Burma, officially the
Union of
Myanmar, is the largest country by geographical area in
mainland
Southeast Asia or
Indochina.
The country is bordered by China
on the northeast, Laos
on the east,
Thailand
on the
southeast, Bangladesh
on the west, India
on the
northwest and the Bay of
Bengal
to the southwest with the Andaman Sea
defining its southern periphery. One-third
of Burma's total perimeter, 1,930 kilometres (1,199 mi), forms
an uninterrupted
coastline.
The country's culture, heavily influenced by neighbours, is based
on
Theravada Buddhism intertwined with
local elements. Burma's diverse
population has played a major role in defining its politics,
history and demographics in modern times, and the country continues
to struggle to mend its
ethnic tensions. The military has
dominated government since
General Ne Win led
a coup in 1962 that toppled the civilian government of
U Nu. Burma remains under the tight control of the
military-led
State
Peace and Development Council.
Name
The name "Burma" is derived from the Burmese word "Bamar"
(

), which in turn is the colloquial form
of Myanmar (

) (or Mranma in old
Burmese), both of which historically
referred to the majority
Burman (or the
Bamar). Depending on the
register used the pronunciation would
be “Bama” or
Myanmah. The name “Burma” has been in use in
English since the time of
British
colonial rule.
In 1989, the military government
officially changed the English
translations of many colonial-era names, including the name of the
country, to
"Myanmar". This prompted one scholar to coin
the term "Myanmarification" to refer to the top-down programme of
political and cultural reform in the context of which the renaming
was done. The renaming remains a contested issue.
While some of the name changes are closer to their actual Burmese
pronunciations, many opposition groups and countries continue to
oppose their use in English because they recognize neither the
legitimacy of the ruling military government nor its authority to
rename the country or towns in English. Various non-Burman ethnic
groups choose to not recognize the name because the term Myanmar
has historically been used as a label for the majority ethnic group
rather than for the country.
Various world entities have chosen to accept or reject the name
change. The
United Nations, of which
Burma (under the name Myanmar) is a member, endorsed the name
change five days after its announcement by the junta.
However, governments
of many countries including the United States
, the United Kingdom
, Australia, France
, and
Canada
still refer to the country as "Burma", with varying
levels of recognition of the validity of the name change
itself. Others, including the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations and the governments of Germany
, Japan
, China
and Russia
recognise
"Myanmar" as the official name.
Media usage is also mixed. In spite of the usage by the US
government, some American news outlets including
The New York Times,
The Wall Street Journal, The
International Herald
Tribune and
CNN, and international news
agencies the
Associated
Press,
Reuters and
Agence France-Presse
have adopted the name "Myanmar". The name "Burma" is still widely
used by other news outlets, including
Voice of America,
The Washington Post, the
BBC,
ITN,
The Times,
The Times of India and
Time. Other sources often use combined
terms such as "Burma, also known as Myanmar." Some media outlets
that use "Myanmar" refer to "Burma" as the nation's "colonial
name."
"Myanmar" is the local short-form name
Myanmar
Naingngandaw, the name used by the regime currently in power
in the country. While the etymology of the name is unclear, it has
been used since the
13th century,
primarily as a reference to the Myanma ethnic group. Until the
mid-
19th century, rulers in the region
identified themselves with the areas that they ruled. For example,
the
18th century king,
Alaungpaya alternately referred to himself as the
ruler of
Tampradipa and Thunaparanta,
Ramanadesa,
and
Kamboza (all alternate names of places in the
Irrawaddy Valley) in correspondence with the
East India Company.
The Court of Ava was
the first to use this name to refer to its kingdom in the mid-19th
Century, when its power was declining, when the kingdom was
confined to the Irrawaddy
Valley
which was predominantly Myanma in character, and at
a time when the Myanma ethnic identity first began to develop a
political identity. In other European languages, Burma is
known as , , and .
Confusion among English speakers on how to pronounce 'Myanmar'
gives rise to pronunciations such as , , and . The BBC recommends
or .
Geography
Burma, which has a total area of , is the largest country in
mainland
Southeast Asia, and the
40th-largest in the world.
It is
bordered to the northwest by Chittagong Division
of Bangladesh
and Mizoram
, Manipur
, Nagaland
and Arunachal Pradesh
of India to the northwest. It shares its longest
borders with Tibet to the north and Yunnan
of China to
the northeast for a total of . It is bounded by
Laos
and Thailand
to the
southeast. Burma has of contiguous coastline along the
Bay of
Bengal
and Andaman
Sea
to the southwest and the south, which forms
one-third of its total perimeter.
In the
north, the Hengduan
Shan
mountains form the border with China.
Hkakabo Razi
, located in Kachin State
, at an elevation of , is the highest point in
Burma. Three mountain ranges, namely the Rakhine
Yoma, the Bago Yoma, and the Shan
Plateau exist within Burma, all of which run north-to-south
from the Himalayas
. The mountain chains divide Burma's three
river systems, which are the Ayeyarwady
, Salween
, and the Sittaung
rivers. The Ayeyarwady River, Burma's longest river, nearly
long, flows into the
Gulf of
Martaban. Fertile plains exist in the valleys between the
mountain chains. The majority of Burma's population lives in the
Ayeyarwady valley, which is situated between the Rakhine Yoma and
the Shan Plateau.
Much of
the country lies between the Tropic of Cancer
and the Equator. It
lies in the
monsoon region of Asia, with its
coastal regions receiving over of rain annually. Annual
rainfall in the
delta region is approximately , while average
annual rainfall in the Dry Zone, which is located in central Burma,
is less than . Northern regions of the country are the coolest,
with average temperatures of . Coastal and delta regions have mean
temperatures of .
The country's slow economic growth has contributed to the
preservation of much of its environment and
ecosystems. Forests, including dense tropical
growth and valuable
teak in lower Burma, cover
over 49% of the country. Other trees indigenous to the region
include
acacia,
bamboo,
ironwood,
mangrove,
michelia champaca coconut and
betel palm
and
rubber has been introduced. In the
highlands of the north,
oak,
pine and various
rhododendrons cover much of the land. The lands
along the coast support all varieties of
tropical fruits. In the Dry Zone, vegetation
is sparse and stunted.
Typical
jungle animals, particularly
tigers and
leopards, are common
in Burma. In upper Burma, there are
rhinoceros, wild
buffalo,
wild boars,
deer,
antelope, and
elephants, which are also tamed or bred in
captivity for use as work animals, particularly in the
lumber industry. Smaller
mammals are also numerous, ranging from
gibbons and
monkeys to
flying foxes and
tapirs. The
abundance of birds is notable with over 800 species, including
parrots,
peafowl,
pheasants,
crows,
herons, and
paddy.
Among
reptile species there are
crocodiles,
geckos,
cobras,
Burmese pythons,
and
turtles. Hundreds of species of
freshwater fish are
wide-ranging, plentiful and are very important food sources.
History
Summary
After the
First Burmese War, the Ava
kingdom
ceded the provinces of Manipur
, Tenassarim, and Arakan to the British.
