Showing posts with label Myanmar crackdown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Myanmar crackdown. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Cambodian journalists decry Japanese journalist killing in Myanmar

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Phnom Penh (dpa) - Cambodia's most powerful journalist union on Tuesday condemned the killing of a Japanese colleague during the Myanmar pro-democracy demonstrations and called for strong action.

The Club of Cambodian Journalists (CCJ) released a statement expressing its condolences for Ken Jinagai, 50, who was apparently gunned down by Myanmar troops while filming for Japanese agency APF on September 27.

"This killing is very regretable and shocking," the CCJ said in the statement.

"The CCJ strongly condemns the killers of this journalist and appeals to the Myanmar government to take action to investigate the incident clearly and send the killers to trial to find justice for the victim and his family."

The CCJ boasts hundreds of members and is by far the largest journalist union in Cambodia.

Viewed as close to, but far from dependent on, the Cambodian government by media analysts, the CCJ's criticism is yet another indication of growing indignation amongst various sections of the community within the Association of South-east Asian Nations (ASEAN) at Myanmar's military junta's conduct.

The 10-member ASEAN bloc consists of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. It is the most powerful diplomatic and trading bloc in the region. Myanmar joined ASEAN in 1997.

6,000 detained in Burma; Even Rambo was horrified by the atrocities he saw there

'6,000 held' as Burma smashes revolution

Tue 2 Oct 2007
ETHAN MCNERN AND AUNG HLA TUN IN RANGOON
The Scotsman (Scotland, UK)


BURMESE authorities are holding about 6,000 anti-government protesters at four sites, including the notorious Insein prison and a racecourse, a dissident group, the Democratic Voice of Burma, said yesterday.

DVB, which has continued to broadcast TV and radio into Burma from its Norwegian base in Oslo, added that at least 138 people were killed in last week's protests.

"Our own estimate is about 6,000 people detained, not killed, but detained," including about 2,400 monks, said DVB's chief editor, Aye Chan Naing. He said they were being held in at least four places: the Insein prison; a pharmaceutical factory; a technical institute and a disused racecourse.

Ominously, it was reported many would be sent to prisons in the far north of the country.

Monks appear to be paying a heavy price for spearheading the demonstrations. An Asian diplomat said all the arrested monks were defrocked and made to wear civilian clothes. Some were likely to face long jail terms, the diplomat said.

Insein prison, near Rangoon, was built by the British during the colonial period. It is now the junta's maximum security jail. One dissident who was held there has described it as the "darkest hell-hole in Burma".

The junta has been forced to use other facilities to hold people simply because of the numbers it has picked up.

Meanwhile yesterday, General Than Shwe, the junta's leader, stalled a United Nations envoy, Ibrabim Gambari, for yet another day, putting off the apparently onerous task of hearing international demands for an end to Burma's harsh crackdown on democracy advocates.

Mr Gambari has been in the country since Saturday with the express purpose of seeing the general, but the junta's top man has apparently been too busy.

Gen Than Shwe, 74, is frequently rumoured to be in poor health, but he has a well-deserved reputation as a military hard-liner who pays scant regard to the cares and concerns of the outside world.

Instead of the meeting that he had hoped for, Mr Gambari was shipped out yesterday to Lashio, a remote northern town for an academic conference.

In a sign yesterday that the junta was confident it had squeezed the life out of the uprising, barbed-wire barricades were removed from the Shewdagon Pagoda, a rallying point for monks leading the marches in Rangoon.

However, soldiers and security men were searching people for cameras. The internet, by which images of the crackdown reached the world, also remained unavailable.

Public anger ignited on 19 August after the government raised fuel prices, then shifted into mass protests led by Buddhist monks against 45 years of military dictatorship. Soldiers responded last week by opening fire on unarmed demonstrators. The government said ten people were killed.

Among residents in Rangoon, there was a palpable sense yesterday that the strongest anti-democracy protests since 1988 had once again failed.

"The people are angry, but afraid; many are poor and struggling in life, so they don't join the protests anymore," said Theta, 30, a university graduate who is now driving a taxi.

