Technology gives world rare view of Myanmar's rage

Secret networks of dissident citizen reporters operating beneath the noses of government spies in army-ruled Myanmar are giving the world unprecedented glimpses of the biggest anti-junta protests in two decades. With foreign journalists barred from...

Secret networks of dissident citizen reporters operating beneath the noses of government spies in army-ruled Myanmar are giving the world unprecedented glimpses of the biggest anti-junta protests in two decades.

With foreign journalists barred from what is one of the world's most closed states, much of the worldwide media coverage is coming from exiled newshounds in countries such as Thailand and India - and their clandestine contacts on the inside.

Technology ranging from the latest Internet gizmo to satellite uplinks, to camera phones ensured pictures of the massed marches of monks and civilians and the response by security forces is on TV screens around the world in hours.

The contrast to Myanmar's last major uprising, in 1988, could not be more stark. Then, as many as 3,000 people were killed when soldiers opened fire on the crowds but it took days for the news - let alone pictures or video footage - to emerge.

"The difference is night and day," said Dominic Faulder, a Bangkok-based British reporter during the 1988 uprising. "Now, the whole population are journalists on the move equipped with all sorts of information-capturing devices from telephones and video machinery that you just couldn't use in 1988." As troops fired warning shots at crowds in Yangon, "citizen journalists" in the masses seething through the city centre were sending their thoughts, pictures and video to international broadcasters such as CNN and the BBC.

More important, the news is beamed back in by satellite television and radio by exile news groups such as the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), now one of the main ways Myanmar's 56 million people learn about events inside their own country. DVB has its headquarters in Oslo and receives funding from several EU countries.

The US helps fund other dissident newsgathering organisations through its National Endowment for Democracy, one source of the generals' assertions that the protests are the result of outside agitation.

Apart from dissident news outlets, the only sources of news inside Myanmar are the junta's rigidly controlled state media, which, according to one man in Shan state, broadcast, "only pop singers and lies".

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