Afleveringen
-
By 3CR Radical Radio | May 26, 2023
Featuring the latest in activist campaigns and struggles against oppression fighting for a better world with anti-capitalist analysis on current affairs and international politics.
Presenters: Jacob Andrewartha, Chloe DS
Maung Zarni, burmese scholar and activist with over three decades of experience in international politics & activists joined the program to reflect on the ongoing uprising in Myanmar against the millitary dictatorship and the nature of the Rohingya genocide and why it should have been opposed prior to the uprising.
Note: Maung Zarni will be a featured speaker at the upcoming Ecosocialism 2023: A World Beyond Capitalism conference on July 1-2 in Naarm/Melbourne. -
Dr Maung Zarni calls for the reassessment of bilateral and multilateral relations with the UN Member state of Myanmar, in the hands of the genocide perpetrators.
He urges the international community of democracies to provide Myanmar resistance with arms and other support in the same manner they are unequivocally arming and supporting Ukrainian resistance against the war criminal regime of Putin.
BBC World Radio
22 March 2022 -
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
-
Dr Maung Zarni: The International Court of Justice has overstepped its bounds by controversially accepting Myanmar Military's Agent, BBC World Service Newsday Program 6:20 GMT/London, 21 Feb 2022
-
Published by ABC on December 7, 2021
On RN Breakfast with Cathy Van Extel
A court in Myanmar has sentenced the country's ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, to two years on charges of inciting public unrest and breaching COVID-19 protocols.
Aung San Suu Kyi, who was detained in a military coup in February, is facing a total of 11 charges and life imprisonment.
Guest: Maung Zarni, human rights activist and founder of the Free Burma Coalition
Producer:
Linda LoPresti -
London, 7th May – In this latest episode of Trouble with the Truth, Lana speaks about the origins and the consequences of the coup with UK-based academic and human rights activist Maung Zarni.
It’s been over three months since the military coup in Myanmar that has resulted in violence and mass protests. Press freedom has suffered immensely, as the military junta shut down the internet, muzzled and attacked journalists. In this latest episode of Trouble with the Truth, Lana speaks about the origins and the consequences of the coup with UK-based academic and human rights activist Maung Zarni. He is a co-founder Forces of Renewal Southeast Asia network, Burmese coordinator of the Free Rohingya Coalition and has been engaged in activism for over thirty years. Zarni gave a detailed and thought-provoking account of the events in Myanmar – the unravelling of the coup, how people came together to join the fight against the junta and how civilians and journalists are navigating the social media and information shutdown. He touches on what can be done at a local and global level to help topple the military dictatorship. -
In the first episode of the 2021 Free Rohingya Coalition Genocide Podcast Series, Gregory Stanton and Daniel Feierstein, the past two Presidents of the International Association of Genocide Scholars, shared their thoughts on the perennial question of INTENT in the Genocide Convention, and discuss The Gambia vs Myanmar case at the International Court of Justice.