Rangoon
and southern Burma were incorporated into British India in 1853. All of Burma
came directly or indirectly under
British
India in 1886 after the
Third
Burmese War and the fall of Mandalay. Burma was administered as
a province of
British India until 1937
when it became a separate, self-governing colony. The country
became independent from the United Kingdom on 4 January 1948, as
the
"Union of Burma". It became the
"Socialist
Republic of the Union of Burma" on 4 January, 1974, before
reverting to the
"Union of Burma" on 23 September 1988. On
18 June, 1989, the
State Law and Order
Restoration Council (SLORC) adopted the name
"Union of
Myanmar" for English transliteration. This controversial name
change in English, while accepted in the
UN and in many countries, is not recognised
by opposition groups and by nations such as the United Kingdom and
the United States.
Early history
Archeological evidence suggests that civilization in the region
which now forms Burma is quite old. The oldest archeological find
was of
cave paintings and a
Holocene assemblage in a
hunter-gatherer cave site in
Padah Lin in Shan State.
The
Mon people are thought to be the
earliest group to migrate into the lower
Ayeyarwady valley, and by the mid-900s BC were
dominant in southern Burma.
The
Tibeto-Burman speaking Pyu arrived later in the 1st
century BC, and established several city states – of which
Sri Ksetra
was the most powerful – in central Ayeyarwady
valley. The Mon and Pyu kingdoms were an active overland
trade route between India and China.
The Pyu
kingdoms entered a period of rapid decline in early 9th century AD when the powerful kingdom of
Nanzhao (in present-day Yunnan
) invaded the
Ayeyarwady valley several times.
Bagan (1044 – 1287)
Tibeto-Burman speaking Burmans, or the Bamar, began
migrating to the Ayeyarwady valley from present-day Yunnan
's Nanzhao
kingdom starting in 7th century
AD. Filling the power gap left by the Pyu, the
Burmans established a small kingdom centred in Bagan
in
849. But it was not until the reign of King
Anawrahta (1044 – 1077) that Bagan's influence
expanded throughout much of present-day Burma.
After
Anawrahta's capture of the Mon capital of Thaton
in 1057, the
Burmans adopted Theravada Buddhism from the Mons. The
Burmese script was created, based on
the
Mon script, during the reign of
King
Kyanzittha (1084 – 1112). Prosperous
from trade, Bagan kings built many magnificent temples and
pagodas throughout the country – many of which can
still be seen today.
Bagan's power slowly waned in
13th
century.
Kublai Khan's
Mongol forces invaded northern Burma starting in
1277, and sacked Bagan city itself in 1287. Bagan's over two
century reign of Ayeyarwady valley and its periphery was
over.
Small kingdoms (1287 – 1531)
The Mongols could not stay for long in the searing Ayeyarwady
valley.
But the Tai-Shan
people from Yunnan who came down with the Mongols fanned out to the Ayeyarwady valley, Shan states, Laos
, Siam
and Assam
, and became
powerful players in Southeast
Asia.
The Bagan empire was irreparably broken up into several small
kingdoms:
This period was characterized by constant warfare between Ava and
Bago, and to a lesser extent, Ava and the Shans. Ava briefly
controlled Rakhine (1379 – 1430) and came close to defeating Bago a
few times, but could never quite reassemble the lost empire.
Nevertheless, Burmese culture entered a golden age. Hanthawady Bago
prospered.
Bago's Queen Shin Saw Bu (1453 – 1472)
raised the gilded Shwedagon
Pagoda
to its present height.
By the late-
15th century, constant
warfare had left Ava greatly weakened. Its peripheral areas became
either independent or autonomous.
In 1486, King Minkyinyo (1486 – 1531) of Taungoo
broke away from Ava and established a small
independent kingdom. In 1527,
Mohnyin (Shan: Mong
Yang)
Shans finally captured Ava,
upsetting the delicate power balance that had existed for nearly
two centuries. The Shans would rule Upper Burma until 1555.
Taungoo (1531 – 1752)
Reinforced by fleeing Burmans from Ava, the
minor Burman kingdom of Taungoo
under its young, ambitious king Tabinshwehti (1531 – 1551) defeated the more
powerful Mon kingdom at Bago, reunifying all of
Lower Burma by 1540. Tabinshwehti's
successor King Bayinnaung (1551–1581)
would go on to conquer Upper Burma
(1555), Manipur
(1556), Shan states
(1557), Chiang Mai
(1557), Ayutthaya
(1564, 1569) and Lan Xang (1574), bringing
most of western South East Asia under his rule. Bayinnaung died in
1581, preparing to invade Rakhine, a
maritime power controlling the entire coastline west of Rakhine
Yoma, up to Chittagong
province in Bengal
.
Bayinnaung's massive empire unraveled soon after his death in 1581.
Ayutthaya
Siamese had driven out the Burmese by
1593 and went on to take Tanintharyi
. In 1599,
Rakhine
forces aided by the Portuguese mercenaries sacked the kingdom's
capital
Bago.
Chief Portuguese mercenary Filipe de
Brito e Nicote (Burmese: Nga Zinga) promptly rebelled
against his Rakhine masters and established Portuguese rule in
Thanlyin
(Syriam), then the most important seaport in
Burma. The country was in chaos.
The Burmese under King
Anaukpetlun
(1605–1628) regrouped and defeated the Portuguese in 1611.
Anaukpetlun reestablished a smaller reconstituted kingdom based in
Ava covering Upper Burma, Lower Burma and Shan states (but without
Rakhine or Taninthayi). After the reign of King Thalun (1629 –
1648), who rebuilt the war-torn country, the kingdom experienced a
slow and steady decline for the next 100 years.
The Mons successfully
rebelled starting in 1740 with French
help and
Siamese
encouragement, broke away Lower Burma by 1747, and finally put an
end to the House of Taungoo in 1752 when they took Ava
.
Konbaung (1752 – 1885)
King
Alaungpaya (1752 – 1760), established the
Konbaung Dynasty in Shwebo
in
1752. He founded Yangon
in
1755. By his death in 1760, Alaungpaya had reunified the
country. In 1767, King
Hsinbyushin (1763
– 1777) sacked
Ayutthya.
The
Qing
Dynasty
of China invaded four times from 1765 to 1769
without success. The Chinese invasions allowed the new
Siamese kingdom based in Bangkok to repel the Burmese out of
Siam
by the late
1770s.
King
Bodawpaya (1782 – 1819) failed
repeatedly to reconquer Siam in 1780s and 1790s. Bodawpaya did
manage to capture the western kingdom of
Rakhine, which had been largely independent since
the fall of Bagan, in 1784.
Bodawpaya also formally annexed Manipur
, a rebellion-prone protectorate, in
1813.
King
Bagyidaw's (1819 – 1837) general Maha Bandula put down a rebellion in Manipur
in 1819 and captured then independent kingdom of
Assam
in 1819 (again in 1821). The new conquests
brought the Burmese adjacent to the British India. The British
defeated the Burmese in the
First Anglo-Burmese War (1824 –
1826).
Burma had to cede Assam
, Manipur
, Rakhine (Arakan) and
Tanintharyi
(Tenessarim).
In 1852, the British attacked a much weakened Burma during a
Burmese palace power struggle.
After the Second Anglo-Burmese War, which
lasted 3 months, the British had captured the remaining coastal
provinces: Ayeyarwady, Yangon
and Bago, naming the territories as Lower Burma.
King
Mindon (1853 – 1878) founded Mandalay
in 1859 and made it his capital. He
skillfully navigated the growing threats posed by the competing
interests of Britain and France. In the process, Mindon had to
renounce
Kayah (Karenni) states in 1875. His
successor, King
Thibaw (1878 – 1885), was
largely ineffectual.
