open letters on the selection of candidates for the new National Human Rights Commission of Thailand. The regional body has warned that if the Senate accepts the seven current nominees, the commission may lose its status before the United Nations.
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April 16, 2009Hog Kong, China — As troops and antigovernment protestors clashed on Bangkok’s streets again this week, a furious battle also played out in the media over casualties. Government spokespersons and army officers insisted that bullets had not been fired into the crowds. Their opponents said the opposite.
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April 02, 2009Hong Kong, China — Among the many people in Rangoon’s central jail who shouldn’t be there are a couple of journalists. They did not write or say anything against the government. They did not threaten the army or its hold on power. Yet they were imprisoned for inciting others to “commit an offence against the state.”
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March 19, 2009Hong Kong, China — A court in Rangoon has sentenced three men to a decade’s imprisonment for allegedly sending news through the Internet. Police in Bangkok have arrested an editor for failing to patrol, censor and delete comments that readers left on a website. These are not cybercrimes. They are thought-crimes.
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March 05, 2009Hong Kong, China — The U.N. envoy to Burma on human rights, Tomas Ojea Quintana, will present his annual report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva within a week. While his predecessors documented abuse, Quintana has gone a step further by meeting key figures in the criminal justice system to understanding its features.
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February 19, 2009Hong Kong, China — Thailand’s legal, political and social developments in the 1990s were greeted with applause. This week, the Asian Legal Resource Center submitted a statement to the Human Rights Council that has painted the bleakest picture yet of denied rights and declining rule of law in Thailand during the past few years.
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February 05, 2009Hong Kong, China — When some villagers in Natmauk, central Burma, made a complaint last year that the army had illegally occupied land they had been farming, they probably hoped for a sympathetic response. The army promptly detained and interrogated four of them, and eventually brought one complainant to court.
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January 22, 2009Hong Kong, China — When Abhisit Vejjajiva slipped through the back door and into the prime minister’s seat in Thailand late last year, exiled democracy advocates from Burma welcomed him. After reports broke of the Thai navy forcing boatloads of people from Burma back into the ocean to die, they should be thinking again.
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January 08, 2009Hong Kong, China — Last month, a campaign group in Thailand opposing Internet censorship released a list of 1,303 new website addresses that it claims are blocked by a government ministry. The group is concerned that the pages blacklisted are kept under wraps with the aid of courts and a new cybercrime law.
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December 18, 2008Hong Kong, China — According to news from Thailand this week, police are set to lay charges against protesters responsible for blockading Parliament after the leader of the main opposition party finally succeeded in becoming prime minister without having to win an election.
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December 11, 2008Hong Kong, China — While governments and groups made effusive statements to mark the 60th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on Dec. 10, the Asian Human Rights Commission said the celebration was a grim reminder of the gap between what is declared and what is achieved. The downbeat mood was shared in Burma.
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December 04, 2008Hong Kong, China — This week in Thailand a top court dissolved the biggest political party, along with two of its partners, and effectively banned its leader and executive members from politics. The ruling allowed the political extremists who had occupied the airports for a week to declare victory.
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November 27, 2008Hong Kong, China — Organizers of the prolonged raid on the Bangkok international airport have insisted that they will bring down the government at any cost. In targeting the airport they have taken a dramatic strategic step and have also made a move of enormous symbolic importance.
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November 20, 2008Hong Kong, China — Next Thursday a court in Yala will decide on a very important case for victims of arbitrary detention and forced disappearance in Thailand. The court is due to give its view on what happened to Mayateh Maranoh, who has not been seen since he was taken away by a paramilitary group in mid-2007.
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November 13, 2008Hong Kong, China — It has been a frantic week in Burma’s closed courts. At least 60 people have in the past few days been sentenced for their roles in last year’s mass protests, including high-profile activists, monks, a blogger and a poet. The sentences were as harsh as 65 years for some defendants.
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November 06, 2008Hong Kong, China — Over half-a-million people in eastern Burma are living in temporary dwellings, forced out of their villages as a result of fighting, insecurity and the whims of local army commanders. Around 100,000 are hiding in jungles, valleys and hills; many have moved and adapted so many times they’ve lost count.