Hosted by Dr. Maung Zarni -
FRC Genocide Podcast Series (မြန်မာပိုင်း)
ဒေါက်တာမောင်ဇာနည် စီစဉ်တင်ဆက်သည်။
Rohingya Blogger တည်ထောင်သူ ဦးဘစိန်နဲ့ ဒေါက်တာမောင်ဇာနည်တို့ စကားဝိုင်း
FRC Genocide Podcast Series မြန်မာပိုင်းအစီအစဉ်မှာ ဦးဘစိန်က -
(၁) ရိုဟင်ဂျာနဲ့ ရခိုင် အသိုင်းအဝိုင်းနှစ်ခုကြား အေးအတူပူအမျှ သင့်မြတ်စွာ နေထိုင်လာခဲ့တဲ့အကြောင်း
(၂) နဂါးမင်းစီမံချက် ဖြစ်ပေါ်လာပုံအဆင့်ဆင့်
(၃) ၁၉၇၈ ခုနှစ်မှာ နဂါးမင်းစီမံချက်နဲ့ ရိုဟင်ဂျာတွေကို ညှဉ်းပန်းနှိပ်စက်ပြီး အစုလိုက်အပြုံလိုက် တစ်ဖက်နိုင်ငံကို မောင်းထုတ်ခဲ့စဉ်က ကိုယ်တွေ့အတွေ့အကြုံ - စတာတွေကို အသေးစိတ်ဆွေးနွေးထားပါတယ်။ -
FRC Genocide Podcast Series [in English, hosted by Dr. Maung Zarni]
A Conversation with Michael Becker, former associate legal officer with ICJ, a PhD candidate at the University of Cambridge
The FRC Genocide podcast with Michael Becker covers:
1) The recent developments around the Myanmar genocide case at ICJ, specifically Canada and the Netherlands’ official joint plan to “intervene” in The Gambia vs Myanmar;
2) The Gambia team’s litigation in USA regarding Facebook’s refusal to cooperate with The Gambia legal team on the release of the potentially valuable evidence of Myanmar’s genocidal intent; and
3) Myanmar’s specific acts of non-compliance with the ICJ provisional measures order to protect Rohingyas -
FRC Genocide Podcast Series [in English, hosted by Dr. Maung Zarni]
The FRC Genocide Podcast with Edith Mirante covers:
1) “the unlivable Bhasan Cher island” where Bangladesh is planning to relocate 100,000 Rohingya genocide survivors
2) The sordid history of Bangladesh in mistreating Rohingya refugees over the last 40 years
3) Burma or Myanmar’s internal colonialism towards national minorities
4) Western and global corporate involvement and Burma’s “Resource Curse”
5) The slow Balkanization of Myanmar as the result of decades of repression by Myanmar or Bama ruling class -
A conversation with Dr. Gianni Tognoni, Secretary General of the Rome-based Permanent Peoples Tribunal (hosted by Dr. Maung Zarni)
The FRC Genocide Podcast with Dr. Gianni Tognoni covers:
1) The problems with international law as the law of the states
2) The rights of peoples, not states
3) The origin of Permanent Peoples’ Tribunals
4) The nature and proceedings of the PPT
5) PPT on international crimes such as genocides, war crimes, exploitation
6) Peoples’ Tribunals as part of People’s Struggle for Freedom, Justice and Accountability
A medical doctor by profession, Dr Gianni Tognoni is the Secretary General of the Rome-based Permanent Peoples Tribunal since its establishment in 1979. Over the last 35 years Dr Tognoni has been deeply involved in the promotion of humans and people's rights, beginning with his participation in the Russell Tribunal 2 on Latin American Dictatorships ( 1973-76) and in the preparation of the Universal Declaration of Peoples Rights. In his professional field of medicine, he has collaborated with WHO in the formulation of essential drugs policies, and activated research groups in community epidemiology in most of the countries of central and Latin America, and in Africa. As research director at the Mario Negri Institute in Milan over the last 30+ years, Dr Tognoni has directed research in the fields of cardiology, intensive care, neurology and psychiatry the findings of which have been published in some of the world's leading professional journals. -
The FRC Genocide Podcast with retired Dean, Professor Gill Boehringer covers:
1) The feudal structure of wealth and power in the Philippines
2) The targeted extrajudicial killings of those “red-tagged” (that is, labelled "subversives") by the Duterte regime
3) The alarming rate of the persecution of people’s lawyers and
4) The attacks on civil society including journalists
Prof. Gill Boehringer is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow at Macquarie University School of Law, Sydney, Australia. He was previously Dean at the School.
