Undaunted: An Interview with Zoya Phan

June 3, 2010 | by

Undaunted Book CoverHer father was a pro-democracy leader and her mother a guerrilla soldier.  When she was 14 years old, the Burmese army attacked her remote village and Zoya Phan ran for her life.  After weeks of hiding in the jungle, Zoya and her family, members of the Karen ethnic group, ended up in a refugee camp on the Thai-Burma border. There, she won a scholarship from the Open Society Institute to study in the United Kingdom.  Today, at age 29, she is one of Europe’s leading human rights advocates for Burma. Her book, Undaunted, describes her struggle for freedom and survival in Burma and has just been released in the United States.

Why did you write this book?

I wrote Undaunted to tell the world about my homeland and the struggle for freedom in Burma.

Few people know what is going on there. In Eastern Burma, more than 3,500 villages have been destroyed in the past 15 years and hundreds of thousands of ethnic minorities continue to be used as slave labor.  Women and children are raped, men are tortured and executed. Right now there are more than 100,000 people hiding in the jungle, without food, proper shelter, or medicine.

There are remarkable people there who try to help and save lives without much support from the outside world. If they had more support, they could save more lives. I would like my book to inform but also to move people and governments to take action for human rights in Burma.

How many ethnic groups are there in Burma and why are they being persecuted?

There are eight major ethnic groups together with more than 130 ethnic minorities in Burma. Ethnic people have been living under constant attack by the ruling Burmese regimes for decades. There is a humanitarian crisis in Burma and systematic human right violations—including forced labor, rape, torture, extra-judicial killings, forced relocations, extortion, land confiscation and denial of aid—are widespread. The level of poverty and disease is as high as in the worst conflict zones in Africa, but without much attention from the international community.

The United Nations has accused the dictatorship in Burma of breaking the Geneva Conventions by deliberately targeting civilians. But there hasn’t been a UN investigation into these crimes. The U.S. government should support a UN commission of inquiry into war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the dictatorship in Burma.

My dream for Burma is that everyone can live in peace, security and freedom regardless of ethnicity, race, religion and gender, and that everyone is treated equally.

In March, you visited the Thai-Burma border. Can you describe what is it like and tell me about the people you met?

I went to Papun in Karen State and met with people who were hiding in the jungle after having survived a mortar bomb attack by the Burmese army. The people cannot return to their land because the Burmese army is shooting people on sight. The army destroyed their houses, food, and crops.

I met a child soldier who had defected from the Burmese army. He was ordered to attack civilians and destroy their villages. He could end up in prison for forty years for deserting. And I will never forget a young woman I met who was five months pregnant and forced to carry heavy loads by the dictatorship’s troops. She was gang-raped, like many other women who are subjected to rape as a weapon of war by the regime.

How did you become a voice for freedom in the struggle for human rights in Burma?

The dictatorship holds on to power by denying education to its people, especially ethnic minorities like me. I grew up in Karen state and was forced to flee my homeland when the Burmese army attacked my village. While in a refugee camp, I received a scholarship from the Open Society Institute and a few other organizations to pursue higher education. Many other young people from Burma have no access to education.

In 2005, I started working with Burma Campaign UK to promote human rights, democracy, and development in Burma. I met twice with former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown as well as with the leader of the Conservative Party and now Prime Minister David Cameron, celebrities, and governments across Europe to ask them to take stronger action against the dictatorship.

What was life like in the refugee camp?

It was more like a prison camp. We were not allowed to go out. It wasn’t completely safe and we were completely dependent on aid from NGOs. We got basic food, education, and medical supplies. People in the camp live with hope that the situation in Burma will get better so that they can return home. As a young person there, I really didn’t know what lay ahead.

Do you know if people inside Burma are reading your book? What is their response?

People in Burma know about my book through the Burmese exiled media, which broadcasts the information all over the country. It could be dangerous for people to physically have my book inside. The dictatorship won’t allow such a political book that tells the truth about what’s going on in Burma.

People can read my book freely if they are in areas controlled by ethnic groups.  Many have sent encouraging messages and said the book gave them hope as well as information about advocacy activities.

