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‘There shall be no home where the Christian religion is practised’ 

the report claims that Burma's regime is
"shaped by a fascist mentality with echoes of Hitler and the Nazis"

It begins: "There shall be no home where the Christian religion is practised."

The report will be launched at a meeting of the UK All Party Parliamentary Group on Burma to be held in the Wilson Room, Portcullis House, House of Commons, London, on Tuesday January 23.

"The meeting will be chaired by John Bercow MP," says a report from www.AsianTribune.com. "The report will be presented by Christian Solidarity Worldwide's Advocacy Officer for South Asia and author of the report, Benedict Rogers, and a delegation of Chin and Kachin activists from Burma will present evidence of human rights violations.

"'Carrying the Cross' is the most comprehensive analysis of its kind, and the first to examine the military regime's policies towards Christians of all denominations and ethnicities in Burma. It follows reports in recent years on the persecution of Muslims and the imprisonment of Buddhist monks."

"Echoes of Hitler and the Nazis"

The story goes on to say that the report claims that Burma's regime is "shaped by a fascist mentality with echoes of Hitler and the Nazis," found in the junta's hostility towards ethnic and religious minorities. Citizens who do not conform to the regime's version of Burman Buddhist nationalism - which, the report argues, is a "perverted and distorted form of Buddhism" - face "potentially serious consequences." The regime's tactics range "from churches in Rangoon finding it difficult to obtain permission to renovate their buildings, to pastors in Chin State being killed," the report claims.

The report quotes a plea from six Christian organizations in 2006, who wrote a letter to the junta's Senior General Than Shwe saying: "We simply cannot let things go on without doing anything. This is because Christian associations have been suffering, and we are feeling the pain deep in our hearts."

Baroness Cox in Newport Beach (Picture by Dan Wooding, ANS

"Carrying the Cross" has received praise from several leading public figures, with Foreword written by Baroness Cox, a member of the House of Lords who has visited Burma's border areas many times, and Preface by the former Anglican Bishop of Chelmsford, the Rt. Rev. John Perry.

John Bercow MP, the Co-Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Democracy in Burma, who visited the Thai-Burmese border with CSW in 2004, says: "As this report makes clear, all the people of Burma are suffering at the hands of this brutal regime, whatever their religion or ethnicity. But there can be no doubt that Christians are singled out for an extra dose of discrimination and barbaric abuse. CSW (Christian Solidarity Worldwide) has made a unique and vital contribution to the campaign for freedom in Burma by publishing this evidence. The United Nations and the international community must now act to bring an end to the sadistic behavior of these dictators."

The report's author, CSW's Advocacy Officer for South Asia Benedict Rogers, says: "It is time that the United Nations Security Council pass a resolution on Burma calling for an end to the grotesque human rights violations perpetrated by the regime. We urge the United Nations to investigate the violations of religious freedom in Burma and to put pressure on the regime to change. Burma's people, of all religions and ethnicities, have suffered in silence for too long."



 Dan Wooding is an award winning British journalist now living in Southern California with his wife Norma. He is the founder and international director of ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints in Strategic Times) and the ASSIST News Service (ANS). He was, for ten years, a commentator, on the UPI Radio Network in Washington, DC. Wooding is the author of some 42 books, the latest of which is his autobiography, "From Tabloid to Truth", which is published by Theatron Books. To order a copy, go to www.fromtabloidtotruth.com. danjuma1@aol.com.


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