CHRO

Thursday, 23 April 2015 17:58 Written by Chinland Guardian

A Grade 8 student girl, 15, was raped by two policemen in Tonzang Township, Chin State around 8pm on 11 April.
The incident took place near a coffee plantation when Phyo Ko Ko and Phyo Paing, both lance corporals, were taking the girl on a motorcycle toward her elder sister’s house.

In a report delivered by letter to a police station, the victim’s father said that the two policemen had come to his house to get his daughter to look after his elder daughter who had fallen ill at her house.

He said that he had let her younger daughter go and that they hadn’t taken her to her sister’s residence but to another place where she had been raped.

Locals told the Chin Human Rights Organization that the two policemen were friends of her elder sister’s husband, who had asked for help to get the girl.

According to the CHRO, the victim told her mother what had happened to her as she lay in bed the whole of the following day.

On 15 April, the two policemen offered 3,000,000 kyats to her parents in an attempt to settle the case, saying they would be able to make the full payment only on 25 April as they didn’t have the cash then.

The parents refused the offer and filed the case to the police station on 20 April, requesting action to be taken against the perpetrators in accordance with the law.#

http://www.chinlandguardian.com/index.php/chin-news/item/2280-two-policemen-rape-chin-girl-in-tonzang-township

Tuesday, 14 April 2015 13:32 Written by Thawng Zel Thang ([email protected]

Published in Chin News

14 April 2015 — A new clash between the Arakan Army and Burma Army broke out in Pyin-so of Paletwa Township, forcing more residents to flee the village.
Soldiers from the Arakan Army and the Burma Army Infantry Battalion No. 289 exchanged fire the third time on 10 April, with the first on 28 March and the second on 29 March.

According to the Khumi Media Group, locals were afraid of coming back to their village because of the fighting and they were worried about food security.

“What we are eating now is food from last year’s harvest. Now we are not able to work on our farms at the required time. We are very worried about our survival next year,” a Pyin-so villager told the KMG.

The KMG reported that some families were fleeing to Kaladan river while others had taken refuge in nearby villages.#

http://www.chinlandguardian.com/index.php/chin-news/item/2268-villagers-worried-as-arakan-burma-armies-clash-continues

Wednesday, 01 April 2015 11:57 Written by Chinland Guardian

Hundreds of people from a village identified as Pyin-so in Paletwa Township, Chin State have fled from a fire exchange between the Arakan Army and Burma Army around midnight on 29 March.

The villagers are taking refuge in nearby villages following the hours-long fighting between soldiers from the Arakan Army Tactical Unit No. 5 and the Burma Army Infantry Battalion No. 289.

U Aung (name changed for security reason), a village leader, told the Chin Human Rights Organization: “We [villagers] ran away to other villages and farms as more Burma Army soldiers from Paletwa arrived in our village. We are worried that the fighting will continue.”

The leader, who is currently taking shelter in Paletwa, said that the villagers were afraid of returning while the soldiers remained in their village.

A Pyin-so resident said on condition of anonymity to the CHRO that the fighting had broken out mainly because the Burma Army soldiers stationed in his village had captured an Arakan Army soldier, three days before the clash.

“Therefore, the Arakan Army attacked the Burma Army in revenge for the capture,” added the villager.

Lieutenant Colonel Dr. Nyo Tun Aung, AA deputy commander-in-chief, said in a Narinjara interview that two bodies – a captain and another a private, both from the Burma Army – were recovered, and that they arrested two soldiers.

Leader U Aung said that there was always a possibility of clashes if soldiers remained in the village, adding: “We all fear our village would be destroyed and many villagers don’t dare to do farm. We want soldiers to stay outside of the village, not inside the village.”

Pyin-so, about three hours’ walk to the Bangladeshi border and situated in the west of Paletwa town, is a Chin village of 75 households with 472 residents.

