Demand that the Burmese military end their war in Kachin State

To: Secretary of State John Kerry

Dear Secretary Kerry,

Congratulations on your recent appointment. We, concerned citizens throughout the world, ask you to play a meaningful role in ending all hostilities in Kachin State and pressure the Burmese military regime and all invested parties to begin genuine peace talks which...

Dear Secretary Kerry,

Congratulations on your recent appointment. We, concerned citizens throughout the world, ask you to play a meaningful role in ending all hostilities in Kachin State and pressure the Burmese military regime and all invested parties to begin genuine peace talks which honor the six-point peace plan agreed to by ethnic minority leaders throughout Burma. Your leadership will play a vital role in ending the bloody violence which has displaced over 100,000 people and has killed hundreds.

The six-point peace plan proposes that the Burmese military government and all ethnic minority groups honor the following:

1) Host a meeting including all civil groups and ethnic armed groups
2) an international community monitored meeting between government and ethnic armed groups
3) referenda in each of the ethnic minority states to ratify any agreements made in dialogues
4) a peace meeting for all ethnic groups
5) tripartite discussions between the government, ethnic groups and democracy activists and
6) implementation of any ratified agreements made.

We call on you to play a role in ensuring the Burma's fledgling democracy has a chance to place itself on solid footing. We care about Burma. Please play a role in supporting its nascent democracy.
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2,136 people signed the petition

Hundreds of thousands of people in Kachin State have become refugees due to the ongoing civil war in Kachin State, located near the border of Burma and China. In January 2013, the Burmese military admitted that it had launched an aerial attack on an area where 25,000 refugees are sheltering. Fighting must stop.

Fighter jets continue to drop bombs throughout the region. Mortar shells rain endlessly on the people. Whenever a temporary ceasefire has been called, the Burmese military continues to advance and fortify its position, making it clear their true intent is complete control of the region.

Call on Senator John Kerry, who became America's new Secretary of State on 2/4, to pressure the Burmese military regime that governs the country to end its hostilities in Kachin State, establish a new ceasefire agreement with the Kachin Independence Organization which governs Kachin State, and participate fully and sincerely in meaningful multilateral peace talks with Burma's ethnic groups.

  1. Update #4

    Posted by Gordon Welty (Campaign Leader) on Mar 26

    Clashes continue in Kachin state

    Burma's military continued to attack Kachin Independence Army (KIA) posts in Kachin and northwestern Shan states over the last week. The small isolated clashes came despite repeated claims from senior government officials including Burma President Thein Sein that all fighting in northern Burma had ended.

    Last Tuesday evening, the Light Infantry Battalion 432 fired mortar around the Shan village of Konlaw located about 10 km from Bhamo. They ...

    Clashes continue in Kachin state

    Burma's military continued to attack Kachin Independence Army (KIA) posts in Kachin and northwestern Shan states over the last week. The small isolated clashes came despite repeated claims from senior government officials including Burma President Thein Sein that all fighting in northern Burma had ended.

    Last Tuesday evening, the Light Infantry Battalion 432 fired mortar around the Shan village of Konlaw located about 10 km from Bhamo. They attacked Konlaw post in Momauk (N'Mawk) township in Kachin state at approximately 7 pm, according to sources in the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO).

    Over the weekend, KIA forces and army troops clashed in northern Shan state, continuing until Monday, according to KIO officials.  Infantry 130 based in Namtu attacked the Man Dung KIA post. They were assisted by the Infantry 502 based in Kyaukme. Although there were no casualties from the Kachin side, government shelling destroyed several civilians' homes.  Monday saw both sides trade fire near the Man Dung KIA post.

    The clashes in northern Burma contradict statements by Thein Sein during his recent trip to Europe

    "There's no more hostilities, no more fighting all over the country, we have been able to end this kind of armed conflict," said the president  during a joint press conference with Austria's President Heinz Fischer earlier in the month. Thein Sein was in the Austrian capital as part of a 10 day tour of Europe.

    http://bnionline.net/index.php/news/kng/14984-clashes-continue-in-kachin-state.html

  2. Update #3

    Posted by Gordon Welty (Campaign Leader) on Mar 16

    Dear Supporters of Burma Community Builders,

    Not long ago, Michael Posner, Assistant Secretary of State, spoke to a Congressional Human Rights commission about the situation in Kachin State. Please read below, and encourage your friends to join our call to end the human rights abuses in Kachin State.

    Sincerely,

    Gordon

    Executive Director, Burma Community Builders

    "The government has signed ten ceasefire agreements with armed ethnic groups in the past year, including with the Karen...

