Tuesday, 9 October 2007



China doesn't have heart for those who had been killed by junta


We could see what china said on the UNSC meeting on monday (08 Oct 2007). See the news at below.

We need to organize the people all over the world to boycott the bloody china Olympic. I would like to request to people; if you have any idea of what we can do effectively.

Please ... advice us.

Shall we work together and show to CHINA what is the real power of people all over the world?


(Quote from news.com.au)
UN security council seeks common ground on Burma

UN security council experts met today to finetune a Western-sponsored statement condemning the bloody military crackdown in Burma, but China pressed for softer language.

Experts from the council's 15 members huddled behind closed doors this afternoon in a search of consensus on a draft that could be submitted to their ambassadors for approval.

Early today, China's deputy UN ambassador Liu Zhenmin said there would be consultations "to improve the text", meaning to soften language in the draft submitted by the United States, Britain and France on Friday.

The three Western powers introduced their text after the council heard a report from UN envoy Ibrahim Gambari on his recent mission to Burma to defuse the crisis.

The draft would condemn "the violent repression of peaceful demonstrations" by Burma's rulers, urge them to "cease repressive measures" and release detainees as well as all political prisoners, including opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

It was submitted amid intense pressure for strong council action from world public opinion following outrage over Burma's deadly repression of peaceful anti-government protests led by Buddhist monks late last month.

Official figures reveal at least 13 people died and more than 2100 were locked up in the crackdown as security forces used live rounds, baton charges and tear gas to crush protests involving up to 100,000 people.

On Saturday, protests were held in several cities around the world in support of Burma's embattled pro-democracy movement.

"What is important is that the council give a strong message in support of Professor Gambari," a South African diplomat said as he went into the meeting.

The diplomat predicted agreement on a text by Wednesday at the earliest.

Italy's UN Ambassador Marcello Spatafora for his part stressed that it was urgent for the council to send a "strong, unified' message to Burma's ruling junta.

"There's a sense of urgency to send a strong message, a unified message, at the right moment. That is now," he said.

Unlike a resolution, a presidential statement requires the consent of all 15 members to be adopted.

China, which has close ties with Burma and favours constructive engagement with its military regime, warned last week that putting pressure on the ruling generals "would lead to confrontation".

China's UN envoy Wang Guangya Friday urged members to adopt "a prudent and responsible approach".

The United States has threatened to push for UN sanctions against the military regime, including an arms embargo, if it refuses to halt its crackdown and refused to cooperate with Mr Gambari's mediation for national reconciliation.

But any sanctions resolution was likely to face resistance and possibly a veto from China and Russia, which deem the turmoil in the South-East Asian country an internal matter and not a threat to broader peace and security.

Last January, China and Russia used a rare double veto to block a US-sponsored draft resolution that would have called on Burma's rulers to free all political detainees and end sexual violence by the military.

In a conciliatory move apparently aimed at forestalling tough council condemnation, Burma's rulers trumpeted the release of hundreds of monks and demonstrators and donated thousands of dollars as well as food and medicines to monasteries in rangoon.

And junta chief Than Shwe named the deputy labour minister, Aung Kyi, as the "manager for relations" with Aung San Suu Kyi, four days after the military supremo made a heavily conditioned offer to meet with the Nobel Peace prize laureate, state television said.

Aung San Suu Kyi, who has come to symbolise Burma's peaceful struggle for democracy, has spent most of the past 18 years under house arrest.

On Friday, Mr Gambari had said that all council members agreed the status quo in Burma "is unacceptable and unsustainable" and backed his plan to pay a return visit to Burma before mid-November.

Two monasteries in Sittwe defy junta orders

The Burmese military junta has ordered all monasteries in Sittwe, capital of Arakan state, western Burma to send back student monks to their respective villages and not allow more than 10 monks to stay in any one monastery in Sittwe.

However, two monasteries in Sittwe have refused to follow the directives and have not told the monks to go.

The two monasteries are Myoma Kyung and Laraung Won Kyung, located in downtown Sittwe. Each monastery has about 100 monks in residence studying Buddhist scriptures, a town elder said.

On the contrary, abbots from the two monasteries have allowed monks from other monasteries to stay, should they be in need of accommodation in the city after being forced to leave for their home towns.

The abbot from Myoma monastery was summoned last week by the army authorities to the state SPDC office and was asked to follow the government's order, but the abbot continued to refuse, a monk source said.

