“Every gap year student should have some skills training to help them travel in a more sensible and informed way. There are very few things in life that we expect to go off and do with no training, so why do we assume that travelling in the developing world can be achieved without preparation?”

Charlotte Hindle – author of Lonely Planet’s ‘Gap Year Guide’

Saturday 29 September 2007

The young people got up and ran, but the police just fired into their backs

To view the original article Click Here


Title – The young people got up and ran, but the police just fired into their backsSource – The Independent
Date – 29th September 2007

This terrible eye witness account of what happened on one of those fateful days in September 2007 when the Burmese people tried to stand up for themselves against 'their' rulers and it turned into a blood bath, can leave no one in any doubt that the situation for the Burmese people is a desperate one. For 45 years they have lived in fear, fear of the people that rule over the country. A tiny military elite who rule through oppression, violence, torture and extrajudicial killings. But even in a country where the majority of the population has never seen anything but this regime and even the older populations only briefly saw any form of democracy between the colonial rule and the military junta, they are still willing to stand up and pay with their lives in an attempt to change their future through peaceful protest. How depraved is a leadership that can turn guns loaded with live ammunition on praying Buddhist monks? Even the Burmese themselves never believed the day would come when the junta’s desperation would lead them to such brutality.

Beyond The Blue prides itself on a reputation or providing impartial and transparent advice to anyone taking one of our Gap Year and Independent Travel Safety and Awareness workshops. We will not provide guidance or advice on certain countries for a number of reasons. These may be as simple as a location like Colombia where in 2005, over 800 kidnapping cases were reported (many believe the actual figure is much higher) and foreigners are regularly targeted, as they generally command a higher ransom. We believe Colombia is an unsuitable destination for the average independent traveller and as such advise against travel to the country (and therefore do not provide information on it) on the grounds of safety.

Another reason we may choose to advise against travel is for political reasons. Burma for example, is a country ruled by an illegal military dictatorship, their record on Human Rights is one of the world’s worst and tourism is one of the primary ways that this corrupt government generates foreign exchange. Much of this income is then used by the military to allow it to better oppress its own people. The list of reported atrocities is a long and disturbing one.

In 1990 Burma held the first free and fair elections since the military regime came to power. By way of demonstrating exactly how out of touch the military regime was with the will of the people and reality in general, they believed that the fear they had instilled in the Burmese people would land them and overwhelming victory. As it turned out Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy party won a landslide victory with over 82% of all the votes cast. The military’s response was to place her under house arrest and either imprison torture or kill most of her party. Aung San Suu Kyi remains under house arrest to this day in one of the most flagrant displays of Human Rights abuses that the world seems able to ignore. She has however made it abundantly clear that she feels it is not in Burma’s interest at this time to have tourists visiting the country and providing the dictators with funds to further oppress her people.

A snapshot of the worst atrocities committed by the brutal military regime reads like one of history’s horror stories from hundreds of years ago, but it is happening today :

Widespread use of forced labour. Over 1 million people forcibly moved from their homes, At least 1100 political prisoners (many of whom are routinely tortured), an army of over 500,000 soldiers (The UK has just over 100,000) of whom 70,000 are child soldiers (more then any other country in the world), rape as a weapon of war against ethnic women and children, nearly half the government budget spent on the military and only 19p per citizen, per year, on health and one in ten babies die before their 5th birthday. (Source The Burma Campaign)

Burma used to be one of the richest countries in the region providing exports it now has to import.

However there are other pressure groups that disagree with this advice. Beyond The Blue believes that it is the right of every individual to choose if going to Burma is the right or wrong thing to do. We also believe that the will of the only democratically elected leader of Burma is one that represents the views of the Burmese people. We would never seek to dictate people’s choice of destination and our workshop would be very useful to anyone travelling to Burma, but by way of showing our support for the people of Burma, Beyond The Blue will not provide specific information on this country. We ask anyone planning a trip to Burma to research their trip carefully. The first step of this research should be
www.burmacampaign.org.uk.





