Activists discuss roadmap for democracy
Activists and politicians met in Fort Wayne for a Burmas Road Map Conference
Activists and politicians met in Fort Wayne for a Burma’s
Road Map Conference on October 11 and 12. “It was very productive. We
built more networks and made decisions to change the military regime in Burma,”
said Nai Banyadean, one of the Conference organizers. It had been busy days
for Banyadean and members of Monland Restoration Council since the Conference
organizers selected Fort Wayne as the host site. The small town is home to the
largest concentration of refugees from Burma in the United States, who mostly
fled the country after 1988 brutal military coup. Mon delegates from Thailand,
Canada and other parts of the USA traveled to Fort Wayne to join with two hundred
participants including Prime Minister of the government in exile Dr. Sein Win
and Karen National Union (KNU) leader Padoh Mahn Sha. It was reported some Mons
were not permitted visas for entering the U.S for this meeting. Various exiled
groups based in Thailand, Canada, India, England, Japan and other States from
the U.S flocked to Fort Wayne, the residence of 1,500 Burmese community, to
join this significant conference. Most delegates who work for a regime change
in Burma are dedicated leaders of ethnic and democratic organizations such as
NCUB (National Council of the Union of Burma), CRDB, NCGUB, NLD, MUL and FBC.
According to Kevin Kilbane of The News Sentinel, Fred Gilbert, a local social
worker who devotes most of his time to assisting refugees and immigrants said
it was the broad-based conference that had ever been held in the United States.
Messages and speeches from Representatives of Sen. Richard Lugar and the U.S
State Department’s Burma desk were delivered. The Mon team also drafted
a Road Map paper to present at the “Road Map for Democracy in Burma Conference,”
according to the source from the Mon Unity League. The Road Map, jointly drafted
by umbrella organizations Mon Unity League and United Mon Fronts, implemented
to begin a tripartite dialogue in Burma stating that neither the military junta
nor the opposition democratic force can command the support necessary for a
transition to democracy in Burma without participation from the ethnic nationalities.
Pon Nya Mon of MRC said, “We don’t discuss our paper seriously,
it’s only a proposal to contribute the conference as an alternative while
there are Road Maps proposed by other parties”. He told Kao Wao that while
the Mon supports the role of United Nations to bring peace, equality and democracy
on Burma, this road map urges Burmese junta to be obligated accordingly in line
with the UN. The Mon Road Map has five steps; Transitional Period, Tripartite
dialogue process, Forming an interim government, Holding new elections and Forming
a newly elected government. Meanwhile, Mon MP Nai Thaung Shein and former New
Mon State Party leaders in exile urged the Mon not to support the Road Map proposed
by the military regime in Burma. At the two-day conference in Indiana’s
Purdue University, participants spent most of their time developing ideas in
strategy planning, solidarity building among nationalities and international
campaign. Participants and local community were joyfully entertained by M3 (Mon
Modern Music) Band and cultural performance in the evening on October 12 after
the meaningful gathering.