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October 30, 2008Hong Kong, China — A court recently held that police and civilian officials who killed 19 young men in the far south of Thailand in 2004 were acting in self-defense. The Songkhla provincial court ignored facts and omitted some evidence from its verdict included the testimony of a National Human Rights Commissioner.
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October 23, 2008Hong Kong, China — When news spread that in the early hours of Oct. 13 a passenger vehicle had exploded in suburban Rangoon killing seven, the first response of some people was that it must have been another in the latest series of bombings to rock the former Burmese capital.
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October 16, 2008Hong Kong, China — A week ago the U.N. news agency ran an interview with a survivor of Cyclone Nargis, the storm that devastated Burma in May. The 62-year-old farmer said that monks had given her paddy seed, but the crop had failed due to salt water in the fields. Now the WFP is cutting aid to Burma at the junta’s insistence.
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October 09, 2008Hong Kong, China — There is a fine line between human rights and political advocacy, and many have deliberately crossed it, possibly believing that the removal of governments or persons is what human rights work is all about. The movement in Thailand has not clearly distinguished itself from the ideas of the establishment.
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October 02, 2008Hong Kong, China — A criminal court in Bangkok sentenced four men to lengthy jail terms for their alleged roles in a plot to kill the former president of Thailand’s Supreme Court. The court’s verdict is wrong because it took over 90 judges more than 15 years to reach this point.
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September 25, 2008Hong Kong, China — This week marks two anniversaries on Burma’s calendar of historic events. One is the first anniversary of the 2007 protests led by monks; second, it is 20 years since a 1988 uprising was crushed by the ruthless junta. A third anniversary, largely overlooked, is the 50th year of military dictatorship.
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September 18, 2008Hong Kong, China — In the case against activist Win Maw, the two witnesses to his house search are, it seems, rent-a-witnesses whose names appear in cases against other people that the same officer has been responsible for investigating: different cases, different suburbs, different dates, but always the same two witnesses.
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September 11, 2008Hong Kong, China — Among the responses to the judicial sacking of the prime minister of Thailand, Samak Sundaravej, a blog summed it up as, “Hosting a TV cooking show = Guilty! Staging a coup and tearing up a constitution = No problem!” However, arguments about the technicalities of whether or not Samak was employed to be a television chef during his time in office, thus violating the 2007 constitution, miss the point.
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September 04, 2008Hong Kong, China — Two years to the month since the army in Thailand launched its latest takeover of government, the proof of its success is in the mayhem and madness on the streets of Bangkok and the utter farce to which politics there has again descended.
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August 21, 2008Hong Kong, China — It is really impossible to say anything about the new Constitution of Burma, which passed through a farcical referendum and into law amid the cyclone chaos this May, without suspending a large amount of disbelief. At every turn it hands power back to the army or its proxies.
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August 14, 2008Hong Kong, China — The rule of law is being talked up in Thailand since the former prime minister’s wife, Pojaman Shinawatra, lost a criminal case and her husband skipped town and bail prior to a hearing against him too. Former Prime Minister Shinawatra Thaksin claims he and his family are victims of “continuous injustice.”
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August 07, 2008Hong Kong, China — Almost a year has passed since Burma’s military regime suddenly upped fuel prices, triggering a series of protests. Many protesters were arrested and kept in custody for months. Their cases, now going to court, reveal how far officialdom has strayed from any notions of legality in dealing with dissent.
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July 31, 2008Hong Kong, China — The chairman of Thailand’s human rights body, Saneh Chamarik, has sent an open letter to the United Nations blaming the World Heritage Committee, rather than politicking and self-interested nationalist leaders, for a puerile spat over an historic temple between the governments of Thailand and Cambodia.
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July 24, 2008Hong Kong, China — A Burmese-language monthly published in Bangkok carried a letter from an unnamed senior lawyer practicing in Rangoon. According to the author, to be selected for the test to become an apprentice judge a lawyer must pay the selecting panel 3 million kyat – upwards of US$2,500.
