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Who is doing what? (r)



A person who hides his real name and attacks to anybody with his/her fake
name is just a person like, who covers his balded head with the wig.
Actually, that kind of wig does not beautify his/her head but it looks like
the rug, so that the military thug boots could clean and polish theirs on
it.  Maybe that newinnaing is getting proud of it.  What a psychotic guy!

Now newinnaing is knowing 'who is doing what' and also 'who is knowing who'.
Hey! Don't act like a sissy.

Win Naing (Peter)

P.S.  There is no 'Ne' in front of my name.  Just the simple Win Naing.
-----Original Message-----
To: Recipients of burmanet-l <burmanet-l@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wednesday, July 15, 1998 6:02 PM
Subject: Re: Who is doing what?


>Dear Kyaw Kyaw Htut,
>Your analysis on the issue is great.  Now unknown person nwn is scare to
>come out. It is like the SLORC propaganda newspapers.  Many people write
>articles and attacked Daw ASSK but they never reveal their real name,
>instead they use fake name like nwn because they know that they are wrong,
>and they have no guts to expose themselves.  What a shame?
>sincerely
>
>Ko Htun
>
>Here is the news about NCGUB. I think Burma net do not want to put this
>news on the net.  Check it out.
>
>Across southeast Asia
>
>'SECRET' EXODUS LEAVES NCGUB 'LEADERLESS' IN THAILAND News  (based on an
>item in the July 17 edition of Asiaweek and other sources)
>
>Diplomats join Net buffs in questioning financial credibility of exile
>government
>
>BANGKOK  -- This week's edition of  Asiaweek speculates that the Burmese
>resistance movement in Thailand has been dealt a severe blow with the
>departure of NCGUB cabinet ministers Maung Maung Aye, Teddy Buri, Sann
>Aung, Thein Oo and other senior figures who "decamped" to  Sydney in
>mid-June.  According to the widely read newsmagazine, the move followed
>"secret tripartite talks between exiled Burmese leaders and the Thai and
>Australian governments". The article contends that the exodus of the NCGUB
>officials "has removed Thailand as a base for the exiled Burmese government
>- and severely dented its clout as a resistance movement".
>
>"Sympathetic" diplomats in Bangkok, whose governments gave financial aid to
>the exiles in the past, Asiaweek reports, are "miffed by their clandestine
>departure and concerned about the funds they have been giving them".  The
>doubts of the diplomats find resonance in a debate currently being
>conducted on the Internet by exiles in Australia, Thailand and the U.S. who
>charge that the
>"government-in-exile" has lost credibility with many of its supporters
>because of the way it has been spending money received from foreign
>governments and agencies.  So far the NCGUB has stonewalled their attempts
>to get at its accounts.
>
>