Friday, August 28, 2009

POISONOUS POLITICAL THINKING (WEEKEND SPECIAL)


Poisonous political thinking
Zaw Naing Wynn, 26 August 2009
Canberra, Australia
There have been noises and voices coming out from both inside and outside Burma, which seem
to be soothing the military elite – their sham 2008 constitution and the planned 2010 election. It
is crystal clear that those noises and voices are coming from U Chit Hlaing, U Chan Aye (writer
known as Maung Sue Sann) and Manutha Kyaw Win – all three from inside and exiled so-called
NCGUB1 Dr Sein Win and Dr Thaun Htun.
Their idiotic political thinking stems from their so-called national reconciliation approach by
recognising the 2008 constitution (drawn by the military elite is better than nothing) and by
participating in the 2010 election.
According to them, there are a variety of dangers for the National League for Democracy (NLD)
and other political forces for not taking part in the 2010 election. These misguided thinking may
be attractive to naive persons, but if thought carefully it seems they are leading to and paving the
way for the military elite’s forever lasting rule in Burma.
The 2008 constitution was not drafted by the people or their elected representatives, but by the
military elite to prolong their rule. If the 2010 election held and accepted, the Parliament will be
dominated by the military elite in military reform, so it would be far from a meaningful
democracy. As in the autocratic nations like China, North Korea, Cuba and Viet Nam, the
military with uniform will dominate the politics in Burma.
If politics were defined as doing what is only possible, then the revolts and people uprising would
not have happened and will not in the future. The reason Burma gained full independence from
the colonial slavery was due to the refusal of the then diarchy and governor council
administrations.
The so-called politicians who define politics as doing what is only possible are, themselves,
international dole bludgers. They are exploiting the international system and the funding for the
democracy cause and would do anything to join the bandwagon of appeasing the military elite.
Real politicians must be in touch with and trust the people and bravely work for them.
Their shifting stands now seem to be paving the way for the 2010 election, which will only
legitimise the military rule. Their acts are politically meaningless, especially in times of the
political oppression by the military elite of freedom and political movement and organisation and
when hundreds of political prisoners are being held.
Like the old saying ‘you can not teach the old dogs to learn’, they are not able to learn lessons
from history. Burmese way to socialism failed and was overthrown by the people. There are no
such things like ‘(Burmese military’s way to) disciplined democracy.
1 The so-called NCGUB stands for National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma.
It is not the NCGUB but Burmese military who is learning international lessons. The regime has
learnt how Russia conduct elections – imposing hyper-technical laws and restrictions, making it
very impossible for the oppositions to break and by allowing only disgraced candidates to run for
elections for the sake of competitions.
The regime also learnt that there is no universally and broadly accepted definition of democracy
akin to the international human rights law. So by holding elections, to them Burma will become
a democratic country.
We do not have to look far. The full title of North Korea is ‘Democratic Republic of Korea. We
should not be surprised, if the regime adopts similar title ‘Democratic, Republic and Union of
Myanmar’.
So, it is evident that the regime is not only buying nuclear technologies but also political
strategies from both Russia and North Korea. There are many more autocratic regimes around
the world, the military regime can learn from. No doubt, they have also learnt from autocrats like
Islam Karimov of Uzbekistan, Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan,
Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia and Mwai Kibaki of Kenya.
The extents of how much they have learnt from those autocrats and regimes remain to be seen
during and after the 2010 election.
For many Burmese, excluding the NCGUB, the efforts of liberation from the military dictatorship
can not be imported from outside, but will be coordinated by the people and the political force
from inside.
The brutal arrest of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, bludgeoning of cease fire groups, prohibiting of
people’s freedom of movements and speech are crystal clear oppression by the military elite.
Given these conditions, NCGUB and its cronies including U Sein Win are proposing the above
plans of national reconciliation approach. It is a just desperate attempt and an ineffective
medicine (as in Burmese saying), full of appeasement and corrupted and ill conceived plans.
They are desperate more than ever because their time as international dole bludgers2 is coming to
an end – thanks to the Global Financial Crisis and also their fear of becoming extinct after the
planned 2010 election (if ever held). More evidently, their road (of the pretentious democracy
struggle for Burma) has hit the biggest and hardest brick wall. That explains why they are so
desperate. But it will become just like the campfire on ice and will only lead to their gradual
demise (there no needs for 2010 election for that).
2 The term “dole bludger” in Australia generally refers to those who exploit the system of unemployment benefits by
avoiding looking for jobs and thereby receiving and living on unemployment benefits by deception.
Using the above analogy, by the term “International dole bludger”, I refer to those so-called democracy activists
including the NCGUB and its cronies who are receiving and living on funding from international donors of all kinds
and thereby making a living in the name of democracy struggle.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

NUCLEAR PLAYER IN BURMA AND NORTH KOREA


To win respect and rapid promotion in the Burmese military you have to play hardball. Maj-Gen Thein Htay, who is deputy-chief of Defense Industry l, is one of the toughest players on the field.

Military insiders say that Thein Htay has played a key role in the modernization of the armed forces, and he is one of the prime promoters of the idea of purchasing missiles.

If reports are true that Burma is trying to acquire nuclear weapons, then he is likely to be a key player in that effort.

Last year, he accompanied Gen Thura Shwe Mann, the regime’s No 3 general, on his clandestine trip to North Korea. During the visit, he and Shwe Mann visited several arms factories and a military hardware deal with the Communist regime was signed.

Known to be an extreme nationalist, Thein Htay didn’t serve long at the infantry battalion level, and he was quickly given an important position at the military industry ministry because of his extensive knowledge of the weapons industry.

Thein Htay received special attention when he advised junta leader Snr-Gen Than Shwe on how to upgrade the Burmese armed forces. He received a “jump” promotion when Than Shwe grew more serious about buying missiles and missile technology after a series of border skirmishes with Thai forces in 2001-2002.

In 1998, Thein Htay was a lieutenant-colonel on the general staff. In 2006, he was promoted to major general, followed by deputy-chief of Defense Industry 1—a sign that he had the trust of Than Shwe.

Sources say that the junta leader sometimes comes to weapons tests when Thein Htay demonstrates newly bought missiles or other weapons.

Defense Industry 1, one of Burma’s main military industrial complexes, operates 22 manufacturing or procurement facilities, many located on the west bank of the Irrawaddy River west of the Pegu mountain range. Several weapon testing grounds are located near Pegu and Pyi.

Military sources said that Thein Htay has been involved in the upgrading and creation of military facilities, including tunnels for missiles, aircraft and even naval ships. He has also expanded technological assistance of Russia, China, North Korea and Singapore.

Under Thein Htay’s command, military factories manufacture conventional weapons, including automatic rifles, light machine guns and landmines. Sources said that at least two military facilities are believed to be involved in refining uranium.

In earlier decades, the Defense Ministry purchased most of its arms and ammunition under contract with the Federal Republic of Germany’s state-owned Fritz Werner, according to defense analysts.

Burma has procured small arms, jet fighters and naval ships from the West particularly the US and EU countries. However, after the 1988 democracy uprising, Western countries imposed arms embargo and stopped selling arms to Burma.

Thein Htay often travels abroad to look for new sources of weapons and ammunition, upgrade missiles, defensive rockets, anti-aircraft radar and command and control technology.

Should Burma be trying to acquire a nuclear capability, Thein Htay and the Defense Ministry will be key players in that effort.

PEACE AGGREMENT BREAKS OUT AND WAR FLAME FLIES IN KOKANG


The MNDAA, led by Chairman Peng Jiasheng, was reportedly joined in a counteroffensive against the Burmese army by its military allies, National Democratic Alliance Army, also known as the Mong La group, and the United Wa State Army (UWSA).

According to sources on the Sino-Burmese border, gunfire was exchanged between the Burmese army and the ethnic ceasefire groups at three different bases near the Kokang stronghold of Laogai for several hours on Thursday.

The sources said the Kokang troops and their allies took back one base from the Burmese army. No casualties were reported.

“The clashes occurred between the Burmese troops and the Kokang Battalion 7 near Laogai,” said Aung Kyaw Zaw, a Burmese military analyst based on the Sino-Burmese border.

“As far as I know, the Kokang have taken back one of their bases,” he added.

Also on Thursday, gunfire broke out briefly in Yanlon, a town near Laogai, when a unit of MNDAA soldiers encircled a group of Burmese policemen who exchanged fire before escaping to the Chinese side of the border, according to sources on the Sino-Burmese border.

Aung Kyaw Zaw told The Irrawaddy that the Burmese police officers inadvertently shot at each other as they fled over the border.

Another source said that at least one Burmese police officer had died during the clash.

“At least seven policemen fled into China. They were later sent back to the Burmese side by Chinese police,” he said.

The skirmish came after about 1,000 soldiers of the Burmese armed forces, or Tatmadaw, seized the Kokang stronghold of Laogai without a shot being fired on Monday night.

Recent tensions had escalated leading up to the fall of Laogai with a drugs raid on the house of Peng Jiasheng, and a military build-up by the Burmese army in the area.

In recent weeks, an estimated 10,000 Kokang civilians have fled to the Chinese side of the border where they are being temporarily sheltered by Chinese authorities.

MNDAA Chairman Peng Jiasheng, who abandoned his house in Laogai before the Burmese army entered the town, reportedly fled with his troops to the base of his closest ally, the UWSA, from where he released a statement on Thursday urging the Burmese regime to withdraw all its troops from Laogai and seek a peaceful solution to the conflict, said Aung Kyaw Zaw.

But tensions still remain high between the Burmese junta and the ethnic ceasefire groups in northeastern Burma as the Tatmadaw steps up its military maneuvers in the region, he said.

Analysts have said that after if they successfully oust the MNDAA from its stronghold, the Burmese regional military commanders will likely turn their focus to the other ceasefire groups.

“After the Burmese regime has control of the Kokang situation, it will make a move on the Mong La group,” said Saeng Juen, one of the editors of the Thailand-based Shan Herald Agency for News.

Instead of armed attacks though, the Burmese regime will likely explore alternative methods to break down the ceasefire groups, including the strongest insurgent army, the UWSA, said Saeng Juen.

About 700 Chinese troops have been deployed along the Sino-Burmese border for security reasons, he added.

After the fall of Laogai, several defecting MNDAA leaders were appointed by the Burmese regime as the new Kokang leaders.

However, in his statement, Peng Jiasheng rejected the formation of a new Kokang leadership, saying the new leaders did not represent the Kokang people, said Aung Kyaw Zaw.

Meanwhile, the Burmese authorities have released an arrest warrant for Peng Jiasheng and the commanders loyal to him.

The MNDAA signed a ceasefire agreement with the Burmese military government in 1989.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

NEW NUCLEAR BABY IN ASIA


www.dictatorwatch.org: Russia is providing Burma’s dictatorship, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), on its nuclear program and more generally its military modernization. A 10 MW reactor is to be installed in the Kyauk Pa Toe area of Tha Beik Kyin Township, Mandalay Division, by the end of this year. Russia is also providing a factory to produce guided rockets, which will be constructed in Thazi Township in the Pyin Nyaung area on the Shwe Nyaung Railway between Mandalay Division and Southern Shan State. More than 5000 Burmese “State Scholars,” who have already graduated from the Defense Services Academy, are studying in Moscow and St. Petersburg. Their subjects include nuclear science, tunneling science, rocketry, artillery, and a wide variety of other military fields. In return for this assistance, Russia has received mining concessions in Burma for gold, titanium and uranium.

So I don't know if this is true or not, but I'd like to tell Spielberg and Lucas, the above story would have made for a MUCH more interesting plot than the crystal skulls BS. Just saying.

Thousands flood into China after Myanmar army standoff


Large groups crossed the border on Tuesday from Kokang in Myanmar's Shan State, said a Reuters witness in Nansan, a town in China's southern Yunnan province. About 10,000 people have fled Kokang since August 8, China's Chongqing Evening News reported.

The Washington-based U.S. Campaign for Burma said tensions first flared on August 8 when the Myanmar army deployed hundreds of troops in Kokang, a mostly ethnic Chinese region where rebels have observed a two-decade-old ceasefire with the government.

The rebels issued a statement via the Myanmar Peace and Democracy Front (MPDF), a newly formed alliance of four ethnic groups, saying the army was pressuring its fighters to join a border security force under the government's control ahead of Myanmar's elections planned for 2010.

"Tensions are extremely high," the MPDF said in the statement issued via the U.S. Campaign for Burma. "With anticipation of resurgence of war, tens of thousands of ethnic people have fled."

A Nansan shop owner, Xie Feifei, said refugees were being housed by the local government in disused or half-built homes. He did not know of any who had been sent back.

"We haven't had anything like this happen for about 10 years," Xie told Reuters by telephone on Wednesday. "Many people have been coming across the border but it's fallen off now," Xie added. "I think everyone who wants to escape has already."

A local government official in Nansan, however, told Reuters that no refugees had entered the town.

The U.S. Campaign for Burma said the mobilization of troops was a move by the junta to force ethnic groups to form political parties to contest next year's election, the first in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, in 20 years.

Many ethnic groups feel they have nothing to gain from running in the polls and suspect the junta is trying to neutralize their threat by bringing rebel fighters into the army under the command of the Yangon regime.

The MPDF and Chinese media reports said troops had attacked a factory used by the ethnic groups to service and repair weapons on suspicion it was being used to produce illicit drugs. They said a standoff ensued, prompting thousands to flee the area. Myanmar, which has been ruled by the military since a 1962 coup, is home to more than 100 different ethnic groups.

Many armed groups observe a ceasefire with the government but several have resisted. Ethnic insurgencies have continued, in many cases fueled by the opium trade.

(Reporting by Martin Petty and Chris Buckley in Beijing; Editing by Jason Szep)

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Detention now 'worse' for Daw Aung San Suu Kyi


The conditions of Myanmar democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi's detention have gotten "worse" since her conviction this month for violating terms of her previous house arrest, her lawyer said Tuesday.

Myanmar's military government has not responded to Suu Kyi's request for a visit by her personal physician, said Nyan Win, her lawyer and spokesman for her National League for Democracy party.

Nyan Win also said he and his colleagues have not yet been given permission to meet the Nobel Peace Prize laureate since they last met to consult on filing an appeal about a week after her Aug. 11 conviction.

"The present regulations imposed on Daw Aung San Suu Kyi are worse than the previous rules," he said. "Daw" is a term of respect.

A Myanmar court found Suu Kyi, 64, guilty of sheltering an uninvited American visitor. Her sentence of three years in prison with hard labor was reduced to 18 months of house arrest by order of military junta leader Senior Gen. Than Shwe.

Suu Kyi was returned to her tightly guarded home the day she was convicted. She has been detained for about 14 of the past 20 years for her nonviolent political activities, but this year was the first time she faced criminal charges.

The court stipulated eight rules for her new term of house arrest, which were generally seen as slightly more liberal than her previous detention, which kept her in almost complete isolation.

Now Suu Kyi and two female companions can receive visitors with prior permission from the authorities, have the right to medical treatment by doctors and nurses, and are allowed to read state-controlled newspapers and magazines and watch state-run television.

But Nyan Win said authorities still had not agreed on Suu Kyi's request to allow her personal doctor to visit instead of one provided by the government.

He said Suu Kyi wanted her personal doctor "as the doctor knows her medical history well."

Suu Kyi earlier told her lawyers she needed clarification from the authorities regarding the terms of her house arrest regarding matters such as visitation rights and medical coverage.

Nyan Win said it is not clear if she will be permitted to meet people she wants to see, or if people who want to visit her can request permission.

Nyan Win said it is now more difficult to send Suu Kyi books than when she was in Insein Prison during her trial because every book has to pass through scrutiny, taking days.

Monday, August 24, 2009

DOES BURMA'S REGIME WANT NUCLEAR? (UPDATE)


Even as he tries to keep his domestic program from falling apart, the president has to pay attention to threats abroad. And this morning, we have a hint why the U.S. may need to pay attention to Myanmar. Last week, we heard from a Virginia senator, who visited that country. Here's one reason why that engagement matters. Myanmar, like Iran, has a nuclear program.

Here's NPR's Michael Sullivan.

MICHAEL SULLIVAN: There is no doubt Myanmar has a nuclear program. It sent scientists, technicians and army officers to Russia for training in recent years. And Moscow has agreed to supply Myanmar with a small nuclear reactor for civilian use. None of this is disputed. The question is do the Burmese generals want a nuclear weapon too.

Mr. BERTIL LINTNER (Yale Global Online): It is quite clear, I think, that although the Burmese may not have a bomb or even a nuclear capability - no, not yet - they're certainly interested in acquiring one.

SULLIVAN: That's Bertil Lintner. He has written extensively about both Myanmar and North Korea from his base in Thailand.

Mr. LINTNER: And they're seeing how the North Koreans have been able to stand up against the Damascus and the rest of the world because they are nuclear armed. And they would like to have the same kind of negotiating positions.

SULLIVAN: Lintner's recent piece in Yale Global Online detailed the growing defense ties between the two countries and the elaborate underground complexes Myanmar's generals are building with help from North Korea. The tunnels, and the reports this summer - ships from North Korea with mysterious cargos bound for Myanmar - have many countries concerned, including the U.S.

Secretary of State Clinton speaking last month in Thailand.

Secretary HILLARY CLINTON (Department of State): We know that there are also growing concerns about military cooperation between North Korea and Burma, which we take very seriously. It would be destabilizing for the region, it would pose a direct threat to Burma's neighbors and it is something as a treaty ally of Thailand that we are taking very seriously.

SULLIVAN: But the ship may have already sailed. Interviews with defectors, done by Professor Desmond Ball of the Australia National University's Defense Study Center and journalist Phil Thornton, suggest Myanmar is already well on its way with two reactors already in place.

One of the defectors who worked for a prominent Burmese businessman with close ties to the military, says his former boss helped transport materials from North Korean ships to the remote nuclear sites.

Unidentified Man: Their first intention is with the help of North Korea, they produce U235. If they get U235, (unintelligible) not so difficult. If they can arrange UF6, they can make the nuclear bomb.

SULLIVAN: Phil Thornton says he believes the defector's story to be both credible and worrisome, since it matches what other defectors interviewed in Thailand has said.

Mr. PHIL THORNTON (Journalist): Professor Ball has estimated, based on the defector's testimonies, that it could be about 2014 that may have enough nuclear material to start thinking about a weapon.

SULLIVAN: Myanmar, of course, denies any weapons program exists, but seems unusually sensitive to the recent publicity about the issue. Virginia Senator Jim Webb says it came up during his meetings with Myanmar's leadership ten days ago.

Senator JIM WEBB (Democrat, Virginia): I did not directly raise the issue of the nuclear program. It was raised to me by a high governmental official, basically saying, you know, we would never move toward a nuclear weapons program.

SULLIVAN: These denials, of course, are met with a great deal of skepticism by those who follow the growing relationship between North Korea and Myanmar. But analyst Bertil Lintner still isn't convinced Myanmar has even one reactor, let alone two. There is no concrete evidence, he says, that the Russians have delivered the reactor they promised, nor, he says, is there any hard evidence the North Koreans have either - though satellite images do show construction around Myanmar's suspected nuclear sites.

What is clear, Lintner says, is that Myanmar's main ally, China, is well aware of Myanmar's nuclear ambitions. Last year's clandestine visit to North Korea but a senior Burmese general, he says, proves it.