Despite this act of defiance, the authorities are yet to arrest the abbot, who is the former chairman of the Rakhine State Monk Council.

Many monks in Sittwe left their monasteries to return to their native villages after the order was issued by the authorities, but some monks have chosen to stay at the two monasteries in defiance of the military's orders.

.....................................................................................................
Pressure on Beijing will bring down Burmese junta


Burma was once one of the most promising nations in Southeast Asia. After World War II, it was the world's leading rice exporter, with a strong economy, high enrollment in primary and secondary schools, and an elected government. U Thant, a Burmese official, served as United Nations secretary-general from 1961 to 1972. In recent decades, however, military rulers have turned what was once a jewel of Asia into one of its most miserable places through repression, mismanagement and corruption and taken the country in a tragically different direction.

Burma's military leaders have presided over an enormous economic decline. The level of poverty and hunger means millions of families having no more than one meal a day. Once known as Asia's rice bowl, today Burma cannot even sustain its own people - with just $200 in per capita income, Burma today is an economic basket case. One third of the population is malnourished or physically underdeveloped. Yet the top 14 military officers who form the junta live in luxury in the newly built capital city - Naypyidaw - carved out of the jungle, 320 kilometers north of Yangon. Much of the generals' income derives from bribery, corruption and drug trafficking.

Politically, the junta has maintained a vise-like grip on this impoverished nation through psychological and physical terror. The nation has an estimated 1,200 political prisoners, including leader of the nonviolent movement for human rights and democracy in Burma and Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi. And Burma has one of the worst records of human rights abuses in the world, including the systematic use of torture, forced labor and violent national oppression. Transparency International's 2007 Corruption Perceptions Index, which scored 180 countries, has ranked Burma as the most corrupt nation in the world.

Since 1988, the United Nations has adopted 28 resolutions condemning Burma. And last month, President Bush took center stage at the United Nations General Assembly and announced to the world his decision to slap new economic sanctions on Burma and called "every civilized nation has a responsibility to stand up" to Burma's repressive regime.

The current showdown between thousands of Buddhist monks and more than 100,000 civilian demonstrators and the military rulers in Burma is the largest demonstration against military rule since the brutal crackdown on pro-democracy protests in 1988 - more than 3,000 unarmed civilian demonstrators were killed during the 1988 protests.

The enormous demonstrations in Burma in recent weeks may have surprised the world, but the scene in Yangon is surely familiar. The entire episode is reminiscent of the "people power" uprisings in the Philippines and China in the 1980s and Indonesia in the 1990s. Hundreds of thousands of people in the streets demonstrating against a ruthless dictatorship is one that has been repeated all over Asia.

With the junta now facing the biggest threat to its existence since the revolutionary events of 1988, the question is: will the protesters in Burma actually succeed in peacefully overthrowing the military regime, or are the marching monks and demonstrators in for a bloodbath?

In 1988, the international community had hoped Japan - then Yangon's biggest patron would pressure the regime to listen to its people's demand. Today all eyes are on China, Burma's most important trading partner, investor, strategic ally and biggest arms supplier. In recent years, China has pumped billions of dollars worth of aid into Burma. Burma has become a critical outpost in China's "string of pearls" strategy in the Indian Ocean and near the Malacca Straits, through which four fifths of Beijing's oil imports pass. Energy-hungry China has also been jockeying for a share of Burma's vast energy resources and is eager to import energy from a country that has proven natural gas reserves of 0.54 trillion cubic meters.

What leaders in Beijing also want is a virtual return to Burma's traditional status as a "vassal state" on China's periphery. For that purpose, China has consistently thwarted attempts to put pressure on Burma's rulers, and in 2007 alone, China twice vetoed U.N. Security Council resolutions condemning the junta. Unless China is willing to join the international community in supporting the aspirations of the Burmese people and to tell the Burmese junta to cease using force on its own people, it is highly unlikely that international sanctions will have any real impact on the illogical, opaque and truculent military junta in Yangon or would lead to a Burmese replay of the so-called "color revolutions" that toppled dictators from Ukraine to Kyrgyzstan.

But Beijing also has its Achilles' heel - the Chinese authorities are paranoid about anything that might tarnish the 2008 Beijing Olympics. So this is the perfect time to squeeze Chinese leaders to drop the junta in Yangon. After all, Beijing's biggest nightmare is having next year's game dubbed the "Genocide Olympics."

By; Dr. Xiaoxiong Yi is a professor at Marietta College and director of the China Institute.

