• About
  • Contact
Sunday, December 28, 2025
Catholic Sabah
  • News
    • All
    • Asia
    • Focus
    • Local
    • Nation
    • Vatican
    • World
    Cambodian youth lead march for peace, demand ceasefire

    Cambodian youth lead march for peace, demand ceasefire

    Message from the Holy Land: Peace is not an illusion but a life choice

    Message from the Holy Land: Peace is not an illusion but a life choice

    Pope calls for more collegiality in letter on priestly ministry

    Pope calls for more collegiality in letter on priestly ministry

    50 years on, Paul VI’s gesture of reconciliation with the Orthodox Church

    50 years on, Paul VI’s gesture of reconciliation with the Orthodox Church

    Pope: Even as Jubilee ends we remain pilgrims of hope

    Pope: Even as Jubilee ends we remain pilgrims of hope

    Pope Leo: Br Lawrence teaches us joy of living each day in God’s presence

    Pope Leo: Br Lawrence teaches us joy of living each day in God’s presence

    Sydney Archdiocese dedicates Christmas light show to Bondi attack victims

    Sydney Archdiocese dedicates Christmas light show to Bondi attack victims

    Catholic bishops reaffirm Christmas message of welcome to marginalised

    Catholic bishops reaffirm Christmas message of welcome to marginalised

    Papua New Guinea Catholics celebrate nation’s first saint

    Papua New Guinea Catholics celebrate nation’s first saint

  • Opinion
    • All
    • Im on my Way
    • Kanou Monuhid Lahan Koposizon
    • Making A Difference
    • Mantad Di Katekis Peter
    • Reflection: Straight Talking
    Hope remains Asia’s enduring Christmas witness

    Hope remains Asia’s enduring Christmas witness

    Hanoi chokes under toxic winter smog as policies lag

    Hanoi chokes under toxic winter smog as policies lag

    When youth culture meets the sacred in Vietnam

    When youth culture meets the sacred in Vietnam

    What Advent preparation really demands

    What Advent preparation really demands

    Love becomes real when it costs us something

    Love becomes real when it costs us something

    Christ’s quiet reign in our digital age

    Christ’s quiet reign in our digital age

    Truly Free: Rethinking work in the age of exhaustion

    Truly Free: Rethinking work in the age of exhaustion

    Malaysia’s clergy must shed their media-shy image

    Malaysia’s clergy must shed their media-shy image

  • Feature
    Losing a loved one to suicide

    How do we know God exists?

    Living Ancestors:’ Voices of African Sisters are a testament of resilience

    Living Ancestors:’ Voices of African Sisters are a testament of resilience

    Lack of female journalists muffles voice of Cambodian women

    Lack of female journalists muffles voice of Cambodian women

    What’s in a creed?

    What’s in a creed?

    Losing a loved one to suicide

    Letting People into Our Stingy Heaven

    Restarting the Economy: (Still) time to rest – the Jubilee Year as the world’s ‘Sabbath’

    Restarting the Economy: (Still) time to rest – the Jubilee Year as the world’s ‘Sabbath’

    Synod report on women and leadership promised ‘in coming months’

    Synod report on women and leadership promised ‘in coming months’

    A glimpse into contemplative life: Sr Elisabeth on the Carmel in Sweden

    A glimpse into contemplative life: Sr Elisabeth on the Carmel in Sweden

  • Statements
    The Lord has first loved us, come let us adore Him!

    The Lord has first loved us, come let us adore Him!

    Chancery Notice

    Chancery Notice

    Reshuffle of Priests

    Reshuffle of Priests

    Media Statement

    Media Statement

    Reshuffle of Priests

    Reshuffle of Priests

    Masses for Christmas Vigil and Christmas Day 2023

    Pastoral Statement for the Feasts of All Saints and All Souls Day 2025

    Violence and Bullying Have No Place in Malaysia CFM Demands Swift Action

    Violence and Bullying Have No Place in Malaysia CFM Demands Swift Action

    Banns of Sacerdotal Ordination

    Banns of Sacerdotal Ordination

  • Chinese
  • Bahasa Melayu
  • Kadazan Dusun
  • JUBILEE 2025
  • About
  • Donate
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • All
    • Asia
    • Focus
    • Local
    • Nation
    • Vatican
    • World
    Cambodian youth lead march for peace, demand ceasefire