Mr. LINTNER: He passed through China on his way to North Korea, back again. On his way back from North Korea, Shwe Mann and his entourage had meetings with high-level officials. It was almost as the Chinese were, not only aware of what this trip through North Korea, but they were closely involved in it. See, it's very convenient for the Chinese to be able to say, we're not doing this. This is the North Koreans. We can't control them. It's kind of a sort of plausible deniability. But there's definitely Chinese complicity in this new corporation between North Korea and Burma.

SULLIVAN: Something else for the U.S. to think about as it considers a review of its policy toward Myanmar, amid the ongoing tug-of-war with North Korea over its nuclear program.

Michael Sullivan, NPR News.

INSKEEP: This is NPR News.

Copyright ©2009 National Public Radio®. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Friday, August 21, 2009

YETTAW DISCLOSES HIS INTRUTION AT HIS HOME WITH NEWSWEEK JURNALIST


BY AUNG NAING HTWE
John Yettaw, just back from his Burmese prison odyssey, explains how he unwittingly created an international diplomatic crisis.

How was a retired bus driver from Missouri able to make a flipper-clad, two-kilometer swim to the heavily guarded house of Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung Sang Suu Kyi, one of the world's most famous dissidents? While John Yettaw languished in Burmese jail during his trial for "illegal swimming," all we could do is speculate. But now, in an exclusive interview with NEWSWEEK, Yettaw has offered an explanation: Burmese security officials let him. "I don't know why they didn't stop me," he says. "The man with the AK-47 shook my hand and let me in."

In his first full-length interview, conducted by telephone from his home in central Missouri, Yettaw addressed the rationale for his undiplomatic dip, responding to critics and speaking at length about his commitment to Burma. "I want to free Myanmar. I want to stop the suffering there. I am antijunta. I will never be at peace, emotionally or psychologically, until that woman is free, until that nation is free," he said.

Yettaw burst onto the front pages of the world's papers in May, when he had made an uninvited two-day visit to the home of Suu Kyi. "The Lady," as locals call her, trounced opponents in the country's last open election in 1990, but the junta refused to recognize the results and has kept her under arrest for 14 of the past 20 years for trying to topple the regime. She was due to be released on May 27, just weeks after Yettaw showed up, well ahead of next year's landmark national elections—the first in two decades. But earlier this month, Suu Kyi was sentenced to 18 more months of home confinement. On Sunday, Yettaw was freed from seven years of hard labor when U.S. Sen. Jim Webb negotiated for his release; he was deported back to the United States.

Compassionate Release Will not Occurs in Burma ?(WEEKEND SPECIAL)


A lot of people worldwide are shocked to know that Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, 57, was released based on compassionate ground. Megrahi was jailed in 2001 for blown up the PAN-AM 103 jet plane which claimed 270 lives in 1988. Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill made a decision that the Libyan, who has terminal prostate cancer, would be allowed to return to his homeland. Among the dead were 189 Americans. Americans are very upset about the Scott’s decision because innocent people were killed in this incident.

Unlike Scotland , the Burmese regime has an opposite attitude. The Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s husband, the British academic Michael Aris had terminal prostate cancer like Megrahi have. Michael requested to visit Burma to see his lovely wife Aung San Suu Kyi for one last time, before he died. But the Burmese authorities denied his visa application. Three months later Michael died without fulfill his last wish.

The Scottish judge’s decision is based on his religious belief that even though the Libyan man killed 270 lives, he has to release him based on forgiveness as well as compassionate understanding which allowed the murderer to rejoin with his family before his last breath.

On the other hand, the Burmese generals do not understand compassionate release to Burmese most beloved opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who did not kill any one. She is the one who choose non violent means and her goal is to change Burma as democratic state. Her upper Burma organizational trip was ambushed by the government sponsored criminals and nearly hundred of her followers were beaten to death. She luckily escaped from being murdered. No one was captured for the massacre known as Depeyin Massacre but the regime put her under house arrest and claimed her life was in danger that was the reason they put her house arrest. The regime let the attackers free but the one who was attacked was put under house arrest. This kind of unlawful act clearly proved that people who committed crimes are now ruling Burma and innocent people were systematically thrown into jail.

When her house arrest term was nearly to end, unfortunately, the American man, John Yettaw who has unstable mental state crossed the lake at night on May 3, 2009 and secretly entered Kyi’s lake side villa. He was giving food and shelter by the kind and passionate leader but she requested him to leave because she worried that he might be captured. He was captured when he get out at night.

Aung San Suu Kyi, her two aids and Yettaw were captured and sent to notorious prison called “Insein” similar to the words “Insane”. Fortunately, the generals have an excuse to detain Aung San Suu Kyi for breaching the term of her house arrest that she never committed.

After three months of the arrest Yettaw was sentenced to seven years, Aung San Suu Kyi and two aids were sentenced to three years with hard labor. Then the regime reduced the sentence to 18 months house arrest.

One day after the sentenced, US senator Jim Webb was allowed to visit Burma and met General Than Shwe who is the head of the regime. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon requested twice to meet Aung San Suu Kyi was out right rejected two week ago, but when Webb requested to meet her was smoothly permitted. Is it a coincident?

Conspiracy Theory of Senator Jim Webb visit to Burma

Here are the facts that give us many questions, all the below facts are purely coincident or it is a fixed plan played by Than Shwe, Yettaw and Jim Webb.

1. Yettaw swam with a hand made flip flop in the lake at night which was highly guarded by troops.

2. Yettaw is not a healthy man. He is diabetic and has asthma. How could he swim across the lake for one mile?

3. Yettaw was hospitalized for his illness. His situation in the hospital was video taped and distributed on the web even though he was well guarded and was not allowed to see his condition in the hospital including his lawyer.

4. Senator Jim Webb visited Burma one day after Yettaw was sentenced. He met both Than Shwe and Aung San Suu Kyi.

5. Than Shwe gave an amnesty and allowed Yettaw to go together with Jim Webb.

6. Jim Webb gave a press conference that Aung San Suu Kyi wouldn’t mind to lift sanction. Later Aung San Suu Kyi denied such a thing.

7. Aung San Suu Kyi was now serving another 18 months house arrest, the crime she never committed but Yettaw who broke the law was free.

8. Americans are happy because Yettaw was free two days after his seven years sentenced but Americans were very upset when Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi was free.

In conclusion

It might be a simple coincident. It might be a bigger picture. Senator Jim Webb is an anti-sanction guy. Both he and Yettaw are Vet Veterans. Shortly after the regime locked up Aung San Suu Kyi, Webb arrived the next day. He met Than Shwe then Suu Kyi. Webb has to inform Than Shwe long before he visited Burma and wait for the green light. Two days after his sentenced Yettaw was free to go because the regime does not need Yettaw, only thing they need is to silence Aung San Suu Kyi. Webb got a credit for bringing back Yettaw but Burmese will miss their dear leader for another 18 months or more.

The Story of a Child Soldier


PAPUN, Karen State—Sixteen-year-old Htun Htun Oo, looked relieved and happy when he learned he would be leaving the conflict zone controlled by the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) soldiers on the Burmese bank of the Salween River, opposite Thailand’s Mae Hong Son province.

The prospect of going to study instead of facing more military duties gave him new hope.

Told he could leave, Htun Htun Oo quickly packed his clothes in a sling bag, put on a watch, applied some Thanaka (Burmese traditional makeup) to his cheeks and said goodbye to the Karen soldiers who had temporarily taken care of him.

Speaking quietly against a background of birdsong and eddying water in the fast flowing Salween River, he told us his story before he left.

Htun Htun Oo escaped from the Burmese Light Infantry Battalion (LIB) 341 in Papun District in northern Karen State in July, making his way through the forest eastwards, even though he was not sure whether he would be killed when he reached KNLA-controlled territory.

Before he escaped, senior officers had regularly warned the troops that they would be tortured and killed if they surrendered to Karen rebels.

“Whether I lived or died didn’t matter anymore,” Htun Htun Oo said, “All I wanted to do was escape. I was ready for anything so long as I didn’t have to stay another day in that battalion.”

He said that he had to sleep rough in the jungle for three days before he reached the KNLA area.

“When I arrived on the Burmese side of the Salween River, I started to swim across,” he said, pointing to the waters swollen with monsoon rain streaming by.

“The water was too fast and I was drifting downstream, trying to swim,” he said, “Luckily a boat came along and picked me up.

“The Burmese officers would continually punish us and order us to do additional duties—we were no better than slaves,” he said.

“They didn’t give us enough food, and when we were too exhausted to follow orders, they liked to beat us. I was beaten three times for falling asleep when I was on guard duty at night.

“Every morning we had to get up at five and do military exercises,” Htun Htun Oo said. “Around three in the afternoon we would be ordered into the jungle to cut bamboo and collect leaves to make temporary shelters.

“We didn’t get enough time to sleep as we had guard duty at night. I couldn’t take it any more and decided to run away,” he said.

Htun Htun Oo earned 21,000 kyat [US $19] a month, but said he only got about 7,000 kyat [$6.40] after senior officers made deductions.

Htun Htun Oo said he saw child soldiers in other Burmese battalions, and he knew of eight other child soldiers in LIB 341 alone.

During military training, he said he spoke with a younger comrade called Ye Thew, who told him he had been sexually abused by higher ranking officers on several occasions.

Htun Htun Oo was seized by the Burmese army at a railway station in June 2007 while he was on his way to visit his uncle, who was a policeman in Rangoon,.

“A Burmese soldier asked me for my ID card, but I didn’t have one because I hadn’t applied for one by then. So they took me away,” he said.

Htun Htun Oo’s case is not untypical. The recruitment of child soldiers in Burma is still widely practiced by the Burmese army, according to Aye Myint, a leader of Guiding Star, a Burma-based social and labor rights group.

In the last three months, more than 20 children who say they were forced by Burmese officials to serve as soldiers were helped by Aye Myint’s group and the International Labour Organization to return to their families.

Commenting in early August on reports that the Burmese government had released some children from the military, the UN’s special representative for children and armed conflict, Radhika Coomaraswamy, was quoted by Reuters as saying: “We still are not sure how comprehensive that is and the extent of it.

And so I am dispatching a team [to Burma] at the end of this month.”

The team would hold talks with the Burmese regime and rebel groups, said Coomaraswamy.
In a report in June, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon accused the Burmese military government and “ethnic rebel militias” of recruiting children to serve as fighters, saying that there had been “grave violations” against children in Burma.

According to a 2002 report by the Washington-based Human Rights Watch, there is no precise figure of the number of child soldiers serving in the Burmese army, but it was estimated that 35-45 percent of new recruits were children, some as young as 11, who were forcibly conscripted and brutally treated during training.

The report estimated that as many as 70,000 recruits were under the age of 18.
Htun Htun Oo said, “I have only one message for the youth of Burma—don’t even think about joining the Burmese army. It is like being in a living hell. You will go so far from home that you will forget it even exists.”

Asked about the Burmese regime’s announcement that the military did not recruit child soldiers, he said, “They are lying.”

US monitoring Myanmar on N.Korea sanctions


A top US diplomat said Friday Washington was monitoring Myanmar's stated commitment to enforcing UN sanctions on North Korea, after reports of possible nuclear cooperation between the Asian nations.

Last month US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hailed a pledge by military-ruled Myanmar to abide by a UN resolution on the sanctions, following a rare meeting between US and Myanmar officials at an Asian summit.

But reports in recent weeks have said that Pyongyang is helping Myanmar to build a secret nuclear reactor and plutonium extraction plant, and to build an atomic bomb within five years, causing regional concerns.

"The Burmese government did make a commitment during the course of the ARF (Association of Southeast Asian Nations Regional Forum) meetings in Phuket to implement the resolution," Ambassador Philip Goldberg, the US coordinator for the implementation of recent UN sanctions on Pyongang, said in Bangkok.

"We hope and expect that that will be the case but it is something that will require further discussion," he told reporters. US officials refer to Myanmar by its former name, Burma.

Goldberg was in Bangkok as part of an Asian trip aimed at strengthening support for the UN Security Council resolution passed in July in response to North Korea's May 25 underground nuclear test and subsequent missile firings.

The expanded sanctions include tougher inspections of cargo suspected of containing banned missile and nuclear-related items, a tighter arms embargo and new targeted financial curbs to choke off revenue for Pyongyang's nuclear and missile sectors.

Goldberg said Myanmar also had an obligation to adhere to the sanctions resolution because it was a member of the United Nations.

"We will continue to verify that everybody has been abiding by that obligation," Goldberg said.

Suspicions about Myanmar and North Korea escalated in June after a US Navy destroyer began tracking a suspect North Korean ship reportedly heading for Myanmar. The ship eventually turned back to North Korea.

Goldberg also reiterated comments made in Singapore urging Southeast Asian financial institutions to remain vigilant in monitoring transactions that could boost North Korea's nuclear and ballistic missiles programmes.

He is later due to head to South Korea and Japan. He has already travelled to Malaysia, China, Russia and the United Nations to coordinate global efforts to implement the sanctions.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Regime Wants to BeThe Strongest Army in Southeast Asia


The Burmese military regime is well on its way to modernizing its military services, including a self-manufacturing infrastructure for the army, navy and air force.

Many of the changes have occurred under the direction of Snr-Gen Than Shwe, who became chairman of the ruling council in 1992.

The Defense Industry (DI) ministry, Burma’s main military industry agency, operates 22 manufacturing or procurement facilities, many located on the west bank of the Irrawaddy River west of the Pegu mountain range.


Burma army parade during the Armed Forces Day in the administrative capital Naypyidaw on March 27. (Photo: Getty Images)
Lt-Gen Tin Aye, a trusted Than Shwe ally, is chief of the Defense Industry ministry.

Htay Aung, a Thailand-based military researcher, said that since the military took control of the country in 1988, Burma has steadily expanded its military services and modernized armament production and procurement.

“In Southeast Asia, Burma has the second largest military after Vietnam,” Htay Aung told The Irrawaddy.

“The primary reason for military expansion is that the generals fear that Burma could face an invasion, since it is located between two giant neighbors [India and China].”

The regime also may be trying to acquire nuclear weapons, said Htay Aung.

Late in the1950s, the Defense Industry, or Ka Pa Sa, maintained arms and ammunition production facilities under contract with the Federal Republic of Germany’s state-owned Fritz Werner.

Since then, the Defense Industry network has expanded its infrastructure and today manufactures small arms, ammunitions, land mines and other military hardware. Analysts said the Defense Industry also produces surface-to-surface missiles (SSMs), and may be in the process of exploring ways to build or acquire nuclear weapons.

One facility, the No (2) Defense Industry, located in Upper Min Hla Township in Magwe Division, was built by Singapore, say analysts. The facility is said to produce 60 mm, 81 mm, 105 mm and 120 mm mortars. Singapore is a major source of arms technology for Burma, according to analysts.

The Korean Daewoo Company signed a deal with the government in May 2002 to build an arms factory valued at US $133 million near Prome in Pegu Division. The factory may build or assemble missiles.

No (10) Defense Industry was built in 1993 near Kongyi village in Upper-Min Hla Township in Magwe Division to manufacture surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), air-to-air missiles (AAMs) and rocket launchers. Parts and other material at the No (10) Defense Industry facility are believed to be supplied by South Korea, Russia and China. Defense analysts say the junta may have started a guided missile development program with the help of firms in Singapore.

In the face of an arms embargo by Western countries, the regime now relies on China, South Korea, North Korea and Russia for help in upgrading its military hardware.

The junta’s desire to acquire some form of nuclear weapons has received extensive exposure in the media in recent months, including in The Irrawaddy.

A Rangoon-based company, Soe Min Htaik Co. Ltd, plays a central role in weapons procurement from China, South Korea, North Korea and Russia.

Soe Min Htaik Co. Ltd is a private company that was formed by Burma’s Defense Industry in the early 1990.

Analysts say Soe Min Htaik Co. procured surface-to-surface missiles (SSMs) from China and North Korea.

The Burmese military also has created two military-managed economic organizations: the Myanmar Economic Corporation (MEC) and Union of Myanmar Economic Holding Limited (UMEHL), established in 1989 and 1990 respectively.

The mission of the two commercial enterprises is to make the military services self-sufficient. Heavy weapons, ammunition and other defense technology are acquired with profits from MEC and UMEHL.

The UMEHL has numerous subsidiary and affiliated firms engaged in trading with Singapore, Japan, Malaysia, China, South Korea and India. Cooking oil, fuel oil and automobiles are important imports while exports include cigarettes, beans and pulses, gems, garment products and gas.

UMEHL also has earned hundreds of millions of dollars from the Daewoo Company which has a contract to export natural gas.

Defense analysts have said that Than Shwe has a goal to acquire nuclear weapon capability by 2025

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

US man says: "no regrets!"


"If I had to do it again, I would do it a hundred times, a hundred times, to save her life," an exhausted-looking Yettaw said of Aung San Suu Kyi in an interview with The Associated Press after arriving in the U.S. on Wednesday.

He added, "That they locked her up, it just breaks my heart."

Yettaw, 53, was wearing a blue surgical mask and clutching a green Harrods bag as he was pushed in a wheelchair through Chicago's O'Hare International Airport after his arrival. Yettaw, who has been ill since his arrest in Myanmar, wore the mask to guard against infection.

The American is from the tiny south-central Missouri town of Falcon, but he generated global headlines after he was arrested and sentenced to hard labor for visiting the home of Suu Kyi. Yettaw was deported Sunday from Myanmar after the intervention of U.S. Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va.

Yettaw has testified that he swam to the Nobel Laureate's house in May to warn her that he had a "vision" that she would be assassinated. Though Yettaw was released, Suu Kyi and her two live-in aides remain in detention because of Yettaw's visit, and Yettaw has been called a fool and a madman by some of her supporters.

As he waited in Chicago to board a flight to Springfield, Mo. — his last destination after a nearly 24-hour journey from Bangkok — Yettaw sat with his head in his hands, his eyes bloodshot.

His companion, who did not identify herself, said he was "very tired." He flashed the sign language symbol for "I love you" and nodded and smiled when asked whether he was happy to be home.

When asked later if he would comment further, Yettaw said "I wish I could talk more. I can't" and made a zipper motion across his mouth. When he arrived in Springfield on Wednesday night, he was greeted by a police officer after collecting his luggage. He did not speak to media on the flight.

Yettaw had flown with Webb to neighboring Thailand on a U.S. government plane Sunday and underwent two days of medical tests at a private Bangkok hospital.

Webb said Yettaw had suffered a "medical incident" just before leaving Myanmar as authorities there read him his deportation order. While in custody in a Yangon jail during his trial, he had a seizure and was hospitalized for a week. He also reportedly suffers from diabetes and asthma.

Yettaw, a Mormon who lives on a military pension from serving in the Army for about a year in 1973, traveled to Myanmar in early May and donned homemade flippers for a nighttime swim to Suu Kyi's lakeside home. The incident led to a trial that sparked global condemnation in which Suu Kyi was sentenced to an additional 18 months of detention for breaching the terms of her house arrest. She has already spent 14 of the past 20 years in detention.

Suu Kyi's lawyers have described Yettaw's release was a "very ugly" turn.

Yettaw testified that he was on a divine mission to save the democracy leader, saying he had a "vision" she was going to be assassinated and wanted to warn her. Suu Kyi testified that she repeatedly asked Yettaw to leave but relented because he complained of exhaustion and she was concerned for his safety.