Other Burmese were more despairing. "The people are enraged, but they could not do anything because they're facing guns," said a 68-year-old teacher. "I think the protests are over because there is no hope pressing them."

Mark Canning, Britain's ambassador, said China had pushed for Mr Gambari's mission to be as far-reaching as possible, getting permission for him to fly to Naypyidaw, where he met the acting prime minister.

He then returned to Rangoon for an hour with the opposition leader and democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been under house arrest for nearly 12 of the past 18 years.

"There's been an evolution in his programme. The initial pitch was minimalist. It's got a bit better, and we want to see it get better still," Mr Canning said.

STALLONE IS HORRIFIED

SYLVESTER Stallone yesterday said he and his crew on the Rambo movie sequel witnessed the human toll of unspeakable atrocities while filming along the Burmese border.

"I witnessed the aftermath - survivors with legs cut off and all kinds of land mine injuries ... and ears cut off. We hear about Vietnam and Cambodia and this was more horrific," he said.

Stallone returned eight days ago from a film shoot on the Salween River separating Thailand and Burma.

Candle vigil in front of the Burmese embassy to last one week


Groups Continue Support of Burmese Activists

Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
01 October 2007


Members of Cambodian rights groups and other activists said they would stay in front of the Burmese Embassy in Phnom Penh for a week to protest the use of violence to suppress demonstrations in Burma, an Asean neighbor.

Organizers said they wanted the campaign to reflect solidarity with the international community against brutal action of the Burmese junta, which quelled pro-democracy demonstrations last week with tear gas and guns, shooting at thousands of demonstrators protesting a gasoline price hike.

"We have a week-long plan to support the Burmese people, their ideals, hearts, spirit, in their plight," Center for Social Development Executive Director said in a speech Monday. "We want to give a message to the Burmese government that… Seng Thearywe hate violence and crime, and we think that we will continue to do this until the Burmese government gives freedom to the Burmese people and frees political prisoners."

The military authorities who rule Burma have been holding pro-democracy leader and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi under house arrest for 12 of the last 18 years.

At least 10 Burmese exiles in Cambodia joined Monday's demonstration.

Activist Hla Htay told VOA that the activists wanted to announce to the Burmese military leaders that the world condemned the violence.

"We are now here to tell the Burmese government to stop killing people," he said.

The UN, US, EU and Asean have each condemned the violent crackdown on demonstrations. Only a veto from China stopped UN General Assembly sanctions of the junta.

Monday, October 01, 2007

S'pore PM tells Burma: ASEAN backs UN

Lee tells Burma: Asean backs UN

Singapore (dpa) - Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong told Burmese regime chief Than Shwe that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) fully backs the mission to Burma by UN envoy Ibrahim Gambari, a published letter said Monday.

"The videos and photographs of what is happening on the street of Rangoon and other cities in (Burma) have evoked the revulsion of the people throughout Southeast Asia and all over the world," said Lee, writing in his capacity as Asean chairman.

"I would like to emphasise the importance which the Asean countries, and indeed the whole international community attach to Gambari's mission," Lee said in the letter released to The Straits Times on Sunday.

Gambari was holding talks with several Burmese leaders to try to resolve the ongoing crisis in the country.

"We strongly urge your government to grant Mr Gambari full access to all parties in (Burma), as you have done in the past, and to work with Mr Gambari to find a way forward," said Lee.

The stern message came days after Asean leaders issued an unprecedented sharp rebuke of Burma on the sidelines of a UN meeting in New York.

Asean comprises Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, Indonesia, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Burma.

Gambari arrived Sunday in Rangoon after an overnight stay in Naypyidaw, the capital, where he talked with several military leaders, diplomats said. He later held talks with opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

U.N. envoy lands in Myanmar for talks

CRACKDOWN: Riot police and soldiers patrol Yangon streets to block anti-government protests first led by Buddhist monks. The military confined many monks to their monasteries.(Photo: STR/AFP/Getty Images)

The streets of Yangon are quiet as the diplomat arrives to meet with military rulers after their crackdown on protesters.