His research focuses on repressive states and the violation of human and environmental rights. For the past decade he has had a special focus on the Philippines. Currently he is studying the ‘drug war” in that country, and attacks on lawyers under the regime of the authoritarian regime of President Duterte. -
FRC Genocide Podcast Series [in English, hosted by Dr. Maung Zarni]Daniel Feierstein holds a Ph.D, in Social Sciences by the University of Buenos Aires. He is the Director of the Centre of Genocide Studies at the National University of Tres de Febrero in Buenos Aires, Argentina.Feierstein´s books and articles have been critical in the qualification of the crimes committed in Argentina as genocide, established by 9 different tribunals from 2006 on. Feierstein is the current President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars. Among his most recent books, it is worth to mention “Genocide as a Social Practice. Reorganizing Society under the Nazis and Argentina´s Military Juntas (Rutgers University Press, 2014)” and “Memorias y Representaciones. Sobre la elaboracion del genocidio I” (FCE, 2012). He also chaired the Permanent Peoples Tribunals on Sri Lanka (2013) and Myanmar (2018).In this part II of 2 conversations, Daniel Feierstein discusses:1) US National Security Doctrine as applied to Latin America and resultant genocides & other grave crimes in the region; 2) The fallacy of treating Auschwitz as “the yardstick” against which other genocides are measured; 3) Reorganizing internal societal relations as the goal of genocides; and 4) The pervasive problem of “the genocidal mind” that frames groups and their identities as “immutable” “fixed” & "permanent".
-
FRC Genocide Podcast Series [in English, hosted by Dr. Maung Zarni]
Febriana Firdaus, an independent investigative journalist based in eastern part of Indonesia, discusses:
1) West Papua, a resource rich and mountainous island nation, snatched from the Dutch colonial ruler by Indonesia as since 1961
2) History of Western corporate exploitation of the island’s gold, copper and timber
3) Remote, isolated and deeply impoverished lives of the predominantly Christian West Papuan people
4) Trans-Migration of Javanese Muslims as state-supported new migrants
5) Christian Church and its role in resistance and struggle for self-determination -
Rene C Mugenzi is a UK-based human right activist from Rwanda. He is also Chair of the Global Campaign for Rwandans Human Rights, also based in London.
Rene has spoken on several platforms including universities, the House of Common, the European Union and the UN on human rights issues relating to Rwanda. In 2011, the UK Police foiled an assassination plot that has been planned by agents of the Rwandan government. Besides Rwandan human rights issues, Rene gas campaigned for the end of Myanmar's ongoing genocide of Rohingya people.
Rene Mugenzi, a UK-based Chairman of the Global Campaign for Rwandan Human Rights, discusses:
1) His mixed Hutu-Tutsi heritage and identity
2) The principal use of identification cards to kill, or not to kill
3) Radio station and communal meetings as pre-internet, and pre-Facebook platforms for the genocide propaganda
4) Geopolitics surrounding the West’s selective justice for Rwandan genocides (Hutu government’s genocide against Tutsis, and subsequent Tutsi rebel’s genocide against Hutus)
5) Reflection on the visit to Auschwitz with Rohingya, Burmese and other international activists and scholars. -
FRC Genocide Podcast Series (မြန်မာပိုင်း)
ဒေါက်တာမောင်ဇာနည် စီစဉ်တင်ဆက်သည်။
ကချင်လူမျိုး - အတိုက်အခံခေါင်းဆောင်နဲ့ ရှေ့နေတစ်ဦး ဖြစ်သူ ဦးခွန်ဆာမခေါ်နဲ့ ဒေါက်တာမောင်ဇာနည်တို့ရဲ့ ဗမာကိုလိုနီအမြစ်ပြုတ်ရေး စကားဝိုင်း
၎င်းတို့နှစ်ဦးက -
(၁) မြန်မာနိုင်ငံအတွင်း နယ်စပ်တောင်တန်းဒေသများနဲ့ မြေပြန့်ဒေသများကြားက ကိုယ်ထူကိုယ်ထအသင်းအကြောင်း
(၂) မြန်မာနဲ့ကချင်၊ ဗုဒ္ဓဘာသာနဲ့ခရစ်ယာန်ဘာသာဝင်များရဲ့ အမွေအနှစ်များအကြောင်း
(၃) ဗမာကိုလိုနီလက်အောက်ခံ နယ်စပ်ဒေသမှပြည်သူများအကြောင်း
(၄) ဗိုလ်ချုပ်အောင်ဆန်း ကတိကဝတ်ပြုခဲ့တာနဲ့ ဖဒရယ်စနစ်ရဲ့မူများကို ချိုးဖောက်ခြင်း၊ တိုင်းရင်းသားလူမျိုးစုများ တန်းတူညီမျှရေးနဲ့ ကိုယ်ပိုင်ပြဌာန်းခွင့်များ ချိုးဖောက်ခံရခြင်း - စတာတွေကို စုံစုံလင်လင် ဆွေးနွေးထားပါတယ်။ -
