September 19, 2011

ျမစ္ေကာ



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ျမစ္မေကာေအာင္လုိ ့
သစ္ေတာတုိ ့စိမ္းရေပမည္ …


ေရေ၀ေတာေတြ ဆုိင္းစုိ ့စုိ ့
မွဳိင္းညိဳ ့ညိဳ ့မွဳန္ရီရီ …
ခ်င္းတြင္းနဲ ့ဧရာ၀တီ
ေရျပာၾကည္သမွ် ျမန္မာ့ေသြးေဟ့ …
တေတာလုံးေျပာင္
တေတာင္လုံးလင္း
ျမစ္က်ဥ္းကာေသာင္ေတြေပၚေတာ့
ေနာင္အရွည္မေမွ်ာ္ ျမန္မာေပ်ာက္ေအာင္လုိ ့
ကုိယ့္ေသြးကုိ ကုိယ္ျပန္ေသာက္ျပီလား
………. စုိးေၾကာက္ဖြယ္အျဖစ္သေဘာ
………. ျမစ္ေကာတဲ့ေန ့။ ။
ေမာင္စိန္၀င္း (ပုတီးကုန္း)

September 1, 2011

Irrawaddy Myitsone Dam's video release.



Today KDNG Release the Myitsone Dam project video with Burmese subtitle and English subtitle as well. The Irrawaddy River is the lifeline of Burma. Running through the center of the country, millions depend on it for agriculture, fishing, and transportation. The ruling regime, without consulting local people, is now allowing Chinese companies to build seven mega dams on the Irrawaddy and its tributaries in Kachin State. The seven dams will produce 17,160 megawatts of electricity, five times more than the current installed capacity for the entire country.

Yet electricity generated by the 152-foot tall Irrawaddy Myitsone dam (6,000 MW), will be sold to China, not used in Burma where there are chronic energy shortages. The sale will provide millions of dollars in revenue to Burma’s regime which has consistently used foreign revenues to build up its military at the expense of health and education, leaving the country with some of the worst social indicators in the world.

The Irrawaddy Myitsone Dam is located on the mainstream Irrawaddy, three miles downstream of the famous confluence of the N’Mai and Mali rivers in Kachin State. The confluence is a revered landmark for all of Burma and particularly important cultural site for the Kachin people and will be submerged by the dam.

The following video was produce by News Centre of China’s largest dam builder Sinohydro in may 2011 has been contracted to complete phase 1 of the Myitsone Dam project by the owner of the Dam project, China Power International (CPI)

Fierce Battle Myitkyina from KDNG on Vimeo.


ခက္ခဲျပင္းထန္ေသာ ျမစ္ႀကီးနားတိုက္ပြဲ from KDNG 2 on Vimeo.

July 20, 2011

Burmese Martyr Day Celebration in UK


Bo Gyoke (General) Aung San, Architect of Burma National Independence, is the father of Burma's sole national leader, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Born on 13 February 1915, Bo Gyoke Aung San successfully led the Burma Independence Movement as well as Fascist Revolution. After the World War II, the British re-entered onto the Burmese soil as a winner in the war. The war had changed the British politics at home and colonies, like Burma, were asking for total independence. Anti-Fascist Burma Nationalist group’s leader Bo Gyoke Aung San was very popular among the Burmese people and he became a promising leader as young as at the age of 30.

I has been participated Martyr day celebration in front of Burmese's embassy and take some video and photos as well. 



