By BosNewsLife Asia Service

burma
Burma's army has been cracking down on ethnic minorities, including Christians, CSW said

RANGOON, BURMA (BosNewsLife)– United Nations officials on Saturday, May 23, remained concerned over the situation  of Burma’s political prisoners, including detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, as Christian rights investigators reported fresh evidence of “human rights violations” by the ruling military in the country.

Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) told BosNewsLife it just returned from a three-week trip to the region with the ‘Free Burma Rangers’ group to investigate widespread the Burma’s
military involvement in widespread “rape, religious discrimination and land confiscation in Kachin State”, an area of the Kachin ethnic group, including many Christian believers.

In a detailed report of the visit to the Kachin, CSW quotes the testimony of a 21 year-old Bible school student who was “raped and strangled by two Burma Army soldiers.”

After describing her ordeal, the student told CSW she had heard that one of the soldiers had
raped many girls, but had never been brought to justice. “Every woman should be careful.
My experience is an example for other girls … I want justice to be done.”

REBEL GROUP

CSW said it also met representatives of the rebel Kachin Independence Organisation
a day after the military government of Burma, also known as Myanmar, ordered it to
surrender its arms and soldiers “to Burma Army control.”

In addition, CSw said met a Chin pastor, now in Malaysia, who “had been forced”
by Burma’s military government to deliver a speech at a public rally “denouncing human
rights campaigners and claiming to enjoy complete religious freedom.”

It comes at a time when observers said the military government is concerned about world
opinion as the U.N. Security Council in a unanimous statement expressed concern about the “political impact” of the trial of Aung San Suu Kyi charging her with violating the terms of her house arrest.

Christians among the Karen, another ethnic group fighting for more autonomy and human rights, say they would accept Aung San Suu Kyi as Burma’s leader as she is seen as a voice of
reconciliation, BosNewsLife learned.

BURMA DENIES

Burma’s foreign minister, Nyan Win, has denied allegations that the government had
framed its case against Aung San Suu Kyi.

In an interview published Friday, May 22, in the state-run newspaper New Light of Myanmar he suggested the incident could have been created by the opposition to attract international attention, the Voice of America (VOA) network reported.

Burmese authorities have accused Aung San Suu Kyi of violating the terms of her six-year
house arrest for allowing American John Yettaw to stay at her house for two days after
swimming to her lakeside residence on May 3.

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