Saturday, October 25, 2008

[Myo Chit Myanmar | Dedicated for the people of Myanmar] 10 New Entries: privateCam_v0.1.exe Virus ရွင္းလင္းနည္း

privateCam_v0.1.exe Virus ရွင္းလင္းနည္း

အေရးေပၚသတိေပးခ်က္


ယခုရက္ပိုင္းအတြင္ Gtalk ႏွင့္ YAHOO တို႔မွတဆင့္ ကူးစက္ေသာ Virus တစ္မ်ိဳးေပၚေပါက္ေနပါသည္။ အကယ္၍ Gtalk တြင့္ မိမိဆီကို Hey Please help me to test my new cam http://h1.ripway.com/.../privateCam_v0.1.exe ဟူေသာစာေၾကာင္း ၀င္လာပါက အဲဒီစာေၾကာင္းကို လံုး၀မႏွိပ္မိေစရန္သတိျပဳၾကပါ။ တစ္စံုတစ္ေယာက္က ေပးပို႔လာပါက ထိုေပးပို႔လာသူအား သူသည္ Virus infected ျဖစ္ေနေၾကာင္းကို သတိေပးေျပာၾကားေပးၾကပါရန္ ႏွိးေဆာ္အပ္ပါသည္။

privateCam_v0.1.exe Virus ရွင္းလင္းနည္း

ClearPrivateCamVirus ဖိုင္ေလးကိုႏွိပ္ျပီးေဒါင္းလုဒ္လုပ္ပါ။

သင့္တြင္ AntiVirus Software ရွိပါက ခဏပိတ္ထားလိုက္ပါ။

ျပီးလွ်င္ Zip ဖိုင္အတြင္းမွ ClearPrivateCamVirus ဆုိေသာဖုိင္ေလးကို ႏွစ္ခ်က္ႏွိပ္ျပီး Run လုိက္ပါ။

သင့္စက္ကို Restart ခ်ေပးလိုက္ပါ။

privateCam_v0.1.exe ကိုရေအာင္ရွာ၍ ဖ်က္ေပးလိုက္ပါ။ ရွာမေတြ႕သူမ်ား ဒီေနရာေလးမွာ ၀င္ေရာက္ေရးသားေပးပါ။

ရင္ထဲက စိုင္းထီးဆိုင္ (New York - Oct, 18th 2008)

သူမ၏ ဗံုး

ဆရာေတာ္ဦးဥတၱမ Finland ႏိုင္ငံသို႔ေရာက္႐ိွ

မႏၱေလးတိုင္း အမ်ိဳးသားဒီမိုကေရစီအဖြဲ႕ခ်ဳပ္ေခါင္းေဆာင္မ်ား ေထာင္ဒဏ္အသီးသီးခ်မွတ္ျခင္းခံရ (AAPP)

ျပည္တြင္း NLD လူငယ္မ်ား၏ အေျခအေနမွန္

 NLD ပါတီ ၀င္ လူငယ္ ( ၁၀၀ ) ေက်ာ္ ႏုတ္ထြက္ ခဲ့ ၾကသည္ ဟု သတင္းမ်ား ျပည္တြင္း ျပည္ပ တြင္ ပ်ံ႕ ႏွံ ေန သည့္ အတြက္ ၊ ျပည္တြင္း ျပည္ပ ရွိ ဒီမိုကေရစီ အင္အားစုမ်ား အမွန္တကယ္ျဖစ္ရပ္အေပၚ သိျမင္ေစရန္ တင္ျပလိုက္ရပါသည္ ။