In 1885, the British, alarmed by the French
conquest of neighboring Laos
, occupied
Upper Burma. The Third Anglo-Burmese War (1885)
lasted a mere one month insofar as capturing the capital Mandalay
was concerned. The Burmese royal family was exiled to
Ratnagiri
, India. British forces spent at least
another four years pacifying the country – not only in the Burmese
heartland but also in the Shan,
Chin and
Kachin hill areas. By some accounts, minor
insurrections did not end until 1896.
Colonial era (1886 – 1948)
The
British
began
conquering Burma in 1824. For a period of sixty-two years,
Burma was under British control. By 1886, Britain had incorporated
it into the
British Raj. Burma was
administered as a province of
British
India until 1937 when it became a separate, self-governing
colony. To stimulate trade and facilitate changes, the British
brought in
Indians and
Chinese, who quickly displaced the
Burmese in urban areas.
To this day Rangoon
and Mandalay
have large ethnic
Indian populations. Railroads and schools were built, as well as
a large number of prisons, including the infamous Insein Prison
, then as now used for political prisoners. Burmese
resentment was strong and was vented in violent riots that
paralyzed Yangon on occasion all the way until the 1930s. Much of
the discontent was caused by a perceived disrespect for
Burmese culture and traditions, for example,
what the British termed the Shoe Question: the colonizers' refusal
to remove their shoes upon entering Buddhist temples or other holy
places. In October 1919,
Eindawya
Pagoda in Mandalay was the scene of violence when tempers
flared after scandalized Buddhist monks attempted to physically
expel a group of shoe-wearing British visitors. The leader of the
monks was later sentenced to life imprisonment for attempted
murder. Such incidents inspired the Burmese resistance to use
Buddhism as a rallying point for their
cause. Buddhist monks became the vanguards of the independence
movement, and many died while protesting. One monk-turned-martyr
was
U Wisara, who died in prison after a
166-day hunger strike to protest a rule that forbade him from
wearing his Buddhist robes while imprisoned.
Eric Blair (
George Orwell), served in
the
Indian Imperial Police in
Burma for five years; his experience yielded the novel
Burmese Days (1934) and the essays
"
A Hanging" (1931) and "
Shooting an Elephant" (1936). An
earlier writer with the same convoluted career path was
Saki. During the colonial period, intermarriage between
European male settlers and Burmese women, as well as between
Anglo-Indians (who arrived with the British) and Burmese caused the
birth of the
Anglo-Burmese community.
This influential community was to dominate the country during
colonial rule and through the mid 1960's.

The Colonial Flag (1937 – 1948)
On 1 April 1937, Burma became a separately administered territory,
independent of the Indian administration. The vote for keeping
Burma in India, or as a separate colony "khwe-yay-twe-yay" divided
the populace, and laid the ground work for the insurgencies to come
after independence. In the 1940s, the
Thirty Comrades, commanded by
Aung San, founded the
Burma Independence Army. The Thirty
Comrades received training in Japan.
During
World War II, Burma became a
major frontline in the
Southeast Asian
Theatre. The British administration collapsed ahead of the
advancing Japanese troops, jails and asylums were opened and
Rangoon was deserted except for the many
Anglo-Burmese and Indians who remained
at their posts. A stream of some 300,000 refugees fled across the
jungles into India; known as 'The Trek', all but 30,000 of those
300,000 arrived in India. Initially the Japanese-led
Burma Campaign succeeded and the British were
expelled from most of Burma, but the British counter-attacked using
primarily troops of the
British
Indian Army. By July 1945, the British had retaken the country.
Although many Burmese fought initially for the Japanese, some
Burmese, mostly from the ethnic minorities, also served in the
British Burma Army. In 1943, the Chin Levies and
Kachin Levies were formed in the border
districts of Burma still under British administration. The Burma
Rifles fought as part of the
Chindits under
General Orde Wingate from 1943 to 1945.
Later in the war, the Americans created
American-Kachin Rangers who also fought
against the Japanese. Many others fought with the British
Special Operations Executive.
The
Burma Independence Army
under the command of
Aung San and the
Arakan National Army fought with the Japanese from 1942 – 1944, but
switched allegiance to the Allied side in 1945.
In 1947, Aung San became Deputy Chairman of the Executive Council
of Burma, a transitional government. But in July 1947, political
rivals assassinated
Aung San and several
cabinet members.
Democratic republic (1948 – 1962)
On 4 January 1948, the nation became an independent
republic, named the
Union of Burma, with
Sao Shwe Thaik as its first President
and
U Nu as its first Prime Minister. Unlike
most other former British colonies and overseas territories, it did
not become a member of the
Commonwealth. A
bicameral parliament was
formed, consisting of a
Chamber of
Deputies and a
Chamber of
Nationalities.
The geographical area Burma encompasses today can be traced to the
Panglong Agreement, which combined Burma Proper, which consisted of
Lower Burma and
Upper Burma, and the
Frontier Areas, which had been administered
separately by the British.
In 1961,
U Thant, then the Union of Burma's
Permanent Representative to the United Nations and former Secretary
to the Prime Minister, was elected
Secretary-General of the
United Nations; he was the first non-Westerner to head any
international organization and would serve as UN Secretary-General
for ten years. Among the Burmese to work at the UN when he was
Secretary-General was a young
Aung San
Suu Kyi, winner of the 1991 Nobel peace prize.
Rule by military junta (1962 – present)
Democratic rule ended in 1962 when
General Ne Win
led a military
coup d'état. He
ruled for nearly 26 years and pursued policies under the rubric of
the
Burmese Way to
Socialism. Between 1962 and 1974, Burma was ruled by a
revolutionary council headed by the general, and almost all aspects
of society (business, media, production) were nationalized or
brought under government control (including the
Boy Scouts). In an effort to consolidate power, Ne
Win and many other top generals resigned from the military and took
civilian posts and, from 1974, instituted elections in a
one party system.
Between 1974 and 1988, Burma was effectively ruled by Ne Win
through the
Burma
Socialist Programme Party (BSPP), which from 1964 until 1988
was the sole political party. During this period, Burma became one
of the world's most impoverished countries.
The Burmese Way to
Socialism combined Soviet
-style
nationalization and central
planning with the governmental implementation of superstitious
beliefs. Criticism was scathing, such as an article
published in a February 1974 issue of
Newsweek magazine describing the Burmese Way
to Socialism as 'an amalgam of Buddhist and Marxist illogic'.
Almost from the beginning, there were sporadic protests against the
military rule, many of which were organized by students, and these
were almost always violently suppressed by the government.
On 7 July
1962, the government broke up demonstrations at Rangoon
University
, killing 15 students. In 1974, the military
violently suppressed anti-government protests at the funeral of
U Thant. Student protests in 1975, 1976 and
1977 were quickly suppressed by overwhelming force.
Ne Win's
rise to power in 1962 and his relentless persecution of "resident
aliens" (immigrant groups not recognised as citizens of the
Union of
Burma
) led to an exodus of some 300,000 Burmese Indians. They migrated to
escape
racial
discrimination and wholesale nationalisation of private
enterprise a few years later in 1964.
A new
constitution of the
Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma was adopted in
1974.
Hundreds of thousands of
Rohingya Muslims
fled Burma and many refugees inundated neighbouring Bangladesh
including 200,000 in 1978 as a result of the
King Dragon operation in
Arakan.