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July 17, 2008Hong Kong, China — The killing of Yapa Koseng in a vehicle parked at an army base in southern Thailand has attracted interest among news media and human rights groups, particularly since a doctor speaking at a postmortem inquest hearing indicated that his fatal injuries could have been caused only by savage torture.
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July 10, 2008Hong Kong, China — Prosecutors in Burma can put together a charge of sedition for just about anything: complaining publicly about increased fuel prices or holding talks on their country’s future. So six men who tried to assemble some people and discuss workers’ rights last year should perhaps have seen what was coming.
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July 03, 2008Hong Kong, China — An Oxford economics professor said in a recent article that the best hope for Burma or Zimbabwe is that military officers might overthrow their dictators. Coups are often premised on the fraud that if things can’t get worse, they can only get better. The Burmese are already repeat victims of this fraud.
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June 26, 2008Hong Kong, China — Thailand’s human rights agency has been in limbo since September 2006 when the army took power for the umpteenth time. The National Human Rights Commission has not fared well since then. Its confused and contradictory response to the military takeover in some ways typified its deeper problems.
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June 19, 2008Hong Kong, China — The Asian Human Rights Commission has issued an appeal on behalf of U Ohn Than, who is imprisoned in Kanti in upper Burma. The 60-year-old protested last August against the government’s dramatic increase in fuel prices, precipitating the historic monk-led revolt in September. He is now jailed for sedition.
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June 12, 2008Hong Kong, China — Kamol, a 49-year-old delivery contractor and activist is missing since February. No government of Thailand any time soon will bring a stop to the forces that made it possible: because like torture, forced disappearance is not an ailment but a symptom and a nationwide feature of what can be labeled as orderly lawlessness.
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June 05, 2008Hong Kong, China — On the night of June 4, police officers came to a house in suburban Rangoon, searched it and took away one of the occupants. He is not a wanted robber, murderer or escapee. He is a comedian. Zarganar, famous for his antics on stage and screen, was arrested for his efforts to get relief to cyclone victims.
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May 29, 2008Hong Kong, China — Among the many responses to the unconscionable blockading of humanitarian assistance to victims of the cyclone that swept through Burma on May 10, perhaps the strangest, if not the most offensive, have been claims that journalists, diplomats and aid workers have exaggerated the death toll.
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May 22, 2008Hong Kong, China — Burma’s military government has by now dramatically compounded the death and misery brought to its country with Cyclone Nargis. Carrying on with the same sort of games it has played against the global community for years, it has caused untold needless loss of life and greatly magnified people’s suffering.
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May 15, 2008Hong Kong, China — As predicted, survivors of Cyclone Nargis, which ravaged lower Burma on May 2 and 3, are no longer surviving. People are suffering from illnesses brought on by dirty water, lack of food and exposure to the elements.
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May 08, 2008Hong Kong, China — In the days since Cyclone Nargis passed through Burma on May 2 and 3, bringing a tidal surge with it to the delta region that has literally swept away hundreds of villages, it has become painfully obvious that the country's government is completely unable to deal with what has happened.
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May 01, 2008Hong Kong, China — There are, despite the odds, human rights lawyers in Burma. In fact the efforts of some to defend a working legal culture from official vandalism and neglect surpass those of their counterparts in more open societies of Asia. These persons are acting as a kind of life-support for Burma's judicial system.
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April 24, 2008Hong Kong, China — A lot of talk in Thailand these days is about the prospects for a new "war on drugs," following on from the state-sponsored murders of people supposedly buying and selling amphetamines in 2003. Official enthusiasm for the methods of that war does not seem to have been dampened by its manifest lack of success.
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April 17, 2008Hong Kong, China — Many of Burma's democracy advocates place Thailand's army in a favorable light when compared to their own. But as their familiarity with the abuse of military power at home vastly outweighs their knowledge of that abroad, their appraisals too are imbalanced and detrimental.
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April 10, 2008Hong Kong, China — A court in Sri Lanka has given a shocking verdict in a case of police torture. Both the judgment and chain of events that led to it contain many important lessons for people in Thailand, where torture is also a routine part of criminal investigating.