ျပီးခဲ့ သည္ ရက္ ပိုင္းမ်ားက မီဒီယာ မ်ားတြင္ ပါရွိလာ ေသာ လူငယ္မ်ား ၏ ႏုတ္ထြက္ေၾကာင္း လက္ မွတ္ထိုးၾကသည္ လူငယ္ အမ်ားစု သည္ ပါတီ ျပင္ပ မွလူငယ္မ်ားျဖစ္ ၾကျပီး ပါတီတြင္ တရားဝင္ အသင္း ဝင္ ထားသူမ်ားမဟုတ္ၾကပါ ။ အခ်ိဳ ့ေသာ ျမိဳ ့ နယ္မ်ားရွိ ပါတီ၀င္ လူငယ္ မ်ားသည္ ထိုသူတို ့ ကိုယ္တိုင္ ပင္ မသိ ရွိလိုက္ ပဲ ႏုတ္ထြက္ သည္ ့ အထဲ တြင္ ပါ ၀င္ ေနသည္ ကို ေတြ ့ ရပါသည္ ။ ထိုကဲ့ သို မိမိဆႏၵ သေဘာ ထား မပါ ပဲ ႏုတ္ထြက္ သည္ ့ အထဲတြင္ ပါ၀င္ေနေသာ လူငယ္မ်ားသည္ အခ်ိန္မွီ ေျဖရွင္း ႏိုင္ရန္ေဆာင္ရြက္ ေနျပီ ျဖစ္ ပါသည္ ။ အမွန္တကယ္ ႏုတ္ထြက္ သည္ ့ လူငယ္မ်ားမွ ခန္မွန္းေျခ အားျဖင္ ့ ( ၁၅ ) ေယာက္ ၀န္းက်င္ သာရွိပါသည္ ။ က်န္သည္ ့ လူငယ္ မ်ားမွာ ယခု ကိစၥ ကို ဦးေဆာင္ ေနသူမ်ား၏ တဖက္လွည္ ့ ျဖင္ ့ေသြး ေဆာင္ သိမ္းသြင္း ျခင္းခံ လိုက္ ၾကရေသာ လူငယ္ မ်ားျဖစ္ပါသည္ ။ မီဒီယာမ်ားတြင္ ပါရွိလာသည္ ့ လူငယ္( ၁၀၀ ) ေက်ာ္ ႏုတ္ထြက္ သည္ ဆိုေသာ္လည္းပဲ အမွန္တကယ္ လူငယ္ပါတီ ၀င္ မ်ားမဟုတ္သည္ အတြက္ ဒီမိုကေရစီ အင္အားစု မ်ားအေနျဖင္ ့ အဆိုပါကိစၥအား စိုးရိမ္ေၾကာင္ ့ၾက ေနရန္ မလိုပါေၾကာင္း အသိ ေပး လိုက္ ရပါသည္ ။

ယခုကဲ့သို ့ပါတီ ၀င္ လူငယ္ မ်ားအၾကားစိတ္၀မ္း ကြဲ ေစရန္ ၊ ပါတီအား အင္အားယုတ္ေလ်ာ ့ေစ ရန္ သပ္လွ်ိဳေသြးခြဲလုပ္ေဆာင္ ေနသူမ်ားအား ဒီမိုကေရစီအင္အားစုမ်ားအေနႏွင္ ့ ၀ိုင္း၀န္း ဆန္ ့က်င္သြားၾကပါရန္ ႏိုးေဆာ္လိုက္ရပါသည္

Burma Students' Post

World's Most Famous Political Prisoner Reaches 13 Years in Detention, How You Can Help


Dear Friends,

 Today marks the day that Burma's Nobel Peace Prize recipient  Aung San Suu Kyi has spent 13 years in detention.  She is the world's only imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize recipient.  Though she hasn't been released, we wanted to share with you some of the exciting things that are being done around the world to set her free.

Now is the time for action.  We are working to ensure that this date doesn't pass unnoticed by the world.
Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for 27 years before he was released, and Aung San Suu Kyi shouldn't have to wait that long.
Mandela was virtually ignored by the world for the first two decades of his imprisonment -- we are making sure that doesn't happen to Aung San Suu Kyi.
Among the other things we are doing to help her (see below), we printed new posters of her that you can order on our website.
We are also sending you a powerful video we made earlier this year about her.

Here is what is happening right now:

1) Yesterday, the United States called for the release of Aung San Suu Kyi and all political prisoners in Burma.

2) Additionally, the European Union called for her release

3) At a meeting of European and Asian leaders, it appears that Euro/Asian countries will call for her release, including China

4) Aung San Suu Kyi's first cousin Dr. Sein Win and her attorney Jared Genser, who represents her at the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, published an opinion piece that has been published in multiple newspapers

5) Most importantly, the UN Secretary General had said he would travel to Burma by the end of this year to secure changes in Burma.  Now, it appears that he may be trying to back out of this trip for fear of failure -- don't let him give up on this trip -- send him a message today!