___

Associated Press Writer Jocelyn Gecker in Bangkok contributed to this report.

US Senator: Burma Denies Nuclear Plans


U.S. Senator Jim Webb, who recently held talks with Burma's military leaders, says the government denies reports that it is trying to acquire nuclear technology. The senator also says Burma's opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has indicated a willingness to see some sanctions on Burma lifted.

Senator Jim Webb says he did not directly raise the issue of whether Burma has a covert nuclear program during talks with the country's leader, General Than Shwe. Webb met with the reclusive leader on Saturday, the first high-ranking U.S. official to do so.

However, he said Monday that the Burmese government denied having a nuclear program.

"But it was communicated to me earlier on that there was no truth to that, from a very high level in their government," Webb said.

Earlier this month, Australian researchers said interviews with defectors from Burma revealed that the government has a secret nuclear program, allegedly aided by North Korea. In June, a North Korean ship believed to be headed to Burma with a suspicious cargo turned back under international pressure. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned that any military ties between Burma and North Korea pose a security threat to the region.

In an unprecedented gesture toward the United States, Webb was allowed to meet opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Rangoon Saturday. He also was able to win the release of a U.S. citizen, John Yettaw, jailed for illegally visiting Aung San Suu Kyi at her home in May. That visit led to the government extending her house arrest by 18 months.

Webb says it appears Aung San Suu Kyi might not oppose easing sanctions on Burma. The U.S, the European Union and other Western governments have imposed economic sanctions over the years to punish the repressive military government. Webb favors the eventual lifting of sanctions on Burma, which he and others argue only increased the isolation of its people.

"I don't want to take the risk of misrepresenting her views," Webb said. "But I would say to you that it was my clear impression from her that she is not opposed to lifting some sanctions."

In the late 1990s, Aung San Suu Kyi expressed some support for economic sanctions as a way to pressure the government to recognize her party's election victory in 1990 and allow it to form a government. But in recent years, she has not publicly commented on sanctions. She has spent 14 of the last 20 years under house arrest.

On Sunday, Webb said Washington needs to develop new ways to end Burma's isolation and bring about political and economic change. Webb, a Democrat, spoke with Secretary Clinton Sunday and will brief her again upon his return to Washington.

The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on East Asia and Pacific Affairs is on a five-nation tour of Southeast Asia. From Bangkok, he will fly to Cambodia Tuesday and from there, to Vietnam.

More bricks in the wall around her


The Economist
August 19, 2009

The junta cocks another snook at the Burmese people and foreign opinion
The only surprise was that it took so long. After many delays, a court in Rangoon this week delivered its verdict on opposition leader, Aung San Suu Kyi. The ruling junta’s staunchest foe was consigned to another 18 months of detention at her home, as punishment for a bizarre incident in May when an American eccentric swam to her lakeside villa. This, the court ruled, broke the terms of the house arrest she was already serving. Her reasonable defence, that as a prisoner she was in no position to fend off uninvited visitors, was brushed aside by the court.

The pretext provided by the hapless visitor, John Yettaw, a 54-year-old Mormon, may have been fortuitous. But the outcome was never in doubt. The junta was always determined to prolong Miss Suu Kyi’s detention, which was about to expire, until after elections that are planned for some time next year. At large, Miss Suu Kyi, who is probably as loved as the generals are hated, would jeopardise this tightly controlled exercise. The last time the regime held an election, in 1990—when she was already locked up—her party won over 60% of the votes and 80% of the seats. The results have never been honoured.

This week Miss Suu Kyi’s initial sentence was for three years’ hard labour. But in a carefully choreographed intervention, the interior minister promptly stood up to announce that the junta leader, General Than Shwe, had magnanimously commuted it. By giving a gentler sentence he may hope to minimise international outrage. Another explanation was hinted at by Miss Suu Kyi’s lawyer, who suggested the act of clemency might also complicate the appeal she is to make against the verdict. At the very least, the manner in which Than Shwe directed her trial is a reminder, if one were necessary, of how completely the armed forces control all of Burma’s institutions. The whole country is a prisoner of the regime.

Mr Yettaw, who testified he was motivated to make his swim by a vision in a dream, was told to serve four years’ hard labour and three years in prison. Aung Naing Oo, a Burmese scholar at Chiang Mai University in Thailand, suggests that the regime will be keen to expel him sooner than that. The generals probably do not want Bill Clinton pitching up in Rangoon, as he did in North Korea, to appeal for mercy.

The trial has given the opposition, many of whose leaders are in exile or in jail, some publicity. It has provoked routine international condemnation and calls from activists and others for an arms embargo and further sanctions. Yet it is doubtful that much will change. Burma already faces Western sanctions, while enjoying trading links with Asian neighbours. The country can rely on Chinese and Russian support in the United Nations Security Council, so harsh new measures against the regime—even an arms embargo—are unlikely. When the UN’s secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, visited Burma in July to beg the generals to free Miss Suu Kyi and other political prisoners, they simply ignored him. This week the Security Council could not even agree on a statement criticising the verdict on Miss Suu Kyi. As Western and even South-East Asian governments condemned it, China urged the world to respect Burma’s laws.

Burma has been under a military dictatorship since 1962 and the generals’ grip looks as strong as ever. Nonetheless, the planned general election raises the tantalising possibility that politics could change. Although the armed forces will remain supreme, the new administration will have a civilian face. The election will be neither free nor fair—it is not even clear how candidates will be selected—yet the establishment of a new system could still amount to the greatest upheaval in domestic politics since the army seized power. The most optimistic analysis is that the new arrangements offer the remote possibility of some change for the better, even if that is not their architects’ intention.

Outsiders may have more to worry about than the lack of democracy in Burma, however. Last month Hillary Clinton, the American secretary of state, while in Thailand for a security conference, suggested that Burma may be receiving assistance from North Korea in building nuclear weapons. Defectors speaking to Australian researchers have alleged that an elaborate nuclear programme is being concealed in tunnels. If such suspicions persist, that issue may come to shape American thinking on Burma at least as much as the persecution of Miss Suu Kyi and other unfortunate democrats.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

MOVEMENT IN SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA TO FREE DAW AUNG SAN SUU KYI


San Francisco Bay Are democratic forces call an action protest against Burmese military regime's exclusive manner extending 18 months house arrest of 1991 Nobel Peace laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Demonstration took place in front of the House speaker Nancy Pelosi's office federal building in San Francisco, California, USA. Mainly Burmese activists and friends of Burma called for "Free Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and all political prisoners unconditionally and immidiately" ; moreover, activists expressed their dissatifiction of Senator Jim Webb's efforts on the release of Aung San Suu Kyi.

At the rally, a representative of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi expressed her concern: Conviction of Aung San Suu Kyi is a step backward for Burma. " The politically- motivated trial and conviction of Burmese democracy leader Aung San Suu Kti is another step backward for future of the Burmese people. The international community must send a clear message that elections in Burma, planned for 2010, will not be open or credible without the participation of imprisoned and detined pro-democracy leaders. Let therer be no doubt that the United States will continue to support Aung San Suu Kyi as she inspires the world in her fight for the freedom of the Burmese people."

In Solidarity,
Ko Ko Lay
SF

Irish Mayor Launches Petition for Suu Kyi’s Release


Suu Kyi was sentenced to a further 18 months of house arrest by a military-controlled court in Burma on August 11 for breaching the terms of her previous house arrest.

The lord mayor urged young people to be aware of human rights and to spread the message of support for Suu Kyi through social networks such as Facebook and Twitter.

“Dublin is a city that prides itself on its social conscience, and young people approached me last week who were truly angry at the 18 months house arrest sentence,” she said. “I realize I could have just issued a statement condemning the injustice, but I wanted Dublin and its young people to have their say.

“Aung San Suu Kyi is a global icon of heroic and peaceful resistance in the face of military repression, and she takes her rightful place in history amongst other great civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi, who I know inspired her. I am calling on the military junta in Burma to immediately release Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest.

“I recall the great wisdom in the words of Aung San Suu Kyi when she said, ‘Please use your liberty to promote ours,’ in calling on people around the world to join the struggle for freedom in Burma,” she said.

Burma Action Ireland welcomed the opening of the book of solidarity and urged the public to sign the book in support of Suu Kyi, asking that they use their freedom “to promote hers".

Well-known singer Bono of the Irish rock band U2 also sent a message of support for the book of solidarity campaign.

“This bunch of crooks that call themselves a government continue to rob the people of Burma of their rightful leader,’ Bono said. “This mock trial and its sham verdict is a signal not of junta strength but of fear and cowardice–fear of a 64-year-old woman whom they dare not even let walk down the street.”

Another reaction to the sentencing of Suu Kyi came on August 13, when the New York-based Global Justice Center (GJC) denounced the UN secretary-general’s response to Suu Kyi’s conviction and called for a UN Security Council referral to bring Burma’s junta leaders to the International Criminal Court.

“The Global Justice Center takes exception to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s remarks which fail to address the junta’s systematic rule by crime,” the GJC said, calling for Ban Ki-moon to end the junta’s impunity and not just “convey his ‘disappointment’ and call for ‘reconciliation.’

“Aung San Suu Kyi ‘s conviction is a crime against humanity by means of a judicial order. Judges are Sen-Gen Than Shwe’s weapons of choice and judges U Thaung Nyunt and U Nye Nye Soe, who convicted Aung San Suu Kyi, are ‘top performers’ in the junta’s judicial arsenal,” the GJC said.

Speaking to The Irrawaddy on Tuesday, Thein Oo, chairman of the exiled Burma Lawyers’ Council (BLC), said: “Suu Kyi’s trial shows that there are many unfair trials and sham verdicts in Burma, and that the Burmese military commit crimes against humanity.”

“The BLC is trying to initiate action to bring Burma’s junta leaders before the International Criminal Court in cooperation with the Global Justice Center, the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH, Paris) and the Women's League of Burma (WLB). The UN Security Council can play an important role in this,” he said.

TO BE UNITY


f //
'Duae@ jrerf mEh idk if Ha&;uiG ;f jyirf mS ay:vp D a00g;r l ( odk@ ) rjywfom;rl ( odk@ ) &yaf x;G r[l m
twudk tf c H titf m;pkawtG m;v;kH &J@ / Eidk if Ha&;a&S@vyk if e;f pOfu dk r&iS ;f rvi;f jzpaf pw, f / 'tD wuG f O;D aqmi f
rtl ce;f u¾rSm&aSd ew Jh titf ,'f Dutdk jypwf ifae& Hk / apmifh=unafh e&eHk J@jy;D rmS r[wk fb J / vyEf ikd &f Sm;Eidk f &Sd wJh
tzGJ@t pn;f aweG J@/ O;D aqmirf lae&mrmS &aSd ew Jh vyl *k K~dvfawGtm;v;kH rmS wm0e&f aSd ewmbJjzpfw,f //
'aD e&mrmS aocsmwmwpcf kuawm h / pptf yk pf &k J@widk ;f jynef J@vlrsLd ;tay:xm;&wSd J h wu Jh oabmxm;
eJ@ &ywf nfcsuuf dk okH;oyfwmrmS ;,iG ;f &i f ( odk@wn;f r[kw f ) arsmfwvivfh ijfhzpfaec&Jh ifawmvh n;f / pptf ky f
ptk ay:tjrief J@oabmxm;[m&iS ;f &iS ;f vi;f vi;f eJ@jywfom;r&l SdrmS r[wk bf ;l / 'tD wGu f aemuqf uwf jGJzpfay:
aewmuawmh / twkdutf cHawG=um;rmS &Si;f vi;f a&&mw Jh ay:vprD sKd ;u dk rcsrSwEf idk f=uawmbh J / [dkwpzf GJ@wp f
rsKd ; / 'wD pzf GJ@wpzf jkHzpaf e=ujy;D / jywfom;wrJh [mAsL[ma&;qGJrul dk rqyk uf dkiEf idk =fubl;jzpaf ew, f //
'ga=umifh vkyif e;f pOyf idk f;awrG mS tm;en;f csurf sm;pGmeJ@ eyr;f v;kH vyk af qmifae=u&ov dk / v l / aiGa=u;
eJ@tcsed pf w&Jh i;f E;SD pudk xf kwrf al w[G m / r=umc%qodk v dk tusKd ;r Jh q;kH &H;ral wuG dok m=uKH ae=u&w, f / 'Dtajc
taeawuG dkausmfvmG ;Eidk zf dk@&m vlwpcf sKd @ / tzGJ@tpn;f wpcf sKd @[m bvkH yk fie;f pOqf dwk pJh um;u dk owad y;ajymq dk
=uw,f / odk@aomfvn;f 'tD aetxm;rsKd ;u dk a&muzf dk@&mrmS / &eof l ( etz pptf yk pf k ) tay: &jriof ;kH oyyf kH
wnl rD l&rSd &qSd dkwmeJ@'rD dkua&pD awmfveS af &;jzppf Ofwpcf kv;kH ( 1988 r S ,ae@xd ) tay:&yfwnfcsuef J@oabm
xm; [mtajccHuswJhjy\emawGjzpfw,f //
yxrtcsujfzpwf Jh etz ppaf cgi;f aqmiaf wtG ay:xm;wJhoabmxm; tjrifuGJjym;r l &Sdaec&Jh if / odk@
wn;f r[kw f rwlnED idk cf &Jh i f / ay:vpyD dik ;f t&wnl ED dkipf &mr&aSd wmhovdk / r[mAsL[meJ@vyk if e;f pOyf dki;f rmS vn;f
av;av;euef uvf ufwvGJ yk af qmizf dk@&mrv,G fuyl gb;l ( rjzpfEidk yf gb;l ) //
b,fvbdk Jjriof njf zpaf p / pptf m%m&iS pf ep&f ycf rH lay:rSm trsKd ;om;jyevf nfoijfhrwfa&; qdwk mu dk
b,af wmrh Swnaf qmuvf dk@rjzpEf dik of v dk / 'rD udk a&ppD epaf y:uaejy;D azmfaqmirf oS m pprf eS fw Jh trsKd ;om;jye f
vnfoifhjrwfa&;u&dk &rSd mS jzpyf gw, f //
cy&f iS ;f &iS ;f ajym&&ifawm h - trsKd ;om;nnD Gwaf &;qdkwm tm%mcaGJ 0a&;r[wk fvdk@bjJ zpwf , f //
'wk ,d tcsurf mS awmh / r&l i;f &n&f G,cf su f / &nrf eS ;f csuaf wjGzpwf wJh idk ;f jynef J@vrl sKd ;&J@tusKd ;p;D yGm;[m
yxrae&muav#musjyD; / u,dk fusKd ;p;D yGm; ( y*k K~dvfa&;tusKd ;tjrw f ) [m yxrtqiufh dk ajymi;f v J a&mu&f Sd
omG ;cJhjy D q&dk iaf wm h / vuwf aGJ qmi&f Gu=fuzdk@rqdkxm;eJ@ tzGJ@tpn;f t&a&m / y*k K~dvfa&;t&yg ( widk f;jyn f
twuG yf gqdkw Jh twdkutf c H titf m;p k tcsi;f csi;f ) ydwqf dk@umq;D ral w G / ysupf ;D &m ysupf ;D a=umi;f udk =upH D
vyk f aqmirf rl sKd ;awGu dk / taumitf xn f azmvf mav&h =Sduov dk / Eidk fiaH &;u dk p;D ymG ;a&;vyk if e;f csi;f
PDF Created with deskPDF PDF Writer - Trial :: http://www.docudesk.com
jyKd iqf idk rf lvrdk sKd ; oabmxm;vmav&h Sdw, f / 'Dvvdk yk f&yrf sKd ;aw[G m &efotl m;ay;vyk &f yfjzpfw,fqdkwmudk
raw;G us / vurf
cuH s b;l q&dk iaf wm h / awmfveS af &;=u;D t"Gef@&nS yf gapqdkw Jh pum;uvdk uaf wG@ taumitf xnaf zmaf euswm
bjJzprf mS aocsmw,f //
ypuP tQ aetxm;rmS awm h / wpOf ;D aumi;f wpaf ,muaf umi;f e@Jwu,tfh ajymi;f tvuJ dk zefw;D Eidk zf dk@
qwdk mb,fvrdk rS jzpEf idk bf l;q dk / trsm;ptk aeeJ@ em;vnfxm;jy;D jzpof v dk twdkutf ctH itf m;ptk m;v;kH r[wk f
&iaf wmirf S / trsm;p k ( wu,fvyk Ef idk fuidk Ef idk fw Jh - y*k K~dvf / tzGJ@tpn;f ) yg0ifw Jh / ppk n;f nDnwG fjy;D cdkirf mw Jh
bvkH yk if ef;pOwf pf&yuf dk xlaxmijfy;D r S / etz pptf yk pf k eJ@twl pptf m%m&iS fpep f ujdkzKwfcs z,&f mS ;Eidk rf ,qf dk
wmxiof mjrifom&SdveG ;f aeygjy D //
odk@aomvf n;f twdkutf ctH itf m;pak w=Gum; / t=uGi;f rJhnDnwG fa&;u dk wnfaqmuzf dk@qdkwm / pwd f
qEoN uof uyf Jjzpwf , f / vuaf wG@jzwof e;f &wtJh cgrmS awmh tzGJ@tpn;f wpfcck si;f taeeJ@ tajcc&H yfwnyf kH
/ wnfaqmuyf rkH wln=DuwJth wGu f / t&m&m wpof m;wn;f usw hJ tajctaewp&f yfuzdk efw;D zdk@qdkwmr
v,G fuyl gb;l / tveG rf cS ucf yJ gw, f // 'gayrJhvn;f =ur;f wr;f curf mjyD; titf m;=u;D veG ;f w&Jh efoel J@&iqf idk f
ae&wtJh cg ( awmfveS af &;wp&f y&f J@ &Sdoi&fh Sxd dkufwoJh abmobm0twidk f; - ) tcsi;f csi;f =um;rmS &oSd i&fh Sd
xudk fw Jh ppk n;f nDnwG rf ul dkawm h / &Eidk foavmufwnfaqmuf,&l rmS jzpyf gw,f //
nnD Gwfa&; qdkwmuvn;f - pum;v;kH aweG J@ wnfaqmu&f Hk / tmabmitf m&i;f oefoe f [p f
a=u;G ae&Hkwpcf kwn;f eJ@rvakH vmubf ;l / wu,jfzpfvkdw Jh oabmxm; pwd qf EeN J@vuaf wG@usus taumitf
xnfazmrf [l mt"Duusygw, f //
vwfwavm O;D pmG yxr vtdk ycf suf uawm h / r[mAsL[m / en;f AsL[mawuG dkjyefvnfo;kH oyrf l /
qe;f pprf al wGuvdk yk &f ygvrd rfh , f // 'aD emu f vtdk y&f ifvtdk yfwJh jyiqf irf l / ajymi;f vrJ lawGudkvyk &f rmS jzpwf , f
bma=umifhq kd Oyrmtm;jzi fh - twkdutf ctH itf m;pak w=Gum; wpfowH n;f rxGufw jJhy\em ( csO;f uyyf kH
trsKd ;rsKd ;uGJjym;r l / &ywf ncf sufujGJym;r l / &n&f G,cf sufujGJym;rl rsm;a=umijfh zpof n f ) utdk m;v;kH jrif=ujy;D jzp f
vdk@ygy J // 'ga=umifh jrerf mEh idk if Ha&;tajymi;f tv J twuG f b,fybkH ,ef n;f qkdw Jh ta&G@[m tm;aumi;f armi;f
oejfzprf vmcJhov dk / uvk or*e~ J@ Eidk fiwH um&J@csO;f uyrf [l mvn;f t"ud tajymi;f tveJ J@ tvrS ;f umG veG ;f
aewmuydk g ab;xGufq;dk usKd ;tjzpfawG@vm&ygw, f //
wzurf Smuvn;f urmB huvk or*t~ zGJ@tpnf; qdkwm[m titf m;=u;D Eikd if HawG ( t"du ADwydk dki&f iS f
aw G ) &J@Eidk if Ha&;upm;uiG ;f wpcf xk u f rydok v dk / Edkiif wH pEf idk if H&J@wu,vfh tdk yfcsuef J@ t[ynf Dw Jh tajymi;f t
vrJ sKd ; twGuaf wm h yg0gr Jh urmB th zGJ@tpn;f jzpfw, f // Eidk if Hwum qdkwmuvn;f ol@tusKd ;p;D ymG ;eJ@olwGu f
csufjy;D rcS sO;f uy f xpd yaf e =uwmjzpfw,f // jrerf mhEidk if Ha&; twudk tf ctH itf m;pkawGxrJ mS q&dk ifvn;f -
etzpptf p;dk & a&G@&mS ;rlu dk taumi;f jriwf Jhorl sm; ( vu&f pSd pftyk pf ek J@y;l aygi;f aeolaw G ) // bmb&J &
tacsmifvdku f csiforl sm; ( pwd fu;l a&mipf ekH J@jcpH n;f &;dk cxG dkiaf eoal w G ) / tajccHupjy;D ajymi;f vrJ S
&r,vf dk@jriwf Jhorl sm; (pptf m%m&iS pf epfu dk z,&f mS ;&efusKd ;pm;aeolawG ) ponjfzi fh
trsKd ;rsKd ;uGJjym;aeral =umi fh / toAH vH rsKd ;pekH J@ &yfax;G aejy;D / &iS ;f vi;f jywfom;w Jh yokH ¿me f wpcf kwnf;udk
qyk qf yk fuidk fuidk &f zdk@&m tveG cf uaf eygw, f //
b,fodk@qadk p useG af wmfwdk@&J@wrd ;f nwG rf [l m bmu&dk n&f ,G fw,fqwdk m ta&;t=u;D q;kH yg y J //
- 'aD e&mrmS nDnwG fa&;twuG fwnaf qmuyf ekH J@ywfoufjy;D / wijfycsu[f m useG fawmf&h J@tErk me
pO;f pm;csurf sm;omjzpfwtJh wuG f jynpfh kHvakH vmuwf ,fvk@drqvdk ydk gb;l / tm;en;f csurf sm;&aSd umif;&aSd e Eidk yf g
w,f //
PDF Created with deskPDF PDF Writer - Trial :: http://www.docudesk.com
'gth jyif t,tl qtm;jziqfh ef@usizf ujfzpfaeoal wuG d k r&nfneG ;f ygb;l / bma=umiqfh dk useG af wmpfh O;f
pm;csu[f m pptf m%m&iS pf epfutdk jrpfjywzf ,&f Sm;a&;qwdk Jh &ycf rH al =umiyfh gy J //
en;f vr;f EpS of G,&f Sdw, f / ( 1 ) wyaf ygi;f pzk GJ@weJh n;f vr;f eJ@ / ( 2 ) r[mAsL[mt&nEdS ild ;f jy;D / vyk f
ie;f y;l wGJaqmi&f uG fa&;yjJzpfw, f // 'aD e&mrmS vn;f yxren;f jzpwf Jh jyef@usaJ ewtJh itf m;pak wuG d k wyaf ygi;f p k
yokH ¿mef ppk n;f jy;D wdkuyf 0GJ ifw Jh en;f vr;f eJ@ / 'kw,d en;f jzpfw Jh r[mAsL[m t&p k pn;f vy&f Sm;weJh n;f vr;f
EpS cf uk dk yuwjdzpEf kdiaf jcay:rwl njfyD;pO;f pm;&rmS jzpyf gw, f //
wyaf ygi;f pzk GJ@jy;D wdkuyf 0GJ ifweJh n;f vr;f [m vu&f Sjdzwof e;f cJhw Jh taetxm;t&awm h / twdkutf c H
titf m;pak w=Gum;rmS / ( jynwf iG f;rmS a&m / jynyf rmS yg wyaf ygi;f pak wzG GJ@c=Jhu / &Sad eqJ qdkayr Jh )wu,cf ikd rf m
nnD Gwjf y;D / wudk yf uGJ dk ( ay:vpyD idk ;f a&m / vy&f mS ;ryl idk ;f rmS yg ) O;D aqmirf al y;Edkirf Jh wpcf kwn;f aom wyaf ygi;f p k
qwdk m jzpEf idk zf kd@rvG,uf lkao;ygbl; / bma=umifhq dk twkdutf c H titf m;pkawG=um; / tzGJ@tpn;f wpcf ck si;f &J@
&ywf nfcsuyf pkH H / t ajccoH abmw&m; / &n&f ,G cf su f eJ@tusKd ;p;D ymG ; &arsmyf akH w[G mtveG fuGJjym;aeveG ;f w Jh
twuG fa=umifh ( wcsKd @ae &mawrG mS y*k K~dvfa&;tjrief @JooH ,awtG jyi f / twtW usKd ;zufwG,rf al waG =umi fh )
pum;v;kH oufouf wyfaygi;f p k ( Ekwxf Gupf um;oufou f ) omjzpaf ecJhjy;D / pprf eS wf Jh wyfaygi;f p k wp&f y&f J@
toiG fo¾merf sKd ; / ppk n;f rrl sKd ;eJ@vyk if e;f pOrf sKd ;u dk r&Eidk cf Jh=ubl;jzpwf , f //
'ga=umifh r[mAsL[mt&nEdS dli;f jy;D / vyk fie;f taumitf xnfazmaf qmifwtJh cgrSm / nnD Gwrf SswpGm
y;l waGJ qmi&f GufweJh nf;vr;f [m ( wyaf ygi;f pkwp&f yrf wnaf qmuEf dkiaf o;ci f ) rjzprf aejzwfoe;f oifhweJh n;f
vr;f jzpfw, f / twudk tf caH w=Gum; nDnwG fa&;wnfaqmufwtJh cg tqiEfh pS fqifhjzwfoe;f w Jh / oabmrsKd ;
vn;f jzpfw,f //
- tjyetf veS fowi;f zv,S rf l //
- tzGJ@tpn;f rsm;=um; / tyk pf rk sm;=um; ( wpcf sKd @ae&mrsm;wGi f y*k K~dvaf &;xpd yrf yl g ta&;yg ) rmS /
&ywf nfcsuyf kHo¿me f / a&G@&mS ;ryl kHo¿meuf tdk jyetf vSe f em;vnrf &l aSd pjci;f //
- vyk if e;f azmfaqmirf rl sm;ESiyfh wfouIf tm;en;f csu f / tm;omcsurf sm;jzpaf y:vmonfth cg
tjyetf veS ef m;vnrf l / ulnaD xmuyf rHh l ( pdwyf idk ;f / &yk yf idk ;f / aiaG =u; / taw;G tac:yidk ;f ) //
- Eidk if aH &;aq;G aE;G rrl sm; ( vyk if e;f pOyf dki;f / tajctaeyidk ;f ) urdk =umc%jyKvyk fjci;f //
- wlnvD yk fie;f rsm;udk y;l wIGJ 4i;f / tqifhvkducf GJa0I4i;f azmfaqmifjci;f - tp&SdwtJh aetxm;
rsKd ; / tqirfh sKd ;udkqyk fuidk Ef idk f=ur, f q&dk ifawmh / r[mAsL[mtqinfh ESd idl ;f aq;G aE;G oabmw&l Hkr#omru
en;f AsL[mtqifhawrG Smyg / wlnDvyk if e;f pOfawGu dk yl;wGJaqmi&f uG Ef idk f=uwtJh wuG f tm;omcsuyf rdk sm;vm
rmS jzpwf , f //
odk@aomvf n;f y J y*k v~ dutusKd ;p;D ymG ;u dk quvf uzf uwf G,fxm;vodk lawuG awm h / nnD Gwaf &;qdkw Jh
vtdk yrf lu dk ta=umi;f jycsurf sKd ;pekH J@npEf rG ;f apygvrd Ofh ;D r, f //
useG fawmwf dk@&J@jynof lawtG wGu f / useG fawmwf dk@q;kH jzw&f ygvdrrfh , f / EpS faygi;f EpS qf ,&f Sn=fumvm
jyjDzpfw Jh / 'rD dkua&ptD a&;awmyf =kHu;D &J@aemuqf ufwtGJ usKd ;qutf jzp f jynof lvlx&k J@b0[mzwG foxufnp f
vmwmuvjGJ y;D / b,fvadk umi;f reG wf Jh ajymi;f vrJ rl sKd ;u&dk cjJh yDv J // //
oufxeG ;f (88rsK;d qufausmi;f om;rsm;jynyf )
PDF