    Cambodian youth lead march for peace, demand ceasefire

    Message from the Holy Land: Peace is not an illusion but a life choice

    Message from the Holy Land: Peace is not an illusion but a life choice

    Pope calls for more collegiality in letter on priestly ministry

    Pope calls for more collegiality in letter on priestly ministry

    50 years on, Paul VI’s gesture of reconciliation with the Orthodox Church

    50 years on, Paul VI’s gesture of reconciliation with the Orthodox Church

    Pope: Even as Jubilee ends we remain pilgrims of hope

    Pope: Even as Jubilee ends we remain pilgrims of hope

    Pope Leo: Br Lawrence teaches us joy of living each day in God’s presence

    Pope Leo: Br Lawrence teaches us joy of living each day in God’s presence

    Sydney Archdiocese dedicates Christmas light show to Bondi attack victims

    Sydney Archdiocese dedicates Christmas light show to Bondi attack victims

    Catholic bishops reaffirm Christmas message of welcome to marginalised

    Catholic bishops reaffirm Christmas message of welcome to marginalised

    Papua New Guinea Catholics celebrate nation’s first saint

    Papua New Guinea Catholics celebrate nation’s first saint

  • Opinion
    • All
    • Im on my Way
    • Kanou Monuhid Lahan Koposizon
    • Making A Difference
    • Mantad Di Katekis Peter
    • Reflection: Straight Talking
    Hope remains Asia’s enduring Christmas witness

    Hope remains Asia’s enduring Christmas witness

    Hanoi chokes under toxic winter smog as policies lag

    Hanoi chokes under toxic winter smog as policies lag

    When youth culture meets the sacred in Vietnam

    When youth culture meets the sacred in Vietnam

    What Advent preparation really demands

    What Advent preparation really demands

    Love becomes real when it costs us something

    Love becomes real when it costs us something

    Christ’s quiet reign in our digital age

    Christ’s quiet reign in our digital age

    Truly Free: Rethinking work in the age of exhaustion

    Truly Free: Rethinking work in the age of exhaustion

    Malaysia’s clergy must shed their media-shy image

    Malaysia’s clergy must shed their media-shy image

  • Feature
    Losing a loved one to suicide

    How do we know God exists?

    Living Ancestors:’ Voices of African Sisters are a testament of resilience

    Living Ancestors:’ Voices of African Sisters are a testament of resilience

    Lack of female journalists muffles voice of Cambodian women

    Lack of female journalists muffles voice of Cambodian women

    What’s in a creed?

    What’s in a creed?

    Losing a loved one to suicide

    Letting People into Our Stingy Heaven

    Restarting the Economy: (Still) time to rest – the Jubilee Year as the world’s ‘Sabbath’

    Restarting the Economy: (Still) time to rest – the Jubilee Year as the world’s ‘Sabbath’

    Synod report on women and leadership promised ‘in coming months’

    Synod report on women and leadership promised ‘in coming months’

    A glimpse into contemplative life: Sr Elisabeth on the Carmel in Sweden

    A glimpse into contemplative life: Sr Elisabeth on the Carmel in Sweden

  • Statements
    The Lord has first loved us, come let us adore Him!

    The Lord has first loved us, come let us adore Him!

    Chancery Notice

    Chancery Notice

    Reshuffle of Priests

    Reshuffle of Priests

    Media Statement

    Media Statement

    Reshuffle of Priests

    Reshuffle of Priests

    Masses for Christmas Vigil and Christmas Day 2023

    Pastoral Statement for the Feasts of All Saints and All Souls Day 2025

    Violence and Bullying Have No Place in Malaysia CFM Demands Swift Action

    Violence and Bullying Have No Place in Malaysia CFM Demands Swift Action

    Banns of Sacerdotal Ordination

    Banns of Sacerdotal Ordination

  • Chinese
  • Bahasa Melayu
  • Kadazan Dusun
  • JUBILEE 2025
  • About
  • Donate
No Result
View All Result
Catholic Sabah
No Result
View All Result
Home News Focus

The free world must match the courage of Myanmar’s people

February 23, 2021
in Focus
The free world must match the courage of Myanmar’s people

A car carrying the body of protester Mya Thwate Thwate Khaing, 20, leads a convoy during her funeral service in Naypyidaw on Feb. 21 after she died following being shot during a rally against the military coup. (Photo: AFP)

By Benedict Rogers

Feb 23 2021

The generals, though they may be stunned by the way the people have responded, show no signs of backing down

The courage, creativity and commitment of the people of Myanmar are incredibly inspiring. From the mass protests to the ingenuity of the protest signs, protesters have turned the anti-coup demonstrations over the past three weeks into an artistic performance reflective of the human spirit.