September 30, 2007
By Henry Chu,
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer


NEW DELHI -- A U.N. special envoy arrived in Myanmar on Saturday for talks with the country's military rulers, whose ruthless crackdown on anti-government protesters has sparked international outrage.

The streets of Myanmar's main city, Yangon, were virtually empty of demonstrators for the first time in nearly two weeks and devoid of the gunfire and chaos that marked three days of violent suppression by soldiers and police. Security forces continued to patrol and seal off parts of the city, including the Buddhist monasteries whose monks spearheaded the protests.

After landing in Yangon on Saturday afternoon, United Nations envoy Ibrahim Gambari immediately traveled to the new capital of Naypyidaw, near Pyinmana about 200 miles to the north, where the generals who rule Myanmar live in relative isolation from the people.

Details of Gambari's schedule were not available, nor was it clear whether he would be allowed to visit pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who is under house arrest and has been detained for most of the last 18 years.

"I expect to meet all the people that I need to meet," Gambari said in Singapore before departing for Myanmar, also known as Burma. He did not elaborate.

In Washington, Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, urged Myanmar's leaders to give Gambari "access to all those he wishes to meet with, including religious leaders as well as Aung San Suu Kyi."

Analysts question how much Gambari, a former Nigerian foreign minister, can achieve in talks with an iron-fisted junta that has repeatedly shown itself impervious to outside pressure.

His mission to Myanmar reflects the growing international concern and anger over the generals' brutal clampdown on protesters, in which the government acknowledges that 10 people have been killed. Diplomats and dissident groups estimate the death toll to be many times that figure, as high as 200.

Some observers feared a repeat of a 1988 massacre of pro-democracy protesters in which an estimated 3,000 people were killed.

The demonstrations began last month in response to steep fuel price increases but soon became an outlet for anger over 45 years of autocratic military rule. Last week, as many as 100,000 people marched in central Yangon, also known as Rangoon, including a large number of monks, who are revered in this predominantly Buddhist country.

The uneasy quiet on Yangon's streets Saturday, however, suggested that the armed crackdown that began Wednesday may have succeeded in containing the biggest challenge to the military's rule in nearly 20 years.

"Peace and stability has been restored," state-run newspapers said. The authorities had handled the protests "with care, using the least possible force."

Small groups gathered to taunt and curse soldiers and police but quickly escaped through alleyways when authorities began to charge, the Reuters news service reported.

Internet connections remained cut off, constricting the flow of photographs and video that had helped galvanize world opinion against the junta.

"The strategy is to neutralize the demonstrators, and they seem to have done that very effectively," said Tim Huxley, executive director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies-Asia.

Human rights organizations and Burmese activist groups in exile have called on leading nations, especially China, Myanmar's traditional ally, to pressure the regime to stop using force against its opponents. The U.S. has imposed new sanctions on Myanmar, and the Assn. of Southeast Asian Nations, one of the few multilateral organizations to which Myanmar belongs, issued a statement expressing its "revulsion" over the bloody crackdown.

On Saturday, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said, "I hope the Burmese regime can be told today by Mr. Gambari just how seriously we view this, and that there is a huge anger across the world about the deaths and about the violence that's been perpetrated against the Burmese people."

But international condemnation, and efforts such as Gambari's visit, probably will have little effect, Huxley said.

"External leverage is extremely limited," he said. "There's been a variety of external pressure over the years -- the dramatic approaches, including successive U.N. envoys who have made representations and failed, representations in very muted form by fellow members of ASEAN and sanctions imposed by Western countries to varying degrees -- and none of them have had significant effect."

henry.chu@latimes.com

Vigil in front of the Burmese Embassy Phnom Penh

All photos by Lux Mean posted on Flickr

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Statement by ASEAN Chair on Burma issue

Statement by ASEAN Chair

Singapore's Minister for Foreign Affairs George Yeo
New York, 27 September 2007

The ASEAN Foreign Ministers had a full and frank discussion on the situation in Myanmar at their Informal Meeting this morning in the UN and agreed for the Chair to issue this Statement. They were appalled to receive reports of automatic weapons being used and demanded that the Myanmar government immediately desist from the use of violence against demonstrators. They expressed their revulsion to Myanmar Foreign Minister Nyan Win over reports that the demonstrations in Myanmar are being suppressed by violent force and that there has been a number of fatalities. They strongly urged Myanmar to exercise utmost restraint and seek a political solution. They called upon Myanmar to resume its efforts at national reconciliation with all parties concerned, and work towards a peaceful transition to democracy. The Ministers called for the release of all political detainees including Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.

