Now on twitter more than blogger, '@adrianwindisch' .
"We can achieve a sustainable future, but we all must do our bit. We're all in this together, one people one planet"
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Friday, 21 November 2008
Burma comic jailed for 45 years
Coming after some very long sentences last week for protesters, the Burmese government have now lashed out at a comic. Burmese comic Zarganar organised private deliveries of aid to cyclone victims, now the popular comedian active in Burma's democracy movement has been sentenced to 45 years in jail by a Burmese court.
Zarganar was found to have violated the Electronics Act, which regulates electronic communications. He is the latest in a string of opposition activists to be jailed by the military government. He was detained earlier this year for criticising the government's slow response to Cyclone Nargis in interviews with foreign news groups.
More than 80 activists have been sentenced over the past two weeks in a judicial crackdown across the spectrum of Burma's pro-democracy movement. Some people have been sentenced to terms as long as 65 years. Many took part in protests against the ruling junta sparked by fuel and food price rises in August 2007. This wave of trials has been condemned by the UN and rights groups. Those sentenced have committed no crime.
Fourteen activists in Burma have been given jail sentences of up to 65 years over their role in anti-government rallies last year. Another 20 leaders from the group are still being tried on numerous charges which could result in sentences of up to 150 years each. They did not receive a fair trial, and many now face spending the rest of their lives in jail.
The trials were held inside Rangoon’s notorious Insein prison, where the activists are being held, and the guilty verdicts were never really in doubt. The defence lawyers were so tightly restricted in what they could do or say that in the end the activists stopped using them.
The staggering length of these sentences does reinforce a very clear message - that Burma’s military rulers are no more prepared to tolerate opposition now than they have been throughout their half century in power.
Burma is ruled by one of the most brutal military dictatorships in the world; a dictatorship charged by the United Nations with a “crime against humanity” for its systematic abuses of human rights, and condemned internationally for refusing to transfer power to the legally elected Government of the country – the party led by Nobel Peace Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who remains under house arrest and virtually incommunicado with her party and supporters.
This is a campaign video about Burma from Ricky Gervais.
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Adrian Windisch MSc BEng has lived in Reading since 2000.
He was Chair of Reading and Wokingham Green Party 2005 to 2012 and has been the candidate in many local elections and General Elections in 2005 and '10.
Adrian Says: "I believe we can achieve a sustainable future and I am doing everything I can to change my life and encourage others to do the same in order to achieve this. I lead the campaign against the closure of Battle Hospital to build a Tesco, and was a director of Sunseed, an environmental charity doing research and educating volunteers.
I am a member of environmental building organisations and I've helped build three straw bale buildings in Oxford and the Brighton Earthship. I have worked in a rural Tanzania with volunteers to build a school and I'm a member of RedR - engineers for disaster relief.
Now a husband and father of two.
Blogging since Jan 2007
Tweeting since Mar 2009
1 comment:
See http://bdcburma.org/EventDetails.asp?msg_id=52
for more Burma protests
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