Whether their cars are allegedly broken down on bridges or their bicycle tires need inflating at traffic jams, whether they feel an urgent need to do workouts at junctions or tie up their shoelaces, whether they launch a “floating strike” on Inle Lake or drop shallots at a crossroads, the peaceful civil disobedience movement in Myanmar deserves the applause of the world.

Most of all, the extraordinary ability of people to daub entire roads, lakes and rivers with “We Want Democracy” and “Free Our Leaders” leaves me in awe — and it conveys a totally united, unambiguous and clear message to the world about the will of the people of Myanmar.

Yet the world so far, though it may be hearing, seems to be responding limply. Some sanctions have been imposed, but they have been token. And the generals who staged this coup, though they may be stunned by the way the people have responded, show no signs of backing down.

Until this past weekend, the military regime focused on rounding up and arresting key pro-democracy leaders, either from the legitimate government or civil society. But perhaps it had not banked on the fact that the entire country and its population hates the idea of a return to the dark days of military dictatorship and international ostracism.

That — along with perhaps some consciousness of international appearances — may explain why we have not yet seen the massacres which are in the military’s DNA, along the lines of 1988 or 2007.

And yet we have seen ominous precursors.

In Mandalay on Feb. 20, live ammunition was used, resulting in the death of at least two people, one a 14-year-old — and the death toll may be more than was reported. In Yangon, a nightwatchman providing security for his neighborhood was shot for no apparent reason. British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab was absolutely right when he tweeted: “The shooting of peaceful protesters in Myanmar is beyond the pale. We will consider further action, with our international partners, against those crushing democracy and choking dissent”.

We have seen the grieving faces of families mourning their loved ones; we have seen the stark images of Burmese soldiers smiling after shooting; and we know, according to Tom Andrews, the UN special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar, that it was the 33rd Light Infantry Division that was deployed in Mandalay, a division that was at least in part responsible for the Rohingya genocide. The military junta appears to be unleashing a war against the people of Myanmar, and the world needs to wake up to that fact.

And yet the people won’t back down.

The day after the shooting and killing in Mandalay, people turned out in even larger numbers in ever more peaceful protest. The contrast could not be clearer: unarmed protesters equipped with flowers and jokes, lined up in their hundreds of thousands against trained killers with guns. Yet it’s the people armed with nothing more than flowers and humor that are courageous, and it’s the men in uniform who are cowards. Those who seize power by the bullet and not the ballot are always guilty of cowardice.

What should the Church and the world do?

The Church in Myanmar has always inspired me. It inspires me by its courage, wisdom and ingenuity. As a tiny minority of the population, it wields a moral influence that far exceeds its numerical strength. It makes its position clear — it is for democracy, justice, human rights and that is unambiguous — but its hierarchy wisely stands in the shadows, knowing that in a Buddhist-majority country it cannot play the same role the Church played at the forefront of the movements against dictatorship in, say, Poland, the Philippines, East Timor or South Korea, and yet it can play some role.

Its leaders signal a dual message — for truth, justice, human rights and democracy, and yet also ready for mediation, reconciliation and peace. It’s walking a tightrope but doing so well.

Within a few days of the coup, Myanmar’s Cardinal Charles Bo issued a strong statement condemning the military’s action, appealing for dialogue and non-violence, and calling for a return to democracy.

Catholic nuns and priests have taken to the streets to join protests, while the inspiring archbishop of Mandalay, Marco Tin Win, whom I’ve had the privilege of meeting several times, stood with some of his clergy holding a placard with the words “People’s desire — free detained leaders and oppose military rule”.

These are brave, plucky moves by a minority religion — and they are why I was inspired eight years ago to become a Catholic in Myanmar.

So, what should happen now? The world should step up. 

Pope Francis, though he has, rightly, made some remarks, must come right out front and call for prayer for Myanmar. Having visited Myanmar in 2017 — the first pontiff to do so — he must call out coup leader Min Aung Hlaing, call for the release of all those detained, appeal against any further violence and broker dialogue.

The United Nations must prove its critics wrong and show that, contrary to popular perception, it is not impotent. The secretary-general must dispatch — this week, without delay — a delegation from the Security Council to de-escalate the situation, secure the release of detained elected leaders and broker talks.

And the free world must come together to say that even with all the other challenges we face not least the Covid-19 pandemic, the abortion of the democratization of Myanmar, however fragile and disappointing that experiment was, cannot be allowed.