The ASEAN Foreign Ministers expressed their concern to Minister Nyan Win that the developments in Myanmar had a serious impact on the reputation and credibility of ASEAN. They noted that Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has spoken to his ASEAN counterparts over the past day, and will be writing to Senior General Than Shwe.

The ASEAN Foreign Ministers gave their full support to the decision of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to send Special Envoy Ibrahim Gambari to Myanmar. They welcomed FM Nyan Win’s assurance that a visa would be issued to Mr Gambari in Singapore. They asked the Myanmar government to cooperate fully and work with him. Mr Gambari’s role as a neutral interlocutor among all the parties can help defuse the dangerous situation. The Ministers urged the Myanmar government to grant him full access to all parties in Myanmar, as they had done in the past.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Myanmar protests persist despite bloodshed

Journalist Kenji Nagai of the Japanese news agency APF News, flat on his back on a street in Yangon, Myanmar, continues taking photos as police and soldiers charge protesters. Nagai, 52, was shot by soldiers as they dispersed the crowd. He later died.

A crackdown leaves at least nine dead, including a photojournalist. But thousands of residents continue to fill the streets of Yangon.

September 28, 2007
By Henry Chu,
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer


NEW DELHI -- As thousands of angry residents continued to pour onto the streets of Yangon in defiance of an official ban, Myanmar's military dictatorship tightened its clampdown Thursday on anti-government protests in a show of force that left at least nine people dead.

Among those killed in clashes in the nation's main city was a Japanese veteran war photographer who was shot while trying to capture images of the large-scale demonstrations that have offered the repressive ruling junta its most powerful challenge in nearly 20 years.

Witness accounts, television video and photographs beamed through cellphones around the world showed security forces with riot shields marching down Yangon's boulevards on the second day of an increasingly brutal crackdown. Security forces fired tear gas and warning shots from automatic weapons to disperse the crowds, which scurried for cover, leaving behind sandals in their haste and pools of blood where the face-off turned violent.

The spiraling unrest in the Southeast Asian nation, also known as Burma, stoked fears of a repeat of a 1988 massacre of pro-democracy protesters in which an estimated 3,000 people were killed. It also sparked concern among bordering countries of growing instability on their doorstep, in a region that has seen its share of political chaos.

Even China, Myanmar's traditional ally, issued a rare public admonition to the country's military regime to proceed with caution, after having joined with Russia to block an official condemnation Wednesday by the United Nations.

"China hopes that all parties in Myanmar exercise restraint and properly handle the current issue so as to ensure the situation there does not escalate and get complicated," Jiang Yu, a spokeswoman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, told reporters in Beijing on Thursday.

A special U.N. envoy, Ibrahim Gambari, was expected to arrive soon in Myanmar, one of the world's most tightly controlled countries.

"The world is watching the people of Burma take to the streets to demand their freedom, and the American people stand in solidarity with these brave individuals," President Bush said in a statement. He met Thursday with China's foreign minister, urging Beijing to use its influence in the region to bring about a peaceful transition to democracy in Myanmar.

As many as 70,000 people ignored government warnings to stay home and marched through the streets of Yangon, also known as Rangoon, for a 10th consecutive day of protests, according to news reports and dissident groups in exile.

Previous rallies had been led by Buddhist monks, who are revered in Burmese society, but fewer of them turned out Thursday, most likely because government forces raided at least six monasteries before dawn and reportedly beat and arrested scores of people.

The majority of demonstrators Thursday appeared to be ordinary citizens, some of whom shouted for freedom from the military rule that has driven their country into poverty and isolation. Others chanted, "We will win! We will win!"