အၾကမ္းဖက္သမားနဲ႔ လက္နက္ကိုင္ ေတာ္လွန္ေရး

ဒီေနရာမွာ ကၽြန္ေတာ္ နည္းနည္းေလာက္ ေျပာပါရေစ။ လက္နက္ကိုင္ၿပီး တိုက္ခိုက္တယ္ ဆိုတာနဲ႔ အၾကမ္းဖက္တယ္လို႔ လူေတြက ယူဆတတ္တဲ့ သေဘာကိုပါ။ ကၽြန္ေတာ္တို႔ ေသေသခ်ာခ်ာ အေျခအေနေတြကို ျပန္ေတြးၾကည့္ပါ။

လက္နက္ကိုင္တိုင္း အၾကမ္းဖက္တာ ဟုတ္၊ မဟုတ္ ဆိုတာ စဥ္းစားၾကည့္ရပါမယ္။ အၾကမ္းဖက္တိုင္းလည္း လက္နက္ကိုင္ စရာလိုခ်င္မွ လိုပါလိမ့္မယ္။ ဒီေတာ့ လက္နက္ကိုင္လိုက္တာနဲ႔ အၾကမ္းဖက္သမား ျဖစ္သြားၿပီလား ဆိုတာကို ကၽြန္ေတာ္တို႔ ေတြးၾကည့္ရပါလိမ့္မယ္။

ေယဘံုယ် သေဘာတရားနဲ႔ကေတာ့ လက္နက္ကိုင္ရင္ အၾကမ္းဖက္ရတာ ပိုလြယ္ပါတယ္။ ဒါေပမယ့္ လက္နက္ကိုင္တိုင္း အၾကမ္းဖက္ သမား မဟုတ္ဘူးဆိုတာေတာ့ အားလံုး သေဘာေပါက္ထားသင့္တယ္လို႔ ထင္ပါတယ္။

အခု လက္နက္ကိုင္ အၾကမ္းဖက္ေနေသာ၊ အျပစ္မဲ့ လူေတြနဲ႔ သံဃာေတာ္ေတြကို သတ္ေနေသာ၊ ဗုဒၶသာသနာကို ဖ်က္ဆီးေနေသာ နအဖ လူတစ္စုကိုသာ အၾကမ္းဖက္သမားလို႔ နာမည္တပ္ေခၚသင့္ၿပီး၊ နအဖကို လက္နက္ကိုင္ၿပီး ျပန္တိုက္ၾကဖို႔ တတ္ႏိုင္သေလာက္ စုစည္းထားတဲ့ အင္အားစုေတြကို လက္နက္ကိုင္ အၾကမ္းဖက္ သမားဆိုတာထက္ လက္နက္ကိုင္ ေတာ္လွန္ေရး သမားေတြ လို႔ ေျပာင္းၿပီး ေခၚေစခ်င္ပါတယ္။


ကိုထိုက္
..............................................................................................................

From the The Times of London:
UN staff were thrown into panic over the weekend after Burmese police and diplomats entered its offices in Rangoon and demanded hard drives from its computers.
The discs contain information that could help the dictatorship to identify key members of the opposition movement, many of whom have gone underground. UN staff spent much of the weekend deleting information.
The stream of dramatic images of tens of thousands of monks parading through Rangoon inspired condemnation of the Government across the world. On Saturday, demonstrations denouncing the regime were held as far apart as Sydney, Singapore, London and Washington.
Many of the images were disseminated through e-mail by Burmese bloggers who used software to outwit attempts to block them. Even after the Government shut down the internet altogether ten days ago, photographs and films were smuggled out on tiny storage drives and memory cards by travelers to Thailand.
Some of the demonstrators have reportedly been arrested after being identified in footage of the rallies. The junta is going after the UN, in the belief that its officials allowed images to be transmitted through their own internet links – channeled via satellite phones and therefore less vulnerable to interference by the authorities.
“It’s part of this systematic, repressive response to the demonstrations,” said a Western diplomat in Rangoon. “We’ve seen them focus on people who directly participated in the demonstrations by picking them up through the videos Then they’ve arrested people with cameras containing images of the demos. And now they’re trying to track down the means that were used to send them out.”