In 1988, unrest over economic mismanagement and political
oppression by the government led to widespread pro-democracy
demonstrations throughout the country known as the
8888 Uprising. Security forces killed
thousands of demonstrators, and General
Saw
Maung staged a coup d'état and formed the
State Law and Order
Restoration Council (SLORC). In 1989, SLORC declared
martial law after widespread protests. The
military government finalized plans for People's Assembly elections
on 31 May 1989. SLORC changed the country's official English name
from the "Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma" to the "Union
of Myanmar" in 1989.
In May 1990, the government held free elections for the first time
in almost 30 years. The
National League for Democracy
(NLD), the party of
Aung San Suu
Kyi,
won 392 out of a
total 489 seats, but the election results were annulled by
SLORC, which refused to step down. Led by
Than
Shwe since 1992, the military regime has made cease-fire
agreements with most ethnic guerrilla groups. In 1992, SLORC
unveiled plans to create a
new
constitution through the National Convention, which began 9
January 1993. In 1997, the State Law and Order Restoration Council
was renamed the
State Peace and Development
Council (SPDC).
On 23 June 1997, Burma was admitted into the
Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN). The National Convention continues to
convene and adjourn. Many major political parties, particularly the
NLD, have been absent or excluded, and little progress has been
made.
On
27 March 2006, the military junta, which had moved the national
capital from Yangon
to a site
near Pyinmana
in November 2005, officially named the new capital
Naypyidaw
, meaning "city of the kings". The
CIA World Factbook,
however, still considers the capital to be Rangoon.
In
November 2006, the International Labour
Organization (ILO) announced it will be seeking – at the
International Court of
Justice
– "to prosecute members of the ruling Myanmar junta
for crimes against humanity" over the continuous forced labour of its citizens by the
military. According to the ILO, an estimated 800,000 people
are subject to forced labour in Myanmar.
The
2007 Burmese
anti-government protests were a series of anti-government
protests that started in Burma on 15 August 2007. The immediate
cause of the protests was mainly the unannounced decision of the
ruling
junta, the State Peace and
Development Council, to remove
fuel
subsidies which caused the price of
diesel and
petrol to
suddenly rise as much as double, and the price of
compressed natural gas for buses to
increase fivefold in less than a week. The protest demonstrations
were at first dealt with quickly and harshly by the junta, with
dozens of protesters arrested and detained. Starting 18 September,
the protests were led by thousands of
Buddhist
monks, and those protests were allowed to proceed until a
renewed government crackdown on 26 September. During the
crack-down, there were rumors of disagreement within the Burmese
military, but none were confirmed. Some news reports referred to
the protests as the Saffron Revolution.
During the 2007 anti-government protests a significant role was
played by Mrs.
Aung San Suu Kyi,
the leader of the opposition to the Burmese military government.
Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi had been under strict house arrest since
1989. In September 2007, hundreds of monks paid respects to her at
the gate of her home, which was the first time in four years that
people were able to see her in public. She was then given a second
public appearance on 29 September, when she was allowed to leave
house arrest briefly and meet with a UN envoy trying to persuade
the junta to ease its crackdown against a pro-democracy uprising,
to which the Myanmar government reluctantly agreed.
On 7 February 2008, SPDC announced that a referendum for the
Constitution would be held, and Elections by 2010. The
Burmese constitutional
referendum, 2008 was held on 10 May and promised a
"discipline-flourishing democracy" for the country in the
future.
World governments remain divided on how to deal with the military
junta. Calls for further sanctions by Canada, United Kingdom,
United States, and France are opposed by neighboring countries; in
particular, China has stated its belief that "sanctions or pressure
will not help to solve the issue". There is some disagreement over
whether sanctions are the most effective approach to dealing with
the junta, such as from a Cato Institute study and from prominent
Burmese such as
Thant Myint-U (a
former senior UN official and Cambridge historian), who have opined
that sanctions may have caused more harm than good to the Burmese
people.
In 1950, the
Karen became the largest
of 20 minority groups participating in an insurgency against the
government of Burma. The conflict continues as of 2009. In 2004,
the BBC, citing
aid agencies, estimates
that up to 200,000 Karen have been driven from their homes during
decades of war, with 120,000 more refugees from Burma, mostly
Karen, living in
refugee camps on the
Thai side of the border. Many accuse the military government of
Burma of
ethnic cleansing.
As a
result of the ongoing war
in minority group areas, more than two million people have fled
Burma to Thailand
.
On 3 May
2008, Cyclone Nargis devastated the
country when winds of up to 215 km/h (135 mph) touched
land in the densely-populated, rice-farming delta of the Irrawaddy
Division
. It was the worst
natural disaster in Burmese history.
Reports estimated that more than 200,000 people were dead or
missing, and damage totaled to 10 billion dollars (
USD). The
World Food Programme reported, "Some
villages have been almost totally eradicated and vast rice-growing
areas are wiped out." The
United
Nations projects that as many as 1 million were left homeless;
and the
World Health
Organization "has received reports of malaria outbreaks in the
worst-affected area." Yet in the critical days following this
disaster, Burma's isolationist regime hindered recovery efforts by
delaying the entry of
United Nations
planes delivering medicine, food, and other supplies. The
government's action was described by the United Nations as
"unprecedented."
On 4 May 2009, an American,
John Yettaw,
allegedly swam across the lake uninvited to the house of Aung San
Suu Kyi and remained there for two nights, resulting in the arrest
of Yettaw and Suu Kyi, who are currently being held in Insein
prison near Yangon. As a result, Suu Kyi is being charged with
violating the terms of her house arrest, and faces a sentence of up
to five years. Suu Kyi's current house arrest was due to end on 27
May 2009. On 11 August 2009, Suu Kyi was sentenced to an additional
18 months of house arrest following conviction on charges of
violating the terms of her previous incarceration. British Prime
Minister Gordon Brown stated, "This is a purely political sentence
designed to prevent her from taking part in the regime’s planned
elections next year."
In early
August 2009, a conflict known as the Kokang
incident
broke out in Shan State
in northern Burma. For several weeks, junta
troops fought against ethnic minorities including the
Han Chinese,
Va, and
Kachin.
On from August 8–12, the first days of the
conflict, as many as 10,000 Burmese civilians fled to Yunnan
province in
neighboring China
.
List of historical capitals
Government and politics
Burma is governed by a
military junta
with the current head of state being
Senior
General Than Shwe, who holds the posts
of "Chairman of the
State Peace and Development
Council" and "Commander in Chief of the Defense Services" as
well as the Minister of Defence. General
Khin
Nyunt was
prime minister until 19
October 2004, when he was replaced by
General Soe Win, after the
purge of
Military Intelligence
sections within the
Myanmar armed forces.
The current Prime Minister is General
Thein
Sein, who took over upon the death of General Soe Win on
October 2, 2007. The majority of ministry and cabinet posts are
held by military officers, with the exceptions being the Ministry
of Health, the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Labour, and
the Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development, posts
which are held by civilians.
Elected delegates in the 1990 People's Assembly election formed the
National
Coalition Government of the Union of Burma (NCGUB), a
government-in-exile since December 1990,
with the mission of restoring democracy. Dr.
Sein Win, a first cousin of
Aung San Suu Kyi, has held the position of
prime minister of the NCGUB since its inception. The NCGUB has been
outlawed by the military government.
Major political parties in the country are the
National League for Democracy
and the
Shan
Nationalities League for Democracy, although their activities
are heavily regulated and suppressed by the military government.
