People are dying amid worsening covid pandemic in Myanmar

The need there is growing. Join us in solidarity to provide urgent aid and support the resistance.

COVID Crisis in Myanmar

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The need there is growing, donate now:
GoFundMe: Click Here
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Hi All,

We all know how bad it was in New York during the early days of the Covid pandemic. The same situation is developing in Myanmar but very much everywhere from big cities to small villages. The difference is that Myanmar is in the middle of a revolution and already being pushed to her limits, and the terrorist army is seizing Oxygen everywhere it can find.

Here are some pictures, I am sorry if it is too hard to see for you.

Father and Son

Rescuers found both father (infected) and son (who is taking care of his father) dead in a home. Only two people lived there. (FB Link Here)

Mother in Need

Her son asked for oxygen help online, After a while later, he updated that she was dead.

Oxygen machine

Oxygen machine that we are donating through some group who are providing vitamins and oxygen machines in Myanmar. (Each cost USD 600)

While the world watches as it has been all along, we must hold our breath and help the people survive.

In solidarity,

Nyunt Than

Fundraising for CDM

Dear All,

There is no better time than now to update you on your support for CDM as the Myanmar Civil Disobedience Movement has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by a group of professors from Oslo University.

So far we have raised close to thirty thousand, online and offline combined. We have already sent $12000 (almost all that we have raised offline) to Myanmar. About $4000 was distributed last month, and the rest is currently being distributed to various recipients this month. We should start receiving online donations soon and there is only a 2.2 % commission to be deducted from it (not too bad).

Cities such as Hlaing Thar Yar, Yangon division, which put up the strongest resistance, are now under strict Marshall law and the military is systematically imposing their rules using heavy military presence, their allies, and thugs. So is the neighboring city, Shwe Pyi Thar. Most people (40 confirmed) were killed in one day there, factories were shutting down and many poor people are struggling to get food. We are donating food to such places. (each bag costs about $4.5)

Hlaing Thar Yar

Though more than 500 have been killed in March alone, people are courageously and yet peacefully protesting - in some cities through heavily fortified protest sites. Such street protests are first-line defenses of the population and CDM workers against the military. We must keep the military busy on the streets to protect the population. Therefore, this month we start donating to protest groups in various cities.

As we speak, CDM workers of various professions are being forced out of their housing. In particular, Myanmar rail workers are at the forefront of CDM, and they have been forced out of their housing as they refuse to give in. There are nearly four hundred in Mandalay, about one hundred in Mawlamyine, and a few hundred in Yangon that we are aware of. We are only able to support some of them for less than $20 each as there is so much need.

All in all, we have donated:

Last month (already updated):

This month:

Hlaing Thar Yar 1 Hlaing Thar Yar 2
Mandalay Fire Victims
Rail Workers

In solidarity,

Nyunt Than

BADA

I Will Die Protecting My Country

Dear All,

The world is witnessing "Give me liberty, or give me death" in Myanmar.

Enough is enough and the people will put an end to "the habit of the coup by the military," in Myanmar --- not with this generation, not again.

If the world powers help, it will be easier and less bloody.

They don't want this, but there is only one viable option left for them to regain freedom - armed struggle.

Young Protester SF Chronicles

In solidarity,
Nyunt Than
BADA

Read online here: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/24/world/asia/myanmar-coup-resistance-protests.html

PDF version with many photos, download here:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Urx4luvlFtqQ2S1pC01s4xzsi0IcHTAK/view?usp=sharing

'I Will Die Protecting My Country':
In Myanmar, a New Resistance Rises


As the nation's military kills, assaults and terrorizes unarmed civilians each day, some protesters say there is no choice but to fight the army on its own terms.
By Hanna Beech Photographs by The New York Times

March 24, 2021

In a jungle in the borderlands of Myanmar, the troops sweated through basic training. They learned how to load a rifle, pull the pin of a hand grenade and assemble a firebomb.

These cadets are not members of Myanmar's military, which seized power last month and quickly imposed a battlefield brutality on the country's populace. Instead, they are an eclectic corps of students, activists, and ordinary office workers who believe that fighting back is the only way to defeat one of the world's most ruthless armed forces.

"I see the military as wild animals who can't think and are brutal with their weapons," said a woman from Yangon, Myanmar's biggest city, who was now in the forest for a week of boot camp. Like others who have joined the armed struggle, she did not want her name published for fear that the Tatmadaw, as the Myanmar military is known, would target her.

After weeks of peaceful protests, the frontline of Myanmar's resistance to the Feb. 1 coup is mobilizing into a kind of guerrilla force. In the cities, protesters have built barricades to protect neighborhoods from military incursions and learned how to make smoke bombs on the internet. In the forests, they are training in basic warfare techniques and plotting to sabotage military-linked facilities.

The boldness and desperation of this new front recalls the radicalization of a previous generation of democracy activists in Myanmar, who traded treatises on political philosophy for guns. As in the past, the hard-line opposition is a defensive response to the military's mounting reign of terror. The Tatmadaw has cracked down on peaceful protesters and unarmed bystanders alike, killing at least 275 people since the coup, according to a monitoring group.

