Tuesday, 2 March 2010

တရုတ္ႏိုင္ငံရဲ႕ ျမန္မာ ျပည္ေပၚ သေဘာထားမ်ားကို အနီးကပ္ဆံုး ထင္ဟပ္ထားတဲ့ စာတမ္း

China’s relations with Myanmar have come under intense media glare in recent years due to a lingering perception, especiallyin the West, that China as a big and influential neighbour has the leverageto influence developments in Myanmar in a positive direction ...more...

2 comments :

Anonymous said...

This paper is very very biased and does not reflect the actual situation in Burma.

This paper was written by two pro Chinese scholars who know nothing of how Burmese people were suffering under the incompetent regime or also do not care about the worsening humanitarian crises is Burma.

Their sole concern was their own region Yunnan to prosper at the expense of Burmese people.

It also stated that Su Kyi would not even last a month if she was given a prime minister position. In reality, she was never given a chance to lead the people of Burma for a day and her party was severely restricted.

I suggest the scholars who wrote this paper to go live in Burma and see with their own eyes that how Burmese people suffer under the regime.

Anonymous said...

Since Independence, China never ever had given Myanmar a chance to prove itself. The late Mao Zedong made Myanmar hectic through out with its CPB (Communist Party of Burma) till today. Till today? Yes definitely. Because of Wa’s “China-man’s attitude”.

Myanmar did not discourage, though sad by the recent mind-sets of the ethnic armed groups, but to take these as a challenge and a lesson. It is a challenge that we should unite as one people, nation and one Myanmar under its leaders (Whoever the leaders may be).

However, Myanmar should never do anything that is not in keeping with due legal process, nor descend into trial by media. Otherwise, the nation will weaken its own case, and who knows, the opportunist nations nearby or far might jump in to the cause.

Myanmar is not a multi-party democracy. The next generation will produce leaders working towards such a democracy. The point is, multi-party democracy must evolve naturally in Myanmar. It must be a Myanmar peoples’ effort. It cannot be prodded or opposed by Chinese.

The Chinese are more than fond of sticking their noses into weaker Myanmar’s backside.

Things should have changed to better after that fellow the late “god crazy Mao”. But sadly became worse, more greedy, aggressive and wily.

China will remain the biggest trouble maker for Myanmar, and in the world.