Many other parties, often representing ethnic minorities, exist.
The military government allows little room for political
organizations and has outlawed many political parties and
underground student organizations. The military supported the
National Unity Party in
the 1990 elections and, more recently, an organization named the
Union
Solidarity and Development Association.
In 1988, the army violently repressed protests against economic
mismanagement and political oppression. On 8 August 1988, the
military opened fire on demonstrators in what is known as
8888 Uprising and imposed martial law.
However, the 1988 protests paved way for the 1990 People's Assembly
elections. The election results were subsequently annulled by
Senior General Saw Maung's government. The
National League for
Democracy, led by
Aung San Suu
Kyi, won over 60% of the vote and over 80% of parliamentary
seats in the 1990 election, the first held in 30 years. The
military-backed
National
Unity Party won less than 2% of the seats. Aung San Suu Kyi has
earned international recognition as an activist for the return of
democratic rule, winning the
Nobel
Peace Prize in 1991. The ruling regime has repeatedly placed
her under
house arrest. Despite a
direct appeal by former UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan to
Senior General
Than Shwe and pressure by the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (
ASEAN), the military junta extended
Aung San Suu Kyi's house arrest another year on 27 May 2006 under
the 1975 State Protection Act, which grants the government the
right to detain any persons on the grounds of protecting peace and
stability in the country. The junta faces increasing pressure from
the United States and the United Kingdom. Burma's situation was
referred to the
UN Security
Council for the first time in December 2005 for an informal
consultation. In September 2006, ten of the United Nations Security
Council's 15 members voted to place Myanmar on the council's formal
agenda. On
Independence Day, 4
January 2007, the government released 40
political prisoners, under a general
amnesty, in which 2,831 prisoners were released. On 8 January 2007,
UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon urged
the national government to free all political prisoners, including
Aung San Suu Kyi. Three days later, on 11 January, five additional
prisoners were released from prison.
ASEAN has also stated its frustration with the
Union of Myanmar's government. It has formed the ASEAN
Inter-Parliamentary Myanmar Caucus to address the lack of
democratisation in the country. Dramatic change in the country's
political situation remains unlikely, due to support from major
regional powers such as India, Russia, and, in particular,
China.
In the
annual ASEAN Summit in January 2007,
held in Cebu
, Philippines
, member countries failed to find common ground on
the issue of Burma's lack of political reform. During the
summit, ASEAN foreign ministers asked Burma to make greater
progress on its roadmap toward democracy and national
reconciliation. Some member countries contend that Burma's
human rights issues are the country's own
domestic affairs, while others contend that its poor human rights
record is an international issue.
Burma's army-drafted constitution was overwhelmingly approved (by
92.4% of the 22 million voters with alleged voter turnout of 99%)
on May 10 in the first phase of a two-stage
referendum amid
Cyclone
Nargis. It was the first national vote since the 1990 election.
Multi-party elections in 2010 would end 5 decades of military rule,
as the new charter gives the military an automatic 25% of seats in
parliament. NLD spokesman
Nyan Win, inter
alia, criticized the referendum: "This referendum was full of
cheating and fraud across the country; In some villages,
authorities and polling station officials ticked the ballots
themselves and did not let the voters do anything." The
constitution would bar
Aung San Suu
Kyi, from public office.
5 million citizens will vote May 24 in
Yangon
and the
Irrawaddy delta, worst hit by Cyclone Nargis.Burma has a high level
of
corruption, and ranks 178th
out of 180 countries worldwide in the
Corruption Perceptions
Index.
Issues
Human rights in Burma are a
long-standing concern for the international community and human
rights organizations. There is general consensus that the military
regime in Burma is one of the world's most repressive and abusive
regimes.
Several human rights organizations, including
Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International, and the
American
Association for the Advancement of Science have reported on
human rights abuses by the military government. They have claimed
that there is no independent
judiciary in
Burma. The military government restricts
Internet access through software-based
censorship that limits the material citizens can access on-line.
Forced labour,
human trafficking, and
child labour are common. The military is also
notorious for rampant use of sexual violence as an instrument of
control, including systematic rapes and taking of
sex slaves as porters for the military. A
strong women's pro-democracy movement has formed in exile, largely
along the Thai border and in Chiang Mai. There is a growing
international movement to defend women's human rights issues.
The
Freedom in the World 2004 report by
Freedom House notes that "The junta rules by
decree, controls the judiciary, suppresses all basic rights, and
commits human rights abuses with
impunity.
Military officers hold all cabinet positions, and active or retired
officers hold all top posts in all ministries.
Official corruption is reportedly
rampant both at the higher and local levels."
Brad Adams, director of Human Rights Watch's Asia division, in a
2004 address described the human rights situation in the country as
appalling: "Burma is the textbook example of a
police state. Government informants and spies
are omnipresent. Average Burmese people are afraid to speak to
foreigners except in most superficial of manners for fear of being
hauled in later for questioning or worse. There is no
freedom of speech, assembly or
association."
Evidence has been gathered suggesting that the Burmese regime has
marked certain ethnic minorities such as the
Karen for extermination or 'Burmisation'.
This,
however, has received little attention from the international
community since it has been more subtle and indirect than the mass
killings in places like Rwanda
.
In April 2007, the U.S.
Government Accountability
Office (GAO) identified financial and other restrictions that
the military government places on international humanitarian
assistance. The GAO report, entitled "Assistance Programs
Constrained in Burma", outlined the specific efforts of the
government to hinder the humanitarian work of international
organizations, including restrictions on the free movement of
international staff within the country. The report notes that the
regime has tightened its control over assistance work since former
Prime Minister
Khin Nyunt was purged in
October 2004. The military junta passed guidelines in February
2006, which formalized these restrictive policies. According to the
report, the guidelines require that programs run by humanitarian
groups "enhance and safeguard the national interest" and that
international organizations coordinate with state agents and select
their Burmese staff from government-prepared lists of individuals.
United Nations officials have
declared these restrictions unacceptable.
Burma's government spends the least percentage of its GDP on health
care of any country in the world, and international donor
organizations give less to Burma, per capita, than any other
country except India. According to the report named "Preventable
Fate", published by
Doctors
without Borders, 25,000 Burmese AIDS patients died in 2007,
deaths that could largely have been prevented by Anti Retroviral
Therapy drugs and proper treatment.
Divisions and states

The 14 states and divisions of
Burma.
The country is divided into seven states (
pyine) and seven
divisions (
yin). Divisions ( ) are predominantly
Bamar. States (

), in essence, are divisions which are
home to particular ethnic minorities. The administrative divisions
are further subdivided into
districts, which are further subdivided
into
townships,
ward, and
villages.
Below are the number of districts, townships, cities/towns, wards,
village Groups and villages in each divisions and states of Burma
as of December 31, 2001:
Foreign relations and military
The country's
foreign relations,
particularly with Western nations, have been strained. The United
States has placed a ban on new investments by U.S. firms, an import
ban, and an arms embargo on the Union of Myanmar, as well as frozen
military assets in the United States because of the military
regime's ongoing human rights abuses, the ongoing detention of
Nobel Peace Prize recipient
Aung San
Suu Kyi, and refusal to honor the election results of the 1990
People's Assembly election. Similarly, the
European Union has placed sanctions on Burma,
including an arms embargo, cessation of
trade preferences, and suspension of all
aid with the exception of
humanitarian
aid. U.S. and European government sanctions against the
military government, coupled with boycotts and other direct
pressure on corporations by western supporters of the democracy
movement, have resulted in the withdrawal from the country of most
U.S. and many European companies. However, several Western
companies remain due to loopholes in the sanctions .
