Tuesday, 13 November 2007

Burmese activists arrested

A report in the Guardian Unlimited, a prominent female activist, Su Su Nway (a member of Aung San Su Kyi's National League for Democracy), and one of the monks who led anti-government protests in Burma during September have been arrested, it was reported today.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/burma/story/0,,2210291,00.html

Don't Forget Burma
http://www.dontforgetburma.org/

Monday, 12 November 2007

Sarah's writing journal: Don't forget Burma

Sarah's writing journal: Don't forget Burma

Please take the time to read the post linked above. Thank you. Share the links contained within the post.

DON'T FORGET BURMA!

Don't Forget Burma

Don't Forget Burma
http://www.dontforgetburma.org/

We created this site because we wanted a space where normal people could show that although the media spotlight over Burma may have dimmed, we are still thinking of Burma.

The team that runs this site came together through the " Support the Monks' Protest in Burma " Facebook group (439,000 members) and has created the website www.burma-watch.org .

We're a team of activists from around the world that work around the clock on our sites, we were key to coordinating the Global Day of Action for Burma on October 6th 2007 and Aung Sang Suu Kyi day (October 24th 2007).

Don't Forget Burma
http://www.dontforgetburma.org/

UN Envoy visits prisons in Burma

According to the Bangkok Post, "United Nations Special Rapporteur Paulo Sergio Pinheiro on Monday investigated claims that the ruling junta last September beat up, killed and burned the bodies of Buddhist monks and their followers in temples, prisons and crematoriums in Rangoon."

UN human rights expert Pinheiro, who arrived in Rangoon Sunday after being denied a visa to visit the country since 2003, has been on the move since his plane touched down, sources said.

First he visited Kabaraye, the seat of Burma's Sangha, or the Buddhist hierarchy similar to the Catholic Church's senior clergy. Pinheiro held talks with the 47-man Sangha, the outcome of which was not disclosed.

He proceeded to Ngwe-Kyar-Yan monastery, South Okkalapa township, where monks were allegedly beaten and taken away in army trucks on the morning of September 27. The abbot of that monastery was severely beaten and according to some accounts, has died of his injuries.



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Monday, 5 November 2007

Possible digitization of Dead Sea Scrolls

Jerusalem Post reports that "an international committee of 10 experts is meeting in Jerusalem this week to discuss the future digitization of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Israel Antiquities Authority said Sunday."

"The Antiquities Authority will then act on the recommendations of the committee, which is being convened on the 60th anniversary of the scrolls' discovery."

"Many of the thousands of fragments of the scrolls were photographed only once, around the time of their discovery."