Can We see National Reconciliation ?

“แ€กแ€™်ိဳးแ€žားျแ€•แ€”္แ€œแ€Š္แ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…แ‚”ေแ€›းแ€œแ€™္းေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း ျแ€–แ€…္ႏိုแ€„္แ€•ါแ‚”แ€™แ€œား”

แ€ါးแ€œ္แ€…แ€›ိแ€‚်ာแ€”แ€š္แ€ြแ€„္แ€•ါแ€›ွိေแ€žာ “ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာแ€กแ€ိုแ€€္แ€ံแ€™်ား แ€กေแ€œွ်ာแ‚”แ€กแ€แ€„္း แ€œုแ€•္แ€›แ€”္แ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ား ေแ€”แฟแ€•ီီ” แ€†ုိေแ€žာေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€•ါးแ€€ုိแ€–แ€္แ€›ႈแฟแ€•ီးေแ€žာแ€กแ€ါ แฟแ€•ဳံးแ€œိုแ€€္แ€™ိแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€€ြ်แ€”္ေแ€ာ္แ€žแ€Š္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กแ€…ိုိးแ€› แ€€ို แแ‰แ‡แ„ แ€ုႏွแ€…္แ€’ီแ€‡แ€„္แ€˜ာแ€œ แ€ฅီးแ€žแ€”္แ‚”ေแ€›းแ€แ€„္းแ€™ွแ€…แ€แ€„္၍ แ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္แ€œာแ€ဲ့แ€žူျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€ါแ€›แ€„့္ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံ ေแ€›းแ€žแ€™ားแ€แ€ฅီးแ€กေแ€”ႏွแ€„့္ แ€…แ€…္ေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€™်ားႏွแ€„့္ แ€กแ€ိုแ€€္แ€ံแ€ိုแ‚”၏ แ€…ိแ€္แ€“ာแ€္ေแ€›းแ€›ာแ€€ို แ€›ာแ€…ုႏွแ€…္ ႏွแ€…္แ€…ုေแ€€်ာ္แ€กแพแ€€ာ แ€”แ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€›ႈိแ€„္းแ€›ႈိုแ€„္းแ€•ါ แ€แ€„္แ€•แ€္แ€žแ€€္แ€žိแ€›ွိแ€žူแ€แ€ฅီးျแ€–แ€…္၍ ေแ€€ာแ€„္းေแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€”ား แ€œแ€Š္แ€žေแ€˜ာေแ€•ါแ€€္แ€žူ แ€แ€…္ေแ€šာแ€€္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။

NCGUB ၏ แ€œแ€™္းေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€žแ€…္แ€Ÿုေแ€แšေแ€žာ แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားျแ€•แ€”္แ€œแ€Š္แ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€žแ€Š္ แ€€ြ်ႏု္แ€•္แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กားแ€œုံးแ€กแ€ြแ€€္ แ€กแ€žแ€…္แ€กแ€†แ€”္းแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€•ါ။ ၎แ€œแ€™္းေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€žแ€Š္ NLD แ€•ါแ€ီแ€€ แแ‰แ‰แ€แ€กแ€œြแ€”္แ€€ာแ€œแ€ြแ€„္ แ€…แ€แ€„္แ‚€แ€€ိဳးแ€…ားแ€ဲ့ေแ€žာ္ แ€™ေแ€กာแ€„္ျแ€™แ€„္แ€žแ€Š့္ แ€œแ€™္းေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းေแ€Ÿာแ€„္း แ€แ€ု แ€žာျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ NCGUB ႏွแ€„့္ NCUB แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กแ€ူ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€œแ€€္แ€žแ€„့္แ€›ာေแ€›ြးแ€်แ€š္၍ แ€–ိแ€္ေแ€แšแ€‘ား ေแ€žာแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ားႏွแ€„့္ แ€”แ€กแ€–แ€กေแ€•แšแ€€แ€™္းแ€œွแ€™္းแ€်แ€€္แ€žแ€Š္ แ€กแ€›ာแ€‘แ€„္ แ€กแ€€်ဳိးแ€›ွိแ€œိแ€™့္แ€™แ€Š္ แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€Ÿု แ‚€แ€€ိแ€™္းေแ€žေျแ€•ာแ€›ဲแ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€กေแ€”ႏွแ€„့္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กားแ€กแ€–แ€€္แ€œုแ€•္၍ แ€…แ€€ားแ€แ€œုံး แ€ေแ€œแ€™ွ်แ€•แ€„္ ျแ€•แ€”္แพแ€€ားแ€œိแ€™့္แ€™แ€Š္แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္ေแ€်။

แ€‚်ာแ€€ာแ€ာแ€€ြแ€”္แ€—แ€„္းแ€›ွแ€„္းแ€ြแ€„္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ แ€žံแ€แ€™ာแ€”္แ€™်ားแ€€ိုแ€–ိแ€္แพแ€€ားแฟแ€•ီး ၎แ€ိုแ‚”၏ “แ€กแ€™်ဳိး แ€žားแ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›း” แ€œုแ€•္แ€„แ€”္းแ€…แ€ฅ္แ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€›ွแ€„္းแ€œแ€„္းแ€แ€„္ျแ€•แพแ€€แ€™แ€Š္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ€™ွแ€แ€†แ€„့္ แ€‘ို แ€กแ€†ိုျแ€•ဳแ€်แ€€္แ€…ာแ€แ€”္းแ€€ို แ€”แ€กแ€–แ€‘ံေแ€•းแ€•ိုแ‚”แฟแ€•ီးแ€†ုံးျแ€–แ€္ေแ€…แ€™แ€Š္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€€ြแ€”္แ€—แ€„္းแ€›ွแ€„္း၏ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€ แ€›แ€Š္แ€›ြแ€š္แ€်แ€€္แ€™ွာ ေแ€„ြေแพแ€€းေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•ံ့แ€™ႈႏွแ€„့္ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€ံแ€กားေแ€•းแ€™ႈแ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံျแ€ားแ€ိုแ€„္း ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€™်ားแ€™ွ แ€›แ€›ွိแ€›แ€”္แ€•แ€„္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။

แ€‘ိုแ€…ာแ€แ€”္း၏แ€กแ€†ိုแ€กแ€› แ€กแ€€แ€š္၍ แ€”แ€กแ€–แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€™ွ ၎แ€…ာแ€แ€”္းแ€•ါแ€กแ€်แ€€္แ€กแ€œแ€€္แ€™်ား แ€€ို แ€žေแ€˜ာแ€€် แ‚€แ€€ိဳแ€€္ႏွแ€…္แ€žแ€€္แ€•ါแ€€ แ€กแ€ိုแ€€္แ€ံแ€ိုแ‚”แ€กေแ€”ႏွแ€„့္ แ€…แ€แ€„္ေแ€†ြးေႏြးแ€›แ€™แ€Š္။ ၎แ€…ာแ€แ€”္း แ€กแ€› แ€•แ€‘แ€™แ€ฅီးแ€†ုံးแ€…แ€แ€„္ေแ€†ြးေႏြးแ€›แ€™แ€Š့္แ€กแ€်แ€€္แ€™ွာ (แ‚แ€แ€แˆ) แ€ုႏွแ€…္แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€€ို แ€กแ€™်ားแ€œแ€€္ แ€ံแ€œာแ€žแ€Š္แ€กแ€‘ိ แ€Šွိႏႈိแ€„္းေแ€›းแ€†ြဲေแ€›းแ€•แ€„္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။

၎แ€กแ€†ိုျแ€•ဳแ€်แ€€္แ€žแ€Š္ แ€…ိแ€္แ€€ူးแ€šแ€ฅ္แ€†แ€”္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€€ို แ€†แ€€္แ€œแ€€္แ€แ€„္ျแ€•ေแ€†ြးေႏြးแ€žြားแ€•ါแ€™แ€Š္။

(แ) แ€šေแ€”แ‚”แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žာ แ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€€ို แ€แ€„္แ€žြแ€„္းแ€œာေแ€žာ NCGUB, NCUB ႏွแ€„့္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”၏ แ€œแ€€္ေแ€›ြးแ€…แ€„္ (แ‡) แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€žแ€Š္ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€•ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€™ႈแ€€ို แ€ฅီးေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ားแ€ก ျแ€–แ€…္ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€•แ€กแ€„္แ€กားแ€…ုแ€™်ားแ€™ွแ€™แ€žแ€္แ€™ွแ€္แ€‘ားေแ€•။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€…ုแ€…แ€Š္းแ€‘ားแ€žแ€Š့္ แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€›း แ€†ိုแ€žแ€Š္ แ€™ွာแ€œแ€Š္း แ€แ€€แ€š္แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€›းแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္ ေแ€€ာ္แ€€แ€•္แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€›းแ€žာျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ုိ NLD แ€•ါแ€ီႏွแ€„့္ ႏႈိแ€„္းแ€šွแ€ฅ္แพแ€€แ€Š့္แ€œွ်แ€„္ NLD แ€•ါแ€ီแ€žแ€Š္ ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€ြแ€„္ แ€กႏိုแ€„္แ€›แ€žแ€Š့္แ€•ါแ€ီแ‚€แ€€ီး ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€œူแ€‘ုแ‚€แ€€ီးแ€€ แ€•ါแ€ီေแ€”ာแ€€္แ€ြแ€„္แ€›ွိแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€•ါแ€ီေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္ေแ€’แšေแ€กာแ€„္แ€†แ€”္းแ€…ုแพแ€€แ€Š္ แ€žแ€Š္ ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာ့ေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€žာแ€™แ€€ แ€€แ€™แปာ့แ€’ီแ€™ိုแ€€ေแ€›แ€…ီ แ€žူแ€›ဲေแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€แ€ฅီးျแ€–แ€…္ แ€žแ€္แ€™ွแ€္แ€ံแ€‘ား แ€›แ€žူျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ€€ဲ့แ€žိုแ‚”ေแ€žာ NLD แ€•ါแ€ီႏွแ€„့္ ၎แ€•ါแ€ီေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္ ေแ€’แšေแ€กာแ€„္แ€†แ€”္းแ€…ုแพแ€€แ€Š္ แ€ိုแ‚”แ€™ွ (แ€”แ€กแ€–) แ€กား แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားแ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€€แ€™္းแ€œွแ€™္းแ€™ႈแ€€ို แ€”แ€กแ€–แ€™ွแ€•แ€š္แ€်แ€‘ားแ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ NCGUB แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ဲ့แ€žိုแ‚” ေแ€›ာ့แ€›ဲแ€›ဲแ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€›းแ€œုแ€•္แ€‘ားแฟแ€•ီး ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€•แ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€™ွ ေแ€กာ့ႏွแ€œုံးแ€”ာေแ€” แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€กား แ€”แ€กแ€–แ€žแ€Š္ แ€‘แ€Š့္၍แ€•แ€„္แ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ားแ€œိแ€™့္แ€™แ€Š္แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္ေแ€်။

