Mie Mie Explained

Mie Mie
Birth Name:Thin Thin Aye
Death Place:Kyaunggon, Myanmar
Nationality:Burmese
Alma Mater:Dagon University
Occupation:democracy activist
Organization:88 Generation Students Group
Party:National League for Democracy
Spouse:Hla Moe

Thin Thin Aye (Burmese: သင်းသင်းအေး, in Burmese pronounced as /θɪ́ɰ̃ θɪ́ɰ̃ ʔé/; 1970 – 13 August 2018), better known as Mie Mie (in Burmese pronounced as /mí mí/), was a Burmese democracy activist who organized and led numerous anti-government protests. She was imprisoned three times between 1988 and 2012, and Amnesty International considered her to be a prisoner of conscience.[1]

Aye died in a car accident on 13 August 2018, near Kyaunggon, at the age of 47.[2] [3] [4]

1988 uprising and 1996 arrest

In the summer of 1988, a series of protests escalated in Yangon and other cities demanding the resignation of General Ne Win, Burma's military ruler.[5] These protests took their name from the date of the largest march, 8-8-88.[5] Aye, a 10th-grade high school student at the time, joined the uprising and became active in the All Burma Federation of Student Unions.[6] [7] On 7 March 1989, she was arrested for the first time for distributing fliers commemorating the one-year anniversary of the death of Phone Maw, whose killing by security forces helped prompt the previous year's uprising. She was detained for three months, then released.[7] In 1990, she traveled to campaign on behalf of the National League for Democracy (NLD).

In 1996, Aye was studying at Dagon University in Yangon when she took part in a protest and was subsequently arrested.[7] She was then imprisoned for seven years in Tharyarwaddy Prison.[7]

Saffron Revolution and third arrest

Following her 2003 release, she became involved with the pro-democracy 88 Generation Students Group. When rising fuel and commodity prices led to widespread unrest in Yangon in August 2007, the 8888 Generation Students Group played a major role in organizing protests.[8] The largest of these rallies drew over one hundred thousand protesters, most notably a number of Buddhist monks, giving the uprising the popular nickname "The Saffron Revolution" for the color of their robes.[9] The New York Times described Aye as "prominent in photographs and videos of the first small demonstrations", noting that she appeared in the shots "with her fist raised".[10]

Following a government crackdown on protestors, members of the 88 Generation Students Group were swiftly arrested.[8] On 22 August, the day after several 88 Generation leaders had been arrested, Aye led a protest march and then went into hiding.[7] She was arrested herself on 13 October 2007 at a rubber plantation where she was hiding with fellow leaders Aung Thu, Htay Kywe, Zaw Htet Ko Ko and Hein Htet.[7]

Trial and imprisonment

Leading up to her trial, Aye was detained with other activists at Insein Prison.[7] On 11 November 2008, she and other 88 Generation members were convicted of four counts of "illegally using electronic media" and one count of "forming an illegal organization", for a total sentence of 65 years in prison apiece.[11] [12] Aye reportedly shouted in response to the judge, "We will never be frightened!"[13]

Amnesty International named her a prisoner of conscience and called on multiple occasions for her release. Human Rights Watch called for the 2007 protesters to be exonerated and freed,[14] as did Front Line.[15]

Aye's health was said to be deteriorating as a result of her imprisonment.[16] In 2008, an NLD spokesperson alleged that prison authorities were refusing her proper treatment for her heart condition.[17] Her husband stated that she also suffers from spondylosis and arthritis.

Release

Aye was released on 13 January 2012 as part of a mass presidential pardon of political prisoners.[18]

Personal life

Aye married Hla Moe in 1990 and has three children with him.[19] Hla Moe works in a car repair shop and in 2009 told Irrawaddy magazine that he was allowed one twenty-minute prison visit with his wife per month.[19]

Death

Aye died in a car accident on 13 August 2018, near Kyaunggon, at the age of 47.[2] [3] [4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Myanmar, Unlock the Prison Doors! . Amnesty International . 17 April 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110501120414/http://www.amnestyusa.org/pdf/POC%20List.pdf . 1 May 2011 .
  2. Web site: ကျောင်းကုန်းမြို့အနီးတွင် မော်တော်ယာဉ်တစ်စီး တိမ်းမှောက်ရာ ၈၈ မျိုးဆက် ငြိမ်းချမ်းရေးနှင့် ပွင့်လင်းလူ့အဖွဲ့အစည်းမှ မမီးမီး ကွယ်လွန်. 13 August 2018. Eleven Media Group. 2 September 2018.
  3. Web site: ၈၈ မျိုးဆက် မမီးမီး ရုတ်တရက်ကွယ်လွန်. 13 August 2018. VOA News Burmese. 2 September 2018.
  4. Web site: ၈၈ မျိုးဆက် ကျောင်းသူ၊ ပွင့်လင်း လူ့ အဖွဲ့ အစည်း က မမီးမီး ကွယ်လွန်. 13 August 2018. BBC Burmese. 2 September 2018.
  5. News: Burma's 1988 protests . 25 September 2007 . BBC News . 8 May 2011.
  6. Web site: Burma Crackdown Goes on Amid Fears for Women in Custody . 17 November 2008 . Radio Free Asia . 8 May 2011.
  7. Web site: Mie Mie . . 8 May 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110602195215/http://www.aappb.org/bio_pdf/Thin%20Thin%20Aye%20%40%20Mie%20Mie.pdf . 2 June 2011 .
  8. News: Key activists arrested in Burma . 13 October 2007 . BBC News . 21 April 2011.
  9. News: Military junta threatens monks in Burma . Jenny Booth and agencies . 24 September 2007 . . 21 April 2011.
  10. News: Myanmar Arrests 4 Top Dissidents, Human Rights Group Says . Seth Mydans . 14 October 2007 . New York Times . 8 May 2011.
  11. News: Harsh sentences for Burma rebels . Jonathan Head . 11 November 2008 . . 17 April 2011.
  12. Web site: Burma protesters each get 65 years . 12 November 2008 . Hong Kong Standard . 8 May 2011.
  13. Web site: Burma's Forgotten Prisoners . 19 September 2009 . Human Rights Watch . 8 May 2011.
  14. Web site: Burma: Free Activists Sentenced by Unfair Courts . 11 November 2008 . . 21 April 2011.
  15. Web site: Front Line condemns the harsh sentencing of ´88 Generation members and other human rights defenders . 12 November 2008 . . 21 April 2011.
  16. Web site: Free The 88 Generation Students Group . December 2009 . Amnesty International . 8 May 2011.
  17. News: 88 Student Leader Mie Mie's Health Deteriorates In Detention . Maung Dee . 6 February 2008 . Mizzima News . 8 May 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120325020722/http://www.mizzima.com/component/content/article/4-inside-burma/94-88-student-leader-mie-mies-health-deteriorates-in-detention.html . 25 March 2012 .
  18. Web site: Photo of the Day . 14 January 2012 . . 15 January 2012.
  19. A Husband Whose Wife is a Political Prisoner . Than Htike Oo . 27 November 2009 . The Irrawaddy . 8 May 2011.