Please visit our website at www.safegapyear.com

Hundreds may have died already, as junta tries to keep brutality unseen

To view the original article Click Here


Title – Hundreds may have died already, as junta tries to keep brutality unseen
Source – The Independent
Date – 29th September 2007

The very fact that no one outside of Burma including the world’s free press, has any real idea how many people died in the brutal crackdown on peaceful protests in Burma in September 2007 is testament to the complete isolation that the regime has decided upon for the Burmese people. They want nothing to do with the rest of the world, except for their foreign currency and brush the worlds concerns aside with an arrogance that comes from 45 years of a small military elite controlling a country of millions of innocent, oppressed and terrified people that are willing to lay down their lives to protest. They don’t protest in the hope that their own leaders will listen to them, they know that is almost futile, they protest so we in the west see their plight and they lay down their lives so that their fellow Burmese might have a small chance of a life free of brutality and fear one day. But they don’t expect that to happen unless the world stands up and stands by them. That time has surely come.

Beyond The Blue prides itself on a reputation or providing impartial and transparent advice to anyone taking one of our Gap Year and Independent Travel Safety and Awareness workshops. We will not provide guidance or advice on certain countries for a number of reasons. These may be as simple as a location like Colombia where in 2005, over 800 kidnapping cases were reported (many believe the actual figure is much higher) and foreigners are regularly targeted, as they generally command a higher ransom. We believe Colombia is an unsuitable destination for the average independent traveller and as such advise against travel to the country (and therefore do not provide information on it) on the grounds of safety.

Another reason we may choose to advise against travel is for political reasons. Burma for example, is a country ruled by an illegal military dictatorship, their record on Human Rights is one of the world’s worst and tourism is one of the primary ways that this corrupt government generates foreign exchange. Much of this income is then used by the military to allow it to better oppress its own people. The list of reported atrocities is a long and disturbing one.

In 1990 Burma held the first free and fair elections since the military regime came to power. By way of demonstrating exactly how out of touch the military regime was with the will of the people and reality in general, they believed that the fear they had instilled in the Burmese people would land them and overwhelming victory. As it turned out Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy party won a landslide victory with over 82% of all the votes cast. The military’s response was to place her under house arrest and either imprison torture or kill most of her party. Aung San Suu Kyi remains under house arrest to this day in one of the most flagrant displays of Human Rights abuses that the world seems able to ignore. She has however made it abundantly clear that she feels it is not in Burma’s interest at this time to have tourists visiting the country and providing the dictators with funds to further oppress her people.

A snapshot of the worst atrocities committed by the brutal military regime reads like one of history’s horror stories from hundreds of years ago, but it is happening today :

Widespread use of forced labour. Over 1 million people forcibly moved from their homes, At least 1100 political prisoners (many of whom are routinely tortured), an army of over 500,000 soldiers (The UK has just over 100,000) of whom 70,000 are child soldiers (more then any other country in the world), rape as a weapon of war against ethnic women and children, nearly half the government budget spent on the military and only 19p per citizen, per year, on health and one in ten babies die before their 5th birthday. (Source The Burma Campaign)

Burma used to be one of the richest countries in the region providing exports it now has to import.

However there are other pressure groups that disagree with this advice. Beyond The Blue believes that it is the right of every individual to choose if going to Burma is the right or wrong thing to do. We also believe that the will of the only democratically elected leader of Burma is one that represents the views of the Burmese people. We would never seek to dictate people’s choice of destination and our workshop would be very useful to anyone travelling to Burma, but by way of showing our support for the people of Burma, Beyond The Blue will not provide specific information on this country. We ask anyone planning a trip to Burma to research their trip carefully. The first step of this research should be
www.burmacampaign.org.uk.





Please visit our website at www.safegapyear.com

What the Burmese Junta wants you to see and what the world must know




Title – What the Burmese Junta wants you to see and what the world must know
Source – The Independent
Date – 29th September 2007

The Independent newspaper should be applauded for taking the lead before the recent (09-2007) problems in Burma surfaced. Following the crushing of the peaceful democracy movements through the use of live gun fire, thousands of people being detained, torture and an unknown number of killings, no one can be in any doubt that Burma is a country not just of a people oppressed, tortured and gagged, but one where there is a spirit that refuses to lie down and be beaten. Those of us who enjoy freedom in the west must not allow the illegal and brutal military regime that rules Burma to do so behind closed doors and without consequence.