6) In Washington, DC and London, human rights activists are holding demonstrations in front of Chinese embassies.  China is the Burmese regime's #1 ally, and they need to do more to secure peaceful change in Burma.

7) Today, the creators of The Trouble with the Alphabet , a photographic journey through the alphabet that illuminates the world's injustices from the point of view of a child, will launch their compelling new exhibit to celebrate the book's release at the Ditto Gallery in downtown Denver. If you buy the book, you can designate US Campaign for Burma as the beneficiary and we will receive 10% of the profits.
8) Students across the United States are participating in events to help raise funds to free Aung San Suu Kyi and all the people of Burma.
While we are doing many things, we have much more work to accomplish.  Thank you for your interest in our work -- we are asking you to continue to support our efforts.

Aung Din, Jeremy Woodrum, Jacqui Pilch, Jennifer Quigley, Mike Haack

Support 1991 Nobel Peace Prize recipient Aung San Suu Kyi and the struggle for freedom and democracy in Burma:

Free Aung San Suu Kyi

Sein Win and Jared Genser | October 23, 2008

Today is a sad anniversary in the bitter tyranny of Burma 's history.
TODAY marks 13 years that the world's only imprisoned Nobel peace prize laureate, and Burma's democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, has spent under house arrest in her country.
Stoically battling ill health and relentless in her pursuit of freedom for her people, The Lady's unjust imprisonment is a powerful reminder of a brief moment of freedom realised by Burma's people and the dream that remains unfulfilled.
While some governments find it convenient to treat the symptoms of this regime's malfeasance — the terrible humanitarian challenges facing its people — the root cause of these problems is the fundamental lack of accountability from a military dictatorship ruling with an iron fist.
Burma's recent engagement with the international community in the wake of cyclone Nargis is yet another skilfully deployed smokescreen by the regime, designed to postpone any meaningful discussion of political reform.
Nevertheless, the release of Suu Kyi and that of other political prisoners in Burma remains the only true bellwether to measure whether Burma is serious about political reform.
Suu Kyi led her National League for Democracy to an overwhelming victory in 1990. The NLD and its allies gained 82% of the total vote in what was the last free and fair election in Burma . The military, in power since a coup in 1962, refused to recognise the result and annulled the parliament.
The National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma is comprised of those elected officials, never allowed to take office, who remain in exile.
Suu Kyi has been in and out of house arrest for most of the past 19 years, even since before those elections. She has been there non-stop since 2003, following a rally in Depayin, where regime thugs murdered more than 70 democracy activists in an attempt on her life. She escaped with minor injuries.
Suu Kyi's release has been called for by sources as diverse as US first lady Laura Bush, financier and philanthropist George Soros, Nobel peace prize laureates Desmond Tutu and Lech Walesa and entertainers Bono and Jim Carrey.
In May last year, 59 former presidents and prime ministers, including Margaret Thatcher, Bill Clinton, Vaclav Havel, George Bush snr and Benazir Bhutto, signed a letter urging her release. All recognise that democracy in Burma will remain a distant dream until Suu Kyi, along with about 2000 other political prisoners, is released and an inclusive and time-bound three-party dialogue between the NLD, ethnic groups, and the junta achieves a restoration of democracy to Burma .
This much was confirmed again in a recent report by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. He noted his frustration with the junta's unwillingness to agree to talks with Suu Kyi.
"Now is the time," he said, "for the military and the NLD to find ways to talk to each other and work together in the interest of the nation."
The fact that one of our generation's bravest and most enduring servants of human rights and justice remains in detention diminishes us all and mocks our notion of a global community.
That all the weight behind the campaign to release her has failed to move the junta stands as a victory for oppression and a distinct failure of the international political system.
Yet the shallow realities ruling the Burmese regime expose an intrinsic weakness in its administration. This is emphasised in Suu Kyi's famous "Freedom from Fear" speech, delivered in absentia in Strasbourg in 1991, when she was awarded the European Parliament's Sakharov Prize.
In her speech, Suu Kyi said that "within a system which denies the existence of basic human rights, fear tends to be the order of the day … A most insidious form of fear is that which masquerades as common sense or even wisdom."
She said: "Fear is not the natural state of civilised man." In Burma, as elsewhere, dictatorship is against nature.
As such, in the name of a generation, we call for the immediate release of Suu Kyi and her fellow political prisoners. We urge the international community, and especially Ban and the UN Security Council, to end one of the most sustained, corrosive, and damaging regimes of our era and to push for the beginning of the end of Burma's decades-long oppression.
In doing so, we call for the restoration of democracy to Burma and for the natural state of Burma, of a peace-loving, tolerant and prosperous society, to once again flourish.
All must know that this will not occur while Suu Kyi and her colleagues remain imprisoned.
Sein Win is prime minister of the National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma. Jared Genser is president of Freedom Now and counsel to Aung San Suu Kyi.
This much was confirmed again in a recent report by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. He noted his frustration with the junta's unwillingness to agree to talks with Suu Kyi.
"Now is the time," he said, "for the military and the NLD to find ways to talk to each other and work together in the interest of the nation."
The fact that one of our generation's bravest and most enduring servants of human rights and justice remains in detention diminishes us all and mocks our notion of a global community.
That all the weight behind the campaign to release her has failed to move the junta stands as a victory for oppression and a distinct failure of the international political system.
Yet the shallow realities ruling the Burmese regime expose an intrinsic weakness in its administration. This is emphasised in Suu Kyi's famous "Freedom from Fear" speech, delivered in absentia in Strasbourg in 1991, when she was awarded the European Parliament's Sakharov Prize.
In her speech, Suu Kyi said that "within a system which denies the existence of basic human rights, fear tends to be the order of the day … A most insidious form of fear is that which masquerades as common sense or even wisdom."
She said: "Fear is not the natural state of civilised man." In Burma , as elsewhere, dictatorship is against nature.
As such, in the name of a generation, we call for the immediate release of Suu Kyi and her fellow political prisoners. We urge the international community, and especially Ban and the UN Security Council, to end one of the most sustained, corrosive, and damaging regimes of our era and to push for the beginning of the end of Burma 's decades-long oppression.
In doing so, we call for the restoration of democracy to Burma and for the natural state of Burma , of a peace-loving, tolerant and prosperous society, to once again flourish.
All must know that this will not occur while Suu Kyi and her colleagues remain imprisoned.
Sein Win is prime minister of the National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma . Jared Genser is president of Freedom Now and counsel to Aung San Suu Kyi.