Despite Western isolation, Asian corporations have generally
remained willing to continue investing in the country and to
initiate new investments, particularly in
natural resource extraction. The country
has close relations with neighboring India and China with several
Indian and Chinese companies operating in the country. There
remains active debate as to the extent to which the American-led
sanctions have had adverse effects on the civilian population or on
the military rulers. Burma has also received extensive military aid
from India and China in the past. According to some estimates,
Burma has received more than US$200 million in military aid from
India. Under India's
Look East
policy, fields of cooperation between India and Burma include
remote sensing, oil and gas
exploration,
information
technology,
hydro power and
construction of ports and buildings. In 2008, India suspended
military aid to Burma over the issue of human rights abuses by the
ruling junta, although it has preserved extensive commercial ties
which provide the regime with much needed revenue.
The country's armed forces are known as the
Tatmadaw, which numbers 488,000. The Tatmadaw
comprises the
Army, the
Navy, and the
Air
Force. The country
ranked twelfth
in the world for its number of active troops in service. The
military is very influential in the country, with top cabinet and
ministry posts held by
military
officers. Official figures for military spending are not
available. Estimates vary widely because of uncertain exchange
rates, but military spending is very high.
The country imports
most of its weapons from Russia, Ukraine
, China and India.
The country is building a research
nuclear reactor near May Myo (Pyin Oo Lwin)
with help from Russia.
It is one of the signatories of the nuclear
non-proliferation pact since 1992
and a member of the International Atomic Energy
Agency
(IAEA) since 1957. The military junta had
informed the IAEA in September 2000 of its intention to construct
the reactor. The research reactor outbuilding frame was built by
ELE steel industries limited of Yangon and water from Anisakhan/BE
water fall will be used for the reactor cavity cooling
system.
ASEAN will not defend the country in any
international forum following the military regime's refusal to
restore democracy.
In April 2007, the Malaysian Foreign
Ministry parliamentary secretary Ahmad Shabery Cheek said Malaysia
and other ASEAN members had decided not to defend
Burma if the country's issue was raised for discussion at any
international conference. "Now Myanmar has to defend itself
if it is bombarded in any international forum," he said when
winding up a debate at committee stage for the Foreign Ministry. He
was replying to queries from opposition leader
Lim Kit Siang on the next course of action to
be taken by Malaysia and ASEAN with the military junta. Lim had
said Malaysia must play a proactive role in pursuing regional
initiatives to bring about a change in Burma and support efforts to
bring the situation in Burma to the
UN Security Council's attention. In
November 2008, Burma's political situation with neighboring
Bangladesh became tense as they began searching for natural gas in
a disputed block of the Bay of Bengal.
Until 2005, the
United
Nations General Assembly annually adopted a detailed resolution
about the situation in Burma by consensus. But in 2006 a divided
United Nations General
Assembly voted through a resolution that strongly called upon
the government of Burma to end its systematic violations of human
rights. In January 2007, Russia and China vetoed a draft resolution
before the
United
Nations Security Council calling on the government of Myanmar
to respect human rights and begin a democratic transition. South
Africa also voted against the resolution.
The
country is a corner of the Golden
Triangle
of opium production. In
1996 the
United States Embassy
in Rangoon released a "Country Commercial Guide", which states
"Exports of opiates alone appear to be worth about as much as all
legal exports." It goes on to say that investments in
infrastructure and hotels are coming from major opiate-growing and
opiate-exporting organizations and from those with close ties to
these organizations. A four-year investigation concluded that
Burma's national company
Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise
(MOGE) was "the main channel for laundering the revenues of
heroin produced and exported under the
control of the
Burmese army." The main
player in the country's drug market is the
United Wa State Army, ethnic fighters
who control areas along the country's eastern border with Thailand,
part of the infamous Golden Triangle. The
Wa army, an ally of Burma's ruling
military junta, was once the militant arm of the Beijing-backed
Burmese Communist Party.
Burma has been a significant cog in the transnational drug trade
since World War II. The number of hectares used to grow the crops
increased 29% in 2007. A
United
Nations report cites corruption, poverty and a lack of
government control as causes for the jump.
Economy

The Sakura Tower in Yangon is
virtually vacant due to a lack of major foreign investment.
The country is one of the poorest nations in southeastern Asia,
suffering from decades of stagnation, mismanagement and isolation.
Burma's GDP grows at an average rate of 2.9% annually – the lowest
rate of economic growth in the Greater
Mekong
Subregion.
Under British administration, Burma was the wealthiest country in
Southeast Asia. It had been the world's largest exporter of
rice. During British administration, Burma
supplied
oil through the
Burmah Oil Company. Burma also had a
wealth of natural and labor resources. It produced 75% of the
world's
teak and had a highly literate
population. The country was believed to be on the fast track to
development.
After a parliamentary government was formed in 1948, Prime Minister
U Nu disastrously attempted to make Burma a
welfare state and adopted central
planning. Rice exports fell by two thirds and mineral exports by
over 96%. Plans were partly financed by printing money, which led
to inflation. The 1962 coup d'état was followed by an economic
scheme called the
Burmese Way
to Socialism, a plan to nationalize all industries, with the
exception of agriculture. The catastrophic program turned Burma
into one of the world's most impoverished countries. Burma's
admittance to
Least Developed
Country status by the
UN in 1987 highlighted
its economic bankruptcy.
After 1988, the regime retreated from totalitarian socialism. It
permitted modest expansion of the private sector, allowed some
foreign investment, and received needed foreign exchange.
The
economy is still rated as the least free in Asia
(tied with North
Korea
). All fundamental market institutions are
suppressed. Private enterprises are often co-owned or indirectly
owned by state.
The corruption watchdog organization
Transparency
International in its 2007 Corruption Perceptions Index
released on September 26, 2007 ranked Burma the most corrupt
country in the world, tied with Somalia
.
The national currency is
Kyat. Burma has a dual
exchange rate system similar to Cuba. The market rate was around
two hundred times below the government-set rate in 2006. Inflation
averaged 30.1% between 2005 and 2007.
Inflation is a serious problem for the economy. In
April 2007, the
National
League for Democracy organized a two-day workshop on the
economy. The workshop concluded that skyrocketing inflation was
impeding economic growth. "Basic commodity prices have increased
from 30 to 60 percent since the military regime promoted a salary
increase for government workers in April 2006," said Soe Win, the
moderator of the workshop. "Inflation is also correlated with
corruption." Myint Thein, an NLD spokesperson, added: "Inflation is
the critical source of the current economic crisis."
In recent years, both China and India have attempted to strengthen
ties with the government for economic benefit. Many nations,
including the United States and Canada, and the European Union,
have imposed investment and trade sanctions on Burma. The United
States has banned all imports from Burma.
Foreign investment
comes primarily from People's Republic of China
, Singapore
, South
Korea
, India
, and
Thailand
.
The major agricultural product is rice which covers about 60% of
the country's total cultivated land area. Rice accounts for 97% of
total food grain production by weight. Through collaboration with
the International Rice Research Institute
, 52
modern
rice varieties were released in the
country between 1966 and 1997, helping increase national rice
production to 14 million tons in 1987 and to 19 million tons in
1996. By 1988, modern varieties were planted on half of the
country's ricelands, including 98 percent of the irrigated
areas.