ဒီေန႔ အာဇာနည္ေန႔ အခမ္းအနား ကုိ ျမန္မာႏုိင္ငံသံရံုးေရွ႕မွာ BDC က ဦးေဆာင္ၿပီးေတာ့ က်င္းပျပဳလုပ္ခဲ့ပါတယ္။ က်ေနာ္လဲ အားလပ္ေနတာနဲ႔ အာဇာနည္ေန႔ အခမ္းအနားကုိ တက္ေရာက္ခဲ့ၿပီး ဓါတ္ပံု တစ္ခ်ိဳ႕နဲ႔ ဗီြဒီယုိေတြ ကုိ ဖုန္းကင္မရာနဲ႔ပဲ ရုိက္လာခဲ့လုိက္ပါတယ္။ blog လဲ update မျဖစ္တာ ၾကာၿပီ ၿပီးေတာ့ အာဇာနည္ေန႔ ဆုိတာ ျမန္မာလူမ်ိဳးတစ္ေယာက္အေနနဲ႔ ဘယ္ေနရာ ဘယ္ေဒသပဲ ေရာက္ေရာက္ လံုး၀ မေမ့သင့္တဲ့ ကိစၥ လုိ႔ ယူဆ တာ တစ္ေၾကာင္းပါ။ ေနာက္ထပ္ အျမင္မေတာ္တာ တစ္ခု လဲ ေတြ႔ခဲ့ေသးတယ္၊ ျမန္မာျပည္ကုိယ္စားျပဳတဲ့ သံရံုးေရွ႕မွာ ႏုိင္ငံေတာ္အလံ ရွိမေနတာပါပဲ။ ဘာျဖစ္လုိ႔လဲ ဆုိတာ သံရံုးထဲ၀င္ၿပီးေတာ့ ေမးလုိက္ခ်င္စမ္းပါရဲ႕႔ေလ။ အလံတစ္၀က္ခ်ရမွာစုိးလုိ႔ အလံကုိမ်ား သိမ္းထားလုိက္တာလားလုိ႔ ေတြးေနမိပါတယ္။ ဖုန္း ဘက္ထရီကုန္သြားလုိ႔ အဲဒီ့ပံုကုိ မရုိက္လုိက္ရပါဘူး။ အိမ္အျပန္လမ္းတစ္ေလွ်ာက္ စဥ္းစားရင္း မခ်င့္မရဲျဖစ္မိပါရဲ႕.....။ 














July 7, 2011

Aung San Su Kyi Reith Lecture 2 : Dissent



The pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, examines what drives people to dissent in the second of the 2011 Reith Lecture series. 'Securing Freedom'.
Reflecting on the history of her own party, the National League for Democracy, Aung San Suu Kyi, examines the meaning of opposition and dissident. She also explains her reasons for following the path of non-violence.



 Reith 20110705-0940a by kzy1980 


2011_reith1

July 4, 2011

Top Burmese diplomat seeks political asylum in US


(Mizzima) A high-level Burmese career diplomat in the United States, Kyaw Win, the deputy chief of mission, on Monday defected to seek political asylum in the United States, according to Radio Free Asia (RFA).

“Despite the general elections in Burma, the army still controls and influences the country, and there is no sign of democratic changes under the existing government,” Kyaw Win said in an interview conducted by RFA Burmese.

“I do not trust the Burmese government,” Kyaw Win, 59, who served has served in Foreign Department since 1980. He worked had worked at the Burmese Embassy in Washington since March 2008.

“I supported the US sanctions against Burmese military leaders and their cronies and the sanctions can be fruitful. The US should push to form an international commission of inquiry to investigate the human rights violations in Burma,” Kyaw Win told RFA. On the other hand, he also said he supported the new US policy of forging closer contacts with the Burmese government.

Kyaw Win has served at Burmese embassies in Spain, Switzerland, India and Brazil. In 2005, another Burmese diplomat, Aung Lin Htut, sought political asylum in the US.

July 1, 2011

North Korean kimchi, not missiles, for sale in Rangoon

(Mizzima's Feature) – Korean food is all the rage in Asia but one Korean restaurant in Burma’s old capital has raised a few eyebrows amongst those in the know.

While nobody has seen any pictures of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il or his father yet, there is every indication that Koryo Restaurant is Pyongyang’s first tasty foray into Burma, according to a source close to the Burmese government.

There are many Korean restaurants in Rangoon. Now, it would seem, there is one from the North.

There really should be no question mark over who is supporting the Rangoon venture. The name says it all.