    Dear Supporters of Burma Community Builders,

    Not long ago, Michael Posner, Assistant Secretary of State, spoke to a Congressional Human Rights commission about the situation in Kachin State. Please read below, and encourage your friends to join our call to end the human rights abuses in Kachin State.

    Sincerely,

    Gordon

    Executive Director, Burma Community Builders

    "The government has signed ten ceasefire agreements with armed ethnic groups in the past year, including with the Karen National Union with which it had previously been at war for over 60 years. Still, the government's previously longest running and most stable ceasefire with the Kachin broke down 18 months ago and fighting has intensified in recent months. In December, the military used helicopters and jets to attack Kachin Independence Army positions, marking the first use of air power against an armed ethnic group in decades. The Army continued using heavy artillery to shell KIA positions. Estimates are that tens of thousands of Kachin IDPs remain cut off from international humanitarian aid since July 2012. In our talks with the government, I stressed the urgent need to grant immediate access for humanitarian organizations to all those in need. Since the December escalation both sides have tentatively returned to the negotiating table, though a ceasefire will not be reached easily. In the immediate term we have pressed for, and the government has committed to, restoring international humanitarian access to IDPs both in government and in KIA-held territory.

    "There have been recent signs of improvement: major international humanitarian groups such as ICRC and UNOCHA have recently regained limited access to deliver aid to Laiza and Hpakant in Kachin State; we are hopeful that these initial visits will produce the long-term sustained access these organizations need. Smaller community based Kachin organizations we spoke with have emphasized the need for these larger organizations to continue to fund smaller service delivery groups who do not need government permission to deliver assistance to IDPs in difficult to reach places. We have continued to press the government to allow ongoing humanitarian access for all groups which is crucial not only for delivering assistance but also laying the groundwork for the kind of trust that a ceasefire requires."


  3. Update #2

    Posted by Gordon Welty (Campaign Leader) on Mar 8

    The Free Burma Rangers released a firsthand account today stating that the Burmese military continues to fortify its positions, build additional camps, and resupply, preparing for larger assaults. 25% of all battalions have been deployed to the conflict zone, and the number of internally displaced people from the ongoing violence remains near 75,000, with 10,000 Kachin having flooded into neighboring China. Many of the makeshift camps for the internally displaced camps are now one year...

    The Free Burma Rangers released a firsthand account today stating that the Burmese military continues to fortify its positions, build additional camps, and resupply, preparing for larger assaults. 25% of all battalions have been deployed to the conflict zone, and the number of internally displaced people from the ongoing violence remains near 75,000, with 10,000 Kachin having flooded into neighboring China. Many of the makeshift camps for the internally displaced camps are now one year old with no significant improvements for its inhabitants, who live in squalor in plywood huts covered by plastic tarp roofs. Poor sanitation, unclean drinking water, and lack of access to health care and education remain prevalent in the camps.

    One woman who lives close to the Burmese military held up her baby and stated: ""Yes I am afraid but if I leave what will our Kachin soldiers on the hill above us do? Who will feed them? Who will help them? How will they be encouraged? So as long as I can I will stay with my family here."

    The violence must end. Please help Burma Community Builders reach its goal of 2,000 signatories asking Secretary Kerry to help end the violence in Kachin State. Share with your friends and ask them to join today.

    Sincerely,

    Gordon

  4. Update #1

    Posted by Gordon Welty (Campaign Leader) on Mar 3

    Fighting Continues in Kachin State despite high level meetings between the Burmese government and the Kachin Independence Organization.

    "Fighting between the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and Burma military broke out last weekend near Sawlaw and Chipwe in northern Kachin state. The clashes started after government troops from Infantry Battalion 29 attacked the KIA Battalion 10 on Saturday. Chipwe, located north east of the Kachin state capital Myitkyina, is home to a small 2,000...

    Fighting Continues in Kachin State despite high level meetings between the Burmese government and the Kachin Independence Organization.

    "Fighting between the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and Burma military broke out last weekend near Sawlaw and Chipwe in northern Kachin state. The clashes started after government troops from Infantry Battalion 29 attacked the KIA Battalion 10 on Saturday. Chipwe, located north east of the Kachin state capital Myitkyina, is home to a small 2,000 MW dam built to supply electricity for the construction of the now officially suspended Myitsone dam."

    Our voices must be felt for the sake of ending violence in the region. Raise awareness by posting this Cause to your Facebook account, and inviting your friends to sign on. 

    Burma Community Builders




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