BURMESE CITIZEN JOURNALISTS DEFY MILITARY JUNTA TO TELL STORY OF PROTESTS
http://www.prwatch.org/node/6499

Despite the danger of defying a military junta that is determined to quash the 
current wave of protests, and Internet penetration 
of only 1%, Burmese citizen journalists, activists, and former professional 
journalists have shared news and images with the rest 
of the world. THEY HAVE EVEN MANAGED TO SKIRT AN INTERNET BLOCKADE BY LINKING 
THEIR COMPUTERS DIRECTLY TO A 
COMPUTER OUTSIDE OF THE GOVERNMENT'S CENSORSHIP REACH. <all caps mine, for 
emphasis> One blog included a 
description in English that read, "Right now they're using fire engines and 
hitting people and dragging them onto E2000 trucks 
and most of them are girls and people are shouting." Ellana Lee, the managing 
editor of CNN Asia Pacific said, "When 
traditional methods and professional journalists can't provide footage, and 
personal safety allows, citizens rise to the challenge 
time and again, often with remarkable material. Even in countries like Myanmar, 
the spread of the Internet and mobile phones 
has meant that footage will always continue to get through and the story will 
be told, one way or another."

SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, September 28, 2007

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