Sein Lwin

Brigadier General
Sein Lwin
6th President of Burma
In office
27 July 1988  12 August 1988
Vice President Aye Ko[1]
Preceded by San Yu
Succeeded by Aye Ko as Acting President
Chairman of the Burma Socialist Programme Party
In office
26 July 1988  12 August 1988
Preceded by Ne Win
Succeeded by Maung Maung
Personal details
Born 1923
Lower Burma, British India
Died (2004-04-09)9 April 2004
Yangon, Yangon Division, Myanmar
Nationality Burmese
Political party Burma Socialist Programme Party

Sein Lwin (Burmese: စိန်လွင်, pronounced [sèiɴ lwɪ̀ɴ]; 1923 – 9 April 2004) was a Burmese General and politician. He was President of Myanmar for 17 days in 1988, following the resignation of San Yu.

He joined the Army in 1943, and in 1944 joined Ne Win's 4th Burma Rifles. He is believed to have personally killed Karen rebel leader Saw Ba U Gyi. General Sein Lwin had a reputation as being a henchman for General Ne Win. He was one of those responsible for the Rangoon University Student Union massacre on 7 July 1962 when 130 university students protesting against General Ne Win's coup d'état were killed and the Student Union building dynamited the next day. Aung Gyi and Tin Pe were the senior officers, and Sein Lwin was the field commanding officer in the University region.[2] No one knows exactly who gave the order.

Sein Lwin, as commander of the security force riot police (Lon Htein) was again responsible for dealing with student protests during the 1988 pro-democracy demonstrations. On 16 March, following the killing of two students, students marching on Prome Road were confronted near Inya Lake by the riot police and many beaten to death or drowned. On 17 March, soldiers and riot police entered Rangoon University and arrested hundreds of students, 41 dying in custody. As public unrest grew, a general strike was called for 8 August 1988. Sein Lwin, succeeded Ne Win as Burma Socialist Programme Party Chairman on 26 July and San Yu as President on 27 July 1988.

Sein Lwin, implementing the threat in Ne Win's "when the army shoots, it shoots to hit" resignation speech, directed troops to fire on groups of unarmed demonstrators in Yangon during the 8 August 1988 demonstrations (referred to as the 8888 Uprising), killing and wounding hundreds. Protests, more shootings and arrests continued until Sein Lwin resigned on 12 August. For these actions, he earned the nickname "Butcher of Rangoon".

The State Law and Order Restoration Council was established shortly after by Gen Saw Maung who staged a coup on 18 September 1988. Following the military takeover, the junta provided assistance to Sein Lwin, including guards, a pension, several four-wheel drive vehicles and monthly food rations. However, after the junta put Ne Win under arrest in March 2002, this assistance was removed.

His death was reported in a state-run newspaper, Myanma Ahlin, which did not give a cause of death.[3]

References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=p4MLAAAAIAAJ
  2. "The Butcher Sees Red". The Irrawaddy. January 2004. Archived from the original on 6 October 2010.
  3. "U Sein Lwin, 81, Former Burmese Leader". New York Times. 12 April 2004.
  • Sein Lwin Short Biography
  • Guardian Newspaper 4 August 1988 "But the 64-year-old brigadier general, known as the 'Butcher of Rangoon' for his brutal suppression of successive students' demonstrations in the capital, has marked his first days in power with a show of force against government critics".
  • New York Times 12 April 2004 "General Sein Lwin had a reputation for being the brutal henchman of U Ne Win, the military dictator, and was best known for suppressing antigovernment activities. He led a violent crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in 1988."
  • Encyclopædia Britannica Year in Review 2004 "..he was better known as the "Butcher of Rangoon," the brutal cohort of U Ne Win … and the man responsible for the ruthless suppression of dissent, notably anti-government protests in 1962 in which scores of university students were killed".
Political offices
Preceded by
San Yu
President of Burma
27 July – 12 August 1988
Succeeded by
Maung Maung
Party political offices
Preceded by
Ne Win
Chairman of the Burma Socialist Programme Party
26 July 1988 - 12 August 1988
Succeeded by
Maung Maung
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