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NEWS - Myanmar dissidents call for



Subject: NEWS - Myanmar dissidents call for release of 37 pro-democracy

activists
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Myanmar dissidents call for release of 37 pro-democracy activists

BANGKOK, Aug 20 (AFP) - Myanmar students in exile called Friday for
Myanmar's military rulers to release 37 pro-democracy activists,
arrested ahead of a planned uprising next month.

At a press conference Thursday, the junta said it had arrested 26 people
in the central town of Pegu and seven more in the southern towns of Ye
and Moulmein in connection with the planned uprising.

The military said another four people, including members of the
opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) had been arrested earlier
in the northern town of Mandalay.

"The press conference was pure theatre, held only to intimidate the
people of Burma and to serve as propoganda for their own forces," said
Aung Thu Nyein of the All Burma Students' Democratic Front (ABSDF).

The ABDSF said at least 150 people had been arrested this month in
connection with the planned uprising on September 9.

"Burma's crisis will not be solved by intimidation, arresting people and
linking them with opposition figures and organisations," Aung Thu Nyein
said.

The ABSDF called for Myanmar's military rulers to enter into dialogue
with pro-democracy groups, particularly the NLD -- led by Nobel peace
laureate Aung San Suu Kyi

The NLD won a landslide victory in 1990 elections in Myanmar but has
been denied power by the military.

On Thursday the junta accused the NLD of working with dissidents and
exiled students to incite a mass uprising next month.

"They are acting in a synchronised manner ... they are heading for
internal riots," Junta spokesman Colonel Than Tun told reporters.

"Most obviously they are doing so with moral and material support from
outside."

Than Tun said since early July authorities had seized thousands of
"instigative leaflets," cassette tapes, videos and flags bearing the
fighting peacock logo of the democracy movement.

Despite denials from the NLD leadership, he said party members were
"unquestionably involved" in alleged plans for unrest.

Exiled pro-democracy activists based in Bangkok have been calling for a
mass uprising against the junta on September 9, or 9/9/99, a day of
numerical significance for many Burmese.

This month saw the 11th anniversary of a popular uprising on August 8,
1988, or 8/8/88, in which hundreds of pro-democracy demonstrators were
gunned down and a junta took power from dictator General Ne Win.