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30 September 2007 Updated

29 September 2007


Date: Fri, 28 Sep 2007 03:51:22 +0700
From: "MyanmarBurma Genocide" <myanmarburmagenocide[at]googlemail.com>
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Subject: Re: Burma Genocide. Help save 1000 lives.


Re: Burma Genocide. Help  save 1000 lives.

SAVE 1000  LIVES, BY FORWARDING THIS TO FRIENDS.

There is a genocide going on in Burma(Myanmar). Please help it stop by forwarding to your friends. Thank you!
http://picasaweb.google.com/burmamyanmargenocide

Today, tyrant military government of Burma (Myanmar) has shot down and wounded over 100 unarmed protesters.
9 dead bodies, including a Japanese journalist, were collected and confirmed by the Burmese soliers.
Many wounded fled away and believed to die in a few hours on their way home. Number of death toll is not confirmed.
The murdered Japanese journalist is called Mr Kenji Nagai, APF Tsushin Media.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Burmese_anti-government_protests

People of Burma were simply asking for peace. Due to torture, people were so scared to protest first.
But the buddhist monks initiated this revolution, without self interest.
However, when a Buddhist monk was tied to pole and tortured in public,
most Buddhist monks around the country and 200,000 protesters joined in.

The protest were very peaceful. They were simply reading Buddhist prayers called Metta Sutta
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metta_Sutta), while walking around town. That was all.
The tyrant Than Shwe (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Than_Shwe) ordered the military to attack,
and shoot into the crowd, causing a genocide like in 1988 again.

Please ask the United Nations to send UN forces to Burma:
http://www.un.org/terrorism/contact-us.asp/

Please ask the US President to send US forces to Burma:
comments[at]whitehouse.gov

 
For more info:
http://burma.usembassy.gov/
http://www.freeburmacoalition.org/
Captions by Associated Press
[Image]

** EDS NOTE GRAPHIC CONTENTS ** This image made from a video provided Sunday, Sept. 30, 2007 by the Democratic Voice of Burma via APTN, is believed to be the body of a monk, covered in bruises, floating face down in a river in Yangon, Myanmar. AP Television cannot independently verify the content of the video, or its authenticity but DVB said the video was shot on Sunday. Troops and police locked down Myanmar's biggest cities on Sunday, keeping most protesters off the streets. (AP Photo/DVB via APTN) ** TV OUT **

[Image]

Myanmar junta leader Sr. Gen Than Shwe reviews soldiers during Armed Forces Day celebrations Sunday, March 27, 2007, in Yangon, Myanmar. Thousand of soldiers and police have been deployed in Myanmar's largest cities over the weekend keeping even the most die-hard protesters off the streets, as scores of arrests were reported overnight. (AP Photo/David Longstreath). Creation Date 09/30/2007 07:34:21.

[Image]

** EDITORS NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT ** In this photo released by the Democratic Voice of Burma a young man, who has been killed on Thursday, Sept. 27, 2007, is carried through the streets of Yangon, Myanmar. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma)

[Image]

In this photo released by the Democratic Voice of Burma a young man, who appears injured or dead, is shown Thursday, Sept. 27, 2007, following a clash with soldiers in Yangon, Myanmar. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma)

[Image]

In this photo made from video released Friday Sept. 28, 2007, by the Democratic Voice of Burma, showing a Japanese journalist, seen at centre, as he falls to the street after being shot during a protest in Rangoon, Myanmar, on Thursday Sept. 27, 2007. The Japanese journalist identified as Kenji Nagai died from his wounds, and is seen in the video falling to the street as anti-government demonstrators run from security forces. (AP Photo/ Democratic Voice of Burma) ** MANDATORY CREDIT DEMOCRATIC VOICE OF BURMA **

[Image]

In this photo made from video released Friday Sept. 28, 2007, by the Democratic Voice of Burma, showing a Japanese journalist as he lays in the street after being shot during a protest in Rangoon, Myanmar, on Thursday Sept. 27, 2007. The Japanese journalist identified as Kenji Nagai died from his wounds, and is seen in the video falling to the street as anti-government demonstrators run from security forces. (AP Photo/ Democratic Voice of Burma) ** MANDATORY CREDIT DEMOCRATIC VOICE OF BURMA **

[Image]

