A child of the revolution seeks office to fulfil a youthful ambition 

Robbed of her own youth, Hnin Hnin Hmway is running on a promise to improve young people’s prospects for a better life

Published on Oct 31, 2020
Pyithu Hluttaw candidate Hnin Hnin Hmway is seen at her party's Botahtaung township office on October 10 (Myo Set Pai/Myanmar Now)
Pyithu Hluttaw candidate Hnin Hnin Hmway is seen at her party's Botahtaung township office on October 10 (Myo Set Pai/Myanmar Now)

Hnin Hnin Hmway knew early in life that she wanted to be an educator. But before she could realize her dream, her world was turned upside down: A nationwide uprising against military rule became a decades-long struggle, and like so many others of her generation, she had to put her personal goals on hold. 

Now, more than 30 years later, she says her passion for education is as strong as ever. And she promises that if her bid to enter parliamentary politics in next month’s election is successful, she will make educational reform her top priority. 

“A good education law is one of the fundamental necessities of the country, and so I want to amend the existing law so that it will be in line with democratic standards and our desire for peace,” she said. 

As a candidate for the Democratic Party for a New Society (DPNS) running in Yangon’s Botahtaung township, Hnin Hnin Hmway has a wealth of political experience, even if she has never held elected office.

 

 

In recent years, she has been involved with the National Network for Education Reform (NNER), which spearheaded opposition to the 2014 Myanmar National Education Law, introduced by the quasi-civilian government of former general Thein Sein.

“It’s important for forces inside parliament to join hands with forces outside,” said Hnin Hnin Hmway

 

 

Criticized for ignoring the input of students, the law provoked major protests that ended in a violent crackdown the following year. Since then, little progress has been made in meeting the demands of those most affected by the law.

“I think the education law we have now is on the wrong track. We tried to amend it, but haven’t been able to do so yet,” said Hnin Hnin Hmway. 

An even bigger problem, she said, is Myanmar’s 2008 constitution, which grants 25 percent of seats in parliament to unelected military representatives. This provision, which makes it impossible for elected lawmakers to amend the army-drafted charter, is completely at odds with democratic principles, she said.

Despite her objections to the constitution, however, she has finally decided to run for office in the hope that she will be able to amplify her political message, even if it means working within a deeply flawed system.

“We can speak with a louder voice in parliament. There is nothing we can do to change the constitution, but if we can speak up officially, there’s a chance that our voices will be heard by the international community,” she said.

As someone who has spent much of her life as an activist, she also believes that those in power need to hear what politically engaged people in the wider society have to say.

“It’s important for forces inside parliament to join hands with forces outside. We should listen to the voices of outside forces,” she said.

A life in politics

Hnin Hnin Hmway has been a member of the DPNS since its founding in October 1988. Before that, the then 20-year-old university student was active in the massive pro-democracy protests that had reached a crescendo on “four eights day”—August 8, 1988—only to be brutally crushed a month and 10 days later.

But even earlier than this, her life was steeped in politics. Her father, Kyaw Min, had joined the Burma Independence Army (BIA) in the struggle against colonial rule and later took part in the peace movement led by Thakin Kodaw Hmaing. 

By the time she was born, Myanmar was living under the dictatorship of General Ne Win, but that did not stop her father or his friends from engaging in politics.

“Old politicians often gathered at my house to discuss politics. My uncle was also the secretary of a local peace group, so we always listened to what he said. That’s how I grew up,” she recalled.

“When the schools were closed, we opened our own classes,” said Hnin Hnin Hmway

But her parents always urged her to put her education first. She did well in high school and passed the matriculation exam with distinction. It was while she was in her fourth year at Yangon University that the student-led protests of 1988 swept everything else aside.

She became a member of the All Burma Federation of Student Unions (ABFSU) and also joined a local student union in Yangon’s Thaketa township, where she lived. She watched as soldiers raided their office and destroyed signboards and other property. She vowed at that moment never to give up politics.

Dark decades 

After the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) seized power in September 1988, Myanmar was plunged into a long era of oppression. Activists were forced to flee the country or go underground, while schools and universities were repeatedly shuttered, sometimes for years at a time, to prevent students from reigniting protests.

But none of this deterred Hnin Hnin Hmway, who continued her activities despite the constant threat of arrest. 

“When the schools were closed, we opened our own classes. We did this for the benefit of the poor. Whenever public servants faced oppression, we stood with them publicly. This made people in the Tatmadaw very angry with us,” she said.

Any sign of trouble from student protesters inevitably led to a visit by the authorities. In August 1989, a search of her house turned up copies of political statements released by groups opposed to military rule. A month later, she was sentenced to three years in prison.

While she was in Yangon’s notorious Insein prison, the SLORC held an election that the National League for Democracy (NLD) won by a landslide. When the regime refused to recognise the result, Hnin Hnin Hmway and other political prisoners staged a strike. For this, she was transferred to Thayarwaddy prison in Bago region, where she remained until her release in 1992.

