PDA

View Full Version : Freedom! Burma!



Chuck Bao
10/4/2007, 06:37 PM
I've decided that I'm going to Burma, well maybe.

I'm going to the Burmese embassy tomorrow to get the visa. I figure that it will only cost $100 to get the visa for a friend and me. We may not go and it is only $100 wasted. The visa lasts for a month and if the situation suddenly improves, I can go anytime I get the flight and hotel confirmation.

This is an interesting story from International Herald Tribune about the ruling junta's ability to cut off internet access.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/04/asia/04info.php?page=2


Myanmar junta unplugs Internet
By Seth Mydans Published: October 3, 2007

BANGKOK: It was about as simple and uncomplicated as shooting demonstrators in the streets. Embarrassed by smuggled video and photographs that showed their people rising up against them, the generals who run Myanmar simply switched off the Internet.

Until last Friday television screens and newspapers abroad were flooded with scenes of tens of thousands of red-robed monks in the streets and of chaos and violence as the junta stamped out the biggest popular uprising there in two decades.

But then the images, text messages and posts stopped, shut down by generals who belatedly grasped the power of the Internet to jeopardize their crackdown.

"Finally they realized that this was their biggest enemy, and they took it down," said Aung Zaw, editor of an exile magazine called Irrawaddy, whose Web site has been a leading source of news over the past weeks.

His Web site has been attacked by a virus whose timing raises the possibility that the military government has a few skilled hackers in its ranks.

Myanmar junta unplugs Internet

efficiency of this latest, technological crackdown raises the question of whether the much-vaunted role of the Internet in undermining repression can stand up to a determined and ruthless government — or whether a tiny, economically isolated country like Myanmar is an exception.

"The crackdown on the media and on information flow is parallel to the physical crackdown," said David Mathieson, an expert on Myanmar with Human Rights Watch, "and it seems they've done it quite effectively. Since Friday we've seen no new images come out."

There are just two Internet service providers in Myanmar, and it was not complicated to shut them down, he said. Along with the Internet, the junta cut off most telephone access to the outside world. Soldiers on the streets confiscated cameras and video-recording cellphones.

In keeping with the country's self-imposed isolation over the past half-century, Myanmar's junta seemed prepared to cut itself off from the virtual world just as it had from the world at large.

At the same time, the junta turned to the oldest tactic of all to silence an opposition — fear. Local journalists and people caught transmitting information or using cameras are being threatened and arrested, according to Burmese exile groups.

In one final, hurried telephone call, Aung Zaw said, one of his long-time sources said goodbye.

"We have done enough," he said the source told him. "We can no longer move around. It is over to you, we cannot do anything any more. We are down. We are hunted by soldiers, we are down."

There are still images in the pipeline, Aung Zaw said, and as soon as he receives them and his Web site is back up again, the world will see them.

But Mathieson said the country's dissidents were reverting to tactics of the past, smuggling images out through cellphones by breaking the files down and reassembling them.

It is not clear, though, how much longer the generals can hold back the future. Technology is making it harder for dictators and juntas to draw a curtain of secrecy around themselves.

"There are always ways people find of getting information out, and authorities always have to struggle with them," said Mitchell Stephens, a professor of journalism at New York University and the author of "A History of News."

"There are fewer and fewer events that we don't have film images of: the world is filled with Zapruders," he said, referring to Abraham Zapruder, an onlooker who was the only person who recorded the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

Before last Friday's blackout, Myanmar's hit-and-run journalists were staging a virtuoso demonstration of the power of the Internet to outmaneuver a repressive government. A guerrilla army of citizen reporters was smuggling out pictures even as events were unfolding, and the world was watching.

"For those of us who study the history of communication technology, this is of equal importance to the telegraph, which was the first medium that separated communications and transportation," said Frank Moretti, executive director of the Center for New Media Teaching and Learning at Columbia University.

Since the protests began in mid-August, people have sent images and words through SMS text messages and e-mails and on daily blogs, according to some of the exile groups that received their messages. They have posted notices on Facebook, the social networking Web site. They have sent tiny messages on e-cards. They have updated the online encyclopedia Wikipedia.

They also used Internet versions of "pigeons" — the couriers reporters used in the past to carry out film and news — handing their material to embassies or nongovernment organizations that had access to satellite connections.