In this photo released by DEMOCRATIC VOICE OF BURMA, a Myanmar protester is injured while demonstrating in Yangon Myanmar on Wednesday Sept. 26, 2007. Security forces fired warning shots and tear gas into massive crowds of demonstrators in Myanmar's biggest city Wednesday, while hauling away defiant Buddhist monks into waiting trucks, the first mass arrests since protests in this military dictatorship erupted last month. (AP Photo/DEMOCRATIC VOICE OF BURMA)

[Image]

**EDS NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT**In this photo released by Free Burma Rangers, a Karen woman waits to be helped after she was injured by the mortar attack from Myanmar soldiers in an offensive at a village in Papun district of Karen state in Myannmar March 21, 2007. An offensive by Myanmar pro-junta forces against ethnic minority Karen separatist rebels drove about 250 Karen civilians to flee into neighboring Thailand, officials said. (AP Photo/Free Burma Ranngers, HO)

[Image]

A truckload of soldiers patrol the streets of Yangon, Myanmar to quell defiant protesters who gathered in pockets in continuing protest against the military junta Saturday Sept. 29, 2007 in Yangon, Myanmar. Daily protests began last month and have grown into the stiffest challenge to Myanmar's ruling junta in decades. They were initially started by people protesting massive fuel price hikes, with crowd sizes mushrooming to tens of thousands after monks joined in. (AP Photo)

[Image]

Soldiers arrest three men along a street in Yangon, Myanmar in a continuing crackdown on protests Saturday Sept. 29, 2007. Daily protests began last month and have grown into the stiffest challenge to Myanmar's ruling junta in decades. (AP Photo)

[Image]

Residents watch as soldiers and police drive away protesters who gathered in pockets in continuing demonstrations against the military junta Saturday Sept. 29, 2007, in Yangon, Myanmar. Daily protests began last month and have grown into the stiffest challenge to Myanmar's ruling junta in decades. (AP Photo)

[Image]

Soldiers arrest three men along a street in Yangon, Myanmar in a continuing crackdown against pro-democracy protesters on Saturday Sept. 29, 2007. (AP Photo)

[Image]

** EDITORS NOTE GRAPHIC CONTENT ** In this photo released by Free Burma Rangers, the remains of an Ethnic Karen, who the source said was believed to be tortured by Myanmar's soldiers, lies rotting near a burned out village in the Toungoo district of eastern Myanmar, Thursday April 27, 2006. The Karen have been battling the government in Yangon for more than 50 years seeking an independent homeland. Myanmar's ruling military has acknowledged that its army is waging an offensive against the Karen and it is estimated that 15,000 Karen have been driven from their homes since it began earlier this year. (AP Photo/Free Burma Rangers, HO)

[Image]

In this photo released by Free Burma Rangers group, an injured Karen man is carried on a stretcher by compatriots up the hill while fleeing the Myanmar soldiers in Karen state, Myanmar in March 2006. U.S. lawmakers condemned a brutal offensive by the Myanmar army against ethnic minority civilians, calling on the U.N. Security Council to take urgent action against the country's ruling junta, statements received Thursday said. Myanmar troops have uprooted more than 11,000 Karen civilians in their biggest offensive in almost a decade _ a campaign punctuated by torture and killings, according to reports from inside the country and Thailand. (AP Photo/Free Burma Rangers, HO)

[Image]

In this photo released by Free Burma Rangers, Karen villagers flee after Myanmar soldiers attack their village in Papun district of Karen state in Myanmar on March 21, 2007. An offensive by Myanmar pro-junta forces against ethnic minority Karen separatist rebels drove about 250 Karen civilians to flee into neighboring Thailand, officials said. (AP Photo/Free Burma Ranngers, HO)

[Image]

Members of Myanmar's military ruling junta smile and call out to friends as the arrive for Armed Forces Day ceremonies in Naypyitaw, the new capital of Myanmar Tuesday, March 27, 2007. Myanmar, also known as Burma, has been ruled by the junta for more than 60 years. (AP Photo/David Longstreath)

[Image]

In this photo released by Democratic Voice of Burma, a Myanmar man is arrested by plain cloths police officers during a protest in Yangon, Myanmar Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2007. Pro-government militia members on trucks staked out key streets in Yangon Wednesday as the Myanmar's military rulers sought to crush a rare wave of dissent against fuel price hikes by pro-democracy activists. Tension was high in Yangon where security officials and their civilian auxiliaries cracked down on an attempted protest within minutes of its start, roughing up about 15 demonstrators before tossing them into waiting trucks to take them away for detention. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma-HO)

