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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Cheery Zahau

Interviewed January 8, 2010

I think the Burma democracy movement, first we’re trying to do mass demonstrations, people’s movement, which has shown in the 1980s when thousands and thousands of students, monks and nuns and, you know, government services men and women came on the street and demonstrated and demanded political change. That we have seen. And in the 1996 students uprising. Happened again in 2007. The monks uprising happened again.

In between there are small demonstrations happening. In the whole Burma democracy movement historical background, so one of the strategies is a people’s movement. But the Burmese regime has never respected the people’s movement or the desire of the people. As a result of that, some people had to operate along the Burma border in Thailand, India, China, in different ways.

And at the moment we use two main strategies. One is capacity building for grassroots people. So we keep doing programs on human rights training, women’s right training, community development, leadership training. So that we empower people so that one day they will stand up for their rights. That’s one strategy that we’re using. And the other strategy is calling the international community to act on Burma – to do something about Burma. So I think at the moment we are focusing on these two strategies.

The democracy movement in Burma needs help from the world, the international community. Although some of the policy makers or some people would say, “It´s been too long. It doesn´t work this way. We should go in there. We should go in Burma.”

But two things that we need to remember: the democracy movement are representing the wish and the desires and the will of the people. They are not the rulers. They are not the government positions. But they represent the desires of the cause of the people in Burma.

So no matter how people see us, we are still representing what they want the world to do. What they wish the government of Burma to do. So we will keep doing this unless there´s a political change in Burma. That´s one thing that we need to remember.