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April 03, 2008Hong Kong, China — Around the suburbs of Rangoon small scraggly bushes now occupy plots of land that once were used for growing vegetables or beans. They look miserable. Unattended among weeds and debris, they show no signs of growth and bear few leaves. Some are used for hanging laundry. Others catch plastic bags in the breeze.
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March 27, 2008Hong Kong, China — According to the United Nations, the Royal Thai Police are organized criminals. The Convention against Transnational Organized Crime defines an organized crime group as at least three people acting in concert "with the aim of committing one or more serious crimes or offences (for) a financial or other material benefit."
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March 20, 2008Hong Kong, China — The latest report of a United Nations independent expert has rightly inferred that the deepening poverty of millions is the most endemic human rights abuse in Burma today.The report notes that even government figures reveal that citizens spend around 73 percent of their disposable incomes on food alone, while international agencies estimate that one child in three aged under five is malnourished.
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March 13, 2008Hong Kong, China — In most countries teachers with talent and commitment are valued; in Burma some are jailed. U Aung Pe is one. His crime was to have taught underprivileged children without a license, which brought him three years in prison.
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March 06, 2008Hong Kong, China — It has been four years since Somchai Neelaphaijit disappeared; four long years of heartbreak for his family, four years of unanswered questions. Somchai was a lawyer who took on cases others wouldn't touch, cases that didn't earn him friends in high places. He did not disappear by accident, but by force.
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February 28, 2008Hong Kong, China — The new prime minister of Thailand has outraged many by refusing to admit that an infamous massacre ever occurred, dismissing it as "dirty history." Thailand's history is dirty not because stuff happened, but because even now nobody is able to tell the truth about what really went on, or name names.
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February 14, 2008Hong Kong, China — In recent weeks Thailand's media has attentively reported on the arrest of some paramilitary police who are alleged to have abducted and framed tens, perhaps hundreds, of people. One of these, a middle-aged woman, in January set off the alarm after she, her son and two others had been freed.
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February 07, 2008Hong Kong, China — For anyone grappling with the thorny problem of assigning a financial value to human life, help is at hand. Insurance companies of the world, rejoice: Burma's Defense Ministry has definitively established that one life is worth a bit less than six US dollars.
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January 31, 2008Hong Kong , China — An article in the Asia Times this week linked a secret U.S. facility in eastern Thailand with the torture of people in the country's south. That soldiers, paramilitaries and police in the south routinely torture their detainees is beyond doubt, but their practices long preceded the war on terror.
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January 24, 2008Hong Kong, China — Within the last decade, the cost of a bus trip across Rangoon, a cup of tea, or a bottle of peanut oil has risen tenfold. Spreading poverty has been documented, but the contrasting displays of extravagant riches by the small elite have attracted less attention abroad. In the country, they are increasingly hard to ignore.
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January 03, 2008Hong Kong, China — Officers of the Kalasin District Police Station in northeastern Thailand are alleged to have abducted and murdered dozens of people in the last few years. The actual number could exceed 100; many more bodies have been found, but were not properly examined and documented before being cremated.
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December 27, 2007Hong Kong, China — Some months ago, Le Monde reported that a man in Russia had been jailed for an "excessive sense of justice" after protesting the brutal treatment of demonstrators. A new study has hit upon this, and applied the notion of mental illness not to persons but to legal and political life in Burma.
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December 20, 2007Hong Kong, China — Hundreds of people blockaded the National Assembly in Bangkok on Dec. 12, where the unelected legislature, consisting largely of serving and former military officers and bureaucrats, was set to pass a flurry of highly regressive bills before stepping down next year.
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December 14, 2007Hong Kong, China — Tourist brochures portray Burma as a mystical land full of unseen wonders and tall tales about amazing imaginary creatures, from giant serpents to magical birds. But it was a different sort of fantasy the government spun stories about in Geneva this week: a far more modern, albeit no less implausible entity.
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December 06, 2007Hong Kong, China — A high-level committee in Thailand is gearing up to recommend that people who enabled the killing of thousands in 2004 and thereafter be held criminally liable. It has in its sights former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and other parties to his "war on
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November 29, 2007Hong Kong, China — Thailand's coup leader has uncovered a new and serious threat to national security. No, it's not imminent bloodshed of the sort that was supposedly about to tear the country asunder last year, obliging him to play the part of reluctant gentleman usurper.