(แ‚) แ€€แ€™แปာ့แ€€ုแ€œแ€žแ€™แ€‚ၢ၊ แ€ฅေแ€›ာแ€•แ€žแ€™แ€‚ၢ၊ แ€กာแ€†ီแ€šံႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€™်ားႏွแ€„့္ แ€กေแ€™แ€›ိแ€€แ€”္ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€ိုแ‚”แ€™ွ ေแ€’แš ေแ€กာแ€„္แ€†แ€”္းแ€…ုแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€กား แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•းแ€›แ€”္ေแ€ာแ€„္းแ€†ိုေแ€”แ€žแ€Š့္แพแ€€ားแ€™ွ (แ€”แ€กแ€–)แ€แ€›ားแ€›ုံးแ€™ွ แ€กแ€œုแ€•္ แพแ€€แ€™္းႏွแ€„့္ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€’แ€္แ€žုံးႏွแ€…္ แ€်แ€™ွแ€္แ€œိုแ€€္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€†ိုแ€„္းแ€„ံ့แ€กျแ€–แ€…္ ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€’แ€္ (แแˆ) แ€œႏွแ€„့္ ေแ€”แ€กိแ€™္ แ€กแ€€်แ€š္แ€်ဳแ€•္แ€žိုแ‚” แพแ€žแ€‚ုแ€္แ€œ(แแ)แ€›แ€€္ေแ€”แ‚”แ€ြแ€„္ แ€်แ€™ွแ€္แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ€œုแ€•္แ€›แ€•္แ€€ုိ แพแ€€แ€Š့္ျแ€แ€„္းแ€กားျแ€–แ€„့္္ NCGUB แ€แ€„္แ€žြแ€„္းแ€œာแ€žแ€Š့္ แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားျแ€•แ€”္แ€œแ€Š္แ€žแ€„့္ျแ€™แ€္ေแ€›းแ€€ို (แ€”แ€กแ€–) แ€™ွ แ€…ိแ€္แ€™แ€แ€„္แ€…ားေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း แ€‘แ€•္ေแ€œာแ€„္းแ€žแ€€္ေแ€žแ€‘ူแ€œိုแ€€္ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ‚”แ€กျแ€•แ€„္ (แ‚แ€แแ€) ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€€ို แ€†แ€€္แ€œแ€€္แ€်ီแ€แ€€္ေแ€ာ့แ€™แ€Š့္แ€กေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း ေแพแ€€ျแ€„ာแ€œိုแ€€္ျแ€แ€„္းแ€•แ€„္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။

(แƒ) แ€‚်ာแ€€ာแ€ာ แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€แ€„္แ€แ€ฅီးျแ€–แ€…္แ€žူ แ€€ိုแ€Šိဳแ€กုแ€”္းျแ€™แ€„့္แ€™ွ แ€žแ€แ€„္းแ€…ာแ€›ွแ€„္းแ€œแ€„္းแ€•ြဲแ€ြแ€„္ “แ€€ြ်แ€”္ေแ€ာ္แ€ိုแ‚” แ€˜ာแ€€ိုแ€œိုแ€်แ€„္แ€แ€š္แ€†ိုแ€ာแ€€ိုแ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ားแ€ာแ€‘แ€€္ แ€…แ€…္္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€€แ€˜ာแ€€ိုแ€œုแ€•္ေแ€•း ႏိုแ€„္แ€แ€š္၊ แ€˜ာแ€€ိုแ€œုแ€•္แ€™ေแ€•းႏိုแ€„္แ€˜ူးแ€†ိုแ€ာแ€€ို แ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ားแฟแ€•ီးแ€œုแ€•္แ€ာျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€แ€š္” แ€Ÿုแ€†ိုแ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”၏ แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားျแ€•แ€”္แ€œแ€Š္แ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€œုแ€•္แ€„แ€”္းแ€…แ€ฅ္แ€ြแ€„္แ€•แ€„္ “ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€กแ€€်แ€ฅ္းแ€žားแ€™်ား แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•းေแ€›းွႏွแ€„့္ (แแ‰แ‰แ€)แ€ုႏွแ€…္ ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€›แ€œာแ€’္แ€€ိုแ€กแ€žိแ€กแ€™ွแ€္ျแ€•ဳေแ€›း” แ€†ိုแ€žแ€Š့္ แ€กแ€ိုแ€€္ แ€กแ€ံแ€ိုแ‚”แ€™ွ แ€กแ€…แ€ฅ္แ€แ€…ိုแ€€္ေแ€ာแ€„္းแ€†ိုေแ€”แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š့္ แ€กแ€်แ€€္ႏွแ€…္แ€်แ€€္แ€€ို แ€်แ€”္แ€œွแ€•္แ€‘ားแ€ဲ့แฟแ€•ီး แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žား แ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€€ို ေแ€ာแ€„္းแ€†ိုแ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€€ိုแ€Šဳိแ€กုံးျแ€™แ€„့္แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กေแ€”ႏွแ€„့္ ၎แ€กแ€်แ€€္แ€žแ€Š္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€™ွ แ€œแ€€္แ€™แ€ံႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กแ€်แ€€္ႏွแ€…္แ€်แ€€္แ€กျแ€–แ€…္ แ€žေแ€˜ာแ€‘ားแ€ဲ့แพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€šแ€‘ာแ€˜ူแ€ แ€€်แ€€်แ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ား ေแ€ြးေแ€แšแ€›แ€œွ်แ€„္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€žแ€Š္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•းแ€်แ€„္แ€žူแ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•းေแ€”แพแ€€ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံ ေแ€›းแ€กแ€€်แ€ฅ္းแ€žားแ€™်ားแ€กားแ€œုံး แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•းแ€်แ€„္แ€€แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•းႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กแ€ြแ€€္ျแ€•ႆแ€”ာ แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္။ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€กแ€€်แ€ฅ္းแ€žားแ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•းแ€œုိแ€€္ ျแ€•แ€”္แ€–แ€™္းแ€†ီးแ€œိုแ€€္ แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”แพแ€€ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€กแ€˜แ€š္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္แ€†ိုေแ€žာ္ ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€ြแ€„္ แ€แ€Š္แฟแ€„ိแ€™္ေแ€žာแ€แ€›ားแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’ แ€แ€Š္แ€›ွိแ€™ေแ€”ေแ€žာ ေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ‚•ေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€กแ€€်แ€ฅ္းแ€žားแ€™်ား แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•းေแ€›းแ€žแ€Š္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€™ွ แ€œုแ€•္ႏိုแ€„္ေแ€žာแ€กแ€œုแ€•္ျแ€–แ€…္แฟแ€•ီး แ€™แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€žးျแ€แ€„္းแ€žာျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။

แแ‰แˆแ€ แ€ုႏွแ€…္แ€€ แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€กေแ€”ႏွแ€„့္ แ€žံแ€ƒာေแ€ာ္แ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€‘ိแ€”္းแ€်ဳแ€•္ႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š့္ แ€žံแ€ƒာ့ แ€™แ€Ÿာแ€”ာแ€šแ€€แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€€ို แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€…แ€Š္းေแ€•းႏိုแ€„္แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ€กแ€်ိแ€”္แ€™ွแ€…၍ แ€žံแ€ƒာေแ€ာ္แ€™်ား แ€แ€›ီးแ€žြား แ€œာแ€›ာแ€ြแ€„္ แ€žံแ€ƒာแ€™ွแ€္แ€•ုံแ€แ€„္ျแ€–แ€„့္แ€žာ แ€žြားแ€œာแ€›ေแ€ာ့แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€šแ€แ€„္แ€€แ€œို แ€™ွแ€္แ€•ုံแ€แ€„္แ€™แ€›ွိแ€•ဲ แ€œြแ€္แ€œแ€•္แ€…ြာแ€žြားแ€œာแ€ြแ€„့္ แ€်ဳแ€•္แฟแ€„ိแ€™္းแ€žြားแ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€‘ိแ€”္းแ€်ဳแ€•္แ€™ႈေแ€กာแ€€္แ€ြแ€„္แ€™แ€›ွိေแ€žာ แ€žံแ€ƒာေแ€ာ္แ€™်ားแ€žแ€Š္ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€กแ€› ႏိုးแพแ€€ားแ€žแ€Š့္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ‚€แ€€ီးျแ€–แ€…္แ€žျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€—ိုแ€œ္ေแ€”แ€แ€„္းแ€™ွ แ€…ိုးแ€›ိแ€™္ ေแ€žာแ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€™်ားแ€‘ဲแ€ြแ€„္ แ€‘ိแ€•္แ€แ€”္းแ€™ွแ€•ါแ€แ€„္ေแ€”แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กแ€…ီแ€กแ€›แ€„္แ€ိုแ€„္း แ€žံแ€ƒာ့ แ€™แ€Ÿာแ€”ာแ€šแ€€แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”ႏွแ€„့္ แ€žံแ€ƒာ့แ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္းแ€•ုံแ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို แ€กแ€แ€Š္ျแ€•ဳแฟแ€•ီး แ€žံแ€ƒာေแ€ာ္แ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€™ွแ€‘ိแ€”္းแ€်ဳแ€•္ႏိုแ€„္ေแ€žာ แ€กေျแ€แ€กေแ€”แ€›แ€žแ€Š့္ႏွแ€„့္แ€แฟแ€•ိဳแ€„္แ€”แ€€္ แ€กေแ€‘ြေแ€‘ြแ€œြแ€္แฟแ€„ိแ€™္းแ€်แ€™္းแ€žာ แ€ြแ€„့္แ€€ို ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€กแ€€်แ€ฅ္းแ€žားแ€™်ားแ€กားေแ€•း၍ ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€™ွแ€œႊแ€္แ€œိုแ€€္ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€—ိုแ€œ္แ€žแ€”္းေแ€›ႊ แ€žแ€Š္แ€œแ€Š္း แ€ိုแ€„္းျแ€•แ€Š္แ€กာแ€ာแ€€ို แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ိုးแ€™ႈေแ€กာแ€€္แ€ြแ€„္ แ€‘ာแ€แ€›ေแ€›ာแ€€္ေแ€”ေแ€…แ€™แ€Š့္ (แ‚แ€แแ€) ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€ြแ€„္၎แ€ိုแ‚” ျแ€•แ€္ျแ€•แ€္แ€žားแ€žားแ€กႏိုแ€„္แ€›แฟแ€•ီးแ€žแ€Š့္ေแ€”ာแ€€္ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€กแ€€်แ€ฅ္းแ€žား แ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•း၍ แ€กแ€™ွแ€္แ€šူေแ€•แ€œိแ€™့္แ€™แ€Š္။
แ€‘ိုแ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ု၏ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€แ€›แ€Š္แ€›ြแ€š္แ€်แ€€္ျแ€–แ€…္ေแ€žာ แ€…แ€…္แ€แ€•္แ€™ွแ€†แ€€္แ€œแ€€္แ€—ို္แ€œ္แ€€်แ€…ိုးแ€™ိုးแ€‘ားႏိုแ€„္ ေแ€›းแ€œแ€™္းแ€…แ€ฅ္แ€žแ€Š္ (แ‚แ€แแ€) ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲ แ€กႏိုแ€„္แ€›ေแ€›းแ€•แ€„္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ (แ‚แ€แแ€) ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္ แ€•ြဲแ€žแ€Š္ (แ‚แ€แ€แˆ) แ€ုႏွแ€…္ แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€กေแ€•แšแ€ြแ€„္แ€™ူแ€แ€Š္၍ ျแ€•ဳแ€œုแ€•္แ€‘ားျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎ แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€กแ€แ€Š္ျแ€•ဳႏိုแ€„္ေแ€›းแ€€ို แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€กေแ€”ျแ€–แ€„့္ ႏွแ€…္ေแ€•ါแ€„္းแ€›ာแ€…ုႏွแ€…္(แ‚) แ€ုแ€”ီးแ€•ါး แ€€်ိဳးแ€…ား แ€กေแ€€ာแ€„္แ€‘แ€Š္ေแ€–ာ္แ€ဲ့แ€›แ€žแ€Š္။

NCGUB แ€™ွ แ€แ€„္แ€žြแ€„္းแ€œာေแ€žာ แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားแ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€…ာแ€แ€”္းแ€€ို ေแ€žေแ€žแ€်ာแ€်ာ ေแ€œ့แ€œာแพแ€€แ€Š့္แ€•ါแ€€ ၎แ€…ာแ€แ€”္းแ€žแ€Š္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€™ွแ€แ€”္แ€˜ိုးแ€กแ€‘ားแ€†ုံးျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š့္္ (แ‚แ€แ€แˆ) แ€ု แ€ก ေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€€ို ျแ€•แ€”္แ€œแ€Š္ျแ€•แ€„္แ€†แ€„္ေแ€›းแ€†ြဲေแ€›းแ€•แ€„္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€กแ€€်แ€ฅ္းแ€žားแ€™်ားแ€œႊแ€္ေแ€•း ေแ€›းႏွแ€„့္ แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€€ို ျแ€•แ€„္แ€†แ€„္ေแ€›းแ€†ြဲေแ€›းႏွแ€…္แ€်แ€€္แ€ြแ€„္ แ€™แ€Š္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กแ€်แ€€္แ€€ို แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€™ွ แ€œแ€€္แ€ံแ€œိแ€™့္แ€™แ€Š္แ€Ÿု แ€‘แ€„္แ€žแ€”แ€Š္း?

แ€…แ€…္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€žแ€Š္ แ€™แ€Š္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กေျแ€แ€กေแ€”แ€™်ဳိးแ€ြแ€„္แ€™ွ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”ေแ€›းแ€†ြဲแ€‘ားแ€žแ€Š့္แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’ แ€€ို ျแ€•แ€„္แ€†แ€„္ေแ€›းแ€†ြဲျแ€แ€„္းแ€€ို แ€ြแ€„့္ျแ€•ဳแ€œိแ€™့္แ€™แ€Š္แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္ေแ€်။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”ွႏွแ€„့္ แฟแ€„ိแ€™္းแ€်แ€™္ေแ€›းแ€šူแ€‘ားแ€žแ€Š့္ แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€„္ แ€ိုแ€„္းแ€›แ€„္းแ€žားแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ား၏ แ€กแ€œုိแ€†ႏแตแ€€ိုแ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္แฟแ€•ီး แ€กแ€แ€Š္ျแ€•ဳแ€‘ား แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€€ို แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€™แ€Š္แ€ံ แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€„္แ€แ€•္แ€™แ€›ွိေแ€žာ แ€œူแ€ုႏွแ€…္แ€ฅီးแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•၏ แ€Šြแ€”္แ‚”ေแ€•ါแ€„္း ေแ€ာแ€„္းแ€†ုိแ€်แ€€္แ€€ို แ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ားแ€•ါ့แ€™แ€œားแ€Ÿု ေแ€™းแ€ြแ€”္းแ€‘ုแ€္แ€œိုแ€€္แ€်แ€„္္แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€คแ€กแ€်แ€€္แ€™်ားแ€žแ€Š္ แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားแ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€€ို แ€แ€€แ€š္แ€™ျแ€–แ€…္ႏိုแ€„္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း แ€žုံးแ€žแ€•္แ€แ€„္ျแ€•ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။

แ€‘ိုแ€žိုแ‚”แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€•ဲ “แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားแ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€€ို แ€Ÿแ€”္ျแ€•แ€กေแ€”ျแ€–แ€„့္แ€แ€„္ျแ€•ျแ€แ€„္းแ€™်ဳိးแ€œားแ€Ÿု” แ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ားแ€›แ€”္แ€›ွိแ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။

၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€แ€„္ျแ€•ေแ€žာ แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားแ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€žแ€Š္ แ€กေแ€•แšแ€šံแ€แ€„္ျแ€•แ€်แ€€္แ€žာျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€•แ€š္แ€် แ€ံแ€›แ€™แ€Š္แ€€ို แ€€်ိแ€”္းေแ€žแ€žိแฟแ€•ီးျแ€–แ€…္แ€œွ်แ€€္ แ€แ€„္ျแ€•ျแ€แ€„္းแ€™်ဳိးแ€œแ€Š္းျแ€–แ€…္ႏိုแ€„္แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ€€ဲ့แ€žိုแ‚”ျแ€–แ€…္แ€œွ်แ€„္ แ€™แ€Š္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€›แ€Š္แ€›ြแ€š္แ€်แ€€္ျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€แ€„္ျแ€•ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€”แ€Š္းแ€Ÿု แ€†แ€”္းแ€…แ€…္แพแ€€แ€Š့္แ€›แ€”္ แ€œုိแ€กแ€•္แ€œာแ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ NCGUB, NCUB แ€žแ€แ€„္းแ€…ာแ€›ွแ€„္းแ€œแ€„္းแ€•ြဲแ€€ိုแพแ€€แ€Š့္แ€œွ်แ€„္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€žแ€Š္ แ€›ာแ€…ုႏွแ€…္แ€แ€ုแ€กแ€ြแ€„္း แ€™ျแ€–แ€…္ แ€–ူးေแ€žးေแ€žာ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€…แ€Š္းแ‚€แ€€ီး (แแ€) แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€žแ€Š္ แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္แ€…ြာျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€‚်ာแ€€ာแ€ာแ€ြแ€„္ แ€Šီแ€œာแ€ံ แ€€်แ€„္းแ€•ေแ€ာแ‚”แ€™แ€Š္ျแ€–แ€…္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း ေแพแ€€ျแ€„ာแ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎ေแพแ€€ျแ€„ာแ€်แ€€္แ€žแ€Š္ แ€กแ€်แ€€္ႏွแ€…္แ€်แ€€္แ€€ို แ€™ီးေแ€™ာแ€„္းแ€‘ိုးျแ€•ေแ€”แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။