Beyond The Blue prides itself on a reputation or providing impartial and transparent advice to anyone taking one of our Gap Year and Independent Travel Safety and Awareness workshops. We will not provide guidance or advice on certain countries for a number of reasons. These may be as simple as a location like Colombia where in 2005, over 800 kidnapping cases were reported (many believe the actual figure is much higher) and foreigners are regularly targeted, as they generally command a higher ransom. We believe Colombia is an unsuitable destination for the average independent traveller and as such advise against travel to the country (and therefore do not provide information on it) on the grounds of safety.

Another reason we may choose to advise against travel is for political reasons. Burma for example, is a country ruled by an illegal military dictatorship, their record on Human Rights is one of the world’s worst and tourism is one of the primary ways that this corrupt government generates foreign exchange. Much of this income is then used by the military to allow it to better oppress its own people. The list of reported atrocities is a long and disturbing one.

In 1990 Burma held the first free and fair elections since the military regime came to power. By way of demonstrating exactly how out of touch the military regime was with the will of the people and reality in general, they believed that the fear they had instilled in the Burmese people would land them and overwhelming victory. As it turned out Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy party won a landslide victory with over 82% of all the votes cast. The military’s response was to place her under house arrest and either imprison torture or kill most of her party. Aung San Suu Kyi remains under house arrest to this day in one of the most flagrant displays of Human Rights abuses that the world seems able to ignore. She has however made it abundantly clear that she feels it is not in Burma’s interest at this time to have tourists visiting the country and providing the dictators with funds to further oppress her people.

A snapshot of the worst atrocities committed by the brutal military regime reads like one of history’s horror stories from hundreds of years ago, but it is happening today :

Widespread use of forced labour. Over 1 million people forcibly moved from their homes, At least 1100 political prisoners (many of whom are routinely tortured), an army of over 500,000 soldiers (The UK has just over 100,000) of whom 70,000 are child soldiers (more then any other country in the world), rape as a weapon of war against ethnic women and children, nearly half the government budget spent on the military and only 19p per citizen, per year, on health and one in ten babies die before their 5th birthday. (Source The Burma Campaign)

Burma used to be one of the richest countries in the region providing exports it now has to import.

However there are other pressure groups that disagree with this advice. Beyond The Blue believes that it is the right of every individual to choose if going to Burma is the right or wrong thing to do. We also believe that the will of the only democratically elected leader of Burma is one that represents the views of the Burmese people. We would never seek to dictate people’s choice of destination and our workshop would be very useful to anyone travelling to Burma, but by way of showing our support for the people of Burma, Beyond The Blue will not provide specific information on this country. We ask anyone planning a trip to Burma to research their trip carefully. The first step of this research should be
www.burmacampaign.org.uk.



Please visit our website at www.safegapyear.com

Saturday 15 September 2007

Bus trip goes global to Australia


To view the original article Click Here

Title – Bus trip goes global to Australia
Source – www.bbc.co.uk
Date – 15th September 2007

It seems that travel has gone full circle. 30 years ago flights to Australia were only for the elite and anyone else would have to consider the arduous journey by boat, either as a paying customers or working their passage. In 2007 flights to Australia leave several times each day from many airports in the UK and are accessible to the masses and anyone willing to work hard and save can afford to go, but as flying is now 'normal' the adventurous travellers are looking for alternatives and this bus journey is just one of those. In an age where people are joining rallies to Mongolia armed only with a car worth less then £1000 for charity fundraisers and busses are crossing vast continents stopping along the way to explore the fascinating, often undiscovered countries, travellers now have the more options then ever and there is a choice to fit every need.

But whether you fly, drive, sail, go alone or in a group, many of the essentials of travel remain the same. The dangers may vary, but they always remain a constant potential threat.

At Beyond The Blue we understand the wide variety of obstacles and dangers that travellers face along the way and our two day Gap Year and Independent Travel Safety and Awareness workshop addresses many of these providing candidates with an insight into the problems they may face and the solutions to allow them to travel in confidence with the knowledge they have gained.

On a trip like this bus journey, travellers will pass through countries and cultures as varied as the most populous Muslim country in the world in Indonesia and the devote Buddhist country of Nepal. Both require a very different approach not just in the cultural and religious aspects of their respective peoples, but in many other areas as well; dealing with altitude sickness in Nepal and the malaria risk in Indonesia; the extreme heat of Java and the cold nights in Kathmandu. All these considerations and much more are covered during our course as well as vital personal safety techniques.

Please visit our website at
www.safegapyear.com