Within hours, the images and reports were broadcast back into Myanmar by foreign radio and television stations, informing and connecting a public that hears only propaganda from its government.

These technological tricks may offer a model to people elsewhere who are trying to outwit repressive governments. But the generals' heavy-handed response is probably a less useful model.

Other nations, with larger economies and more ties to the outside world, have more at stake. China, for one, could not consider cutting itself off as Myanmar has done, and so control of the Internet is an industry in itself.

"In China it's massive," said Xiao Qiang, director of the China Internet Project and an adjunct professor at the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley.

"There's surveillance and intimidation, there's legal regulation and there is commercial leverage to force private Internet companies to self-censor," he said. "And there is what we call the Great Firewall, which blocks hundreds of thousands of Web sites outside of China."

Yet for all its efforts, even China cannot entirely control the Internet, an easier task in a smaller country like Myanmar.

As technology makes everyone a potential reporter, the challenge in risky places like Myanmar will be accuracy, said Vincent Brossel, head of the Asian section of the press freedom organization Reporters Without Borders.

"Rumors are the worst enemy of independent journalism," he said. "Already we are hearing so many strange things. So if you have no flow of information and the spread of rumors in a country that is using propaganda — that's it. You are destroying the story, and day by day it goes down."

The technological advances on the streets of Myanmar are the latest in a long history of revolutions in the transmission of news — from the sailing ship to the telegraph to international telephone lines and the telex machine to computers and satellite telephones.

"Today every citizen is a war correspondent," said Phillip Knightley, author of "The First Casualty," a classic history of war reporting that starts with letters home from soldiers in Crimea in the 1850s and ends with the "living room war" in Vietnam in the 1970s when people could watch a war for the first time on television.

"Mobile phones with video of broadcast quality have made it possible for anyone to report a war," he said in an e-mail interview. "You just have to be there. No trouble getting a start, the broadcasters have been begging viewers to send their stuff."

Of course, I want to stay at the Strand, which, in my opinion, is the best hotel in the world. I'm still a bit shocked that it's now charging US$450-500 a night. So, I don't want to stay there too long.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strand_Hotel

http://www.ghmhotels.com/hotels/hotel_home.asp?hotelid=5&section=home

Jerk
10/4/2007, 06:49 PM
Don't get yourself kilt, dude.

RUSH LIMBAUGH is my clone!
10/4/2007, 08:38 PM
Don't get yourself kilt, dude.And why is it you want to go there right now?

Chuck Bao
10/5/2007, 03:05 PM
Okay, that’s a tough question, Mr. Limbaugh is my clone.

This is what I’ve come up with so far.

1) If I did receive a visa, it doesn’t mean that I have to go. A visa lasts for four weeks and I don’t mind losing the $23 (not $100) visa fee. As I stated in my first post, it would give me a chance to go on a moments notice if things improved.

2) I would like to help in any way. If I could smuggle out 10-20 thumb drives of video or pics and get the story out and keep the world focused on this important struggle. ASEAN, the UN, China, Russia, etc. need to apply more pressure. I’m afraid that the crackdown on the internet will work and set a very dangerous precedent for future governments to follow, such as Thailand. I’m afraid that people outside Burma will forget about Burma and its people. I’m afraid that those who have made sacrifices will have made them in vain. Even if there is less than 1% chance of success of making contact with pro-democracy people, I’m still willing to try. I have the money and time.

3) I don’t have family or close friends in Burma, but the Burmese struggle for freedom is still the main cause I support. There are more than one million Burmese political refugees in Thailand and I donate clothes, food and medicine to the border camps and refugee camps.

4) What goes on in Burma does have an indirect impact on Thailand. The Thai generals are close to the Burmese generals. I’m appalled that the leader of last year’s coup was publicly quoted as saying that the Burmese army had to fight back in defense against the Burmese monks. Talk about a poopyhead comment.

5) If the ruling junta fell, it would be like being in Berlin when the Berlin wall fell – the party of this century. According to my colleague, Geoff, the odds of this happening are less than 1%. Sadly, I have to agree.

All of this is moot, anyway.

I'm not getting a visa. I went to the embassy this morning and they said that all tourist visas have to be approved by the government in Burma (I guess in the new capital of Naypyidaw) and that it would take 3-5 business days. The couple in front of me in the queue had already been waiting a week.