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November 22, 2007Hong Kong, China — At a meeting in Singapore last week, Burma's defense minister iterated that persons taken into custody over the protests in his country of recent months had not been arrested but held "only for questioning." Perhaps because it was intended to deflect ce
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November 15, 2007Hong Kong, China — A former senator this week decried the treatment of the 2 million or so migrant workers now in Thailand, most of whom have come from Burma. In a Bangkok Post article, Jon Ungphakorn offered up some instances of abuse in factories and on fishing boats to s
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November 08, 2007Hong Kong, China — While hundreds of persons remain detained or are missing in the aftermath of the uprising that gripped Burma in September, and new sporadic protests emerge, its national newspapers have consisted of the usual phalanx of army officers forcing their largess
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November 01, 2007Hong Kong, China — When Madi Alilatay was picked up in Yala, southern Thailand on July 23 this year he was not charged with anything. He was not held under any law, for any reason, or for any purpose.
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October 25, 2007Hong Kong, China — The lead article in last Sunday's South China Morning Post breathlessly reported that some of those involved in recent protests throughout Burma had received training from the National Endowment for Democracy, a group funded by the United States governmen
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October 18, 2007Hong Kong, China — Thailand at the start of the month acceded to the U.N. Convention against Torture, after years of work by many persons, among them human rights advocates and personnel in its Justice Ministry; the latter having convinced those in other parts of government
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October 11, 2007Hong Kong, China — The Hong Kong University this week hosted a talk on recent events in Burma by its dean of social sciences, who was billed as arguing "for new forms of intervention that take policy responses beyond the bankrupt strategies of sanctions imposed by Western s
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October 04, 2007Hong Kong, China — The reports of car crashes, court cases and actresses' haircuts that normally comprise the television broadcasts on Hong Kong's aboveground trains last week gave way to the images seen all over the world of monks leading their people in prayer and protest
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September 27, 2007Hong Kong, China — Among the many inspiring photographs to come from Burma in this past week, perhaps one of the most compelling was not of rain-soaked monks wading through flooded Rangoon streets or teenagers and their grandmothers with hands locked together to form protec
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September 20, 2007Hong Kong, China — When a group of Buddhist monks in Pakkoku, upper Burma, a fortnight ago joined public protests against drastic increases in nationwide fuel prices, they were met with shocking violence. At least three suffered injuries; one is rumored to have died.
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September 13, 2007Hong Kong, China — Many people have expressed genuine concern about the expanded role of the judiciary under Thailand's new army-backed constitution, which was pushed through a referendum and passed into law this August.Three top judges are now obliged to sit on panels th
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September 06, 2007Hong Kong, China — Over two weeks of rallies against rising prices in Burma have been met with familiar violence. In the former capital, Rangoon (Yangon), government-organized gangs consisting of plainclothes officials and hired thugs have set upon protestors with increasin
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August 30, 2007Hong Kong, China — Among the contingents of soldiers manning checkpoints and keeping watch on the public throughout August, in the eve and aftermath of Thailand's military-backed constitutional referendum, at least one took its work a bit too far. The unit, on detail in L
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August 23, 2007Hong Kong, China — If you are among those fretting about the global financial slump that has taken up so much news time in recent days, spare a thought for the people in Burma. On Aug.
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August 16, 2007Hong Kong, China — In a radio interview at the end of July, the interim prime minister of Thailand criticized anti-government protestors who fought with police outside the house of a privy councilor in Bangkok, the man whom they accuse of masterminding last year's military
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August 09, 2007Hong Kong, China — Six men in Burma have been jailed on account of a duck. Anyone wanting to appreciate the real nature of human rights abuse there, and also why years of international efforts have so far failed to effect any significant change, should take interest in how
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August 02, 2007Hong Kong, China — The interim government of Thailand is about to make a spectacle of itself -- one that will make brilliantly clear its ideal future society. According to an announcement by the Public Relations Department, a Democracy Festival will usher in the Aug.