[Image]

In this photo released by Democratic Voice of Burma, a Myanmar man is carried on to a waiting truck after being arrested by plain cloths police officers during a protest in Yangon, Myanmar Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2007. Pro-government militia members on trucks staked out key streets in Yangon Wednesday as the Myanmar's military rulers sought to crush a rare wave of dissent against fuel price hikes by pro-democracy activists. Tension was high in Yangon where security officials and their civilian auxiliaries cracked down on an attempted protest within minutes of its start, roughing up about 15 demonstrators before tossing them into waiting trucks to take them away for detention. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma-HO)

[Image]

In this photo made available by Democratic Voice of Burma, Buddhist monks survey the situation after an early morning raid Thursday, Sept. 27, 2007 by security forces on their monasteries. Truckloads of troops in riot gear raided Buddhist monasteries Thursday on the outskirts of Yangon, beating and arresting dozens of monks in the second day of the brutal government crackdown, witnesses and Western diplomats said. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma, HO)

[Image]

In this photo released by the Free Burma Rangers, made available Saturday, Sept. 29, 2007, Shan villagers protest against Myanmar's military government on Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2007, in a remote region of eastern Myanmar along the border with Thailand. (AP Photo/Free Burma Rangers)

[Image]

In this photo made available by the Democratic Voice of Burma, soldiers man a checkpoint Thursday, Sept. 27, 2007, in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Overnight Myanmar security forces raided two Buddhist monasteries beating up and hauling away more than 100 monks following a day of violent confrontation. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma, HO)

[Image]

In this photo released by the Democratic Voice of Burma, Myanmar, Buddhist monks in cinnamon robes stand on the streets of Yangon, Myanmar on Wednesday Sept. 26, 2007. Security forces fired warning shots and tear gas canisters while hauling militant Buddhist monks away in trucks Wednesday as they tried to stop anti-government demonstrations in defiance of a ban on assembly. (AP Photo/ Democratic Voice of Burma)

[Image]

In this photo released by the Democratic Voice of Burma, Buddhist monks stand in front of riot police as they demonstrate in Yangon Myanmar on Wednesday Sept. 26, 2007. Security forces fired warning shots and tear gas into swollen crowds of demonstrators in Myanmar's biggest city Wednesday, while hauling away defiant Buddhist monks into waiting trucks, the first mass arrests since protests in this military dictatorship erupted last month. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma)

[Image]

In this photo released by the Democratic Voice of Burma, Myanmar, a fires burn on the streets of Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2007, as demonstrators and Buddhist monks in cinnamon robes take to the streets. Security forces fired warning shots and tear gas canisters while hauling militant Buddhist monks away in trucks Wednesday as they tried to stop anti-government demonstrations in defiance of a ban on assembly. (AP Photo/ Democratic Voice of Burma)

[Image]

This image made in August 2007, and made available in London by the Democratic Voice of Burma, Wednesday Sept. 26, 2007, shows senior officers watching, as Burmese riot police practice crowd control in the capital Yangon. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma, HO) ** EDITORIAL USE ONLY **

[Image]

This image made in August 2007, and made available in London by the Democratic Voice of Burma, Wednesday Sept. 26, 2007, shows Burmese riot police receiving instructions from senior officers, while practicing crowd control in the capital Yangon. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma, HO) ** EDITORIAL USE ONLY **

[Image]

In this photo released by the Democratic Voice of Burma, Buddhist monks in cinnamon robes and demonstrators march in Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday Sept. 26, 2007. Security forces fired warning shots and tear gas canisters while hauling militant Buddhist monks away in trucks Wednesday as they tried to stop anti-government demonstrations in defiance of a ban on assembly. (AP Photo/ Democratic Voice of Burma)

[Image]

In this photo released by the Democratic Voice of Burma, Myanmar soldiers, center, block a road leading to Sule Pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar on Wednesday Sept. 26, 2007. Security forces fired warning shots and tear gas canisters while hauling militant Buddhist monks away in trucks Wednesday as they tried to stop anti-government demonstrations in defiance of a ban on assembly. (AP Photo/ Democratic Voice of Burma)

[Image]