China Olympic 2008


Monday, 8 October 2007





China so-called internal affair



တေဘာင္

ကၽြန္ေတာ္ ငယ္ငယ္က အဘိုးက ေျပာျပေလ့ရွိတယ္။ သူငယ္ငယ္က အဂၤလိပ္ လက္ေအာက္မွာ ေနခဲ့ရတဲ့ အေၾကာင္းေတြနဲ႔ အဂၤလိပ္ေခတ္မွာ ေပၚခဲ့တဲ့ တေဘာင္ တစ္ခု အေၾကာင္းပါ။ အဲဒီတေဘာင္ကို အဘိုးက ခဏခဏ ရြတ္ျပၿပီး အဓိပၸါယ္ ရွင္းျပခဲ့ဖူးပါတယ္။ တေဘာင္ဆိုတာ ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံရဲ႕ ျဖစ္စဥ္ ကံၾကမၼာ အေၾကာင္းကို ထင္ဟပ္ျပတဲ့ စာစုေလးေတြလို႔ အဘိုးက ေျပာေလ့ရွိတယ္။ ျမန္မာ့ သမိုင္းေၾကာင္း တေလွ်ာက္ ျဖစ္ၿပီးတာေတြ၊ ေနာင္ ျဖစ္လာမည့္ အေၾကာင္းအရာေတြကို ဘယ္သူက `စ´ လိုက္မွန္းမသိတဲ့ ကဗ်ာလိုလို စာခ်ိဳးလိုလို ရြတ္ဆိုလို႔ ေကာင္းတဲ့ တေဘာင္ကို အဂၤလိပ္ေခတ္မွာ ကေလးေတြ အပါအ၀င္ လူႀကီးေတြပါ ရြတ္ဆိုၾကတယ္လို႔ ေျပာျပဖူးပါတယ္။ ၿပီးေတာ့ အားလံုး မွန္တယ္လို႔ သူက ရွင္းျပခဲ့ပါတယ္။ အဲဒီ တေဘာင္က ဦးေန၀င္း အာဏာ သိမ္းတဲ့ အေၾကာင္းအထိပါ၀င္ တယ္တဲ့။ ကုန္းေဘာင္ ေခတ္ကေန ေနာက္ဆံုး မဆလ ေခတ္အထိေပါ့။ (ေနာက္ပိုင္းေတာ့ ဘာတေဘာင္ ေပၚလဲ သူ မသိေတာ့ဘူးတဲ့။) သူ ရြတ္ျပေလ့ရွိတဲ့ တေဘာင္ကို ကၽြန္ေတာ္ မမွတ္မိေတာ့ပါဘူး။ ကၽြန္ေတာ့္ အဘိုး ကြယ္လြန္သြားခဲ့တာ ၅ ႏွစ္ခန္႔ရွိပါၿပီ။ ျပန္မေမးႏိုင္ေတာ့ပါ။ (မွတ္မိတဲ့ သိရွိတဲ့ လူမ်ားရွိလွ်င္ ေျပာျပေပးပါ။) ဒါေပမယ့္ ဦးေႏွာက္ထဲ ဆြဲမိတဲ့ စာ တစ္ေၾကာင္းေတာ့ရွိတယ္။

"မုဆိုးကို ထီးရိုးရိုက္မည္။
ထီးရိုးကို မိုးႀကိဳးပစ္မည္"

မုဆိုးဆိုတာက မုဆိုးဖိုရြာကေန တည္ေထာင္ခဲ့တဲ့ ကုန္းေဘာင္မင္းဆက္ကို ဆိုလိုၿပီး၊ ထီးရိုးလို႔ ဆိုလိုတဲ့ အဂၤလိပ္က တိုက္ခိုက္ သိမ္းပိုက္တာကို ေျပာတာပါ။

အဲဒီေနာက္ အဂၤလိပ္ အစိုးရကို မိုးႀကိဳး ပစ္မယ္လို႔ ေျပာတာပါ။ ဒီေတာ့ ဗိုလ္ခ်ဳပ္ေအာင္ဆန္းဦးေဆာင္တဲ့ ဗမာနဲ႔ ဂ်ပန္ ပူးေပါင္းထားတဲ့ ပထမဆံုး စစ္ေၾကာင္းရဲ႕ တပ္ဦးက ခ်ီလာတဲ့ ဂ်ပန္စစ္ဗိုလ္ (ဆူဇူကီး ထင္ပါတယ္) ကို ဗိုလ္မိုးႀကိဳးလို႔ နာမည္ေပးၿပီး အဂၤလိပ္ကို စတင္ တိုက္ခဲ့တယ္။ ႏိုင္လဲ ႏိုင္ခဲ့တယ္လို႔ အဘိုးက အဲဒီ တေဘာင္ကို ရွင္းျပခဲ့ဖူးတယ္။ ထီးရိုး ဘုရင္ အဂၤလိပ္ကို၊ ဂ်ပန္ မိုးႀကိဳးက ပစ္ၿပီး ေမာင္းထုတ္ႏိုင္တဲ့တယ္လို႔ ဆိုလိုပါတယ္။