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July 26, 2007Hong Kong, China — On June 15 a man in upper Burma emerged from a crowd to smash another in the face with knuckledusters. Then he ran off and hid in the office of an organization under the patronage of the country's senior army commander.
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July 19, 2007Hong Kong, China — On July 17 the government of Thailand renewed a state of emergency over the southern border provinces for the ninth time since it was introduced two years ago. That the bloodshed in the south has only worsened in these years should not be a surprise to an
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July 12, 2007Hong Kong, China — The International Committee of the Red Cross two weeks ago issued a remarkable press release on Burma (Myanmar). Remarkable, because in contrast to the committee's usually circumspect approach in discussing problems of government in countries where it ope
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July 05, 2007Hong Kong, China — A recording has been made public that indicates the extent to which Thailand's top jurists are compromised and their conduct, censurable.An unidentified top echelon bureaucrat apparently recorded his phone conversation with the secretary of the Supreme
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June 28, 2007Hong Kong, China — Burma's military government will reopen its constitutional convention for the fifth and final time as announced last week, whereby a new charter will be finalized and go to a referendum; thereafter the country will supposedly return to some kind of civili
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June 21, 2007Hong Kong, China — Dramatic events in both Pakistan and Thailand during the past year have brought their respective judiciaries to the centre of national politics. Judges and lawyers in Pakistan have played a heroic role in challenging the authority of the army, while those
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June 14, 2007Hong Kong, China — A group of schoolchildren in Burma were recently given a lesson on the inanity of their government and its officialdom. According to a report by the Thailand-based Yoma 3 news group, representatives of the Myanmar Maternal and Child Welfare Association ca
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June 07, 2007Hong Kong, China — Beware of news editors who write about "stakeholders." The word may be popular among the staff of international development agencies, producing clouded reports about projects that they have never seen, but it is usually avoided by journalists, who are exp
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May 31, 2007Hong Kong, China — The latest one-year extension to the house arrest of Burma's democracy icon Daw Aung San Suu Kyi has brought with it the usual speculation about the country's future and the thinking of its military rulers. What will be their next steps?
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May 24, 2007Hong Kong, China — Alexander Hamilton wrote in the Federalist Papers in 1787 that where powers of government are properly separated the judiciary poses the least threat to constitutional rights. It has no physical force of its own.
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May 17, 2007Hong Kong, China — The wedding video of a Burmese general's daughter has proved a surprise hit throughout the country. Footage of Thandar Shwe's glittering marriage ceremony has since last July been watched around the country on black market CDs, and globally on You Tube an
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May 10, 2007Hong Kong, China — In April, a court hearing on the outskirts of Bangkok was held up three times while the presiding judge answered his mobile phone. The judge, who was supposed to be listening to the deposition of a forensic expert, instead talked loudly into the telephone
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May 03, 2007Hong Kong, China — Burma and North Korea together caused a flurry of excitement a few days ago when they renewed diplomatic relations after a quarter-century hiatus. Government officials, newspaper editorialists and human rights advocates around the world rushed to iterate
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April 26, 2007Hong Kong, China — Thailand's eighteenth Constitution has been drafted. By September it will go to the country's first ever referendum.
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April 19, 2007Hong Kong, China — The price of eggs is a sensitive topic in Burma. Anger at the cost of an omelette, one Rangoon resident recently discovered, can land you in jail.
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April 12, 2007Hong Kong, China — A leading international human rights group released a report on Thailand a couple of weeks ago. The report was accurate, yet it said nothing new.
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April 05, 2007Hong Kong, China — The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) is having trouble finding violent crime in Burma. This is strange, given its mandate; stranger still given that police and local officials there assault and kill people with impunity, and often over the
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March 29, 2007Hong Kong, China — Over the past months the interim prime minister of Thailand has stressed his strong interest in the "rule of law." What does a prime minister installed through a military coup mean when he talks about the rule of law?
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March 27, 2007Hong Kong, China — Over the past months the interim prime minister of Thailand has stressed his strong interest in the "rule of law." What does a prime minister installed through a military coup mean when he talks about the rule of law?


