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THE INDIFFERENT SPDC GENERALS' PREV



Subject: THE INDIFFERENT SPDC GENERALS' PREVENTIVE MEASURES  WILL BE VOID

HE INDIFFERENT SPDC GENERALS' PREVETIVE MEASURES  WILL BE VOID
by Julien Moe
11st October 1999

Since the hostage crisis, the SPDC generals have been busy holding meetings
to deter possible political violence inside Burma.  So far the dissident
students responsible for the incident that made headlines in the media are
now in the safe haven far from the arrest warrants of the Thai authorities.
SPDC has been preparing to launch attacks where they believe is a haven for
these student fighters. 

The United Nations representative will be in Burma to discuss the  political
gridlock between the junta and the democratic opposition. It is not the
people's will against the minority group of military brasshats. Today the
Burmese army is no loger the people's army on which the Burmese can depend
for security and progress. Because it has been the army terrorising its own
people to serve just a faction of a few generals. These generals have never
been to the battle field whereas generals from the rest of the world have to
go to the front when a war breaks out.  

The dissident students in Thailand planned to kidnap the Secretary 1 when he
was on a state visit there. Unfortunately the plan became an abortive coup.
Today security has been tightened along the borders surrounding Burma.
Security is tightened but the political stability is loose. The hostage
incident that was staged by the dissident students would never have occured
and it would never have been an international incident if SPDC generals
would sideline some personal interests and initiate political reforms by
having a dialogue with NLD, the party voted by the working people, the
farmers and the army itself. Sanctions have been imposed on Burma. Protests
have been staged by dissident groups ubiquitously. Boycotts have been called
for and they are happening all over the world. Governments impose sanctions
to show their displeasure with the undemocratic regime in Burma. Protests
and boycotts have been staged by dissident groups not because they do not
love their motherland but because they want to show their displeasure with
the government.