အခုလည္း ခ်စ္သူေလး ဆိုတဲ့ တစ္ေယာက္က ေမးလ္ထဲကို တေဘာင္တစ္ခု ပို႔လာလို႔ အားလံုး သိရေအာင္ ျပန္လည္ ျဖန္႔ေ၀လိုက္ပါတယ္။ ေအာက္မွာ ဖတ္ၾကည့္ပါ ......
(ကိုထိုက္)

ဂငယ္ ေလးဆူ အုတ္သစ္ထူ
ထူသည့္ အုတ္သစ္ ဆယ့္ကုိးႏွစ္
ဆယ့္ကုိးႏွစ္ေက်ာ္ တဖန္ေပၚ
ေပၚသည့္ ဦးေခါင္း ေနထီးေဆာင္း
ေရႊေခါင္းေျပာင္ေျပာင္ လမ္းလယ္ေခါင္
တစ္ေရာင္ထဲထြက္ မင္းလည္းပ်က္
ျဖစ္ပ်က္စုံညီ ျမန္မာျပည္
ေအာင္စည္သံတုိ႔ ျမည္လာၿပီ...
၀ိဇ ၨာရွစ္ေသာင္း ဆရာအေပါင္း
ခေညာင္း မ လိမ္႔မည္ ။

ဒီတေဘာင္ေလးကို ဘေလာ့မွာေတြ ့လို ့အရင္ကလည္းၾကားဘူးတာနဲ ့သူငယ္ခ်င္းတေယာက္နဲ ့ၿပန္ၿပီးစံုစမ္းၾကည့္ပါတယ္။