She wanted to go back to university after this, but that proved impossible because she refused to sign a pledge not to engage in politics. So instead she opted for a distance-education program. In 1995, she graduated with a bachelor’s degree in history.

During this period, she also continued her political work. She tried to establish contacts between students who had fled to the border to take up arms and those who remained active inside the country. She was under constant surveillance, so she went into hiding as more and more of her colleagues were detained. Then, in January 1997, she was arrested again and sentenced to another three years in prison.

“Laws should not be based only on the orders of higher-ups. The will of the people also has to be considered,” said Hnin Hnin Hmway.

Even this second stint in prison did nothing to dampen her commitment to the struggle. In 2007, she took part in the monk-led protests of the Saffron Revolution, and the next year she was active in efforts to resist the junta’s final push to force its constitution on a country still reeling from the devastation of Cyclone Nargis.

A new era

As Myanmar’s political climate began to change after elections were held for the first time in two decades in 2010, Hnin Hnin Hmway looked for new ways to work for justice. 

In 2012, she joined a committee to support former political prisoners and played a leading role in collecting information about those still behind bars. Of all her political activities over the years, this is the one she speaks of with the greatest pride.

After nearly three decades as a political outsider, she made her first attempt to win public office in 2015, running as a candidate in Mandalay’s constituency 5.

She lost in that election, but now she’s ready to try again.

Even though she has changed her stance on the utility of participating in a political system that preserves military influence, she still believes firmly in the importance of representing the interests of ordinary people.

“Laws should not be based only on the orders of higher-ups. The will of the people also has to be considered,” she said.

As a product of the heady days of the 1988 uprising, she remains committed to the idea that the first rule of politics is to include everyone in decisions that affect them.

This vision of an inclusive system politics also extends to those who are constrained as much by tradition as by poverty or political oppression.

“It is still rare for women to reach high positions in politics. But women should also be decision-makers, and not just members. Real responsibilities should be given to women, and women must fulfil their duties in turn,” she said.

Myo Set Pai is Fact-Checking Reporter with Myanmar Now

After three deaths of alleged regime allies in the area, the junta’s armed forces storm villages and open fire on locals

Published on Jun 16, 2021
21-year-old Aung San from Boke in Depayin Township was killed by regime troops when they opened fire on his village on June 14 (Supplied)

Regime soldiers opened fire on villages in Sagaing Region’s Depayin Township on Monday after both a former local administrator and the daughters of a current junta-allied administrator were killed by unknown assailants one day earlier.

One villager was killed and another was seriously injured in Monday’s attack. 

On Sunday evening, locals in the Depayin Township village of Kyi found the bodies of two women—Than Than Sint, a school teacher in her 30s, and San, in her 40s—with visible stab wounds near a creek. Their father, Thein Zaw, the village’s administrator under the military regime, fled the area soon after. 

Junta-run newspaper Kyemon alleged on June 15 that “armed terrorists” were responsible for the women’s deaths. 

Bo Tint, the former administrator of Inpin village, also in Depayin, was shot in the head on Sunday evening as well. He had been accused of being a military informant regarding anti-coup activities due to his close ties to the army.

After the three deaths on Sunday, 16 military trucks were subsequently deployed to villages throughout the township. On Monday afternoon, the junta’s army first opened fire on residents of Satpyarkyin and Boke, two miles west of Kyi. 

“They stormed the villages for no apparent reason. They used a lot of force,” a Boke resident said.

Twenty-one-year-old Boke local Aung San was shot in the chest and died immediately. Thike Htwe, 22 was shot in the abdomen and in the pubic region and is seriously injured. 

Villagers feared Thike would be arrested and tortured if he were taken to the hospital, so he was being treated in a safe house at the time of reporting, according to residents. 

Hundreds of soldiers then stormed the villages of Kyi, Inpin, Nyaung Hla and Yin Kyay, reportedly chasing and shooting at locals. 

At around 6pm on Monday, fighting broke out between the army and the local People's Defence Force (PDF) near Inpin. The clash lasted more than 30 minutes. 

Two regime soldiers were killed and seven were injured in the fighting, according to the local PDF.

On Tuesday morning, around 300 soldiers in 22 military trucks opened fire in Nyaung Hla. Further information about the incident was not available at the time of reporting. 

Since April, the junta’s troops have been deployed to the Sagaing Region villages where there have been anti-coup activities in Depayin, Yinmabin, Kani, Taze, Ayataw and Mingin townships.

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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An elderly husband and wife are feared dead after they hid in their home, which was set on fire by the regime troops

Published on Jun 16, 2021
The smoldering remains of homes in Kinma, as seen by residents who returned on June 16, one day after the junta’s troops set fire to the village (Supplied)

Myanmar army troops and police officers set fire to Kinma—a village in Magwe Region’s Pauk Township—on Tuesday, destroying nearly 80 percent of its houses, according to residents. 

An elderly husband and wife are now missing after staying behind and hiding in their home as other residents fled. Locals fear that they burned to death in the attack.