Other forms of resistance have continued in Myanmar. A mass civil disobedience campaign has idled the economy, with a nationwide strike on Wednesday leaving towns devoid of business activity. In creative acts of defiance, protesters have lined up rows of stuffed animals and origami cranes as stand-ins for demonstrators who could get shot.

But there is a growing recognition that such efforts may not be enough, that the Tatmadaw needs to be countered on its own terms. Last week, remnants of the ousted Parliament, who consider themselves the legitimate government, said that a "revolution" was needed to save the country. They have called for the formation of a federal army that respects various ethnic groups, not just the majority Bamar.

"If diplomacy fails, if the killings continue, the people of Myanmar will be forced to defend themselves," said Dr. Sasa, a spokesman for the ousted Parliament who is on the run after having been charged with high treason.

Any such movement will have to contend with a military that has ruled Myanmar by force for the better part of 60 years and has fought dozens of insurgencies for even longer. The Tatmadaw's bloodthirst is notorious. Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the army chief who led the coup, has repeatedly commanded the extermination of entire villages, most chillingly the ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims.

The country has trembled as the Tatmadaw has brought its war machine to the cities, imprisoning Myanmar's civilian leaders last month and erasing a decade of political and economic reform.

Since then, dozens of young protesters have been killed by single gunshots to the head. Security forces have fired into homes at random, leaving families cowering in back rooms. On Tuesday, a 7-year-old girl sitting at home in her father's lap was shot in the city of Mandalay, in what appeared to be a collateral death. (Hundreds of protesters were released on Wednesday after weeks of detention.)

The Tatmadaw is flouting the international rules of war. Security forces have fired at ambulances and tortured detainees. Given the brutality, members of Myanmar's frontline of democracy say there is no choice but to take up arms.

Most days in the concrete conflict zones of Yangon, Ko Soe Win Naing, a 26-year-old sailor, prepares for war: a GoPro camera affixed to his helmet, a balaclava over his head, vials of tear gas in his vest pockets, a sheathed sword on his back and a gas mask at the ready. His weapon of choice is a firework fashioned into a sort of grenade.

Mr. Soe Win Naing has not gone home for weeks, part of a roving gang that tries to protect neighborhoods from marauding security forces. He does not, however, support going into the jungle to train to fight the military.

"Although we are working for the right thing, I have become like a fugitive," he said. "But even if I get killed, I will fight until the very end."

The frontline fighters have piled up sandbags and built bamboo barricades, which they defend with homemade firebombs. Children have joined, too, dressing in pajamas to look harmless as they travel to their battle posts.

"I don't have fear," said Ko Moe Min Latt, 15, a member of a defensive line who barely reaches 5 feet tall

The image of resistance in Myanmar, once known as Burma, is often wreathed in an aura of nonviolence. In 1988, students argued political theory in the classroom and marched for democracy on the street. In 2007, Buddhist monks overturned their begging bowls and walked barefoot in quiet dissent.

The nation's ousted civilian leader, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for her campaign against the generals who locked her up for 15 years. (The award was tarnished by her defense of the ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya.)

But most struggles in Myanmar have involved guns and slingshots. In the mountainous periphery of the country, ethnic armed groups have been fighting for autonomy for decades. After soldiers gunned down hundreds of protesters in 1988, thousands of students and activists fled into the forests and formed armed groups that fought alongside ethnic insurgencies.

Of late, their tactics have extended to information warfare. On Wednesday, anti-coup protesters said they had launched hacking attacks on two military-linked banks.

For the new generation, the decision to fight is born of a desire to protect what the country has gained over the past decade. Myanmar was once one of the most isolated countries on Earth, as a xenophobic and economically inept junta cleaved the country from the international community. Then came tentative political reforms, an internet link to the world and chances at private-sector jobs.

The notion that Myanmar might return to a frightened past has galvanized some protesters. One young woman, who is about to start military training in the jungle, said she remembered huddling as a child with her family and listening secretly to BBC radio broadcasts, an act that once could have earned imprisonment.

"I decided to risk my life and fight back any possible way I can," she said. "If we oppose nationwide in unison, we will make the military have sleepless nights and insecure lives, just as they have done to us."

The security forces, she continued, are following orders and lack a greater purpose.

"We have our political faith, we have our dreams," she said. "This is the fight in which we have to use our brains and our bodies."

If any armed rebellion is to succeed, it will need the backing of the ethnic insurgencies that have long been at war with the Tatmadaw. Last week, the Kachin Independence Army, which represents the Kachin of northern Myanmar, launched a surprise strike against the Tatmadaw.

On Thursday, five Tatmadaw soldiers were killed by the Karen National Liberation Army, which fights for the Karen ethnicity. Last year, hundreds of Tatmadaw troops died while battling another ethnic insurgency in western Rakhine State.

