Burmese people are still trapped by their useless government. The Burmese government reported only 10 people died, but who knows what’s really happening in the country? It doesn’t make sense to have shot down or torture people who held a peaceful protest, even a Japanese news reporter was shot down.

This is the newsletter I received from Avaaz yesterday:
Dear Avaaz member,
Burma’s streets are quiet–no mass demonstrations, no riot police. But the calm is an illusion. Change is coming to Burma, and we are all a part of it.
Here’s where we stand: The regime has massacred, tortured, and intimidated its critics at home, and continues its night arrests and brutal interrogations. But while it has momentarily silenced the domestic opposition, its attacks on the revered Buddhist monks ignited an anger amongst the Burmese people that cannot be extinguished. Contacts inside Burma tell us that the demonstrators are steadily regrouping, even in the face of the deadly crackdown.
And around the world, the roar has grown deafening–so powerful that governments are scrambling for ways to bring new pressure to bear on the junta. Government leaders and the media have publicly credited the outcry of global civil society. Look at the statistics in the box on the right to see how, working alongside allies around the world, Avaaz members have begun to make a difference.
Many Burmese members of Avaaz have written in. Here’s a note from one of them–Trisa, now living abroad:
I am one of the 8888 uprising generation. Since the September uprising in Burma, I can’t get good night sleep. I can’t contact my remaining families and friends if they are ok… The voice of the world is very powerful. I have heartfelt thank you for all the supporters. Your voice can change our lives!
And here’s a note from an Avaaz member, Lynn in London, who joined a group of Burmese monks to hand-deliver the Avaaz petition–contained in a big red box–to UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, a permanent member of the UN Security Council, on the steps of 10 Downing Street last week:
When I put my hand on the red box, which held the 753,000 signatures from around the world collected by Avaaz, I imagined the outrage of the many people from every country in the world, every culture, every race, and every religion, contained within this box which was about to be presented to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. I thought about what it might mean for these Burmese monks whose religious brothers far away had been hurt and mistreated by the crackdown, to know that in every country in the world, people were supporting them.
And here’s what May Ng, a Burmese writer, editorialized on the news site Mizzima after seeing our petition:
As their voices have been heard and their faces have been seen, Aung San Suu Kyi and the people of Burma will no longer be alone. Avaaz.org, whose mission is to ensure that the views and values of the world’s people shape global decisions, will make sure that Burmese people will have a voice over their own fate from now on.
Avaaz will share the struggle of the Burmese people until the struggle is won. Our goals are constant: transition, dialogue, reconciliation, and democracy. We will also continue to take action together on many urgent issues, from climate change to peace in the Middle East to human rights–but we will not turn from the cause of the Burmese people. We believe that every human life has equal value, whether in Berlin, Beijing or Rangoon.
As Aung San Suu Kyi once urged, we will use our freedom to promote theirs.
With hope,
Ben, Ricken, Paul, Galit, Graziela, Iain, Sarah, Pascal, and Milena–the Avaaz team
PS: 52 years ago today, the UN charter enshrined “the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples.” Twelve years ago today, Aung San Suu Kyi was imprisoned. And today, in key cities around the world, protesters held a new wave of protests; the first shipment of supplies, paid for by Avaaz members, left for Burma–and the junta agreed to re-admit Ibrahim Gambari, the U.N. envoy who is working to build a dialogue between the regime and the opposition, earlier than previously announced. It’s been a long struggle, but the most important ones always are.
PPS: If your friends haven’t yet signed the petition, urge them to sign at: http://avaaz.org/en/burma_hope_lives/6.php
The Burmese people are waiting in the dark right now. You can do a small part helping them by shinning a light on Burma. I have done mine, you should have to.
If you are not convinced, look at these pictures showing how the government treat monks and protesters. Remember, they did nothing but just protest.

Gun shot wound of a 9 years old girl / Image credit: Burma Friend @ Flickr

The animals are killing to the monks / Image credit: Burma Friend @ Flickr

They murdered the monks like this / Image credit: Burma Friend @ Flickr

A young demonstrator was shot dead on 27 September in Rangoon / Image credit: Democratic Voice of Burma

Monk killed by Burma army / Image credit: Burma Friend @ Flickr
It will go never ending if I post all the pictures here, you can try to Google them using phrases like “Burma protest pictures” or head over to Democratic Voice of Burma.

I just wanted to share what I have read from a newspaper, and I think it’s worth sharing.
“We shouldn’t called them animal, because even though the animal don’t kill their same species like that. We shouldn’t called them sick too, because they can use that accuse to free them self from being punish.”
I forgot what the writer suggest, a a person worse than animal. I really agree that. Stop yelling them are ‘animal’ or even ‘sick’!
Free BURMA!
Military junta = eek.
The news about the Burmese protests weren’t known to the people living in Vietnam. Nobody in Vietnam knows about it; I’m sure the government’s afraid that such would be a motivating force to the people to protest against the communist government. :yell: I doubt Chinese people know about it either, but then again, I’m sure there are many pro-democracy advocates in China.
Hello,
Cheers on you, for putting the spotlight on Burma,
Now I would like to make a correction here, the pix of the first two monks are from Southern Thailand, The third picture is questionable.
It is easy to identify the difference, thai monks wear orange cloaks and Burmese red.
http://illustratedpig.blogspot.com/2007/09/land-of-smiles.html
All the best
Shiva