(แ) NCGUB, NCUB แ€ိုแ‚”แ€žแ€Š္ แ€œူแ€žိแ€›ွแ€„္แพแ€€ား แ€€ုแ€œแ€žแ€™แ€‚ၢแ€ြแ€„္ แ€…แ€…္แ€…ိုးแ€›၏ แ€€ိုแ€š္ แ€…ားျแ€•ဳแ€™ႈแ€€ို แ€…ိแ€”္ေแ€แšแ€žแ€Š့္แ€€ိแ€…แฅႏွแ€„့္แ€•แ€္แ€žแ€€္၍ แ€€ြဲแฟแ€•ဲแ€ဲ့แพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€แ€–แ€”္ แ€กိုแ€„္แ€šာแ€œแ€”္ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€ြแ€„္ แ€‘แ€•္แ€€ြဲแพแ€€ျแ€•แ€”္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€…แ€…္แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€€ိုแ€š္แ€…ားแ€œွแ€š္แ€กား แ€€ုแ€œแ€žแ€™แ€‚ၢแ€™ွ แ€‘ုแ€္แ€•แ€š္แ€œိုแ€žแ€Š့္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုႏွแ€„့္ แ€™แ€‘ုแ€္แ€•แ€š္แ€œိုแ€žแ€Š့္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ု ႏွแ€…္แ€ုแ€€ြဲแ€€ာ แ€™ဲแ€ြဲแ€†ံုးျแ€–แ€္แ€›แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กแ€†แ€„့္แ€‘ိေแ€›ာแ€€္แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€…แ€…္แ€กแ€…ိုး แ€›แ€€ို แ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္ေแ€”แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္แ€†ိုေแ€žာแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€‘ဲแ€ြแ€„္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€€ို แ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္แ€›แ€”္แ€žแ€„့္แ€™แ€žแ€„့္ แ€™ဲแ€ြဲ แ€†ံုးျแ€–แ€္แ€›ျแ€แ€„္းแ€€ แ€žแ€™ိုแ€„္းแ€กแ€™ဲแ€…แ€€္แ€แ€ုแ€กျแ€–แ€…္ แ€แ€„္แ€€်แ€”္แ€›แ€…္แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€™ဲแ€ြဲแ€™ႈแ€ြแ€„္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€› แ€€ိုแ€š္แ€…ားแ€œွแ€š္แ€กား แ€€ုแ€œแ€žแ€™แ€‚ၢแ€™ွแ€‘ုแ€္แ€•แ€š္แ€™ႈแ€€ို แ€œแ€€္แ€™แ€ံแ€žแ€Š့္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€™ွ แ€กႏိုแ€„္แ€›แ€žြားแ€žแ€Š္แ€€ို แพแ€€แ€Š့္แ€œွ်แ€„္ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™်ားแ€ြแ€„္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€€ိုแ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္ေแ€žာแ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€€ แ€กေแ€›းแ€”ိိแ€™့္ေแ€” ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း แ€‘ိုแ€…แ€ฅ္แ€€แ€แ€Š္းแ€€ แ€™ီးေแ€™ာแ€„္းแ€‘ိုးျแ€•แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ€กแ€€ြဲแ€กแฟแ€•ဲေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•့ံ ေแ€”ေแ€žာ แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ားแ€€ แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္แ€™ႈแ€™แ€›ွိျแ€แ€„္းแ€€ို แ€กေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းျแ€•၍ ေแ€„ြေแพแ€€းျแ€–แ€္ေแ€ာแ€€္ ျแ€แ€„္းแ€€ို แ€ံแ€ဲ့แ€›แ€žแ€Š္၊ แ€‘ိုแ‚•ေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ แ€‚်ာแ€€ာแ€ာแ€Šီแ€œာแ€ံแ€žแ€Š္ NCGUB, NCUB แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กျแ€•แ€„္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€œแ€€္ေแ€แ€ံ ေแ€™แ€‚်ာแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™်ားแ€€แ€•ါ แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€”แฟแ€•ီျแ€–แ€…္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း ျแ€•แ€žႏိုแ€„္แ€›แ€”္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€žိုแ‚”แ€™ွแ€žာ ေแ€„ြေแพแ€€းေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•့ံแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€€ แ€กားแ€แ€€္แ€žေแ€›ာ ျแ€•แ€”္แ€œแ€Š္แ€€ူแ€Šီแ€œာแพแ€€แ€™แ€Š္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။

(แ‚) NCGUB แ€กေแ€”ႏွแ€„့္ ၎แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚• แ€…แ€แ€„္แ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္းแ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š့္ (แแ‰แ‰แ) แ€ုႏွแ€…္แ€™ွแ€…၍ แ€šေแ€”แ‚”แ€ိုแ€„္ แ€’ီแ€™ိုแ€€ေแ€›แ€…ီแ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€€ိုแ€ฅီးေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€–ိแ€္แพแ€€ားแฟแ€•ီး แ€ိုแ€„္แ€•แ€„္ေแ€†ြးေႏြးျแ€แ€„္း၊ แ€œแ€™္းแ€Šႊแ€”္ျแ€แ€„္း၊ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€™ႈแ€กားแ€›ွแ€„္းျแ€•ျแ€แ€„္း แ€กแ€œ်แ€ฅ္းแ€™แ€›ွိแ€ဲ့ေแ€်။ แ€กျแ€ားျแ€ားေแ€žာ แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ားแ€™ွ แ€–ိแ€္แพแ€€ား แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กแ€ါ แ€แ€€္ေแ€›ာแ€€္แฟแ€•ီးแ€™ိแ€”္แ‚”แ€ြแ€”္းေแ€ြ်แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กแ€œုแ€•္แ€žာ แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€šแ€ု แ€‚်ာแ€€ာแ€ာ แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းေแ€းแ€•ြဲแ€žแ€Š္ แ€›ာแ€…ုႏွแ€…္แ€แ€ုแ€กแ€ြแ€„္း แ€™ျแ€–แ€…္แ€–ူးေแ€žးแ€žแ€Š့္ ေแ€†ြးေႏြးแ€•ဲြျแ€–แ€…္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€™ွ ေแพแ€€ျแ€„ာแ€œိုแ€€္ျแ€แ€„္းแ€žแ€Š္ แ€™แ€Š္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กแ€်แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€›แ€Š္แ€Šြแ€”္แ€žแ€”แ€Š္းแ€Ÿု แ€†แ€”္းแ€…แ€…္แพแ€€แ€Š့္แ€›แ€”္แ€œိုแ€•ါ แ€žแ€Š္။

แ€‘ိုแ€›ာแ€…ုႏွแ€…္ (แ) แ€ုေแ€€်ာ္ แ€กแ€ြแ€„္း แ€กแ€“ိแ€€แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™်ားแ€…ုแ€…แ€Š္းแ€™ႈแ€žแ€Š္ แ€แ€€แ€š့္แ€…ုแ€…แ€Š္းแ€™ႈแ€Ÿု แ€šူแ€†၍แ€™แ€›แ€•ါ แ€œแ€€္แ€žแ€„့္แ€›ာ แ€™ိแ€™ိႏွแ€„့္แ€กแ€œြแ€™္းแ€žแ€„့္แ€žူแ€™်ားแ€€ိုแ€žာ ေแ€›ြးแ€်แ€š္แ€–ိแ€္ေแ€แšแ€žแ€Š့္แ€•ြဲျแ€–แ€…္ แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€™ိแ€™ိแ€…ားแ€›ိแ€္ แ€™ိแ€™ိแ€…ားแฟแ€•ီး แ€แ€…ိုแ€€္แ€™แ€္แ€™แ€္ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€€ို แ€€်แ€žแ€Š့္ေแ€”แ€›ာ၊ ႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€แ€”္ แ€‘แ€™္းแฟแ€•ီး แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”ေแ€žာแ€žူแ€™်ား แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€–ိแ€္แพแ€€ားျแ€แ€„္း แ€กแ€žိေแ€•းျแ€แ€„္းแ€™แ€›ွိแ€•ဲျแ€•ဳแ€œုแ€•္ ေแ€žာ แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ€กေแ€းแ€•ြဲျแ€–แ€…္แ€žျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€แ€”္แ€˜ုိးแ€›ွိေแ€žာแ€…ုแ€…แ€Š္းแ€™ႈแ€Ÿု แ€™ေแ€แšႏိုแ€„္ေแ€်။ แ€แ€–แ€€္แ€™ွแ€œแ€Š္း NCGUB แ€žแ€Š္ แ€†แ€š္แ€…ုႏွแ€…္แ€แ€ုแ€กแ€ြแ€„္း แ€’ီแ€™ိုแ€€ေแ€›แ€…ီแ€กေแ€›း แ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€œ်แ€…္แ€œ်ဴแ€›ႈ แ€‘ားแ€ဲ့แฟแ€•ီး แ€†แ€š္ႏွแ€…္แ€กแพแ€€ာแ€€ာแ€œေแ€›ာแ€€္แ€™ွ แ€แ‚€แ€€ိแ€™္แ€…ုแ€…แ€Š္းႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š္แ€Ÿု แ€แ€”္แ€ံแ€œိုแ€€္ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္ แ€žแ€Š္။

แ€ฅီးแ€…ိแ€”္แ€แ€„္း၏ေျแ€•ာေแ€”แพแ€€แ€…แ€€ားแ€™ွာ “แ€€ြ်แ€”္ေแ€ာ္แ€ိုแ‚”แ€™ွာ แ€•ိုแ€€္แ€†ံแ€™แ€›ွိแ€˜ူး” แ€Ÿူေแ€žာ แ€…แ€€ားแ€žာ ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€’ီแ€™ိုแ€€ေแ€›แ€…ီแ€กေแ€›းแ€กแ€ြแ€€္ แ€แ€…ိုแ€€္แ€™แ€္แ€™แ€္แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”แ€žူแ€™်ားแ€€ို ေแ€›ွာแ€„္แ€›ွားแพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€œ်ဳိแ‚•แ€ွแ€€္แพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€ြဲแ€™แ€œုแ€•္แ€်แ€„္แพแ€€။ แ€€ိုแ€š့္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ု แ€€ိုแ€š့္แ€กแ€žိုแ€„္းแ€กแ€ိုแ€„္းေแ€œးႏွแ€„့္แ€žာ แฟแ€ံแ€แ€္ ေแ€”แ€žူแ€™်ားျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กေแ€”ႏွแ€„့္ ႏွแ€…္ေแ€•ါแ€„္းႏွแ€…္แ€†แ€š္แ€”ီးแ€•ါးแ€กแ€်ိแ€”္แ€กแ€ြแ€„္း แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ား แ€กားแ€œုံးแ€€ို แ€–ိแ€္แพแ€€ားแ€žแ€Š့္ေแ€†ြးေႏြးแ€•ြဲ แ€แ€ုแ€ေแ€œแ€™ွ်แ€™แ€œုแ€•္แ€ဲ့แ€•ဲ แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ားแ€€แ€–ိแ€္แพแ€€ားแ€žแ€Š့္ ေแ€†ြးေႏြးแ€•ြဲแ€™်ားแ€€ိုแ€žာ แ€แ€€္ေแ€›ာแ€€္แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ ေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္ေแ€”แ€›ာแ€šူแ€‘ားေแ€žာ္แ€œแ€Š္း แ€€ိုแ€š္แ€€ แ€ฅီးေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€œုแ€•္แ€›แ€™ွแ€”္းแ€™แ€žိ။ แ€กျแ€ားแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€™်ားေแ€แšแ€›ာแ€žိုแ‚”แ€žာ แ€œိုแ€€္แ€แ€္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กေျแ€แ€กေแ€”แ€กแ€†แ€„့္ แ€ြแ€„္แ€žာ แ€›ွိแ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။

แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€„္แ€ိုแ€€္แ€›แ€”္แ€กแ€ြแ€€္ แ€แ€•္ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€–ိုแ‚”แ€œိုแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ€€ိแ€…แฅแ€€ို ေแ€†ြးေႏြးแพแ€€แ€Š့္ แ€•ါแ€†ိုแ€œွ်แ€„္แ€œแ€Š္း แ€ฅီးแ€…ိแ€”္แ€แ€„္းแ€€ “แ€กဲแ€’ီแ€œိုแ€œုแ€•္แ€›แ€„္ แ€•ိုแ€€္แ€†ံแ€›แ€™ွာแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€˜ူးแ€—်” แ€Ÿု ေျแ€•ာแ€แ€္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ‚”ေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ แ€€ြ်แ€”္ေแ€ာ္แ€ိုแ‚” ABSDF แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€€ာแ€…แ€€ แ€€ြ်แ€”္ေแ€ာ္แ€ိုแ‚” แ€แ€•္ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€œွ်แ€„္ แ€•ိုแ€€္แ€†ံแ€›แ€™ွာ แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€œိုแ‚” แ€แ€•္แ€™ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€˜ူးแ€€ြာแ€†ိုแ€žแ€Š့္ แ€กေแ€ြးแ€™်ဳိးแ€™แ€›ွိแ€ဲ့แ€˜ူးေแ€်။ แ€แ€•္ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္แ€™ွာ แ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€်แ€€္ျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€แ€•္ေแ€‘ာแ€„္ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။”

แ€šေแ€”แ‚”ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€กแ€žိုแ€„္းแ€กแ€ိုแ€„္းแ€ြแ€„္ NCGUB แ€€ဲ့แ€žိုแ‚” แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€กแ€™แ€Š္แ€ံแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္း แ€™ွแ€กแ€… แ€กแ€žီးแ€žီးေแ€žာแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€กแ€…แ€Š္แ€™်ားแ€žแ€Š္ “แ€•แ€›ုိแ€•ိုแ€†แ€š္ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›း” แ€กแ€žြแ€„္ แ€€ူးေျแ€•ာแ€„္းแ€œာแฟแ€•ီး ေแ€”ာแ€€္แ€•ိုแ€„္း ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€…ိแ€္၊ ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€žေแ€˜ာแ€แ€›ားေแ€•်ာแ€€္แ€€ြแ€š္၍ ေแ€„ြแ€›ႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š့္ แ€กแ€œုแ€•္แ€™ွแ€œြဲ၍ ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းေแ€กာแ€„္ျแ€™แ€„္ႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€œแ€™္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€™ွ ေแ€žြแ€–แ€š္၍แ€žြားျแ€แ€„္းแ€žแ€Š္ แ€กားแ€œုံးแ€กแ€ြแ€€္แ€†ုံးแ€›ႈံးแ€™ႈျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€•ို၍แ€†ိုးแ€žแ€Š္แ€€ား ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ား แ€กแ€™แ€Š္แ€ံแฟแ€•ီး ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€œုแ€•္แ€…ားေแ€”แพแ€€ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€œုแ€•္แ€…ားแ€žူแ€™်ား แ€‚ိုแ€္းแ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™်ားแ€–ြဲแ‚”แฟแ€•ီး แ€แ€–ြဲแ‚•ႏွแ€„့္แ€แ€–ြဲแ‚•ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€ံျแ€แ€„္း၊ ေแ€•ါแ€„္းแ€…ားျแ€แ€„္း၊ แ€แ€€แ€š္แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”แ€žူแ€™်ား၏แ€œုแ€•္แ€„แ€”္းแ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€Ÿแ€”္แ‚” แ€ားျแ€แ€„္း၊ แ€‚ိแ€္ေแ€…ာแ€„့္แ€™်ားแ€œုแ€•္၍แ€•ိแ€္แ€•แ€„္ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€„့္ ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€€ိုแ€กႏုแพแ€€แ€™္းแ€…ီးแ€€ာ แ€žာแ€šာ ေแ€”แ€ဲ့แพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။

แ€แ€်ိแ€”္แ€€ แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ€กေแ€းแ€แ€ုแ€ြแ€„္ แ€แ€€္ေแ€›ာแ€€္แ€žူแ€แ€်ဳိแ‚•แ€€ NCGUB แ€กေแ€”ႏွแ€„့္ ေแ€„ြ แ€™แ€Š္แ€™ွ်แ€›แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€˜แ€š္แ€œိုေแ€”แ€›ာแ€ြแ€„္แ€žုံးแ€žแ€Š္၊ แ€˜ာေแ€ြแ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”แ€žแ€Š္แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို แ€›ွแ€„္းျแ€•แ€›แ€”္ေแ€†ြးေႏြး ေแ€žာแ€กแ€ါ แ€ฅီးแ€…ိแ€”္แ€แ€„္းแ€€ “แ€€ြ်แ€”္ေแ€ာ့္แ€€ို ေแ€™းแ€ဲ့แ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ို ျแ€•แ€”္ေแ€™းแ€်แ€„္แ€แ€š္ แ€แ€„္แ€—်ားแ€ိုแ‚” แ€€ြ်แ€”္ေแ€ာ္แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€†ုိแฟแ€•ီး แ€กแ€ြแ€”္แ€˜แ€š္ေแ€œာแ€€္ေแ€•းေแ€”แ€œိုแ‚”แ€œဲ၊ แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€†ိုแ€ာ แ€€ိုแ€š့္แ€€ို แ€กแ€ြแ€”္ေแ€•းแ€ဲ့แ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ို แ€›ွแ€„္းျแ€•แ€–ိုแ‚”แ€ာแ€แ€”္แ€›ွိแ€แ€š္၊ แ€’ါေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္แ€กแ€ြแ€”္แ€™ေแ€•းแ€ဲ့แ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ို แ€›ွแ€„္းျแ€•แ€…แ€›ာ แ€™แ€œိုแ€˜ူး၊ แ€€ြ်แ€”္ေแ€ာ္แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို ေแ€„ြေแพแ€€းแ€กแ€€ူแ€กแ€Šီေแ€•းแ€ဲ့แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”ေแ€ြแ€€ိုแ€žာ แ€›ွแ€„္းျแ€•แ€™แ€š္” แ€Ÿုแ€†ိုแ€ဲ့ แ€˜ူးแ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။

แ€กแ€်ဳแ€•္แ€กားျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€šแ€ုแ€€ဲ့แ€žိုแ‚” แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားแ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€กแ€‘ုแ€•္แ€€ို แ€แ€„္แ€œာแ€žแ€Š့္ แ€›แ€Š္แ€›ြแ€š္แ€်แ€€္แ€™ွာ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€แ€€ာแ€žိုแ‚” ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€™ွာ ေแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€™ြแ€”္ေแ€žာ แ€™แ€Ÿာแ€—်ဴแ€Ÿာแ€›ွိေแ€”แฟแ€•ီျแ€–แ€…္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း၊ แ€‘ိုแ‚”แ€กျแ€•แ€„္ แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€›းแ€แ€Š္ေแ€†ာแ€€္แฟแ€•ီးแฟแ€•ီျแ€–แ€…္၍ แ€‘ိုแ€œုแ€•္แ€„แ€”္းแ€€ို แ€กေแ€€ာแ€„္แ€กแ€‘แ€Š္ေแ€–ာ္แ€›แ€”္ ေแ€„ြแ€œိုแ€žแ€Š္ ေแ€„ြေแ€•းแ€•ါแ€Ÿူ၍ ေแ€ာแ€„္းแ€›แ€”္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€แ€”แ€Š္းแ€กားျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€’ီแ€™ိုแ€€ေแ€›แ€…ီแ€›แ€›ွိေแ€›းแ€‘แ€€္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€œแ€€္แ€ါးแ€›ိုแ€€္แ€‘ားေแ€žာแ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€ိုแ‚”၏ แ€…ားแ€แ€္ေแ€”ေแ€›းေျแ€•แ€œแ€Š္ေแ€…แ€›แ€”္แ€กแ€ြแ€€္ ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•့ံ ေแ€„ြแ€›แ€›ွိေแ€›းแ€žแ€€္แ€žแ€€္ แ€œုแ€•္แ€›แ€•္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ိုแ€€ဲ့แ€žိုแ‚”แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€œိုแ€€္แ€žျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€›แ€›ွိแ€œာေแ€žာ แ€กแ€€်ဳိးแ€†แ€€္ႏွแ€…္แ€›แ€•္แ€™ွာ….
แ။ แ€’ီแ€™ိုแ€€ေแ€›แ€…ီ แ€กแ€„္แ€กားแ€…ုแ€™်ားแ€€ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€กား ေแ€กာ့ႏွแ€œုံးแ€”ာแ€™ႈ แ€›ြံแ€›ွာแ€™ုแ€”္းแ€ီးแ€™ႈแ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို แ€•ို၍ျแ€–แ€…္ေแ€•แšแ€œာေแ€…แ€žแ€Š္။
แ‚။ แ€’ီแ€™ိုแ€€ေแ€›แ€…ီแ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€กแพแ€€ားแ€ြแ€„္ ေแ€•แšแ€œแ€…ီแ€›ႈแ€•္ေแ€‘ြးแ€™ႈแ€€ို ျแ€–แ€…္ေแ€•แšแ€œာေแ€…แฟแ€•ီး၊ ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€แ€„္แ€›แ€™แ€Š္ေแ€œာ၊ แ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္แ€ုိแ€€္แ€–်แ€€္แ€›แ€™แ€Š္ေแ€œာแ€†ိုแ€žแ€Š့္ ေแ€ြေแ€แ€™ႈ၊ แ€…ိแ€္ แ€กေႏွာแ€€္ แ€กแ€šွแ€€္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€™ႈ၊ แ€…ိแ€္แ€•်แ€€္แ€™ႈแ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို ျแ€–แ€…္ေแ€•แšေแ€…แ€žแ€Š္။