"It's civilians and students. The monks were beaten up in public, which causes outrage. Despite the fact that they knew they might be shot, there are still protests in Rangoon," said Soe Myint, the editor of the Myanmar-focused Mizzima News website and a longtime dissident based here in India.

Myint and a friend served three months in jail after hijacking a Thai Airways International plane in 1990 to protest the Myanmar regime's overturning of elections won that year by the party of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi. Upon their release, the pair were recognized as refugees in India.

Also Thursday, there were unconfirmed reports of demonstrations in Mandalay, Myanmar's second city, and the towns of Sittwe, Pakokku and Moulmein.

In Yangon, protesters tried to converge on a familiar rallying point, the Sule Pagoda, a sacred and politically symbolic shrine in the center of the city, near which the 1988 massacre of demonstrators took place, the Reuters news service reported.

But when chanting marchers threw rocks and bottles at surrounding soldiers and police, the security forces charged amid a fusillade of gunfire. The photojournalist, Kenji Nagai, 50, died in the melee.

Nagai, who worked for the Japanese Web service APF News, had arrived in Myanmar on Tuesday. He had covered conflicts in Cambodia and Afghanistan, according to reports in the Japanese media, and was in Iraq in 2003 when U.S. forces pulled down the statue of Saddam Hussein in central Baghdad.

Myanmar state media, which blamed the monks for instigating the unrest and inciting "the mob group," said nine people were killed and 11 wounded Thursday. One man was reported killed Wednesday. Witnesses and activist organizations say the toll could be much higher than the official numbers.

"It is basically a repeat of the 1988 violent crackdown, at least in Rangoon," Myint said. "So far we have not seen that [many] casualties, but I fear that I cannot rule [that] out in the next few days."

Unlike 19 years ago, images of the bloody events unfolding in Myanmar have streamed out of the country via the Internet and cellphones, captured in photos and video that have been picked up by news outlets across the globe. The leadership, perhaps caught off guard by the instantaneous multimedia campaign, has begun closing down blogs and other sources of information.

"The military does all in its power to shut off outside contact," said Josef Silverstein, a professor emeritus at Rutgers University and an expert on Myanmar. "The reports we're getting are coming from ordinary citizens who risk their lives to get on the Internet and take their camera shots. They want the world to know what's going on."

Whether international outrage will have any effect on the government is debatable; Myanmar's leaders have shown themselves contemptuous of world opinion throughout 45 years of military dictatorship under various regimes. The junta has insulated itself from greater international condemnation by using to its advantage the interest of China, India and others in Myanmar's rich natural gas reserves and other resources.

The U.S. this week announced new sanctions against Myanmar and its top leaders, naming 14 senior officials in the government subject to having assets frozen. The European Union is also considering new sanctions. But analysts say such measures would have a limited effect.

Myanmar's regime is far more concerned with maintaining control than with world opinion, said French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner. Neighbors such as China and India "are the only ones who are able to make sufficient pressure on Myanmar," Kouchner said at the U.N., which is holding its annual General Assembly.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met in New York with representatives of the Assn. of Southeast Asian Nations to rally regional pressure on Myanmar's rulers. The ASEAN group expressed "revulsion" at reports that the demonstrations were being suppressed by force resulting in fatalities and demanded that the regime "immediately desist" the use of violence.

About 20 monks from the New York and Washington areas joined Myanmar expatriates in a peaceful demonstration outside the U.N.

The current string of protests in Yangon has its origins in sporadic demonstrations that began last month, ostensibly because of a doubling in the price of fuel -- a major blow to the residents of a country where per capita GDP is only $1,800, according to the CIA's World Factbook.

The demonstrations soon took on a political color. Upset over being treated roughly by government forces, Myanmar's monks demanded an official apology by Sept. 17. When none came, the monks invited the public to join them in mass protests.

Analysts said that the involvement of the monkhood, which had been fairly pacific and supportive of social order over the last 20 years, immediately complicated matters for the military regime.

Man for man, the monkhood, with an estimated 400,000 to 500,000 members, is about equal in number to Myanmar's military.

