"With the Landslide Victory in this Burma's 2012-Election, I think a New Era has begun for Burma and our focus now should shift to rebuilding the country, opening up doors for businesses, welcoming trade opportunities and working with the rest of the world for a positive change.

With this being the case, I am going to start a new blog that reflects and promotes such cause, welcomes the New Era of Burma and will continue sharing news, info & organize activities with you all......

Please Come & Join me at "BurmaAndNewEra.blogspot.com"!!!!!!

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Myanmar Monk Tells Story of Killings


JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)

A Myanmar monk called for a global weapons embargo on his country, telling a human rights conference Thursday that the junta's military leaders must not be allowed to use guns against his people again.

U Awbata said he struggles to shake memories of Myanmar soldiers opening fire on fellow monks during street protests last September, stomping on their heads and pummeling them with batons.

"It doesn't matter how many tears I shed," Awbata said at the three-day conference in Indonesia. "I cannot erase these images from my mind."

Awbata is one of several monks who fled Myanmar after the crackdown and have shared tales of alleged torture and other brutality during last September's uprising.

Buddhist monks initially took to the streets in Myanmar's capital Yangon to oppose a state-imposed fuel price hike. Their protests escalated into the biggest anti-government rallies in two decades.

The United Nations estimated at least 31 people were killed and thousands more detained in the military crackdown that followed.

The United States imposed financial sanctions against the country's military rulers, freezing their assets in U.S. banks and barring American citizens from doing business with the junta.

Awbata fled across the border to Thailand after witnessing the attack at the famed Shwedagon pagoda and then headed to Sri Lanka, where he continues to support the struggle to bring change to his homeland.

It is not clear how many died in the Shwedagon pagoda attack. Awbata said he saw three monks killed as they were chanting prayers of love.

"When they fell down, the soldiers used their boots and stamped on the heads of the wounded monks and beat them with batons," he said, fighting back emotion.