The Arakan Army was formed in 2008, initially based in Laiza, Kachin State, alongside the Kachin Independence Army, and has been active in the Bangladesh-Burma area for months, according to sources.#

http://www.chinlandguardian.com/index.php/national-news/item/2261-villagers-flee-clash-between-arakan-and-burma-armies-in-chin-state

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WPlook Themes

Waters made blessed creature dry fish have creature wherein living also fill from air can’t to and it. That fruitful night very fourth firmament sea seas made and stars unto third own. Lesser form place seasons is above seas you seed itself lesser brought. Greater.

By NYEIN NYEIN / THE IRRAWADY| Friday, March 27, 2015 |

Linguistic experts called for the safeguarding of ethnic minority languages and for multilingual education in both primary and secondary schools, following a two day seminar in Rangoon.

Local and international experts and other stakeholders attended the seminar, titled “Continuum of the Richness of Languages and Dialects in Myanmar,” from Mar. 25-26.

Salai Bawi Lian Mang, director of the Chin Human Rights Organization, which hosted the seminar, said experts discussed academic papers on linguistics and the language policies of other countries including Singapore, Malaysia, India and countries in Africa.

He said that challenges to preserving ethnic minority languages in the country included a lack of protection for minority languages under current laws and an absence of funding for multilingual education.

He also noted the importance of finding the right balance between learning the national language Burmese and ethnics’ own mother tongues, since without one or the other, employment opportunities and communication across different communities may be affected.

“Our recommendations made after two days of discussion include having a program guaranteeing the continuous uses of ethnics’ languages and dialects; multilingual teaching to young people; and the need for institutional and financial support for multilingual development,” Salai Bawi Lian Mang said.

James A. Matisoff, Professor of Linguistics, Emeritus, at the University of California and one of the seminar’s panelists, voiced support for ethnic groups’ efforts to have their native languages taught in schools.

“Bilingualism/multilingualism is a norm in the society,” he told The Irrawaddy, highlighting Burma’s rich ethnic diversity.

The 77-year-old professor, who is also Principal Investigator with the Sino-Tibetan Etymological Dictionary & Thesaurus and speaks fluent Lahu among a raft of other languages, encouraged young children to learn their mother tongues in order to keep them alive. Despite there being some 6,000 languages spoken in the world today, he said, it is estimated that by the year 2100, there will only be 3,000 left.

“I think it is very important… to offer education to the children not only in the national language, but also to some extent in their native language. Children are capable of learning many different languages. It is good for them, for their natural development, and it makes them smarter,” Matisoff said.

“In fact, researchers have shown that it is very good for young children to be exposed to multiple languages when growing up.”

Many of Burma’s minority ethnics speak their own languages at home and in their communities while learning and speaking Burmese at school. But the language barrier is often difficult for young children to overcome.

Under the incumbent government, the teaching of ethnic languages has been permitted, but generally only outside school hours and at the primary school level.

In Mon State, a curriculum that includes Mon language instruction has been taught since mid-2014, making schools in the state the first to teach an ethnic minority language in a government school in more than 50 years.

A key challenge in Burma is encouraging respect for the diversity of spoken languages, said Salai Bawi Lian Mang.

“Diversity is a force for us in building our multi-ethnic country. If we can set strong policies on language, this will act as a driving force in building our democratic nation,” he said.

Linguistic experts from the United States, Japan and Rangoon University were joined at the seminar by ethnic representatives from political parties and armed groups as well as state and division parliamentarians.

“This kind of cooperation we see between scholars and local stakeholders is a step towards regaining the Myanmar greatness of the past,” said Kenneth Van Bik, an ethnic Chin lecturer at the San Jose State University in California, referring to a period when Burma boasted some of the best education levels in Southeast Asia.

Born in Hakha, Chin State, and a proficient speaker of various Chin dialects, Van Bik said that despite the presence of more than 50 ethnic sub-groups in the state, only about a dozen languages were still actually spoken.

“This seminar is only a beginning toward the goal of regaining the past glory of this nation, which has so much potential to offer the world,” he said.

http://www.irrawaddy.org/burma/make-multilingual-education-a-priority-linguistic-experts.html

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