Burma on the Savvy Traveler
I am writing to express grave concern over this weekend's Savvy Traveler
show, which attempted to highlight some experiences in Burma. The brief discussion of a tourist's experience in Burma was alarming, given that there is an international tourism ban in this military-controlled country. As a leader
in the human rights community for Burma, I must express our disappointment
and anger at this oversight.
My company manufactures auger filler systems that put someone's
product into containers quickly and accurately. I travel to
service, repair the equipment, and to train the operators and
maintenance people that use our machines.
Although seemingly benign, tourists exacerbate the military atrocities in
Burma by a) giving a false legitimacy to the military dictatorship that is universally condemned for its genocide,
enslavement, and torture of the people, b) gives money to the illegal
military regime which wholly controls all tourist venues, c) perpetuates the military propaganda that there is no human rights abuses
or genocide in Burma, and most troubling, d) financially supports the
tourism industry that uses slave labor and has killed thousands. The bus that the tourist describes on your show travels upon roads that
are well-documented to be built by slave labor, many of them children.
The Savvy Traveler is going against the intention of international law, UN resolutions, US trade sanctions, and common decency by encouraging tourism in Burma against the wishes of the people and world
human rights organizations. And you callously describe a "scene of life" inside Burma that tourists may find charming but has been
tainted by the blood of so many innocent victims of the military
dictators. I would expect your show be cautious when choosing Angola or Iraq or Kosovo as tourist topics to cover because of the implicit danger of encouraging tourism in these danger zones at the present time.
However, in Burma, tourists are a great danger to the Burmese people because of the ignorance of where tourists' money goes and how the tourist industry was built to accommodate them.
All this information is readily available from Amnesty International, the
United Nations, the US State Department, Human Rights Watch Asia, and the Free Burma Coalition (which works with the democratic
government in exile). Most travel agencies and airlines do not fly into
Burma due to the human rights crisis, and nearly 200 corporation have ended business in Burma. I understand if this information is new
to you, but please take heed. Your show's casual illustration of tourism
in Burma could be construed as collaboration with the military's propaganda machine that encourages unwitting tourists to bring dollars
to Rangoon so the military can show up the international community.
-Mick Schommer
Free Burma Coalition
P.S. This was particularly disturbing timing, as the show aired the same
day that Michael Aris died. Michael Aris is the husband of Nobel Laureate and our democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi. Suu Kyi has been in detention by the military since 1989 and separated from her husband and family.
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