Your cluster for mine Thomson, Cox in newspaper swap

NewsInc September 2, 1996 The latest in newspaper clustering moves has Thomson Newspapers and Cox Newspapers quietly agreeing on Aug. 20 to swap several papers in the southeast and southwest.

In the broker-less deal, which is expected to close this fall, Thomson gets six Cox dailies in Arizona: Yuma Daily Sun, plus the suburban Phoenix papers Mesa Tribune, Tempe Daily News Tribune, Chandler Tribune, Gilbert Tribune and Scottsdale Progress Tribune. In return, Cox picks up two papers in North Carolina: the Rocky Mount Telegram and the Elizabeth City Daily Advance, plus an undisclosed amount of cash. this web site greenville daily news

The aggregate circulation for Thomson's new dailies is around 100,000, and the aggregate circulation for the North Carolina papers is around 28,000.

While the move fits into Thomson's clustering strategy for newspapers, industry observers found Cox's motivations particularly hard to divine. Shielded from industry eyes, however, are the specifics of unidentified "other considerations we are not ready to discuss," according to Cox Newspapers' president Jay Smith. "I would hope," he said, to reveal what those may be "before the year is out, but I really can't be any more specific." Thomson Newspapers president and chief executive officer Dick Harrington deferred to Cox on the unnamed other considerations. "I think they want to do that under a separate announcement," he said. here greenville daily news

As for Thomson, the demographically attractive and growing suburban sprawl around Phoenix is one that few companies wouldn't cherish. "It's obvious that the east valley is terrific," Smith said, referring to the suburban Phoenix markets. "And we enjoyed nearly a 20-year run out there, but in the end, what Thomson was offering fit our long-term strategy better." Harrington, in outlining Thomson's strategy of consolidating its holdings into strategic marketing groups, or SMGs, pointed out that Thomson isn't just interested in selling--despite a recent paring of print holdings.

In North Carolina, meanwhile, Cox now boasts its own cluster, having added the Thomson papers to the nearby Greenville Daily Reflector, acquired in January. "We've asked Jordy Whichard," the publisher in Greenville, "to take the lead in knitting together what we've got," said Smith. And we'll wait for the next shoe to drop on this one.

9 Comments to “Undaunted: An Interview with Zoya Phan”

  1. On June 5th, 2010 at 5:29 am, myoaung said:

    Zoya.....I'm really proud of you.

  2. Hi Zoya
    You have shown great courage.
    I pray Burma will become an open democratic country in the near future.
    The outside world needs to demand that the military rulers step down and return power to the people.
    My thoughts and prayers are with you.

  3. On June 17th, 2010 at 5:40 pm, purple said:

    Ama I proud of you. I would like to read your book

  4. On July 9th, 2010 at 10:13 am, Thiha said:

    This is the beginning of people power movement to remove dictator rulership in burma.

    well, u still need to reach basic grass root level people from different areas of Burma and need to meet with every different ethnics' representatives from burma to get stronger and better understanding in this non-violence movement.

    well, i will suggest u more, later.

    thiha

  5. On August 1st, 2010 at 2:35 am, Pahsun said:

    Our whole KaRen Nation salute you and your sister.
    You carry well the genes of your Freedom fighting Dad and your daunting mother.
    They sat the path and you siblings have stuck to it.
    There ought to be many more of you'll.
    We will yet achieve our goal of shaking off the Dictators yoke.

  6. I concur with Pahsun. I read your book late last year and was riveted by the courage and incredible survival skills of your family. Each individual member was so brave. Your mother's encouragement of education and your father's sacrifice to fight the brutality against the Karen people will never be forgotten by me.

    I applaud the Open Society Foundation for supporting your university education and hope that they will support so many more Burmese people of diverse ethnicities.

    We all look to Egypt, a truely amazing revolution to build hope in all our hearts for Burma and all the oppressed people of oppressive governments worldwide.

    Though I live in the USA, I can relate to your plight and others because of the unruly dictator of a neurological disease. It is unpredictable, limiting but somehow we all find courage to keep fighting ... I wish all oppressed people the same.

  7. I meant... your father's sacrifice to fight the brutality of the current Burmese oppressive government. Your father was definitely on the side of the Karen people!

  8. may God bless you

  9. Hey Nant Zoya

    You are one of our hero like your father Mahn Shar....

    Agga

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