The lack of an educated workforce skilled in modern technology
contributes to the growing problems of the economy.
Today, the country lacks adequate infrastructure.
Goods travel
primarily across the Thai
border,
where most illegal drugs are exported and along the Ayeyarwady
River
. Railroads are old and rudimentary, with few
repairs since their construction in the late nineteenth century.
Highways are normally unpaved, except in the major cities.
Energy
shortages are common throughout the country including in Yangon
.
Burma is also the world's second largest producer of
opium, accounting for 8% of entire world production
and is a major source of
illegal drugs,
including
amphetamines. Other
industries include agricultural goods, textiles, wood products,
construction materials, gems, metals, oil and natural gas.
The Union of Myanmar's rulers depend on sales of precious stones
such as
sapphires,
pearls and
jade to fund their
regime.
Rubies are the biggest earner; 90% of
the world's
rubies come from the country,
whose red stones are prized for their
purity
and
hue.
Thailand
buys the majority of the country's gems. Burma's "Valley of Rubies", the
mountainous Mogok area, 200 km
(125 miles) north of Mandalay
, is noted for its rare pigeon's blood rubies and
blue sapphires. Many U.S. and
European jewelry companies, including Bulgari, Tiffany, and
Cartier, refuse to import these stones based on reports of
deplorable working conditions in the mines. Human Rights Watch has
encouraged a complete ban on the purchase of Burmese gems based on
these reports and because nearly all profits go to the ruling
junta, as the majority of mining activity in the country is
government-run.
Since 1992, the government has encouraged
tourism in the country. However, fewer than
750,000 tourists enter the country annually.
Aung San Suu Kyi has requested that
international tourists not visit Burma. The junta's forced labour
programmes were focused around tourist destinations which have been
heavily criticised for their human rights records. Burma’s Minister
of Hotels and Tourism
Maj-Gen Saw
Lwin has stated that the government receives a significant
percentage of the income of private sector tourism services. Much
of the country is completely off-limits to tourists, and the
military very tightly controls interactions between foreigners and
the people of Burma. They are not to discuss politics with
foreigners, under penalty of imprisonment, and in 2001, the Myanmar
Tourism Promotion Board issued an order for local officials to
protect tourists and limit "unnecessary contact" between foreigners
and ordinary Burmese people.
The M9 gas field in Burma is expected to go online in 2012.
Burma is traditionally a leader in ruby mining but it has been hurt
by trade embargoes. It is also taking steps to become a leader the
growing of tangerines.
Units of Measure
Burma is one of three countries that still predominately uses a
non-metric system of measure. Aside from a few imperial units, the
common units of measure are unique to Burma, see
Burmese units of measurement
for more information.
Demographics
Burma has a population of about 56 million. Current population
figures are rough estimates because the last partial census,
conducted by the Ministry of Home and Religious Affairs under the
control of the military junta, was taken in 1983. No trustworthy
nationwide census has been taken in Burma since 1931.
There are over
600,000 registered migrant workers
from Burma in Thailand
, and millions more work illegally. Burmese
migrant workers account for 80% of Thailand's migrant workers.
Burma has a
population density of
, one of the lowest in
Southeast
Asia.
Refugee camps exist along Indian,
Bangladeshi and Thai borders while several thousand are in Malaysia
. Conservative estimates state that there are
over 295,800 refugees from Burma, with the majority being Rohingya, Kayin
, and
Karenni.
Burma is home to four major linguistic families:
Sino-Tibetan,
Kradai,
Austro-Asiatic, and
Indo-European. Sino-Tibetan
languages are most widely spoken. They include
Burmese,
Karen,
Kachin,
Chin, and
Chinese. The primary Kradai language is
Shan.
Mon,
Palaung, and
Wa are
the major
Austroasiatic languages
spoken in Burma. The two major Indo-European languages are
Pali, the liturgical language of Theravada
Buddhism, and English.
According
to the UNESCO
Institute
of Statistics, Burma's official literacy
rate as of 2000 was 89.9%. Historically, Burma has had
high literacy rates. To qualify for
least developed country status by
the UN in order to receive debt relief, Burma lowered its official
literacy rate from 78.6% to 18.7% in 1987.
Burma is ethnically diverse. The government recognizes
135 distinct ethnic groups.
While it is extremely difficult to verify this statement, there are
at least 108 different ethnolinguistic groups in Burma, consisting
mainly of distinct Tibeto-Burman peoples, but with sizable
populations of Daic, Hmong-Mien, and Austroasiatic (Mon-Khmer)
peoples. The
Bamar form an estimated 68% of
the population. 10% of the population are
Shan.
The
Kayin make up 7% of the population.
The
Rakhine people constitute 4% of
the population.
Overseas Chinese
form approximately 3% of the population.
Mon, who form 2% of the population, are
ethno-linguistically related to the
Khmer.
Overseas
Indians comprise 2%. The remainder are
Kachin,
Chin,
Anglo-Indians and other ethnic minorities.
Included in this group are the
Anglo-Burmese. Once forming a large and
influential community, the Anglo-Burmese left the country in steady
streams from 1958 onwards, principally to Australia and the U.K..
Today, it is estimated that only 52,000 Anglo-Burmese remain in the
country. There are currently 110,000 Myanmarian
refugees in Thai border camps.
89% of the country's population are Buddhist, according to a report
on abc World News Tonight in May 2008.
Culture
A diverse range of indigenous cultures exist in Burma, the majority
culture is primarily
Buddhist and
Bamar. Bamar culture has been influenced by
the cultures of neighbouring countries. This is manifested in its
language, cuisine, music, dance and theatre. The arts, particularly
literature, have historically been influenced by the local form of
Theravada Buddhism.
Considered the national epic of Burma, the
Yama Zatdaw, an adaptation of
Ramayana, has been influenced
greatly by Thai
, Mon, and Indian
versions of the play. Buddhism is
practiced along with
nat worship which
involves elaborate rituals to propitiate one from a pantheon of 37
nats.
In a traditional village, the monastery is the centre of cultural
life. Monks are venerated and supported by the lay people. A
novitiation ceremony called
shinbyu is the
most important
coming of age events
for a boy when he enters the monastery for a short period of time.
All boys of Buddhist family need to be a novice (beginner for
Buddhism) before the age of twenty and to be a monk after the age
of twenty. It is compulsory for all boys of Buddhism. The duration
can be as little as one week. Girls have ear-piercing ceremonies
(

) at the same time. Burmese culture is
most evident in villages where local festivals are held throughout
the year, the most important being the pagoda festival. Many
villages have a guardian nat, and superstition and taboos are
commonplace.
British colonial rule also introduced Western elements of culture
to Burma. Burma's educational system is modelled after that of the
United Kingdom.
Colonial architectural influences are most
evident in major cities such as Yangon
. Many ethnic minorities, particularly the
Karen in the southeast, and the
Kachin and
Chin
who populate the north and northeast, practice
Christianity. According to CIA World Factbook,
the Burman population is 68%, and the Ethnic groups comprise of
32%. However, the exiled leaders and organizations claims that
Ethnic population is 40% which is implicitly contrasted with CIA
report (official U.S report).
