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NEWS - A Tribute to the Martyrs Day



Subject: NEWS - A Tribute to the Martyrs Day, 19 July 1999

14 July 1999

A Tribute to the Martyrs Day, 19 July 1999
Like Father like Son-
The Shan who started Panglong

19 July for most Burmans marks the assassination of Aung San and his
colleagues. The fact is that in the mind-set of the majority, Aung San
looms
large and distinct while the rest of the martyrs are only a blur in the
background.

Sao Sarm Htoon (1907 - 1947), Prince of Mongpawng state, who was never
known
 to
be a publicity-hunter, is certainly among those in the background.

He was the son of Sao Khun Hti, a leader of the Shan Confederacy, that
finally
freed the Shan States from Mandalay, then the capital of the Burmese
kings, in
1882. He was also one of the few Shan princes that the British respected
when
the Shan States became a British protectorate five years later.

Fifty-eight years afterwards, it was his son, Sao Sarm Htun, who was
among the
Shan leaders that sought to free the Shan States from the British. At
the
funeral of his consort, Sao Khin Thaung, in 1945, the leaders that
gathered
there started a discussion that concluded in a decision to call the
Panglong
Conference, which was held first in 1946 and then in 1947 when Burma,
Kachin,
Chin and Shan representatives agreed to struggle for joint independence.

He was then elected by the Supreme Council of the United Hills Peoples
 (SCOUHP)
as their chief representative to work with the Burmese interim
government led
by Aung San. Sao Sarm Htun was with Aung San when the assassins raided
the
Secretariat on that fateful day in July.

Khun Kya Bu, a signatory to the Panglong Agreement, reported: "If July
19,
1947, is the blackest day for both Burmese and Shans alike, the next day
was
 no
less blacker. Zao Zarm Htun (Sao Sarm Htun), the Prince of Mongpawn, who
was
among the wounded during the assassination of Aung San was taken with
the
others to the General Hospital in Rangoon. His Karen personal assistant
personally carried him there. Apart from being unable to speak, because
of the
bullet wound in his chin, he was conscious and in good spirits when last
seen.
"But we were not allowed to visit him. They just told me he was all
right,
 that
there was nothing to worry about him. Then the next day, it was
announced that
he died from his wounds".

Sao Sarm Htun left two sons, Sao Hso Hom, who succeeded him and Sao
Kaifah.
 Sao
Hso Hom is reported as the President of the Shan Democratic Union formed
by
 the
overseas Shans in 1996.

Shans had joined Burma in 1947 under the treaty called Panglong
Agreement
 which
guaranteed Full Autonomy, Human Rights and Democracy for them. They have
been
fighting against successive Rangoon governments since the terms of
agreement
were violated. Their main party is the Shan Nationalities League for
Democracy
that won the General Elections in the Shan State in 1990 and their
central
armed movement is the Shan States Army.

/// END \\\

For further information, please contact S.H.A.N. at:
Shan Herald Agency for News.
P.O. Box. 15
Nonghoi P.O., 50007
Chiangmai
Thailand
Ph/Fax: (053) 807 121
e-mail: <shan@xxxxxxxxxxxx>