They are unarmed, but the monks wield great moral authority in Burmese society. During several days of protests that often drew thousands of participants, the government failed to respond.

"What appeared as toleration was the military attempting to assess what this new situation was," Silverstein said. "This situation's different than '88. . . . That was led by students, mostly university students at that time. This is a monks' movement."

The crackdown that began Wednesday, including the raids on monasteries, clearly signals the government's willingness to take on the monks, despite the risk of further angering the public.

Even an inflamed citizenry might not dare to continue protesting under the threat of bloodshed and brutal reprisals.

"Twenty years of intimidation, you don't just sweep that away," Silverstein said.

henry.chu@latimes.com

Times staff writers Maggie Farley at the United Nations and Hisako Ueno in Tokyo contributed to this report.

Reaction about the political situation in Burma

27 September 2007
By Sok Serey
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Socheata

High ranking government officials, monks, and opposition MPs are reacting differently to the political situation in Burma which is now embroiled wit unrest, and the use of violence against monks causing deaths and the arrest of several hundreds monks during the government attack on demonstrators protesting against the Myanmar regime.

Khieu Kanharith, government spokesman, gave this comment to RFA on Thursday: “We want the Burmese government to avoid using violence, there should be discussions held between all sides of the society again, that would be better.”

Tep Vong, the Buddhist supreme patriarch of Cambodia, said that this is an altogether different issue: “I have no reaction, this is their issue, my issues are mine. The basic attributes of my noble nature are: compassion, pity, joy at other’s happiness, and sincerity…

Venerable Yoeung Sin, President of the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Monks Association in Cambodia, said in reaction to this issue that he is condemning the use of force on Burmese monks.

Venerable Yoeung Sin said: “These savage acts must be condemned by the world and by those who love peace and society. These are savage actions taken by people who are dictators.”

Opposition SRP MP Son Chhay said in reaction to this issue that this is the time for the Cambodian government to show its position.

Son Chhay said: “First, our government should express its position, which party does it side with? Does the (Cambodian) government support the democrats or is it supporting the dictators? This is an issue that the (Cambodian) government can no longer maintain.”

Recently, according to international news, TV, and radio media in English, a large demonstration is occurring in Burma, and more than 100,000 of Burmese monks and laypersons have participated in this mass demonstration to oppose the Myanmar government.

This demonstration was met by violent attacks from the government troops, and 4 people died, over 100 were injured, and more than 200 monks were arrested during the government retaliation.

In 1988, Burma also saw a mass demonstration once already, but that demonstration was quelled with violence causing more than 3,000 deaths from government force shootings.

In Cambodia, there were also government retaliations against demonstration in 1998. The Cambodian demonstration at that time was led by opposition leader Sam Rainsy, and it was also participated by Cambodian monks. The demonstrators were protesting the results of the election which was conducted in July 1998.

Nine Asean countries issue strong statement against Myanmar

2007/09/28
News Straits Times (Malaysia)
NEW YORK


Nine Asean member countries issued a strong statement Thursday against their Asean counterpart Myanmar on the political situation in that country and called for the release of all political detainees, including Aung San Suu Kyi.

The nine countries are Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos.

The statement, issued by the Asean Chair, Singapore’s Foreign Minister George Yeo, said the Asean foreign ministers had a full and frank discussion on the situation in Myanmar when they met at their informal meeting at the United Nations (UN) here.

Myanmar’s Foreign Minister Nyan Win was also present at the informal meeting.

It is believed that this was the first time that such a statement had been issued against an Asean member.

The ministers said they were appalled to have received reports of automatic weapons being used against demonstrators in Yangon.

They demanded that the Myanmar government immediately desist from the use of violence against demonstrators.

Nine people, including a Japanese journalist, had been killed following a crackdown on anti-government protestors in Yangon.

Many more were also injured as more than 50,000 people converged on Yangon to continue their protests against the military government.

The Asean ministers expressed their revulsion to Nyan Win over reports that demonstrations in Myanmar were being suppressed with violent force and that there had been a number of fatalities.