အဲဒီတေဘာင္ဟာရခိုင္ကေနလာပါတယ္လို ့ဆိုပါတယ္။
အဲဒီတေဘာင္ကိုလုပ္ခဲ့တဲ့ရခိုင္နတ္ခတ္ဆရာဟာလြန္ခဲ့တဲ့ႏွစ္ေပါင္းမ်ားစြာကတည္းက သကၠရာစ္အပိုင္းအၿခားအလိုက္တေဘာင္ေတြလုပ္ခဲ့ပါတယ္။
အခုတေဘာင္ဟာအခုအခ်ိန္အပိုင္းအၿခားအတြက္တေဘာင္ၿဖစ္လို ့ၿပန္လည္ေဖာ္ထုတ္ထားတာၿဖစ္ပါတယ္။
2001ခုႏွစ္မွာဆရာေတာ္ေလးပါးဟာတိုင္ပင္ၿခင္းမရိွပဲနဲ ့မင္းဓမၼေတာင္မွာဆံုၿပီးဘုရားစတည္ဖို ့ၾကိဳးစားတာေလးပါးလံုးအဖမ္းခံရပါတယ္။
ဦးေဆာင္တာကေတာ့လက္ခတ္ေတာင္ဆရာေတာ္ပါ။
အဲဒီေနာက္မွာေတာ့ခင္ညြန္ ့ဟာသူ တို ့ပါသာအဲဒီမွာဘုရားတည္ပါတယ္။ တေဘာင္ကိုေရွာင္တာပါ။
အဲဒီတေဘာင္အလိုအတိုင္းပဲေတဇကသူ ့အိမ္ၿဖစ္တဲ့တကၠသိုလ္ရိပ္သာလမ္းမွာေဒါင္းေမြးခဲ့ၿပီးခင္ညြန္ ့ေပ်ာက္သြားပါတယ္။ ေနာက္ပိုင္းမွာေတဇ နာမယ္ၾကီးလာပါတယ္။တေဘာင္အလိုအရေတာ့ေတာ္ေကာက္ခံရတာပါ။
အဲဒီတေဘာင္တရ ၁၀၁ပါးေသာမင္းနဲ ့ဆရာေတာ္ေလးပါးကူညီရင္ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္အာဏာရမယ္လို ့ပါပါတယ္။
(တကယ္လို ့UN ကၿမန္မာ့အေရးကို ေထာက္ခံခ်က္ေတာင္းရင္ ေထာက္ခံတဲ့ႏိုင္ငံ101ႏိုင္ငံရိွခ်င္ရိွႏိုင္မယ္ ထင္ပါတယ္)
ဒီထက္ပိုစိတ္၀င္စားစရာေကာင္းတာကအန္တီစုဟာအာဏာရၿပီးတႏွစ္အၾကာမွာကြယ္လြန္မယ္။ အဲဒီေနာက္မွာအာဏာရမွာလဲအမ်ိဳးသမီးပါပဲတဲ့။
အဲဒီအမ်ိဳးသမီးသက္တမ္းကုန္ခ်ိန္မွာၿမန္မာၿပည္ဟာအထြတ္အထိပ္ႏိုင္ငံၿဖစ္ေနၿပီလို ့ဆိုပါတယ္။
နအဖဖ်က္ခဲ့သမွ်အမ်ိဳးသမီး၂ဦးကၿပင္မယ္လို ့ဆိုပါတယ္။
(အဲဒါကိုၿပန္ေၿပာၿပတဲ့သူငယ္ခ်င္းကလည္းေသခ်ာမမွတ္ထားလို ့ဘယ္စာေၾကာင္းကဘယ္ဟာမွန္းမသိေတာ့ပါဘူး
ဟုတ္ေသာ္ရိွ မဟုတ္ေသာ္ရိွ လူေတြအားတတ္ေစခ်င္တာပါ. အဲဒီတေဘာင္စၾကားဘူးကာစက က်မလံုး၀မယံုခဲ့ပါဘူး.2001ခုႏွစ္ေလာက္ကၾကားတာပါ.အခုလဲအန္တီစုေနာက္မွာေရာက္လာမယ့္
အမ်ိဳးသမီးဆိုတာဘယ္လိုမွကိုစဥ္းစားလို ့မရပါဘူး.ဒါေပမယ္ၿမန္မာၿပည္အထြတ္အထိပ္ေရာက္ဖို ့ရာကြ်န္မတို ့သားသမီးလက္ထက္မွာေကာင္းဖို ့ရာအခု
အခ်ိန္မွာေၿပာင္းလဲမွၿဖစ္မွာပါ.မင္းဓမၼမွာဘုရားတည္ၿခင္းနဲ ့သူတို ့ေရွာင္ခဲ့ေပမယ့္19ႏွစ္မွာၿဖစ္လာမယ့္အေရးကိုသူတို ့မေရွာင္ႏိုင္ခဲ့ပါဘူး..ၾကိဳးစားၾကပါစို ့)
က်န္တဲ့ဘေလာ့ဂါမ်ားကိုလဲေၿပာၿပေပးပါရွင့္
ခင္တဲ့
ခ်စ္သူေလး

(ေနာက္ဆက္တြဲ)
တေဘာင္တဲ႔ ပက္သက္ၿပီး ေနာက္ထပ္ လာပို႔တဲ့ ေမးလ္တစ္ေစာင္ကေတာ့

တေဘာင္အေၾကာင္းတင္ထားတဲ့ ပိုစ့္ေလး ဖတ္လိုက္ရ လို႔ ကၽြန္ေတာ္ သူငယ္ခ်င္းေၿပာၿပတဲ့ တေဘာင္ေလးကို ေၿပာၿပခ်င္လို႔ပါ

ကုန္းေဘာင္ နန္းဆက္ကို စတင္တည္ေထာင္ခဲ့ သူဟာ `အ´ နဲ႔ စတဲ့ အေလာင္းဘုရား ဦးေအာင္ေဇယ် ျဖစ္ၿပီး နန္းစြန္႔ ေၿပးရတဲ့လူကေတာ့ `သ´ နဲ႔ စတဲ့ သီေပါမင္း ၿဖစ္ပါတယ္..

ေနာက္ တဖန္ၿပန္လည္ထူေထာင္ သူက ေတာ့ `အ´ နဲ႔ စတဲ့ သခင္ ေအာင္ဆန္းၿဖစ္ ၿပီး နန္းစြန္႔ ေၿပးရမယ့္သူကေတာ့ `သ´ န႔ဲ စတဲ့ သန္းေရႊ ပါတဲ့
ေနာက္ တၾကိမ္ ၿပန္ထူေထာင္မယ့္ သူကေတာ့ `အ´ နဲ႔ စတဲ့ ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ ပါတဲ့ ခင္ဗ်ား.......