Fact Sheet
Bureau of Public Affairs
Washington, DC
September 19, 2006
Burma: A Human Rights Disaster and Threat
to Regional Security
"When tyrannical governments like Burma abuse their citizens
and deny their rights, it is the responsibility of all free nations
to condemn these actions."
-- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
Over five decades, Burma's military regime has sustained itself
through brutalization and unconscionable human rights abuses, resulting
in over one million internally displaced people and many more international
refugees. The regime further threatens regional stability by ignoring
Burma's HIV/AIDS epidemic, and rampant human and narcotics trafficking.
Due to this regime's total disregard for its own people, the UN
Security Council added Burma to its formal agenda on September 15,
2006. On September 19, 2006, the First Lady of the United States,
Mrs. Laura Bush, hosted a roundtable discussion in New York
to further raise awareness of the crisis in Burma.
Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons
Hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees have fled conflict and
persecution over the last two decades. While some have returned,
approximately 200,000 now live in Thailand, Malaysia, India, and
Bangladesh.
Conditions in Burma continue to deteriorate, reducing hopes for
refugees' safe return. As many as
3,000 Karen refugees entered Thailand this year as a result of Burmese
military offensives against opposition forces in Karen State. The
Burmese government has no programs to assist the nearly one million
Burmese who are internally displaced.
The United States provides humanitarian assistance to Burmese
refugees (estimated at nearly $10 million in FY 2006), and is offering
resettlement consideration to 2,300 Karen living in Thailand. The
United States also plans to resettle many more Burmese refugees
in coming years.
HIV/AIDS
According to the UN, at the end of 2005, about 360,000 Burmese were
infected with HIV/AIDS - one of the most serious HIV/AIDS epidemics
in Asia. In 2002, the United States began supporting international
NGOs working on HIV/AIDS in Burma. Our goals include increased access
to preventive products and services; increased access to care for
people living with HIV/AIDS; and education
to foster safer behaviors among priority groups.
An estimated 18 percent of people with HIV require immediate antiretroviral
(ARV) treatment, but health services are poor, and access to ARVs
is extremely limited. The regime's response to HIV/AIDS remains
ambivalent at best, and it has impeded humanitarian operations.
In August 2005, the AIDS Global
Fund terminated its operations in Burma, as it could no longer ensure
that its funds would go to those in need rather than be diverted
into regime coffers.
Narcotics Trafficking
The United States determined this year that the Burmese regime
has again "failed demonstrably" to meet international
counter narcotics obligations. Burma remains a source of deep concern
because it is the second largest producer of illicit opium, and
it produces and trafficks Amphetamine Type Substances (ATS). A 2005
U.S. Government survey found 40,000 hectares producing 380 metric
tons of potential heroin. Within the Burmese regime and military,
there are serious problems of official corruption, complicity, and
lack of control over high-level drug traffickers, and amphetamine
production and consumption. U.S. counter narcotics assistance was
suspended in 1988, when the military regime began suppressing the
pro-democracy movement.
Trafficking in Persons
The United States has designated Burma a Tier 3 country under
the Trafficking Victims Protection Act because the regime does not
fully comply with the minimum standards to eliminate trafficking
and is not making significant efforts to do so. Burma trafficks
women, children, and men for forced labor and
sexual exploitation, both internally and to several Asian countries.
The regime's economic mismanagement, human rights abuses, and forced
labor policy contribute to Burma's large human trafficking problem.
After the regime began arresting opponents of forced labor, the
International Labor Organization (ILO)
stopped accepting new cases documenting these abuses in Burma. In
2005, the regime imposed new restrictions on all NGOs and international
organizations, undermining their ability to care for trafficking
victims. The Burmese government uses internal forced labor, with
reports of the Burmese Army forcibly enlisting thousands of children.
Burma Timeline
September 1988: The military regime, now known
as the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), took power.
May 1990: The National League for Democracy,
led by Aung San Suu Kyi, won an overwhelming majority of seats in
a national election. The regime red the election results, arrested
political activists and unleashed a campaign to crush the pro-democracy
movement. There are over 1,100 political
prisoners in Burma. Suu Kyi spent the next several years in and
out of detention or house arrest.
May 2003: The regime orchestrated a violent attack
on Suu Kyi and her colleagues. Many of her supporters were killed
or injured and the regime again placed her under house arrest, where
she remains.
December 2005: UN Under Secretary-General for
Political Affairs Ibrahim Gambari briefed the UN Security Council
(UNSC) on the situation in Burma for the first time.
May 2006: Gambari visited Burma where he met Senior
General Than Shwe and Suu Kyi. Immediately after his visit, the
SPDC renewed Suu Kyi's house arrest for another year.
September 2006: The US formally requested the
UNSC add Burma to its permanent agenda.
September 2006: The SPDC announced plans to resume
the National Convention on a new constitution in mid-October. The
regime prohibits delegates to the National Convention from debating
or meaningfully participating in the process of drafting a new constitution.
September 2006: Burma is added to the UNSC's
permanent agenda.
September 2006: First Lady Laura Bush hosts a
dialogue on Burma to raise awareness of the crisis and generate
support for UNSC action.
For More Information
HIV/AIDS
The Joint UN Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS): www.unaids.org
The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria: www.theglobalfund.org
The Global Business Coalition: www.businessfightsaids.org
Refugees
U.S. Refugee Programs: www.state.gov/g/prm/
Narcotics
International Narcotics Control Strategy Report: www.state.gov/p/inl/rls/nrcrpt
Human Trafficking
U.S. Trafficking in Persons Annual Report: www.state.gov/g/tip/
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