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The war on
Burma's women
June 28, 2005 - (Boston Globe) It has been three
years since the report ''License to Rape" exposed to the world
how troops of the Burmese military regime have been committing systematic
sexual violence against women in Shan state, one of the ethnic regions
of Burma where civil war has been continuing for more than four
decades. The report, by the Shan Human Rights Foundation and the
Shan Women's Action Network, documented the rape of more than 600
women by Burmese troops.
Regrettably, despite increased international awareness
of the problem of state-sponsored sexual violence in Burma following
the report, the suffering of women in the wartorn ethnic areas of
Burma is continuing. The Burmese regime is still using rape as a
weapon of war to terrorize, demoralize, and control local communities.
Hundreds more women have been raped during the last few years.
Burmese military personnel, including high-ranking
officers, are raping with impunity. Women who are seven months pregnant
are being gang raped. Girls are being kept for forced labor during
the day and raped at night for periods of months. Mothers and daughters
are being raped together. Girls as young as 4 are being raped.
Some stories are hard for many of us today to imagine.
A woman, now insane, weeps over the photo of her 14-year-old daughter,
who was raped and burned alive by Burmese troops.
Another woman tells how a commander dragged her
to a bed in a hut, raped her, then beat her unconscious. She awoke
to find herself lying naked and her sister's dead body outside the
hut.
The sexual violence is happening not only in Shan
state but in other ethnic areas. Last year, the Karen Women's Organization
released a report detailing 125 incidents of rape by the regime's
troops in Karen state. The Women's League of Burma, an umbrella
organization of 12 women's groups, also released a report entitled
''System of Impunity" exposing a nationwide pattern of sexual
violence by the regime's troops.
Women and girls throughout the country are increasingly
at risk from military sexual violence, whether they are in civil
war zones, cease-fire areas, or ''nonconflict" areas.
The recent rape and murder of the young daughter
of a Burmese Army soldier by a fellow officer in April 2005 has
shown that even families of the regime's army are now suffering
the consequences of the ''License to Rape" policy.
The countries of the Association of South East Asian
Nations and other neighboring states bordering Burma continue to
disregard human rights abuses in their dealings with Burma. There
have been constant calls by women of Burma, particularly ethnic
women, to condemn the regime and push for genuine political reform
in Burma. This is the only way to end the regime's rape policies.
Some ASEAN countries have properly felt compelled
to debate in public whether the junta should assume the chairmanship
of ASEAN in 2006. The ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Caucus, composed
of members of parliament from throughout the region, is calling
for political reform. If the ASEAN legislators want a real change
in Burma they must not ignore sexual violence authorized by the
military junta.
Political repression in Burma has intensified in
recent months. Last February, Hkun Htun Oo, chairman of the Shan
Nationalities League for Democracy, and other Shan state leaders
were arrested by the junta and remain imprisoned. Ethnic resistance
leaders who had made cease-fire agreements with the regime are now
being forced to disarm and surrender. Fierce military offensives
along the Thai-Burmese border are causing increased numbers of internally
displaced persons and unabated flows of refugees into Thailand.
But does this mean we will surrender to this regime,
with its battalions of rapists? The answer is no. We owe this to
the women who have dared speak out about the sexual violence committed
against them. Women who relate their stories say that each time
they talk about rape it is like they are being raped again. Yet
they have been brave enough to speak out in order that one day the
violence can end.
Rape survivors say that all they want is to return
home and to live in peace, without fear of the regime's troops.
Last week we marked the 60th birthday of Nobel laureate Aung San
Suu Kyi, who remains under house arrest in Burma's capital. Let
us be inspired to continue the struggle to restore democracy and
peace in Burma, and to fulfill the wishes of these brave women.
From: http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/06/28/the_war_on_burmas_women/
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