The North Korea Embassy is alleged to have rented the building from Mar 2011 with a five-year lease. Photo: Mizzima
The North Korea Embassy is alleged to have rented the building from Mar 2011 with a five-year lease. Photo: Mizzima
“Koryo is the name the North Koreans use for the country (besides Chosun),” Bertil Lintner, an expert on Burma and North Korea told Mizzima in Chiang Mai.

“The airline, for instance, is called Air Koryo and there is a Hotel Koryo in Pyongyang. In the south the name for Korea is Hankuk. So it definitely sounds North Korean.”

Lintner, one of the few experts who has slipped behind the curtain in both countries, is not surprised by the news that Pyongyang cuisine is about to have Burmese people in Rangoon licking their lips.

“The North Korean government, or embassies abroad, run a number of Korean restaurants in the region,” he said, noting that although those in Bangkok and Pattaya are gone, “new ones have sprung up in Kathmandu and Dhaka, in addition to old ones in Vientiane and Vladivostok.”

A map showing the location of the Koryo Restaurant.
A map showing the location of the Koryo Restaurant.
Is the Koryo Restaurant only going to be selling tasty food including kimchi, Korea’s famous tangy pickled vegetable? Or does it have other objects or objectives not printed on the menu?

The building stands on Sayasan Road, Bahan Township, in Rangoon and is only a few hundred metres from a South Korean restaurant, Dae Wong Gat, a competitor. Enquiries conducted by Mizzima indicate that those involved are “from North Korea,” according to a member of staff on the site, but it is unclear who is running the project. Locals claim the people working on the site are foreign. When Mizzima obtained a translation of the wording in Korean on the signboard, it said, “Pyongyang Chon Ryu Kwan Yangon Branch.”

According to a source, the North Korean embassy began the process of opening the restaurant in September 2010. It rented the building from March 2011 under a five-year rental agreement. The building is currently being finished and 15 workers from North Korea have been employed so far.

The South Korean embassy in Burma was unable to confirm or deny that North Korea was opening a restaurant in Rangoon.

North Korea may be failing miserably conducting business at home or feeding its people, but when it comes to an every-growing list of business outreach programmes in Asia, they are displaying some panache—though it is often unclear whether they are purely pursuing money-making or part of the North Korean intelligence service’s surveillance and other activities.

In a recent article entitled, “North Korea’s creepy crawly capitalism” in Asia Times, Lintner says North Korean capitalism abroad is flourishing but largely under the radar. “Pyongyang has steadily established a string of legitimate and less legitimate front companies across East and Southeast Asia, aimed at earning the cash-strapped government badly needed hard currency. And, by all indications, business is booming.”

Anything fishy about this culinary venture? According to a source close to the government in Naypyitaw, the suggestion that the restaurant is bringing in about 30 workers from abroad indicates they may have the permission of the Burmese government. Thai and Chinese restaurants are unable to ship in hordes of workers. Burmese typically do the jobs.
The remodeled building where about  15 staff members are said to be North Koreans.
The remodeled building where about 15 staff members are said to be North Koreans.

Naypyitaw easing entry would be no surprise. The North Korean and Burmese governments appear to have a cozy relationship—embattled regimes with negative standing on the international stage. Stories in the media allege missile deals and transfer of nuclear technology.

The workers at this new restaurant are said to include “young ladies in their 20s selected from sincere North Korean families loyal to dictator Kim Jong-il.” They are well-trained not only in dancing and singing but also “for espionage,” according to the source.

If Lintner is right, this fits a pattern. North Korea's restaurants in Asia always bring in their own staff, mostly young women from Pyongyang.

According to the Naypyitaw source, the North Korean government would run such a restaurant through their embassy, possibly with a local partner to add a gloss of legality. If the pattern is the same as other ventures in Asia, the restaurant would have two important objectives—to be a base for illegal activity, such as smuggling and money laundering, and espionage in the country.

At present, the doors are locked, workmen are renovating, and it is not clear what will be on the menu.

All that is clear at the moment is kimchi will be served. You can’t have a Korean restaurant–whether North or South–without this tasty staple dish.