Kinma’s residents left their homes on Tuesday in anticipation of the raid by regime soldiers, leaving food and water for elderly people who were unable to run with them, a Pauk local said. They had planned to return to check on them the following day.

Kinma is home to some 1,000 residents and is 18 miles from Pauk, a town in central Magwe Region bordering Chin State. By Wednesday morning, images posted on social media by Pauk locals indicated that much of the village had been burnt down. 

Because they had been hiding in their home at the time of the attack, locals fear that husband and wife Mya Maung, 85, and Kyi Hmein, 83, burned to death. However, villagers who returned to Kinma on Wednesday morning said they were unable to find their bodies, as they were forced to flee again once they heard the troops were coming back.

One of the villagers told Myanmar Now that he had witnessed the couple’s son crying amidst the ashes of his parents’ home.

He added that only around 50 houses—out of some 230—were still intact.

Conflict in the area intensified after June 12, when gunmen on motorbikes shot at the house of the junta-allied administrator of Deedotekwin village, more than 12 miles from Kinma. 

One of the motorcycles broke down and was left behind in Deedotekwin by the gunmen.  The regime authorities traced the bike’s licence plate to Kinma, according to a local. Policemen and plainclothes soldiers then went to the village in search of the suspect.

Kinma’s villagers fled when they got word of the junta’s armed forces’ arrival. Seeing no one in the village, the troops then set fire to the village, said the Pauk resident. 

Be Tu, a man from Pauk who had contact with the civilian resistance in Kinma, said that gunfire was exchanged between local fighters and the regime troops outside of the village as they arrived in the area on Tuesday. 

He said that the shootout ended at around 4pm, and estimated that up to 15 junta soldiers were killed and one local was injured. Myanmar Now was not able to independently verify the number of casualties.

After the clash, the surviving junta troops and policemen set fire to Kinma.  

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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The move was announced on Tuesday following talks with military officials and religious leaders

Published on Jun 16, 2021
The Myanmar military has damaged or destroyed hundreds of buildings, including churches, since clashes with Karenni resistance fighters began in late May. (Supplied) 

Karenni resistance forces announced the suspension of attacks on regime troops in northern Kayah (Karenni) and southern Shan states on Tuesday amid a growing crisis facing displaced civilians in the region. 

The Karenni Nationalities Defence Force (KNDF), a coalition of anti-junta forces formed on May 31, made the decision following talks with military and religious leaders late last week. 

The move comes as the number of civilians displaced by the nearly month-old conflict has surpassed 100,000, according to the United Nations human rights agency OHCHR.

The KNDF consists of civilians from Loikaw, Demoso, and Nan Mei Khon in Kayah State and Moebye and Pekhon in southern Shan State, as well as ethnic armed forces based in the region.

The KNDF did not specify how long its ceasefire would last, but said it would continue to oppose the military junta in various ways. It also urged people to be united, prepared and cautious.

On June 11, representatives of three Karenni armed groups involved in the KNDP met with army personnel from the Eastern Command and Christian religious leaders in Taunggyi, Shan State, to discuss the ongoing situation.

The armed groups that attended the meeting were reportedly the Kayan New Land Party, the Karenni National People's Liberation Front, and the Karenni National Peace and Development Party.

“The armed groups talked to the military council about the armed conflict. Our religious groups mainly discussed allowing humanitarian channels for displaced people,” a Catholic priest from Loikaw told Myanmar Now.

The church, which has taken a leading role in efforts to mitigate harm to civilians caught in the conflict, has also been a target of attacks, with at least eight churches damaged or destroyed by the military since fighting began.

Religious leaders demanded that relief workers be allowed to transport food and other supplies safely and without hindrance. 

“The commander said he would consider measures for the displaced people. The people are in real trouble. Living in the jungle during the rainy season is very difficult. The elderly and children are especially vulnerable,” the priest said.

During the meeting, no agreement was reached to guarantee the security of displaced locals, but the situation is likely to be more stable than before, he added. 

“I haven’t heard any gunfire for a day or two since the meeting,” he said, noting that some civilians have also returned to their homes in recent days.

“But people are still very worried. There’s a ceasefire, but they don’t know how long it will last. They’re worried that troops will come and arrest them at night if they return. They are still in so much fear.”

Some residents who returned to Demoso on Tuesday discovered that their homes had been destroyed during the clashes, according to local sources.

The military has used heavy artillery and airstrikes against local anti-regime resistance forces since clashes began in the area in late May. 

In addition to killing numerous civilians in these attacks, the military has also imposed restrictions on the transport of food, fuel and other essential commodities into Kayah State since May 28, creating widespread shortages of basic necessities. 

On June 11, the day that a six-day-old boy died of a cold while his family was fleeing from clashes in Pekhon Township, the military set fire to an ambulance and vehicles carrying food and medical supplies for displaced people in the township.

In an article published by a state-run newspaper, the regime claimed that it had merely seized supplies from “terrorists”. 

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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