appeal for Burma's women



June 19, Boston Globe
An appeal for Burma's women



IN A FRAUGHT coincidence, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will be
chairing a United Nations Security Council session on violence against
women in conflict situations today, on the 63d birthday of Burma's Nobel
Peace Prize winner, Aung San Suu Kyi. That devotee of nonviolence has been
kept under house arrest for 13 of the last 19 years by a military junta
that has committed the vilest crimes against women.



Since early May, the regime of General Than Shwe
kept supplies and aid workers from reaching more than 2 million victims of
Cyclone Nargis. Among the uprooted, UN officials say, are 35,000 pregnant
women in need of medical care. The junta's disregard for those women is
emblematic of what Secretary of Defense Robert Gates called the regime's
"criminal neglect."



The Women's League of Burma, an umbrella organization of women's rights
groups in the country, has called for a binding UN Security Council
resolution exposing the junta to criminal prosecution for its abuses
"against people in Burma, particularly women and girls." These abuses have
been worst in minority ethnic areas where, the league said, soldiers have
been "conscripting women as sex slaves and committing gang rape,
mutilation, and murder."



So it is fitting that Senator John Kerry sent a letter this week to Rice,
decrying the junta's "widespread and systematic effort to restrict the
flow of international aid" and asking the State Department to determine if
"the junta's inexcusable response to Tropical Cyclone Nargis constitutes a
crime against humanity under international law."



Kerry's letter goes to the heart of the matter. Than Shwe ought to be
arraigned at the International Criminal Court in the Hague for crimes that
rival those of numerous other mass murderers who have wielded political
power in the past half century. Until then, and until Suu Kyi and all her
fellow political prisoners are freed, the nations of the world should
treat Than Shwe's regime as the outlaw it is.

Like this story?
Join World Pulse now to read more inspiring stories and connect with women speaking out across the globe!
Leave a supportive comment to encourage this author
Tell your own story
Explore more stories on topics you care about