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Burmese TV Blames Protests on Western Broadcasters

27 September 2007
View clip from Burma TV on VOA,BBC - Download 2.8mb   video clip
View clip from Burma TV on VOA,BBC  video clip
Watch Bill Rodger's Burma Reaction report / Windows Broadband - download   video clip
Watch Bill Rodger's Burma Reaction report / Windows Broadband  video clip
Watch Bill Rodger's Burma Reaction report / Windows Dialup - download   video clip
Watch Bill Rodger's Burma Reaction report / Windows Dialup  video clip

Burmese television says foreign instigators are responsible for wide-ranging protests in the southeast Asian country.

An English-language television broadcast by the military government Thursday accused VOA and the British Broadcasting Corporation of concocting fabricated news about events in Burma.

Another graphic displayed over Burmese state TV about VOA and BBC coverage of Burmese protests
Graphic displayed on Burmese state TV about VOA and BBC coverage of Burmese protests
A warning to viewers during the broadcast said they should beware of "destructionist" international broadcasts.

A caption displayed on the screen said: "VOA and BBC, sky-full of liars."

Pro-democracy protests have been under way in Burma for a month, but state-controlled broadcasters mentioned them for the first time this week.

Message displayed over Burmese state TV critisizing VOA and BBC
Message displayed over Burmese state TV criticizing VOA and BBC
The Burmese authorities' version of events Thursday as broadcast by MRTV-3 said "some monks, opposition organizations and disruptive elements" had staged protest marches. The state-controlled broadcast said the protests were "due to instigation of external and internal disruptionists and some foreign radio stations."

Burmese television said the tone of foreign news reports heard in Rangoon indicated that international news organizations are "not happy with peace, stability and development of the [Burmese] nation."

The U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors announced the expansion of Burmese-language broadcasts this week.

The BBG chairman, James Glassman, says the radios' airtime was increased because "the Burmese people are starving for accurate information, both about the world's reaction to their struggle for democracy, and also about what is happening in their own land."

VOA is now airing programs in Burmese for three hours daily up from 90 minutes and RFA's Burmese-language broadcasts have been increased from two hours to four hours daily.

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