Ye
Htoon, also known as Roland Chan Htun,
(born 1937) is a prominent Burmese
lawyer, sometime-jailed political dissident, and a successful
entrepreneur, and one of the notables
of the now-extinct Scouting movement
in Burma.
Ye Htoon is the eldest son of the late
Chan
Htoon, former Attorney General and Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court and the architect of the first
constitution of Burma (Myanmar) in
1947.
He
attended Myoma National High
School, Rangoon, Ananda College, Colombo, Sri
Lanka
and Thacher School,
Ojai Valley, California, is a 1961 graduate of Bucknell
University
, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania
, and received a postgraduate Bachelor of Law degree from the Rangoon
University
in
1965. His wife
Onma Maw is the
daughter of the eminent
statesman Dr.
Ba Maw, who was the first
Prime Minister and the Head of State of
Burma.
Then-
Lieutenant Ye Htoon served as the
last
Director General of the
Union of Burma Boy Scouts and Girl
Guides, and reported that the
military
government dissolved the Union of Burma Boy Scouts, on
March 1,
1964.
Ye Htoon was under detention for the first time from 1962 to 1963
for alleged participation in the
July 7 Upheaval. He was
arrested again from November 1971 to July 1972 for his connection
with Burmese expatriates and foreign firms, and action was taken
against him the third time in January 1975 for participation in
what has come to be known as the
U Thant
crisis, student-led protests over the shabby treatment by the
Ne Win government of the remains of U Thant
which were crushed by the military government, when he was given a
10-year prison term. He was freed in July 1980 under the
Government's Amnesty Order No. 2180. He was detained in June 1986,
accused of involvement in illegal dollar transaction, but was freed
two weeks later under a personal surety.
He was a pioneer in bringing digital switching
telephone exchanges to Myanmar, and has
amassed a vast experience with the
country's economic system. A business
consultant to many international companies, he is now Chairman of
Maw Htoon and Partners Co., Ltd., Shambhala Tours Co., Ltd.,
Shambhala Financial Services and the Myanmar Thai Gypsum Co.,
Ltd.
At a lengthy press conference on
September
9,
1989,
State Law and Order
Restoration Council First Secretary
Brigadier General Khin Nyunt stated, "Fifty-two persons including
Ye Htoon, who were in charge of the
underground youth
organization and who were trying to cause unrest in the
country, were interrogated, and consequently documentary and other
evidence (was) seized...
We received information that a person called
Ye Htoon, resident at 5/A Po Sein Road, Bahann Township, had been in contact with an
organization called 'Da Nya Ta' (Alliance for
Democratic Solidarity, Union of Burma) led by Thanmani Bo Khin Maung, and was
aiding and abetting that group's work from Yangon
since. Information was also received that he had formed the
underground youth organization called FFB (
National Freedom Fighters of
Burma) and was striving to cause unrest in the country under
his supervision; the
National Intelligence Bureau
called in and interrogated 52 persons including Ye Htoon beginning
31 July 1989."
Ye Htoon was picked up, had his teeth kicked out and was sentenced
to 19 years hard-labor rigorous imprisonment, for participating in
the
1988 democratic uprising. The
specific crime, according to the
junta, was
that he had met
Bertil Lintner and
provided him with information. He is also accused of being a
ghostwriter for
Outrage, a book
authored by Lintner. He was imprisoned for four years, from 1989 to
1993.
Ye Htoon, now the leader of the
Myanmar Mingalar Foundation,
appears to be making preparations for the
2010 Burmese elections.
See also
References