Language
Burmese, the mother tongue of the
Bamar and official language of Burma, is related to
Tibetan and to the
Chinese languages. It is written in a
script consisting of circular and
semi-circular letters, which were adapted from the
Mon script, which in turn was developed from a
southern Indian script in the 700s. The earliest known inscriptions
in the Burmese script date from the 1000s. It is also used to write
Pali, the sacred language of
Theravada Buddhism, as well as several
ethnic minority languages, including Shan, several Karen dialects,
and Kayah (Karenni), with the addition of specialised characters
and
diacritics for each language. The
Burmese language incorporates widespread usage of
honorifics and is age-oriented. Burmese society
has traditionally stressed the importance of education. In
villages, secular schooling often takes place in
monasteries.
Secondary and
tertiary education take place at
government schools.
Religion
Many religions are practiced in Burma. Religious edifices and
orders have been in existence for many years. Festivals can be held
on a grand scale. The Christian and Muslim populations do, however,
face religious persecution and it is hard, if not impossible, for
non-Buddhists to join the army or get government jobs, the main
route to success in the country. Such persecution and targeting of
civilians is particularly notable in Eastern Burma, where over 3000
villages have been destroyed in the past ten years. More than
200,000
Rohingya Muslims have settled in
Bangladesh, to escape persecution, over the past 20 years.
89% of the population embraces
Buddhism
(mostly
Theravada). Other religions are
practiced largely without obstruction, with the notable exception
of some ethnic minorities such as the Muslim
Rohingya people, who have continued to have
their citizenship status denied and therefore do not have access to
education, and Christians in Chin State. Four percent of the
population practices
Christianity; 4
percent,
Islam; 1 percent, traditional
animistic beliefs; and 2 percent follow
other religions, including
Mahayana
Buddhism,
Hinduism,
Chinese religions and the
Bahá'í religion.
However, according
to a U.S.
State Department
’s 2006 international religious freedom report,
official statistics underestimate the non-Buddhist population which
could be as high as 30%. Muslim leaders estimated that
approximately 20 percent of the population was Muslim. A tiny
Jewish community in Rangoon had a synagogue but no resident rabbi
to conduct services.
Education
The educational system of Burma is operated by the government
Ministry of Education. Universities and professional institutes
from upper Burma and lower Burma are run by two separate entities,
the Department of Higher Education of Upper Burma and the
Department of Higher Education of Lower Burma. Headquarters are
based in Yangon and Mandalay respectively. The education system is
based on the United Kingdom's system, due to nearly a century of
British and Christian presences in Burma. Nearly all schools are
government-operated, but there has been a recent increase in
privately funded English language schools. Schooling is compulsory
until the end of elementary school, probably about 9 years old,
while the compulsory schooling age is 15 or 16 at international
level.
There are 101 universities, 12 institutes, 9 degree colleges and 24
colleges in Burma, a total of 146 higher education
institutions.
There are 10 Technical Training Schools, 23 nursing training
schools, 1 sport academy and 20 midwifery schools.
There are 2047 Basic Education High Schools, 2605 Basic Education
Middle Schools, 29944 Basic Education Primary Schools and 5952 Post
Primary Schools. 1692 multimedia classrooms exist within this
system.
There are two international schools which are acknowledged by WASC
and College Board –
Yangon
International School (
YIS) and
Yangon International Educare
Center (
YIEC) in Yangon.
Media
Due to Burma's political climate, there are not many media
companies in relation to the country's population, although a
certain number exists. Some are privately owned, but all
programming must meet with the approval of the
censorship board.
Depiction in popular media
The situation in Burma has figured in several motion pictures, such
as
Beyond Rangoon, starring
Patricia Arquette and
Rambo IV, starring
Silvester Stallone.
See also
Notes
- The Burma Road from the Union of Burma to Myanmar, Mya
Maung, Asian Survey, Vol. 30, No. 6, June 1990, p 602
- "Background Notes: Burma." Electronic Information and
Publications Office. Dec 2008. Bureau of Public Affairs. Accessed 5
Jul 2009. http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/35910.htm
- Klotz, Irene, Bush renews trade sanctions on Myanmar,
Malaysia Star, July 28, 2005
- Shenon, Philip, FILM; A Tale of Turmoil Arrives on Top of the
News, New York Times, Aug 20, 1995
- Encyclopædia Britannica, CD 2000 Deluxe Edition.
- "Flora and Fauna" at Myanmars.net
- Asians v. Asians. TIME. 17 July 1964.
- Burma's Muslim Rohingyas - The New Boat People .
Marwaan Macan-Markar. IPS.
- ILO cracks the whip at Yangon.
- Burma leaders double fuel prices.
- UN envoy warns of Myanmar crisis.
- " Human Rights in Burma: Fifteen Years Post
Military Coup " , Refugees International
- Burma Karen families 'on the run'. 16 May 2006.
BBC News.
- The Children of the Mae Sot Dump. Spiegel
Online. 11 May 2007.
- U.S. envoy: Myanmar deaths may top 100,000 -
CNN.com.
- Aid arrives in Myanmar as death toll passes 22,000,
but worst-hit area still cut off - International Herald
Tribune.
- The Associated Press: AP Top News at 4:25 p.m.
EDT .
- The Associated Press: Official: UN plane lands in
Myanmar with aid after cyclone .
- Fighting forces up to 30,000 to flee Myanmar.
Msnbc.com. August 28, 2009.
- Reuters, Cyclone-hit Myanmar says 92 percent back
charter
- www.gmanews.tv, Myanmar OKs charter amid cyclone
disaster
- [1]
- [2]
- Statement to the EU Development Committee | Human
Rights Watch
- Burma's 'slow genocide' is revealed through the
eyes of its child victims – Anton La Guardia, Telegraph, 24
June 2005
- New evidence backs claims of genocide in Burma
– Mike Thomson, Telegraph, 4 March 2006
-
http://www.msf.org/source/countries/asia/myanmar/2008/PreventableFate/PreventableFatereport.pdf
- [3].
- List of Districts, Townships, Cities/Towns, Wards, Village
Groups and Villages in Union of Myanmar published by Ministry
of Home Affairs, Government of Union of Myanmar on December 31,
2001
- Caution by Junta's Asian Neighbors Reflects Their
Self-Interest - washingtonpost.com
- India's Role in Burma's Crisis
- NewsLibrary.com - newspaper archive, clipping
service - newspapers and other news sources
- India looks to Burma to slake growing thirst for
gas | csmonitor.com
- Myanmar, India to build IT centres in
Myanmar_English_Xinhua
- SteelGuru - News
- BBC News
- India and Burma: time to choose (Human Rights Watch,
14-1-2008)
- Guardian News. "[4]."
- 2007 CPI
http://www.transparency.org/policy_research/surveys_indices/cpi/2007
- , Facts About Cooperation, International Rice Research
Institute. Retrieved on 2007-09-25.
- Gems of Burma and their Environmental
Impact.
- [5].
- [6].
- [7]
- Myanmar refugees to try resettling. The Japan Times
Online. February 18, 2009.
- "Ethnic and Religious Diversity: Myanmar's Unfolding Nemesis",
Matthews, Bruce, Institute of South East Asian Studies, Visiting
Researcher Series, Volume 2001, No. 3. 2001.
- Burmese exiles in desperate conditions. BBC
News. September 29, 2007.
- CIA Factbook – Burma
- International Religious Freedom Report 2007 –
Burma
- Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs – Background
Note: Burma
- Chronicle of National Development Comparison Between Period
Preceding 1988 and after (up to 31.12.2006)
External links
- Government
- General information