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Few
people outside the country of Burma can understand the images and
memories that are rolled into the simple expression '10-D.' For
many it signifies their beliefs, sacrifices made, risks taken as
well as the lost lives of their compatriots who died fighting for
a cause they deeply believed in. 10-D is a concept rich in symbolism
and at the same time difficult to express in words. Those who truly
understand the meaning of it will never forget it, especially those
who have languished inside the walls of Burma's prisons.
After
the Burmese military crushed the 1988 calls for democracy by massacring
thousands of peaceful demonstrators throughout Burma, peaceful demonstrations
and political rallies of any sort ceased to exist in Burma and universities
around the country have also been closed. However, one request of
the democracy activists that was granted by the ruling military
regime was the promise of a democratic election in Burma. In 1990
the military regime held that election. The National League for
Democracy (NLD), led by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, won a landslide victory.
Governments
around the world recognized the results and Burmese citizens were
exuberant over the outcome. Regardless of the celebration, the ruling
junta, then known as the State Law and Order Restoration Council
(SLORC) did not recognize these elections in any way.
A
year passed with the election continuing to go unrecognized and
it had been three years since the massacre of 1988. The regime had
almost, so they thought, totally extin guished the flame of democracy
in Burma. To those in the movement it was a flame that would continuously
burn for the sake of the country and to those that had already given
their lives to the cause. Therefore it became essential to re-ignite
the fire at all costs.
Early
in 1991 the government had reopened the universities after a three-year
closure. Towards the end of 1991 the students had begun to mobilize
again. Then on human right's day, December 10, as NLD-leader Aung
San Suu Kyi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in abstentia for her
efforts to restore democracy in Burma, the students chose to re-light
the democracy flame.
During
the morning of December 10,1991 some university students lit a fire
during a peaceful demonstration at Rangoon University to show their
support for Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and to show their disapproval
of the ruling junta, now renamed the State Peace and Development
Council (SPDC). Soon, hundreds of students joined them and were
actively taking part in the December 10 demonstration. The students
were demanding that the junta step down and recognize the election
results, free Daw Aug San Suu Kyi from house arrest and release
all students being detained for their participation in previous
demonstrations. The students marched up and down the famous main
avenue of the campus, Adipati Avenue, chanting slogans and denouncing
the injustices of their government. The desire to demonstrate appeared
to be contagious as students the following day at the Rangoon Institute
of Technology (RIT) instigated similar movements on their campus
and students at Mandalay University attempted the same.
Before
these demonstrations even began the students realized the magnitude
of resistance they would face for attempting to reinvigorate the
democracy movement. The military regime's reputation for handling
situations of this nature was one of violence and hate. The regime's
attitude is to retain power at all costs whether that means the
use of simple intimidation or the outright slaughtering of innocent
people. But the students were convinced that it was their civil
duty to candidly express their will and desire to live in a fair
and free society as well as to bring to light the atrocities committed
by their government. Although the students were too young to shoulder
the burden of a country in such dire straits, it was their belief
that they had to at least try.
On
this day the junta, once again, lived up to its barbaric and violent
reputation. When they finally descended upon the demonstrators,
hundreds of students were forcibly rounded up, beaten and thrown
in jail ending yet another peaceful protest in utter violence. At
that time the military regime again shut down all universities and
colleges in Burma, fearing that the small fire of democracy lit
in Rangoon may burst into flames throughout the country. The students
who were arrested that day were severely beaten and tortured in
the interrogation centers of the Military Intelligence (MI). After
three months of mental and physical abuse, the military tribunals,
organized solely for political activists after the 1988 uprising,
handed down sentences from ten-to-twenty years to all of the 136
students arrested that day, including a number of female students.
This was the first large-scale student demonstration since the 1988
uprising, where thousands of innocent Burmese were killed.
Ironically,
these same students who fought so hard for freedom and democracy
and struggled to bring it to the citizens of their homeland, entirely
lost their own personal freedom that day. They were plucked from
the warm net of their family and friends and thrown into a totally
unfamiliar and uninviting environment. They were now to enter a
place with lifeless gray walls, cold-iron bars, heavy shackles and
bone-crushing bludgeons. Just three months before they were thumbing
through textbooks, listening to the sweet and vibrant sounds of
their co- eds and enjoying the education that was deemed so necessary
by them. Once inside the walls of prison, the warden and guards
dictated their every move and any remaining memories of a student's
life came to a bitter end. Since these students were incarcerated
for participating in the December 10 movement, once in prison they
became known as the '10-D' group.
At
this point not only was a formal education out of the question but
any reading and writing was totally prohibited and punishment for
breaking these rules was extreme. Any political prisoner found in
possession of the tiniest piece of blank-paper or any written document
was to be housed in solitary confinement in iron-shackles for two-to-three
months. If any paper was found concerning politics another seven
years was to be added to their sentence. Sanctioned education of
any sort for political prisoners in Burma is not only against the
law but looked at as subversive and unnecessary. This may surprise
some, but for Burma's 2,000 political prisoners this is a part of
everyday life.
These individuals, after facing such arduous and inescapable obstacles,
were robbed of the youthful opportunities they so deserved. Although
many have been released they still battle incurable diseases and
mental illnesses that were contracted during their long-term imprisonment.
Even now, almost ten years after the 10-D demonstration some students
of the 10-D group still languish in the notorious gulags of Burma
despite completing their sentences. Regardless of their immutable
pasts their fight continues as they are still struggling to bring
democracy, freedom and justice to the country they love, totally
heedless of their own personal freedom.
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