ယေန႔ ျမန္မာ့ေရးရာ သတင္းမ်ား Oct,25th,2008

သတင္းမ်ားကို ကိုကိုမွ အခ်ိန္ႏွင့္ တေျပးညီ တင္ဆက္ေပးေနပါသည္

( 1 )မႏၱေလးတုိင္း အဲန္အယ္လ္ဒီအဖြဲ႔၀င္မ်ား ႏွစ္ရွည္ေထာင္ဒဏ္ ခ်မွတ္ခံရ

( 2 )Myanmar man wins refugee bid

( 3 )Proving to be a cut above the rest

( 4 )ေဒၚစုလြတ္ေျမာက္ေရး အဖြဲ႕ခ်ဳပ္၏ ၾကိုးပမ္းခ်က္

( 5 )Suu Kyi's lawyer asks junta for appeal meeting

( 6 )ေဒၚစုနွင့္ နိုင္ငံေရး အက်ဥ္းသားမ်ား လြတ္ေျမာက္ေရး စစ္အစိုးရကို နိုင္ငံတကာက ဖိအားေပး

( 7 )အရပ္သား အစိုးရအတြက္ စစ္အစိုးရဘက္က ျပင္ဆင္မႈမရွိဟု ကင္တာနား ေ၀ဖန္

( 8 )EU envoy urges lifting of Aung San Suu Kyi's house arrest

( 9 )Yang Hyong Sop Meets Delegation of Myanmar

( 10 ) ေရႊေစ်းက် ၀ယ္လက္တိုး

( 11 )6 Myanmar activists get jail

( 12 )Myanmar leader pledges to spare no efforts to hold general election in 2010

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