NCGUBแ€€ိုแ€š္แ€…ားแ€œွแ€š္แ€€ိုေแ€žာแ€„္းแ€‘ြแ€”္းแ€€“แ€กแ€“ိแ€€แ€กแ€„္แ€กားแ€…ုျแ€–แ€…္แ€ဲ့(NLD)แ€”ဲแ‚” แ€ိုแ€„္းแ€›แ€„္း แ€žားแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™်ားแ€กแ€ြแ€€္ แ€’ီေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€™ွာแ€แ€”แ€Š္းแ€”แ€Š္းแ€”ဲแ‚” แ€™แ€•ါแ€แ€„္แ€ဲ့แ€›แ€„္ ေแ€˜းေแ€›ာแ€€္ แ€žြားแ€™แ€Š့္ แ€กႏၱแ€›ာแ€š္แ€›ွိေแ€”แ€•ါแ€แ€š္” แ€œိုแ‚” ေျแ€•ာแ€ဲ့แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€‘ုိေျแ€•ာแพแ€€ားแ€်แ€€္แ€กแ€› NCGUB แ€›ဲแ‚• แ€กေแ€žแ€กေแพแ€€ေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€›ြแ€€္แ€်แ€€္แ€žแ€Š္ (แ€”แ€กแ€–) ျแ€•ဳแ€œုแ€•္ေแ€žာ ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€€ို แ€˜แ€š္แ€œိုแ€•ုံแ€…ံแ€”ဲแ‚” แ€แ€„္ႏိုแ€„္แ€™แ€œဲแ€†ိုแ€žแ€Š့္ ေแ€ြးေแ€แšแ‚€แ€€ံแ€†แ€™ႈแ€Ÿု แ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€›แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။

ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€•แ€ြแ€„္ แ€แ€€แ€š္แ€กแ€›แ€Š္แ€်แ€„္းแ€›ွိေแ€žာေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€™်ား แ€žူแ‚”แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€”ဲแ‚”แ€žူแ€แ€…ိုแ€€္แ€™แ€္ แ€™แ€္แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”แฟแ€•ီး ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€ြแ€„္းႏွแ€„့္แ€†แ€€္แ€…แ€•္၍ แ€žူแ‚”แ€กแ€…ုႏွแ€„့္แ€žူ แ€›ွိေแ€”แพแ€€แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€™်ားแ€žแ€Š္ แ€šแ€ုแ€กแ€ါ แ€แ€–ြဲแ‚”ႏွแ€„့္แ€แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€်ိแ€္แ€†แ€€္แฟแ€•ီး แ€†แ€€္แ€žြแ€š္ေแ€›းแ€€ြแ€”္แ€šแ€€္แ€™်ား ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€ြแ€„္း ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€•แ€ြแ€„္แ€แ€Š္ ေแ€†ာแ€€္ျแ€แ€„္း แ€žแ€แ€„္းแ€–แ€œွแ€š္ျแ€แ€„္း ေแ€†ြးေႏြးแ€ိုแ€„္แ€•แ€„္ျแ€แ€„္းแ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို แ€ံแ€…ားแ€်แ€€္၊ แ€ံแ€šူแ€်แ€€္แ€กျแ€•แ€Š့္ျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€•ူးแ€ြဲျแ€•ဳแ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”แพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€แ€–ဲြแ‚•ႏွแ€„့္แ€แ€–ြဲแ‚• แ€กျแ€•แ€”္แ€กแ€œွแ€”္ေแ€œแ€…ားแ€™ႈ၊ แ€กแ€žိแ€กแ€™ွแ€္ျแ€•ဳแ€™ႈแ€ိုแ‚”ျแ€–แ€„့္ ႏွแ€…္ (แ‚แ€) ေแ€€်ာ္แ€กေแ€ြแ‚•แ‚€แ€€ဳံแ€กแ€› แ€…ုแ€…แ€Š္းแ€œာแพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€•ို၍แ€”ီးแ€€แ€•္แ€œာแพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€žแ€Š္ แ€™ိแ€™ိแ€ိုแ‚” แ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€›ာแ€€ို แ€™ိแ€™ိแ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€ူแ€Šီေแ€žာแ€œုแ€•္แ€„แ€”္းแ€™်ားแ€ြแ€„္ แ€กျแ€ားแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ားႏွแ€„့္ แ€•ူးแ€ြဲแ€œုแ€•္ ေแ€†ာแ€„္แพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€•แ€›ုိแ€•ိုแ€†แ€š္ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€œုแ€•္แ€…ားแ€žူแ€™်ားႏွแ€„့္ แ€€ြာျแ€ားแ€်แ€€္แ€™ွာ แ€™ိแ€™ိแ€กိแ€•္แ€€แ€•္แ€‘ဲแ€™ွ ေแ€„ြႏွแ€„့္ แ€™ိแ€™ိแ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€›ာแ€€ိုแ€œုแ€•္แพแ€€แ€žျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€‘ိေแ€›ာแ€€္แ€™ႈแ€›ွိแ€žแ€Š္။ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”၏ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€ြแ€„္းแ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€™ႈ แ€แ€်ဳိแ‚•แ€žแ€Š္ แ€œแ€€္แ€ါးแ‚€แ€€ီးแ€กုแ€•္ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€œုแ€•္แ€…ားแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€‘แ€€္ แ€•ိုแ€‘ိေแ€›ာแ€€္แ€™ႈแ€›ွိแ€žแ€Š္။

ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€ြแ€„္းแ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€žแ€Š္ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€›ာ แ€œုแ€•္ေแ€–ာ္แ€€ိုแ€„္แ€–แ€€္แ€™်ား၊ แ€žแ€™ိုแ€„္းแ€›ွိแ€žူ ေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€™်ားแ€€ိုแ€žာ แ€†แ€€္แ€†ံျแ€แ€„္း၊ แ€œုแ€•္แ€„แ€”္းแ€™်ားแ€•ူးแ€ြဲ၍ แ€œုแ€•္ျแ€แ€„္းแ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို ျแ€•ဳแ€œုแ€•္แ€œိုแพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္။ ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€€ို ေแ€„ြျแ€–แ€„့္แ€แ€š္แ€šူแ€œိုေแ€žာ ေแ€„ြแ€‘ုแ€•္แ€•ိုแ€€္แ€‘ားแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€€ို แ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€™ႈแ€œแ€Š္းแ€™แ€›ွိ၊ แ€ြဲแ€œုแ€•္แ€œိုแ€…ိแ€္แ€œแ€Š္းแ€™แ€›ွိေแ€်။ แ€‘ိုแ‚•ေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ ေแ€„ြေแพแ€€းွแ€›ွိေแ€žာแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™်ားแ€žแ€Š္ ေแ€กာแ€„္ ျแ€™แ€„္แ€™ႈแ€™แ€›แ€›ွိแ€•ဲ แ€›แ€•္แ€แ€”္แ‚”แ€†ုแ€္แ€šုแ€္ေแ€”ျแ€แ€„္းျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€ฅแ€•แ€™ာแ€กားျแ€–แ€„့္ (แ‚แ€แ€แˆ) แ€ုႏွแ€…္ แ€กေျแ€แ€ံ แ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€กแ€แ€Š္ျแ€•ဳေแ€›း แ€†ႏแตแ€ံแ€šူแ€•ြဲแ€ြแ€„္ “ Vote No & No Vote” แ€Ÿူแ€žแ€Š့္ แ€™ဲแ€œုံးแ€แ€™ေแ€•းแ€•ဲ แ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္ျแ€แ€„္းႏွแ€„့္ แ€™ဲแ€žြားေแ€•းแฟแ€•ီး ၎แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€กแ€แ€Š္แ€™ျแ€•ဳႏိုแ€„္แ€›แ€”္ แ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္แ€™ဲေแ€•းျแ€แ€„္းแ€Ÿူ၍ แ€กแ€šူแ€กแ€†ႏွแ€…္แ€ု แ€€ြဲแ€‘ြแ€€္แ€œာแ€ဲ့แ€žแ€Š္။ ေแ€กာแ€€္ေျแ€แ€‘ုแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€…แ€Š္းแ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™်ားႏွแ€„့္ แ€”แ€š္แ€…แ€•္แ€›ွိ แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚• แ€กแ€…แ€Š္းแ€กแ€်ဳိแ‚•แ€€ แ€œုံးแ€แ€™ဲแ€™ေแ€•းแ€•ဲแ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္แ€›แ€”္။ “ No Vote” แ€€ို แ€œုแ€•္แ€်แ€„္แพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္ แ€žိုแ‚”แ€›ာแ€ြแ€„္ แ€™ဲแ€›ုံแ€žိုแ‚”แ€žြားแฟแ€•ီး แ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္แ€™ဲေแ€•း၍ “ Vote No” แ€€ိုแ€œုแ€•္แ€်แ€„္แ€žူแ€™်ားแ€€ ေแ€„ြေแพแ€€း ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•ံ့แ€žူ แ€™်ားแ€€ို ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€ြแ€„္ แ€กแ€„္แ€กားแ€›ွိေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း (แ€”แ€กแ€–) ၏ แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’ แ€กแ€แ€Š္แ€™ျแ€–แ€…္ေแ€…แ€›แ€”္ “ Vote No” แ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€™ႈျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€†แ€”္แ‚”แ€€်แ€„္ႏိုแ€„္แ€™แ€Š္แ€Ÿုแ€กာแ€™แ€ံ၍ US แ€„ါးแ€žိแ€”္းแ€€ို แ€œแ€€္แ€ံแ€›แ€šူแฟแ€•ီး Vote No Campaign แ€€ို แ€ฅီးေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€œုแ€•္แ€ဲ့แพแ€€แ€žแ€Š္แ€™ွာ แ€กแ€™်ားแ€กแ€žိแ€•แ€„္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€›แ€œာแ€’္แ€™ွာ (แ€”แ€กแ€–) แ€™ွ แ€กေแ€€ာแ€€္แ‚€แ€€ံแ€”แ€Š္းแ€™်ိဳးแ€…ံုแ€žံုးแ€œွ်แ€€္ แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€€ို แ‰แ€แ€›ာแ€ိုแ€„္ႏႈแ€”္းေแ€€်ာ္ျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€กแ€แ€Š္ျแ€•ဳ แ€žြားႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กแ€ြแ€€္ (แ€”แ€กแ€–)၏ แ€กေျแ€แ€ံแ€ฅแ€•ေแ€’แ€€ို ၎แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ แ€™ဲေแ€•း၍ แ€กแ€แ€Š္ျแ€•ဳေแ€•းแ€œိုแ€€္ แ€žแ€€ဲ့แ€žိုแ‚” ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žြားแ€›แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€กแ€™ွแ€”္แ€™ွာ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€ แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္းแ€™်ားแ€Ÿု แ€”ာแ€™แ€Š္แ€แ€•္แ€‘ားแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€žแ€Š္ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€ြแ€„္းแ€™ွแ€œแ€€္แ€ံႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š့္ ေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€™်ားแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€žแ€Š့္แ€กျแ€•แ€„္ ၎แ€ုိแ‚”แ€€ိုแ€œแ€Š္း ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€ြแ€„္း แ€™ွแ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€™ႈแ€™แ€›ွိျแ€แ€„္း၊ ၎แ€ိုแ‚”၏ แ€†แ€€္แ€žြแ€š္แ€‘ားแ€žแ€Š့္แ€žူแ€™်ားแ€™ွာแ€œแ€Š္း ေแ€„ြေแพแ€€းแ€›แ€›ွိျแ€แ€„္းေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ แ€žာแ€œုแ€•္แ€€ိုแ€„္ေแ€•းแพแ€€แฟแ€•ီး แ€แ€€แ€š့္แ€ံแ€…ားแ€်แ€€္၊ แ€ံแ€šူแ€်แ€€္แ€›ွိแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္ျแ€แ€„္းแ€žแ€Š္ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€แ€กား แ€”แ€Š္းแ€™ႈแ€•แ€„္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။

แ€šแ€ုแ€œแ€Š္း แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားแ€›แ€„္แพแ€€ားေแ€…့ေแ€›းแ€œแ€™္းေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€€ို (แ€”แ€กแ€–)แ€™ွ ျแ€„แ€„္းแ€•แ€š္แ€œိုแ€€္แ€•ါแ€€ แ€‚်ာแ€€ာแ€ာแ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€ြแ€„္ ႏွแ€…္แ€…ုแ€€ြဲแ€žြားႏိုแ€„္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€แ€…ုแ€žแ€Š္ แ€”แ€‚ိုแ€™ူแ€œแ€›แ€•္แ€แ€Š္แ€်แ€€္แ€กแ€ိုแ€„္း แ€กแ€™ာ แ€œိုแ€„္းแ€žိုแ‚” ျแ€•แ€”္แ€œแ€Š္แ€ฅီးแ€แ€Š္แ€žြားแฟแ€•ီး แ€…ီแ€•ြားေแ€›းแ€•ိแ€္แ€†ိုแ‚”แ€™ႈแ€€ိုแ€แ€„္းแพแ€€แ€•္แ€…ြာျแ€•ဳแ€œုแ€•္ေแ€›း၊ แ€€ုแ€œแ€žแ€™แ€‚ၢ แ€ြแ€„္ ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာ့แ€€ိုแ€š္แ€…ားแ€œွแ€š္แ€€ိုแ€–แ€š္แ€›ွားေแ€›း၊ แ€€ာแ€€ြแ€š္แ€™ႈေแ€•းแ€›แ€”္แ€ာแ€แ€”္แ€†ိုแ€žแ€Š့္ R2P แ€กแ€›แ€”ိแ€„္แ€„ံ แ€กแ€ြแ€„္းแ€žိုแ‚” แ€แ€„္ေแ€›ာแ€€္แฟแ€•ီးแ€’ုแ€€แกေแ€›ာแ€€္ေแ€”ေแ€žာ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€žူแ€™်ားแ€กားแ€€แ€š္แ€แ€„္ေแ€›း၊ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€แ€€ာ แ€แ€›ားแ€›ုံးแ€ြแ€„္ แ€…แ€…္แ€›ာแ€‡แ€แ€္ေแ€€ာแ€„္แ€™်ားแ€กျแ€–แ€…္แ€แ€„္ႏိုแ€„္ေแ€›းแ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို ျแ€•แ€”္แ€œแ€Š္ျแ€•ဳแ€œုแ€•္แ€œာแพแ€€แ€กုံးแ€™แ€Š္ ျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€€်แ€”္แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€€ေแ€ာ့ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€€ို ေแ€ါแ€„္းแ€„ုံแ‚”แ€แ€„္แพแ€€แ€–ိုแ‚”แ€›ွိแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€”ိแ€‚ုံแ€်ဳแ€•္แ€กားျแ€–แ€„့္ แ€…แ€…္แ€กာแ€ာแ€›ွแ€„္แ€…แ€”แ€…္แ€€ို แ€ိုแ€€္แ€–်แ€€္แ€›แ€”္แ€กแ€ြแ€€္…..
แ။ แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€›းแ€€ုိ แ€˜แ€š္แ€œိုแ€แ€Š္ေแ€†ာแ€€္แพแ€€แ€™แ€œဲ၊
แ‚။ แ€˜แ€š္แ€œို แ€™แ€Ÿာแ€—်ဴแ€Ÿာแ€်แ€™ွแ€္แ€›แ€™แ€œဲ แ€†ိုแ€žแ€Š္แ€€ို แ€”แ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€”ဲแ€”ဲ แ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ားแ€–ိုแ‚”แ€œိုแฟแ€•ီ။

แ‚แ€แแ€ ေแ€›ြးေแ€€ာแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€€ို แ€แ€”แ€Š္းแ€”แ€Š္းျแ€–แ€„့္แ€™ွแ€™แ€แ€„္แ€œွ်แ€„္ ေแ€˜းေแ€›ာแ€€္แ€žြားแ€™แ€š္แ€†ိုแ€့ဲ แ€กေแ€ြးแ€กေแ€แšแ€Ÿာ แ€›แ€”္แ€žူแ€€ိုแ€’ူးေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€กแ€Š့ံแ€ံေแ€›း แ€กေแ€ြးแ€กေแ€แšแ€žာျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္၊ แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚” แ€˜ာแ€™ွแ€™แ€œုแ€•္ႏိုแ€„္ေแ€ာ့แ€˜ူး။ แ€’ါေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ แ€›แ€žแ€™ွ်แ€šူႏိုแ€„္ေแ€กာแ€„္ แ€แ€„္แ€™ွျแ€–แ€…္ေแ€ာ့แ€™แ€š္แ€†ိုแ€ဲ့ NCGUB แ€›ဲแ‚•แ€กေแ€ြးแ€กေแ€แšแ€Ÿာ แ€œแ€€္แ€ံႏိုแ€„္แ€…แ€›ာแ€™แ€›ွိแ€•ါ။ แ€™ွแ€”္แ€€แ€”္แ€ဲ့แ€กေแ€ြးแ€กေแ€แšแ€œแ€Š္းแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€Ÿု แ€†ိုแ€်แ€„္แ€•ါ แ€žแ€Š္။ แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€›းแ€†ိုแ€ဲ့แ€…แ€€ားแ€Ÿာ แ€œူแ€ိုแ€„္းေျแ€•ာေแ€”แ€ဲ့แ€…แ€€ား แ€œူแ€ိုแ€„္းแ€กေแ€›းแ‚€แ€€ီးแ€แ€š္แ€†ို แ€ာแ€€ို แ€žိေแ€”แ€ဲ့แ€กေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€กแ€›ာแ€แ€ုแ€•ါ။ แ€’ါေแ€•แ€™ဲ့ แ€’ါแ€€ိုแ€˜ာေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္แ€™แ€œုแ€•္ႏိုแ€„္แ€ာแ€œဲแ€œိုแ‚” ေแ€™းแ€…แ€›ာ แ€›ွိแ€œာแ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္၊ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€•ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းแ€™ွာ แ€Šီแ€Šြแ€္ေแ€›းแ€™แ€œုแ€•္ႏိုแ€„္แ€ာแ€€ แ€•ုแ€‚ၢဳိแ€œ္ေแ€›းแ€™ေแพแ€€ แ€œแ€Š္แ€™ႈ၊ แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€–ြဲแ‚•แฟแ€•ီးแฟแ€ံแ€แ€္ေแ€”แ€‘ိုแ€„္ေแ€›း ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•့ံแ€žူแ€™်ားแ€กแ€œိုแ€€် ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€œแ€™္းေแพแ€€ာแ€„္း แ€™ွေแ€žြแ€–แ€š္แฟแ€•ီးแ€œုแ€•္ေแ€”แ€ဲ့ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€›းေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ ျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။