"If ethnic armed groups launch offensives, it could help relieve pressure on the protesters in the cities," said Padoh Saw Hser Bwe, a general secretary of the Karen National Union.

With the Tatmadaw's most notorious brigades now stationed in the cities, focused on anti-coup protesters rather than ethnic civil war, the military's killing continues unabated.

On Monday in Mandalay, Ko Tun Tun Aung, 14, wandered out of his home to grab a pot of water. A bullet pierced his chest, killing him instantly, according to his relatives. At least seven others were also shot dead in the same neighborhood that day. Two were rescue workers.

Ko Thet Aung, a 23-year-old frontline defender, is from the same Mandalay neighborhood where the killings occurred. For three weeks, he has been manning barricades and dodging gunfire.

"The more they crack down, the more we are motivated to fight back," he said. "We are from Generation Z, but I would call ourselves Gen-P --Generation Protection. I will die protecting my country at the front lines."

Latest Updates

January 15, 2025

UN Special Envoy warns of "imminent humanitarian catastrophe" in Myanmar as aid access blocked.
Read UN Report

March 3, 2025

Myanmar's Shadow Government Announces New "Federal Army" to Unify Resistance Forces.
BBC Coverage

April 12, 2025

U.S. Congress Passes Sanctions Bill Targeting Myanmar Junta's Oil & Gas Revenue.
H.R.7789 Text

May 1, 2025

Massive Nationwide Strike Paralyzes Myanmar Economy on May Day.
Al Jazeera Report

May 10, 2025

ICJ Orders Immediate Halt to Military Operations in Rakhine State.
ICJ Press Release

3/19/2021

Myanmar: UN rights office "deeply disturbed" over intensifying violence against protesters: New.un.org
Read more

3/24/2021

Myanmar protesters join 'silent strike' after soldiers kill 7-year-old girl in her father's arms
https://www.cnn.com/2021/03/24/asia/myanmar-protests-7-year-old-killed
Read more

4/1/2021

AP: Striking Myanmar rail workers move out as protests continue: https://apnews.com/article/
Democracy Now: https://www.democracynow.org/
Myanmar Soldiers Burn Man Alive in Weekend Orgy of Junta Violence: https://www.rfa.org/

Statement Condemning the Military Coup

February 1st 2021

On November 8th, 2020 general elections, the NLD won a second straight landslide victory of 83% (396 seats out of 476) in the two houses of Parliament, allowing it to officially form the next Government. The military backed USDP won 7% (33 seats) and their usual 25% quota of seats appointed by the military as included in their sham 2008 constitution.

Once again, on January 28th, 2021, Burma's military dictators have engaged in a military coup d'etat, claiming unsubstantiated electoral fraud in the recent Nov.8th, 2020 general elections. In fact, it was just an excuse to take over the country's power. The military generals were never for the country or the people.

The National League for Democracy (NLD) the winning party and the Members of Parliament were gathered in the capital Naypyidaw, preparing to attend the opening of the 3rd Parliament, which was due to convene on February 1st, 2021, when Sr. General Min Aung Hlaing's coup occurred. They arrested Burma's State Counselor Daw Aung San Su Kyi (DASSK), President U Win Myint, other civilian officers including Members of Parliament, State & County Prime Ministers and some religious monks of around 400 people and have taken steps to undermine the ongoing Burma's transition to democracy into jeopardy.

The constitution states that only the President has the executive power to declare a state of emergency. Since Sr. Gen Min Aung Hlaing took the President U Win Myint into custody, the military is violating its own constitution.

We the people of Burma living in the USA, believe that NLD won a free, fair and unbiased election according to the majority of the people's wish and their true democratic values.

Therefore, we strongly condemn the coup and respectfully request the following:

  1. To release NOW DASSK, President U Win Myint and all MPs, civilians, religious monks and all who have been unjustly detained.
  2. To oppose any attempt to alter the outcome of recent free, fair & unbiased elections of November 8th, 2020, or obstruct, impede, delay the ongoing Burma's democratic process.
  3. To allow President U Win Myint, State Counsellor DASSK, and all the MPs to reconvene the 3rd New Parliament scheduled for February 1st, 2021 IMMEDIATELY.
  4. The United Nations Security Council to impose a global arms embargo on Myanmar's military junta and freeze all assets held abroad by its leadership.
  5. The United States to designate the Tatmadaw as a Foreign Terrorist Organization and sanction all entities providing financial or logistical support.
  6. The United Nations Security Council and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to take serious action on the military dictators who have violated their own Constitution & overridden the will of the people.
  7. The United States to deliver swift and decisive response to force the military to reverse its course and stop Burma from sliding back into the authoritarian rule.
  8. The People's Republic of China to strongly condemn the coup and work with the international community to reinstate the Burma's civilian government according to the will of the people.

Letters and Politics Interview

02.02.21 - 10:00am Part I -The Military Coup in Myanmar
Guest: Nyunt Than is Chair of the Burmese American Democratic Alliance (BADA).

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