Aye Chang Naing, left and reporter Htet Aung Kyaq of the radio station Democratic Voice of Burma discuss the content of the next broadcast from the radio station in their newsroom in Oslo, Norway , Monday, Sept. 24, 2007. Chief Editor Aye Chan Naing said strict control of the news media in Myanmar, also known as Burma, means the first news its citizens often get of what is going on in their own country comes through the station's shortwave radio, satellite TV and Internet services. "There is no other way for the people of Burma to get news," he told The Associated Press on Monday, claiming that broadcasts reach as many as 5 million people in the Southeast Asian nation of 54 million. (AP Photo/Bjorn Langsem) ** Norway out**

[Image]

In this image provided by the Burma Campaigns New Zealand, members of the the Burmese community who marched to the Chinese Consulate protest outside Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2007. Protests were launched worldwide on Tuesday to denounce China's alleged continuing support to the military regime in Myanmar, also known as Burma. (AP Photo/Naing Ko Ko, Burma Campaigns New Zealand) ** EDITORIAL USE ONLY**

[Image]

In this image released by the Democratic Voice of Burma, people protest against the military government in Yangon Myanmar Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2007. It was the eighth day of street demonstrations against the government in Myanmar. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma, HO) ** EDITORIAL USE ONLY **

[Image]

In this image released by the Democratic Voice of Burma, Buddhist monks defied orders to stay off the streets and marched against the military government. Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2007, in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. It was the eight day of street demonstrations against the government in Myanmar. (AP Photo/Democratic Voice of Burma, HO) ** EDITORIAL USE ONLY **

[Image]

First lady Laura Bush speaks at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2007. Mrs. Bush held a roundtable with reporters to discuss the situation in Burma. The Bush administration and lawmakers from both parties have asked the U.N. Security Council to condemn Myanmar's recent crackdown on activists. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)

[Image]

** FILE ** Actor Jim Carrey, left, and actress Jenny McCarthy attend the Oscar De La Hoya and Floyd Mayweather Jr. boxing match on Saturday, May 5, 2007, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. Jim Carrey has made a straight-to-YouTube video. And it's not funny at all. The 45-year-old actor-comedian, in rare serious mode, appears in a new public service announcement on behalf of the Human Rights Action Center and the U.S. Campaign for Burma. The goal: To free Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been confined by the Burmese government for 11 of the last 17 years. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian, file)

[Image]

** FILE ** In this photo released by Free Burma Rangers, Karen villagers cross the Salween River in eastern Myanmar as they flee Myanmar army troops who attacked their homes in late March, 2006 as part of major offensive against Karen rebels. Thousands of Burmese civilians have been forced to flee army attacks in Myanmar, Human Rights Watch said Thursday, Nov. 30, 2006, with many trekking as far as the Thai border in search of food and shelter. (AP Photo/Free Burma Rangers, HO, File)

[Image]

** HANDOUT ** In this handout photo provided by United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), Goodwill Ambassador Angelina Jolie interacts with a refugee woman from Myanmar in the one-room home she shares with her three children in New Delhi, India, Saturday, Nov. 4, 2006. Jolie is on a two-day visit to New Delhi. The woman, one of the 1,750 refugees from Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, under the care of UNHCR in India, told Jolie they fled after her husband was arrested by Burmas military government. (AP Photo/UNHCR, K.McKinsey, HO)

[Image]

In this photo released by Free Burma Rangers, a 9-year old Karen girl is shows her wound after being treated by medic team from the Free Burma Rangers after Myanmar soldiers attack her village in Karen state, Myanmar killing her father and grandmother in March 2006. More than 600 Karen refugees are poised to enter Thailand to swell others who earlier fled a major, ongoing offensive by the Myanmar army against the ethnic minority group. The offensive campaign, which began last November, has driven more than 11,000 Karen villagers in eastern Myanmar from their homes as the troops hunt for autonomy-seeking Karen guerrillas, according to an aid group inside the country. (AP Photo/Free Burma Rangers-HO)

[Image]

In this photo released by Free Burma Rangers, a 9-year old Karen girl is treated from a gun shot wound by medic team from the Free Burma Rangers after Myanmar soldiers attack her village in Karen state, Myanmar killing her father and grandmother in March 2006. More than 600 Karen refugees are poised to enter Thailand to swell others who earlier fled a major, ongoing offensive by the Myanmar army against the ethnic minority group. The offensive campaign, which began last November, has driven more than 11,000 Karen villagers in eastern Myanmar from their homes as the troops hunt for autonomy-seeking Karen guerrillas, according to an aid group inside the country. (AP Photo/Free Burma Rangers-HO)