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Thai Radio Breaks Into Burma



Thai Radio Breaks Into Burma 
By Denis D. Gray 
Associated Press Writer 
Thursday, January 1, 1998; 2:27 p.m. EST 

DAWN GWIN CAMP, Thai-Burma Border (AP) -- In a steamy jungle hut, a
half-dozen young broadcasters tick off their routine stories: Burmese
troops torching an ethnic minority village, women forced into slave
labor, a student tortured for passing out pro-democracy pamphlets. 

Their target audience is a few miles away, across the Salween River in
Burma, one of the world's most closed societies. 

Their news reports, along with radio dramas and music programs, are
produced in this isolated, guerrilla camp in northern Thailand by
one-time student activists. Then they're sent by foot, vehicle and plane
to Oslo, Norway, to be broadcast back by short-wave on the Democratic
Voice of Burma, or DVB. 

Radio remains the prime news source in impoverished Burma, and millions
avidly tune in any of four foreign stations to hear what is happening in
their own, rigidly controlled country. 

Besides the DVB, Burmese-language programing is carried by the British
Broadcasting Corp., the Voice of America and the Washington D.C.-based
Radio Free Asia. Although audience figures aren't available, all four
receive hundreds of letters from listeners inside Burma. 

A strong supporter of Burma's pro-democracy forces, Norway funds the
5-year-old DVB, which hopes to improve reception quality inside Burma by
setting up a relay station, perhaps somewhere in the former Soviet Union.


Burmese get their official news from the Burma Broadcasting Service, run
by a military regime that crushed a pro-democracy revolt in 1988 and sent
thousands fleeing to frontier areas. 

The regime periodically accuses Western news organizations, including the
four stations, of trying to destabilize the country. But listening to
foreign broadcasts is not illegal. 

``We are not putting out a political line. We just believe people should
have a different point of view,'' says Dan Southerland, executive
director of the U.S.-government funded Radio Free Asia, which also
broadcasts to China, Tibet, Vietnam, North Korea, Laos and Cambodia. 

``The long-term effect is hard to predict. But it seems to be good for
morale. It gives Burmese a connection to the outside world,'' Southerland
said in an interview. 

All four stations focus heavily on the pro-democracy movement in Burma,
led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, and on human rights
violations by the military government. 

VOA, BBC and RFA say they present objective news reports, while the
Democratic Voice of Burma is clearly a radio with a cause, and often one
on the run. 

Aye Aye Khaing, a 27-year-old radio reporter, had to flee for her life
when Burmese troops attacked their clandestine base and studio inside
Burma last year. She has moved camp seven times since 1991, when she fled
Rangoon after twice being jailed for political activism. 

A daughter, 5-year-old December, was born in one of the frontier camps,
from which the former students and other anti-government groups have
tried to mount a resistance movement. 

At past locations, Aye Aye Khaing recalled, the ``studio'' consisted of
some recording equipment sheltered by blankets to block out sounds of
jungle wildlife. 

Now, or at least until the next move, the studio at this headquarters of
the All Burma Students Democratic Front has a concrete slab for flooring,
some blue plastic insulation, one small fan and a portable electric
generator which is powered when recordings are made. 

The reporters say they try to be as factual as possible, often trying to
find several sources to confirm an event. Some of their dramas are
compelling, and strictly educational programs are also featured. 

But the radio's stance is clear: it is strongly opposed to the military
regime and does not offer the government's version of developments. 

Only one of the radio reporters here had done any previous work in
journalism, although some have been receiving training from the Indochina
Media Memorial Fund and other international media organizations. 

``My only experience in radio was listening to it,'' says Aye Aye Khaing.


One of her colleagues, Tin Maung Lwin, 48, held degrees in accounting,
law and zoology and says he was apolitical until circumstances forced him
to flee Rangoon in 1989. 

``Even educated people like myself knew very little about democracy and
human rights,'' he said. ``Now I know, so I want to tell my people.'' 


© Copyright 1998 The Associated Press