One of my colleagues suggested that I try to book through a tour group, being that it should be approved ahead of single traveling tourists. But, my travel agent said that no westerners are getting visas at the moment and that they’ve cancelled all tour groups until at least October 15.

So yeah it's not looking very good at the moment.

Stoop Dawg
10/5/2007, 03:15 PM
Kudos to you.

And shame on our world leaders.

OUinFLA
10/5/2007, 03:35 PM
Im impressed with your motive.
Don't get caught.

KaiserSooner
10/5/2007, 03:50 PM
Kudos to you.

And shame on our world leaders.

Agree on both counts.

On a side note, I just recently found out the capital was moved from Rangoon to a military junta-constructed village smack in the middle of Burma. Gee, I wonder why. ;)

Chuck Bao
10/15/2007, 04:21 PM
I’ve changed my plans of going into Burma and will instead donate medicine, money and old clothes to the refugee camp at the border crossing closest to Rangoon.

I haven’t retried to get a visa at the Burmese embassy and I’m not sure if my travel agent is yet booking tour groups into Burma.

I’m so happy to help out as little as I can and am so looking forward to my trip to Mae Sot this weekend.

I’m flying out from Don Muang at 8pm this Friday.

I have a car rental at the Phitsanulok airport. Khun Nope and I will be staying here for one night.

www.rainforestthailand.com/

We will drive to the border town of Mae Sot on Saturday morning.

We talked to Dr. Cynthia’s clinic today and downloaded their medicine need list. They suggested we contact a drug wholesaler in Bangkok who will deliver the donated medicine free of charge. That’s already done.

We will donate old clothes at the clinic as well, like we’ve done before. I appreciate all of the support of my Thai and expatriate friends and colleagues.

Khun Nope and I will also make tamboon (merit) at the Burmese temple (Kybaung Thit) in Mae Sot. I was so impressed by the Burmese monks standing up to the military regime and then walking four days to the Thai border town of Mae Sot. Can I say here that I love the peaceful resistance of Aung San Suu Kyi? Can I at least hope that it does work if we all apply enough moral support?

Khun Nope and I will stay here on Saturday night and plan on sightseeing at Sukholthai on Sunday. Sukholthai is the Thai Camelot – the perfect kingdom.

www.anandasukhothai.com/

It’s such a strange dichotomy with Burma. Thailand, the only Asian nation never colonized, has its perfect mythical model from a 14th century kingdom. What I want to say is that it is not a bad model and west invasions don’t always produce the best results regardless of the intentions.

GottaHavePride
10/15/2007, 07:59 PM
Just a suggestion: when doing incredibly awesome and risky things such as what you have outlined here... I don't think I'd post about it until after I was done. ;)

Chuck Bao
10/22/2007, 06:58 PM
Good suggestion, that. I’ve been there and done did good.

Drove around Thailand in a big circle and still managed to get lost, repeatedly. :(

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/mapphitsanuloktomaesotwithtext.8876954.jpg

Woke up one morning next to a river.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/viewfromriverfrontsuite.jpg

Made merit at a Burmese temple at Mae Sot.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/burmesetempleresized.jpg

Tossed money into the revolving alms bowls for luck…ahem…I mean merit.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/moneytossforluckimeanmeritresized.jpg

Done put some money in some mechanical alms bowls. Pretty neat invention.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/mechanicalalmsresized.jpg

Got my name written on a little ceramic Buddha.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/nameonceramicbuddharesized.jpg

Donated some medicine at the Mae Tao Clinic offering free health care to Burmese refugees.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/maetaoclinicresized.jpg

Walked around some 15th century ruins at the ancient kingdom of Camelot, I mean Sukholthai. Except, there were no knights of the round table here. No, this kingdom had fish in every pond and rice in every field and everyone was just so darn happy and that was the first time Thai script was invented so it must all be true.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/watmahathatresized.jpg

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/watsasiresized.jpg

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/standingbuddharesized.jpg

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/sittingbuddharesized.jpg

Everything is so peaceful, including the temple of victory in war.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/watchanasongramresized.jpg

But needed to make some more merit just for good measure.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/releasethefishesresized.jpg

StoopTroup
10/22/2007, 07:46 PM
Great pics...

Looks like a beautiful place.