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Burma: In Exile, Shah Paung
Writes of Burma Struggle
By Anna S. Sussman
February 29, 2008 - (WOMENSENEWS) Shah Paung, a reporter for a magazine
that is the leading source of news about Burma, first remembers
Burmese troops attacking her village when she was 5 years old.
"I remember my brothers were playing volleyball in front of
the house," she said. "I felt the ground shake. My mom
grabbed me from the floor," recalls the writer for Irrawaddy,
a magazine based in northern Thailand.
That was around 1989, the year when the junta established the Union
of Myanmar, a name that pro-democracy activists still reject. For
the next 10 years Shah Paung's ethnic Karen village came under repeated
attack as the military junta carried out a brutal offensive against
the peoples of eastern Burma.
In 1999, with only their clothes and some rice, Shah Paung's family
fled to Thailand, walking three days through the jungle, hiding
from Burmese soldiers and eventually landing in a refugee camp.
In the face of one of the world's most brutal military regimes,
Shah Paung says she is accustomed to feeling helpless.
"I had been angry, I had thought about joining the armed struggle,"
she said. "That was before I realized the best way to help
my people was reporting their truth."
Nine years after her family's escape, Shah Paung--who, like many
Burmese, has only one name--has now committed herself to reporting
the ongoing conflict in Burma, where the military government continues
to attack and burn down ethnic villages and rape is used as a weapon
of war against local women by Burmese soldiers.
"I have no village now; it's all gone," she said. "Now
all I can do is try to help those still suffering inside by writing."
At the Irrawaddy, Shah Paung reports on the heavily isolated country
via a network of secret informants communicating largely via mobile
phone.
Frontline of Crisis
Sometimes her reporting also takes her across the border, where
she meets with Karen people on the frontlines: resistance fighters,
medics and human rights workers.
She says it's difficult to leave them and return to Thailand. "But
I know my skills are best used writing," she said. "I
would be no help on the battlefield."
When she arrived at the Noe Poe refugee camp near Mae Sot, Thailand,
at age 17, Shah Paung spoke no English. She recalls an overcrowded,
daunting place.
"There was a huge fence around it, and inside there were so
many people and so many huts," she said. "I had never
seen anything like it. I wanted to run away."
When she learned the camp offered free English classes, she became
eager to stay.
After two months, Shah Paung got a job as a secretary for the camp's
committee on women. She worked 10-hour days for a full year inside
the squalid camp until she was hired by the Karen Women's Organization,
an advocacy group based in Mae Sariang, Thailand, that operates
training and support programs for Karen women in all seven Karen
refugee camps along the Thai border, as well as inside Burma.
With the Karen Women's Organization, Shah Paung learned more English
and basic computer skills. She became a trainer, teaching groups
of women in the camps about basic women's rights. She says the trainings
were needed, as women inside the camps lack basic education, often
marry young and endure high rates of domestic violence.
When Shah Paung published a magazine in the camp about the training
program, she knew she had found a way to support the Karen people.
Her Way to Fight
"I used to think, 'what can one girl do against the military?'"
she said. "But after putting out the magazine, I knew I had
found a better way to fight the regime."
Shah Paung then landed a special women's internship at the Irrawaddy,
which was started in 1992 by exiles living in Thailand. Funded by
Western donors such as the New York-based Open Society Institute,
it reports in English and Burmese for the international community
and those still inside.
Shah Paung says one of her biggest concerns is the safety of her
sources.
Anyone caught giving information to the Irrawaddy, she says, can
be sentenced to many years in prison. When Buddhist monks sparked
massive protests in Burma in September, at least 30 demonstrators
were killed and thousands were arrested in a government crackdown
that cut communication lines to the outside world.
The safety of the survivors of military sexual violence is of particular
concern. Those who dare speak up about rape are vulnerable to retaliation,
reports the Chiang Mai, the Thailand-based Shan Women's Action Network.
The rape crisis is not limited to those inside Burma, says Shah
Paung. She has reported on incidences of rape among Burmese migrant
workers and refugees in Thailand, who because of their often undocumented
or unofficial status, are vulnerable to attacks by police and camp
officials.
September Protests
When the September protests caught the world's attention, Shah Paung
and others at Irrawaddy worked long nights providing up-to-the-minute
reports for the international press on the situation inside.
"We had so much hope and so much concern at the same time,"
she said. "When I would go home at night and close my eyes
I would see the faces of the protestors."
Shah Paung, who did not want her photo published, says her strength
was tested during the intense coverage.
"When I reported on women dissidents who were imprisoned by
the government, and had to leave their young children, I finally
just started crying," she said.
Since then, information from inside is even more difficult to come
by. Following the crackdown, many who try to communicate with the
outside world continue to be arrested. Last month a poet and a blogger
were detained inside Burma and journalists continue to flee the
country.
Today the troop presence in eastern Burma is higher then ever before,
as the military strengthens its campaign against the ethnic Karen,
Shan, Mon and Karreni people, according to human rights groups such
as the Bangkok-based Alternative Asean Network on Burma.
Villages continue to be burned to the ground, landmines planted
and women raped by government troops. The Karen continue to wage
an armed rebellion against the military, a resistance that has now
dragged since the end of British control 60 years ago.
Anna Sussman is a freelance print and radio reporter and co-founder
of Backpackjournalist.org. She currently lives in Bangkok, and reported
for the Irrawaddy in 2004. She traveled to Burma most recently in
January 2008.
From:http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm?aid=3510
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