![]()
An underground dissident group in Rangoon has voiced its continued support for Burma’s independence hero, Gen Aung San, on the eve of the 94th anniversary of his birth. Speaking to The Irrawaddy on Thursday, Moe Thway, a spokesman for the dissident organization Generation Wave, said, “Gen Aung San is a hero who opposed oppression. The current Burmese leaders are trying to hide his image.” Since November, Generation Wave has launched a series of underground activities honoring Aung San, the father of detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, in defiance of the ruling junta. The activities include circulating notes of currency stamped with Aung San’s image and distributing postcards in Rangoon bearing slogans such as “We won’t forget Aung San’s birthday!” “Don’t forget Martyrs’ Day!” and “Accept the legacy of Aung San!” “We launched these activities because we want to show that we hadn’t forgotten the spirit of Gen Aung San,” said Moe Thway. Aung San, the founder of the Union of Burma, was born on February 13, 1915, in Natmauk in Magwe Division in central Burma. He was highly respected—not only by Burman people, but also by the various ethnic groups of Burma—for his efforts in winning independence from Great Britain. However, he was assassinated by an armed group along with six comrades at a cabinet meeting in Rangoon on 19 July, 1947, a date now commemorated in Burma as Martyrs’ Day. The anniversary of Aung San’s birthday, February 13, is recognized as Children’s Day in Burma and is celebrated throughout the country. In 2007, according to a UNICEF report, Burma’s child mortality rate was the fourth highest in the world, eclipsed in Asia only by Afghanistan. “The junta would just as soon erase Aung San’s name from Burmese history books and forbid his birthday being celebrated altogether,” she said. On Thursday, in his message to the public on the Union Day of Burma, junta chief Snr-Gen Than Shwe made no mention of Aung San, even though he was the founder of Union Day and of the Burmese armed forces. |
Copyright © 2008 Irrawaddy Publishing Group |
www.irrawaddy.org |