แ€’ါေแ€ြแ€€ိုေแ€€်ာ္แ€œႊားႏိုแ€„္แ€–ိုแ‚”แ€€ แฟแ€ံแ€…แ€Š္းแ€›ုိးေแ€ြแ€กแ€€ုแ€”္แ€›ိုแ€€္แ€်ဳိးแฟแ€•ီး แ€•ုแ€‚ၢိဳแ€œ္ေแ€›းแ€‘แ€€္ แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚” แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€„္แ€œแ€™္းแ€…แ€ฅ္แ€€ို แ€‘แ€Š့္แ€žြแ€„္းแ€…แ€ฅ္းแ€…ားแ€›แ€™แ€Š္။ แ€œုแ€•္แ€›แ€™แ€Š္။ แ€กဲแ€’ီแ€กแ€ြแ€€္ แ€กားแ€œုံးแ€Šီแ€Šီ แ€Šြแ€္แ€Šြแ€္แ€”ဲแ‚” ေျแ€•ာแ€›ဲแ€›แ€™แ€š္แ€†ိုแ€ဲ့แ€กေแ€ြးေแ€แšแ€€ို แ€€ိုแ€„္แ€…ြဲႏိုแ€„္แ€–ိုแ‚”แ€œိုแ€แ€š္แ€œိုแ‚”ျแ€™แ€„္แ€•ါแ€แ€š္။ ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•ံ့ แ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ို แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚”ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€™ွာ แ€™แ€„္းแ€ိုแ‚”ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€ြแ€œို แ€œူေแ€ြแ€€แ€กုแ€•္แ€်ဳแ€•္ေแ€”แ€ာแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€˜ူးแ€†ိုแ€ာแ€€ို แ€แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€်แ€„္းแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€•ဲ แ€กုแ€•္แ€…ုแ€กแ€œုိแ€€္แ€›ွแ€„္းျแ€•แ€›แ€™แ€š္။ แ€’ါ့แ€กျแ€•แ€„္ แ€ฅေแ€›ာแ€•၊ แ€กေแ€™แ€›ိแ€€၊ แ€กာแ€›ွႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံေแ€ြแ€™ွာ แ€›ွိแ€ဲ့ แ€œႈแ€•္แ€›ွားแ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ိုแ€–ိแ€္แฟแ€•ီး แ€ေแ€œးแ€แ€…ား แ€œူแ€›ာแ€žြแ€„္းေแ€†ြးေႏြးแ€›แ€„္ แ€กแ€™်ားแ€€ေแ€‘ာแ€€္ แ€ံแ€œာแ€™ွာျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€žแ€Š္။ แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€„္แ€ိုแ€€္แ€•ြဲ แ€œแ€™္းแ€…แ€ฅ္แ€€ို แ€›ဲแ€›ဲแ€့ံแ€ံ့แ€žာแ€်ျแ€•ေแ€†ြးေႏြး၊ แ€แ€€แ€š္ แ€œแ€Š္းแ€กေแ€€ာแ€„္แ€‘แ€Š္ေแ€–ာ္แ€™แ€š္แ€†ိုแ€›แ€„္ ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာ့แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€…แ€Š္းေแ€ြ၊ ေแ€€်ာแ€„္းแ€žားแ€แ€•္แ€™ေแ€ာ္ แ€œူေแ€Ÿာแ€„္းေแ€ြ၊ แ€ိုแ€„္းแ€›แ€„္းแ€žားแ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€„္ แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€…แ€Š္းေแ€ြแ€กာแ€œုံး แ€ိုแ€„္းแ€แ€”္းေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•ံ့แ€™ႈแ€”ဲแ‚” ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€€ို แ€…แ€แ€„္ႏိုแ€„္แ€•ါแ€œိแ€™့္แ€™แ€š္။ แ€กแ€“ိแ€€แ€€ေแ€ာ့ แ€€ိုแ€š့္แ€œုแ€•္แ€ဲ့แ€กแ€œုแ€•္แ€€ိုแ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€–ိုแ‚”แ€•ါแ€•ဲ၊ แ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€ဲ့แ€กแ€ိုแ€„္းแ€œဲ แ€œုแ€•္แพแ€€แ€™แ€š္แ€†ိုแ€›แ€„္ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€žူေแ€ြแ€•ါแ€œာแ€™ွာแ€•ဲ၊ แ€šေแ€”แ‚”ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ ေแ€›ႊျแ€•แ€Š္ေแ€กးแ€žแ€™ားေแ€ြแ€€ို ေแ€™ွ်ာ္ေแ€”แ€ာแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€˜ူး၊ ေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္ေแ€€ာแ€„္းေแ€ြแ€€ို ေแ€™ွ်ာ္ေแ€” แ€ာျแ€–แ€…္แ€แ€š္။ ABSDF แ€แ€•္แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€แ€„္ แ€œူแ€ေแ€žာแ€„္းေแ€€်ာ္ ေแ€ာแ€‘ဲေแ€›ာแ€€္แ€œာေแ€ာ့ แ€˜แ€š္แ€žူแ€€ ေแ€€ြ်းแ€ဲ့แ€ာแ€œဲဲ? แ€†ိုแ€ာแ€€ို ျแ€•แ€”္ေแ€™းแ€–ိုแ‚”แ€žแ€„့္แ€•ါแ€แ€š္၊ ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€€ေแ€€ြ်းแ€ဲ့แ€ာแ€•ါ ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›း แ€žแ€™ားေแ€ြแ€€ ေแ€•းแ€ဲ့แ€ာแ€•ါ။ แ€•ိုแ€€္แ€†ံแ€†ိုแ€ာ၊ ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€•ံ့แ€™ႈแ€†ိုแ€ာ แ€€ိုแ€š္แ€€แ€แ€€แ€š္แ€œုแ€•္ႏိုแ€„္แ€›แ€„္ ေแ€”ာแ€€္แ€€แ€œိုแ€€္แ€œာแ€ာแ€•ါ။ แ€•ိုแ€€္แ€†ံေแ€”ာแ€€္แ€™แ€œိုแ€€္แ€•ဲ แ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€›ာแ€€ိုแ€œုแ€•္แ€–ိုแ‚”แ€•ဲ แ€œုိแ€•ါแ€แ€š္။

แ€•แ€‘แ€™แ€†ုံးแ€œုแ€•္แ€›แ€™แ€Š့္แ€œုแ€•္แ€€ေแ€ာ့ แ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žားแ€€ြแ€”္แ€‚แ€›แ€€္แ‚€แ€€ီး ေแ€แšแ€šူေแ€›းျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€แ€š္ แ€’ီแ€€ြแ€”္แ€‚แ€›แ€€္แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™ွာ แ€œႊแ€္ေแ€ာ္แ€กแ€™แ€္แ€™်ား၊ แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€„္ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›း ေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€™်ား၊ แฟแ€„ိแ€™္းแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€™်ား၊ ေแ€€်ာแ€„္းแ€žားแ€™်ဳိးแ€†แ€€္แ€™်ား၊ แ€žံแ€ƒာေแ€ာ္แ€™်ား၊ แ€แ€္แ€žိแ€•แ€Šာแ€›ွแ€„္แ€™်ား แ€กားแ€œုံး แ€•ါแ€แ€„္แ€ဲ့ ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€แ€€ာ ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာแ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žား แ€€ြแ€”္แ€‚แ€›แ€€္แ‚€แ€€ီးေแ€แšแ€šူႏိုแ€„္ေแ€›းแ€€ို แ€กแ€™်ားแ€€แ€ိုแ€„္း แ€แ€”္းแ‚€แ€€ိဳးแ€…ားแ€›แ€™ွာျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€แ€š္။ แ€’ီแ€€ြแ€”္แ€‚แ€›แ€€္แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™ွ แ€ိုแ€€္แ€•ြဲแ€แ€„္แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€€ို ေแ€ါแ€„္းေแ€†ာแ€„္ႏိုแ€„္แ€žူ ျแ€•แ€္แ€žားแ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ို ေแ€›ြးแ€်แ€š္ေแ€•းแ€›แ€™ွာျแ€–แ€…္แ€•ါแ€แ€š္။ ေแ€–ာแ€„္းแ€•ြေแ€”ေแ€žာ ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ€กแ€…แ€Š္း แ€™်ား၊ แ€แ€•္ေแ€•ါแ€„္းแ€…ုแ€กแ€ြแ€„္းแ€™ွ แ€‘แ€•္แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€‘ားแ€žแ€Š့္ ေแ€˜ာ္แ€်แ€€္ေแ€”ေแ€žာ แ€แ€•္ေแ€•ါแ€„္းแ€…ုแ€€ေแ€œးแ€™်ားแ€กား แ€œုံးแ€€ုိแ€–်แ€€္แ€žိแ€™္း၍ (แ€–แ€†แ€•แ€œ) แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€်ဳแ€•္แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€€ဲ့แ€žိုแ‚”แ€แ€ုแ€แ€Š္းေแ€žာ แ€กแ€–ြဲแ‚”แ‚€แ€€ီးျแ€–แ€…္แ€›แ€”္ แ€žแ€™ိုแ€„္းေแ€•း แ€กေျแ€แ€กေแ€”แ€กแ€› แ€œိုแ€กแ€•္ေแ€”แฟแ€•ီျแ€–แ€…္แ€žแ€Š္။

แ€…แ€…္แ€กာแ€ာแ€›ွแ€„္แ€ိုแ‚”แ€€ို แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€™ဲ့แ€”แ€Š္းแ€œแ€™္းแ€แ€ုแ€แ€Š္းျแ€–แ€„့္แ€™แ€› แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€€ိုแ€„္ แ€œแ€™္းแ€…แ€ฅ္ แ€”ဲแ‚”แ€•ါေแ€•ါแ€„္းแ€…แ€•္แ€™ွ แ€›ႏိုแ€„္แ€™แ€Š္แ€†ုိแ€žแ€Š့္ แ€กแ€šူแ€กแ€†แ€€ို ၎ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာแ€กแ€™်ိဳးแ€žားแ€™်ား แ€€ြแ€”္แ€‚แ€›แ€€္แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€™ွ แ€€แ€™แปာแ€žိ ေแพแ€€ျแ€„ာแ€်แ€€္แ€‘ုแ€္ျแ€•แ€”္၍ “แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚” แ€’ီแ€œိုျแ€™แ€„္แ€แ€š္၊ แ€’ါေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္แ€’ီแ€œိုแ€œုแ€•္แ€™แ€š္၊ แ€™แ€„္းแ€ိုแ‚”ေျแ€•ာ ေแ€”แ€ဲ့ แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€™ဲ့แ€”แ€Š္းแ€€ แ€™แ€„္းแ€ိုแ‚”ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€™ွာแ€•ဲแ€›แ€™แ€š္၊ แ€œူแ€กแ€žแ€€္แ€€ို แ€แ€”္แ€˜ိုးแ€™แ€‘ားแ€ဲ့ แ€™ိแ€…แฆာေแ€ြแ€›ဲแ‚•แ€œแ€€္แ€‘ဲแ€™ွာ แ€œแ€€္แ€”แ€€္แ€™ဲ့ေแ€€်ာแ€„္းแ€žားေแ€ြြแ€ฅီးေแ€†ာแ€„္แ€ဲ့ แ€›ွแ€…္ေแ€œးแ€œုံးแ€กေแ€›းေแ€ာ္แ€•ုံ แ‚€แ€€ီးแ€Ÿာ แฟแ€–ိဳแ€ြဲแ€ံแ€ဲ့แ€›แฟแ€•ီးแฟแ€•ီ၊ แ€žံแ€ƒာေแ€ာ္ေแ€ြแ€›ဲแ‚• ေแ€›ႊแ€ါေแ€›ာแ€€္ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ ေแ€›းแ‚€แ€€ီးแ€€ိုแ€œแ€Š္း แ€œแ€€္ แ€”แ€€္แ€กားแ€€ိုးแ€”ဲแ‚” แ€›แ€€္แ€›แ€€္แ€…แ€€္แ€…แ€€္ แฟแ€–ိဳแ€ြဲแ€ဲ့แฟแ€•ီးแฟแ€•ီ၊ ေแ€’แšေแ€กာแ€„္แ€†แ€”္แ€…ုแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€›ဲแ‚• แฟแ€„ိแ€™္းแ€်แ€™္းแ€…ြာ แ€€်ဳိးแ€…ားแ€™ႈแ€€ိုแ€œแ€Š္း ေแ€”แ€กိแ€™္แ€กแ€€်แ€š္แ€်ဳแ€•္แ€”ဲแ‚” แ€›แ€•္แ€†ုိုแ€„္းแ€‘ားแ€œုိแ€€္แฟแ€•ီ၊ แ€’ါေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚”ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံ แ€’ီแ€™ိုแ€€ေแ€›แ€…ီแ€›แ€›ွိေแ€›းแ€กแ€ြแ€€္ แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚”แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€™แ€š္၊ แ€กแ€…ိုးแ€›แ€™ွာ แ€แ€•္แ€œိုแ€แ€š္၊ แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚•แ€›ဲแ‚•แ€แ€•္แ€Ÿာ ျแ€•แ€Š္ ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€…ုแ€ိုแ€„္းแ€›แ€„္းแ€žားแ€กားแ€œုံးแ€•ါแ€แ€„္แ€ဲ့ျแ€•แ€Š္ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€…ုแ€แ€•္ျแ€–แ€…္แ€แ€š္၊ แ€’ီแ€แ€•္แ€›ဲแ‚• แ€›แ€Š္แ€›ြแ€š္แ€်แ€€္ แ€€၊ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ိုแ€€ာแ€€ြแ€š္แ€–ိုแ‚”ျแ€–แ€…္แ€แ€š္၊ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€žူေแ€ြ แ€กแ€แ€„္းแ€กแ€“แ€™แผေแ€်ာแ€†ြဲแ€ိုแ€„္းေแ€”แ€ာေแ€ြ แ€›แ€•္แ€แ€”္แ‚”แ€–ိုแ‚”၊ ေแ€€်းแ€›ြာေแ€ြแ€€ို แ€กแ€แ€„္းแ€กแพแ€€แ€•္ေျแ€•ာแ€„္းေแ€›ြแ‚•ေแ€”แ€ာแ€€ို แ€›แ€•္แ€แ€”္แ‚”แ€–ိုแ‚”၊ แ€€ေแ€œးแ€„แ€š္ေแ€ြ แ€…แ€…္แ€‘ဲแ€žြแ€•္แ€žြแ€„္း ေแ€”แ€ာေแ€ြแ€€ို แ€ားแ€†ီးแ€–ိုแ‚”၊ ျแ€•แ€Š္ေแ€‘ာแ€„္แ€…ုแ€˜ြား แ€ိုแ€„္းแ€›แ€„္းแ€žားแ€กแ€™်ဳိးแ€žแ€™ီး แ€„แ€š္ေแ€ြแ€€ို แ€€ာแ€€ြแ€š္ေแ€…ာแ€„့္ေแ€›ွာแ€€္แ€–ိုแ‚”၊ แ€แ€•္แ€›ဲแ‚•แ€™แ€แ€›ားแ€™ႈแ€€ို แ€™แ‚€แ€€ိဳแ€€္แ€œိုแ‚” แ€˜แ€€္ေျแ€•ာแ€„္းแ€œာแ€ဲ့ แ€กแ€›ာแ€›ွိ แ€กแพแ€€แ€•္แ€แ€•္แ€žားေแ€ြแ€€ို แ€œแ€€္แ€ံแ€–ိုแ‚”၊ แ‚€แ€€ိဳแ€†ိုแ€–ိုแ‚” แ€€ာแ€€ြแ€š္ေแ€•းแ€–ိုแ‚”ျแ€–แ€…္แ€แ€š္၊ แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚” แ€แ€•္แ€–ြแ‚”ဲแ€€แ€กแพแ€€แ€™္းแ€–แ€€္แ€–ိုแ‚”แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€˜ူး၊ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€žူေแ€ြแ€กแ€ြแ€€္ แ€€ာแ€€ြแ€š္ေแ€›းแ€žာျแ€–แ€…္แ€แ€š္။ แ€’ါေแพแ€€ာแ€„့္ แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚” แ€กแ€€ူแ€กแ€Šီแ€œိုแ€แ€š္၊ แ€„ါแ€ိုแ‚”แ€œแ€™္းแ€…แ€ฅ္แ€™ွแ€”္แ€€แ€”္ေแพแ€€ာแ€„္းแ€€ို ႏိုแ€„္แ€„ံแ€กแ€žီးแ€žီး แ€™ွာแ€›ွိေแ€”แ€ဲ့ ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာျแ€•แ€Š္แ€žူေแ€ြแ€€ ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€ံေแ€”แพแ€€แฟแ€•ီแ€†ိုแ€ာแ€€ို แ€›ဲแ€›ဲแ€ံ့แ€ံ့ေျแ€•ာแ€›ဲแ€›แ€™แ€š္။ แ€”ိแ€„္แ€„ံ แ€แ€€ာแ€กแ€€ူ แ€กแ€Šီแ€™แ€›แ€›แ€„္ แ€ိုแ€€္แ€™ွแ€›แ€™แ€š္แ€†ိုแ€ာแ€€ိုแ€šုံแพแ€€แ€Š္แ€ဲ့ဲ့ ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€ြแ€„္း ျแ€•แ€Š္แ€•แ€™ွာแ€›ွိแ€ဲแ‚” ျแ€™แ€”္แ€™ာျแ€•แ€Š္ แ€žူแ€œူแ€‘ု แ€›ဲแ‚•ေแ€‘ာแ€€္แ€ံแ€•့ံแ€•ိုးแ€™ႈแ€”ဲแ‚”แ€†แ€€္แ€œုแ€•္แ€›ဲแ€›แ€™แ€š္ “แ€แ€•္แ€–ြဲแ‚•แ€›แ€„္ แ€•ိုแ€€္แ€†ံแ€›แ€™ွာ แ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€˜ူးแ€—်” แ€†ိုแ€›แ€„္ แ€˜แ€š္ေแ€ာ့แ€™ွေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€Ÿာျแ€–แ€…္แ€œာแ€™ွာแ€™แ€Ÿုแ€္แ€˜ူး ။



ေแ€ာ္แ€œွแ€”္ေแ€›းแ€žแ€…แฅာျแ€–แ€„့္
แ€‘ြแ€”္းေแ€กာแ€„္ေแ€€်ာ္
(August 11, 2009)