Daniel Feierstein holds a Ph.D, in Social Sciences by the University of Buenos Aires. He is the Director of the Centre of Genocide Studies at the National University of Tres de Febrero in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
In this FRC Genocide Podcast Series, Argentinian Professor Daniel Feierstein, past-President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars, discusses:
1) Ralphael Lemkin’s two-phased conception of genocide - the identity-based intentional destruction of populations and re-ordering of demographic make-up and social relations
2) The spectacular failures of international law and global accountability in cases of genocides
3) Nazi and Argentinian genocides
4) Myanmar’s ICJ lawyer William Schabas and his un-ethical defense of the genocidal regime -
Katherine Southwick is a consultant adviser on Atrocity Prevention project at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum on the role of domestic criminal justice systems in atrocity prevention. She previously worked for over a decade on human rights, statelessness, and legal reform in Africa, Asia, and the Pacific Islands. She worked for the American Bar Association Rule of Law Initiative (ABA ROLI) in Washington DC and the Philippines on programs relating to judicial reform and the ASEAN human rights system. As a research fellow at Refugees International, she conducted research and advocacy on the global problem of statelessness. She has clerked in the Office of the Prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and her commentary on the Rohingya crisis has appeared in media and scholarly outlets. Katherine grew up in Africa and holds a B.A. and a J.D. from Yale University as well as a PhD (to be conferred 2020) from National University of Singapore Faculty of Law.
Dr. Katherine Southwick touched on the following issues:
1) On her normative theory of the rule of law
2) On the bi-continental upbringing in Africa and USA
3) Her take on #blacklivesmatter: Africans and African Americans
4) The Genocide Convention and atrocity prevention
5) The contextual limits of Law as crime prevention -
David Kilgour is a human-rights activist, author, former lawyer, and Canadian politician. He served as an MP in the Canadian parliament for nearly 30 years, held the position of Secretary of State for Africa and Latin American, and subsequently for Asia. A lifelong practicing Christian, Kilgour has worked on issues such as inter-faith dialog, personal freedoms, and democratic government throughout his career. In Parliament, he was active in prayer groups while at venues and publications across the country he has spoken specifically on religious themes and politics. Commonly, his topics have been on global religious and political persecutions. With David Matas, Kilgour coauthored "Bloody Harvest: Organ Harvesting of Falun Gong Practitioners in China (2009)". For his international activism on human rights and religious freedom, he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for 2010.
This FRC Genocide Podcast covers:
1) His human rights research on China’s commercial harvesting of human organs - without the source and/or consent of vast number of "donors"
2) Communist Party’s decades-long persecution of Falun Gong members whose foundational principles include Truth, Non-violence, Compassion and Health
3) The emerging genocide of Uyghurs by China
4) Canada’s foreign policy on mass atrocity cases -
FRC Genocide Podcast Series [in English, hosted by Dr. Maung Zarni]
A conversation with Tomás Ojea Quintana, United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in North Korea
This conversation covers:
1) On his early whistle - “elements of a genocide” - in April 2014 on Myanmar genocide
2) His criticism of Rangoon-based diplomats who called his UN-mandated human rights investigation “toxic”
3) The Universal Jurisdiction case by BROUK in Argentina - against Burmese monks, politicians, and generals with criminal responsibility including Thein Sein, Min Aung Hlaing, Wirathu and Aung San Suu Kyi
4) On racism of 88 Generation Leadership such as Ko Ko Gyi
5) The crimes against humanity against non-Rohingya ethnic peoples in Eastern and Northern Myanmar - Laat meer zien