The democratic world must say with one voice that the rejection of the will of the people of Myanmar isn’t just an assault on Myanmar’s fledgling, fragile, tentative quasi-democracy. It is an assault on all freedom-loving people everywhere and thus cannot stand.

If there’s any silver lining, it is this: that the people of Myanmar, of all ethnicities and religions, oppose this coup and have come out onto the streets to say so. And that their focus is on values, not personalities — that while civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi is still important, and her release is rightly demanded, not everything depends on her any more.

Other leaders to chart Myanmar’s democratic course may perhaps emerge. Let’s hope so. And that this is a cause that binds everyone together — Burman, Karen, Karenni, Shan, Mon, Rakhine, Chin, Kachin, Rohingya and others.

The people of Myanmar have shown extraordinary courage and creativity. It’s time for the international community, including the worldwide Church, to show the same in support.

Benedict Rogers is a human rights activist and writer specializing in Asia. He is senior analyst for the human rights organization CSW and author of three books on Myanmar, including ‘Burma: A Nation at the Crossroads’. He is also co-founder and chief executive of Hong Kong Watch, co-founder and deputy chair of the UK Conservative Party Human Rights Commission, a member of the advisory group of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC) and a founding trustee of Hong Kong ARC. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official editorial position of UCA News. – UCANews

Previous Post

Hải Phòng Caritas helping people affected by the pandemic during Lent

Next Post

General strike against the coup. At least 4 dead

Related Posts

Dec 28 2025
Readings

Dec 28 2025

December 28, 2025
Dec 27 2025
Readings

Dec 27 2025

December 27, 2025
Dec 26 2025
Readings

Dec 26 2025

December 26, 2025
Next Post
General strike against the coup. At least 4 dead

General strike against the coup. At least 4 dead

Recent News

Cambodian youth lead march for peace, demand ceasefire

Cambodian youth lead march for peace, demand ceasefire

December 23, 2025
Message from the Holy Land: Peace is not an illusion but a life choice

Message from the Holy Land: Peace is not an illusion but a life choice

December 23, 2025
Pope calls for more collegiality in letter on priestly ministry

Pope calls for more collegiality in letter on priestly ministry

December 23, 2025
50 years on, Paul VI’s gesture of reconciliation with the Orthodox Church

50 years on, Paul VI’s gesture of reconciliation with the Orthodox Church

December 22, 2025
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Minor reshuffle and new appointment of priests

Minor reshuffle and new appointment of priests

July 15, 2024
Enggan punya anak, antara sebab perpisahan suami-isteri

Enggan punya anak, antara sebab perpisahan suami-isteri

May 20, 2025
Expulsion of priests: A loss that turns into strength

Expulsion of priests: A loss that turns into strength

December 15, 2025
Minor transfer of priests

Minor transfer of priests

November 11, 2023
The Church wants to be more the ‘inn’ of the Good Samaritan for the sick

The Church wants to be more the ‘inn’ of the Good Samaritan for the sick

Parishioners are invited to help form prophetic and servant priests

Parishioners are invited to help form prophetic and servant priests

Archdiocesan Notice on SSPX

Archdiocesan Notice on SSPX

April 28 2020

April 28 2020

Dec 28 2025

Dec 28 2025

December 28, 2025
Dec 27 2025

Dec 27 2025

December 27, 2025
Dec 26 2025

Dec 26 2025

December 26, 2025
Dec 25 2025

Dec 25 2025

December 25, 2025
Catholic Sabah

Catholic Sabah is a media organization based in Sabah Malaysia. We bring you the latest Catholic news right to your doorstep!

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Asia
  • Bahasa Melayu
  • Chinese
  • Feature
  • Focus
  • Im on my Way
  • JUBILEE 2025
  • Kadazan Dusun
  • Kanou Monuhid Lahan Koposizon
  • Local
  • Making A Difference
  • Mantad Di Katekis Peter
  • Nation
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Readings
  • Reflection: Straight Talking
  • Statements
  • Untold Story of the Living Faith in Sabah
  • Vatican
  • World

Recent Additions

Dec 28 2025

Dec 27 2025

Dec 26 2025

Dec 25 2025

Dec 24 2024

Cambodian youth lead march for peace, demand ceasefire

  • About
  • Contact

© 2024 Catholic Sabah - Powered by KK Top Web.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Feature
  • Statements
  • Chinese
  • Bahasa Melayu
  • Kadazan Dusun
  • JUBILEE 2025
  • About
  • Donate

© 2024 Catholic Sabah - Powered by KK Top Web.