Saturday, June 2, 2012

General Aung San,Father of Myanmar's.

My Father
He was born Feb. 13, 1915, Natmauk, Myanmar [Burma]—died July 19, 1947, Yangon, Myanmar nationalist leader and assassinated hero who was instrumental in securing Myanmar’s independence from Great Britain. Before World War II Mr Aung San was actively anti-British; he then allied with the Japanese during World War II, but switched to the Allies before leading the Myanmar drive for autonomy.
Born of a family distinguished in the resistance movement after the British annexation of 1886, Mr Aung San became secretary of the students’ union at Yangon University and, with U Nu, led the students’ strike there in February 1936. After Myanmar’s separation from India in 1937 and his graduation in 1938, he worked for the nationalist Dobama Asiayone (“We-Myanmar Association” or “Our Burma Association”), becoming its secretary-general in 1939.
While seeking foreign support for Myanmar’s independence in 1940,Mr Aung San was contacted in China by the Japanese. They then assisted him in raising a Myanmar military force to aid them in their 1942 invasion of Myanmar. Known as the “Burma Independence Army,” it grew with the advance of the Japanese and tended to take over the local administration of occupied areas. Serving as minister of defense in Ba Maw’s puppet government (1943–45), Mr Aung San became skeptical of Japanese promises of Myanmar independence, even if an unlikely Japanese victory were to occur, and was displeased with their treatment of Myanmar forces. Thus, in March 1945, Major General Aung San switched his Burma National Army to the Allied cause.
After the Japanese surrender in August 1945, the British sought to incorporate his forces into the regular army, but he held key members back, forming the People’s Volunteer Organization. This was ostensibly a veterans’ association interested in social service, but it was in fact a private political army designed to take the place of his Burma National Army and to be used as a major weapon in the struggle for independence.
Having helped form the Anti-Fascist People’s Freedom League (AFPFL), an underground movement of nationalists, in 1944,Mr Aung San used that united front to become deputy chairman of Myanmar’s Executive Council in late 1946. In effect he was prime minister but remained subject to the British governor’s veto. After conferring with the British prime minister Clement Attlee in London, he announced an agreement (Jan. 27, 1947) that provided for Myanmar’s independence within one year. In the election for a constitutional assembly in April 1947, his AFPFL won 196 of 202 seats. Though communists had denounced him as a “tool of British imperialism,” he supported a resolution for Myanmar independence outside the British Commonwealth.
On July 19, the prime minister and six colleagues, including his brother, were assassinated in the council chamber in Yangon while the executive council was in session. His political rival, U Saw, interned in Uganda during the war, was later executed for his part in the killings.

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