Last week, the Myanmar military killed 14 children in an airstrike on a displaced persons camp in Kachin State, Burma. According to BBC Burmese Service, 14 children were among the 29 dead. The attack came shortly before midnight on Monday in the village of Munglai Hkyet, around three kilometers from the Kachin Independence Organization headquarters in Laiza, on the Chinese border. The camp is home to around 500 displaced people.
Ambassador U Kyaw Moe Tun, Myanmar’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations of the National Unity Government, called for a full arms embargo on the Myanmar military and measures to stop the Burmese army’s import of jet fuel.
Would you like to meet your Members of Congress regarding Myanmar?
Thanks in large part to your continual lobbying, more of your U.S. representatives and senators are co-sponsoring our resolutions.
For instance, Reps. Bill Huizenga (R, MI-4) and Grace Meng (D, NY-6) have just signed on as co-sponsors of H.Res.86 after being asked by our supporters from their district. We’re seeking one or more people in each state and House district to set up similar constituent meetings. We would work with you to set up a Zoom or in-person meeting with the staff of your House Member or senators. We’d also prepare you beforehand with talking points. The goal is to let you – voters from the district – lobby your Members of Congress effectively.
We were impressed at how many people contacted us to step up. As a result, we’ve already set up several meetings for our our supporters with key Members of Congress.
Nothing has more impact on Members of Congress than the voice of voters from the district. If you wish to organize or just participate in a meeting with staffers of your Members of Congress, just email us at [email protected]
What is the impact of these Congressional resolutions?
In support of the people of Myanmar, our friends in Congress have introduced two bipartisan resolutions, one in the House of Representatives (H.Res.86) and the other in the Senate (S.Res.20). The resolutions condemn the Burmese military for seizing power in its February 1st, 2021, coup d’etat. More importantly, the resolutions put Congressional pressure on the Biden Administration to:
– impose sanctions on Burmese military-owned or military-controlled companies, such as Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE);
– work with the United Nations and ASEAN countries to delegitimize the military; and
– empower and assist the National Unity Government of Myanmar, the National Unity Consultative Council, the Civil Disobedience Movement, and Burmese civil society.
If you don’t have the time to meet with your Members of Congress, please follow up your message with phone calls and emails to the staff of your U.S. senators and representative.
We have a new resources to make this easier for you. We’re continually updating our online listing of key staff of every member of the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives.
Click here to find the staffers to your U.S. senators and representative.
If you have extra time, please make a phone call and follow up email to the staff of your U.S. senators and representative. Just follow the steps below! Sometimes just one call or direct email from you can make the difference.
Follow up #1: send a direct email
- Click here to find the staffers to your U.S. senators and representative.
- Click here to check if your U.S. senators are already a co-sponsor of the resolution on Myanmar (S.Res.20). (If your senator is a co-sponsor, thank them. We don’t do that enough!)
- Click here to check if your U.S. representative is already a co-sponsor of the resolution on Myanmar (H.Res.86). (If your senator is a co-sponsor, thank them. We don’t do that enough!)
You may wish to use a succinct and direct subject line such as: “Co-sponsor the resolution condemning the Myanmar military coup”
Start your message with a mention of where you live in the state. Feel free to include a sentence or two on why you care about human rights and Myanmar in particular. Please use or adapt the following text in your email. Please blind copy (bcc) us on your email at [email protected].
I ask that you co-sponsor and support the resolution (S.Res.20) and (H.Res.86) condemning the Myanmar military coup.
Congress must show leadership in holding the Myanmar military accountable for its coup d’etat and its brutal crimes against humanity. Congress must also show support for Myanmar’s Civil Disobedience Movement (CDM) and its democratic and multi-ethnic new National Unity Government of Myanmar (NUG).
Please write back and tell me if you have co-sponsored the resolution condemning the Myanmar military coup. Thank you.
Action #2: make a phone call
- Click here to enter your zip code and find your House Member
- Click here to find the staffers to your U.S. senators and representative.
- Click here to check if your U.S. senators are already a co-sponsor of the resolution on Myanmar (S.Res.20). (If your senator is a co-sponsor, thank them. We don’t do that enough!)
- Click here to check if your U.S. representative is already a co-sponsor of the resolution on Myanmar (H.Res.86). (If your senator is a co-sponsor, thank them. We don’t do that enough!)
- When you reach their office, ask to be connected directly to the staffer, either in person on their voicemail.
- Simply tell the staffer – in person or on their voicemail – that you want your senator or representative to co-sponsor and support the resolution condemning the Myanmar military coup
- Leave your name, number, and city of residence to indicate that you live in the state.
- Email us at [email protected] and tell us how your calls went
Just one meeting, email, or phone call from a constituent can make a difference. Your Members of Congress need to know that you want Congress to act. The people of Myanmar can’t wait any longer.