
The regime previously said that altogether 2,093 people had been arrested in their latest crackdown on dissent, of whom 692 had been released.
Authorities now acknowledge that they raided 18 monasteries in Rangoon last month as part of the crackdown on the monk-led rebellion, which started on September 18 with peaceful barefoot marches through the streets of the city and peaked on September 25 with 100,000 anti-government protesters.
The Burmese junta crushed the "saffron revolution" on September 26 and 27, killing at least 10 people, according to official figures. Anti-government activists in Rangoon say the death toll was closer to 200.
Residents near the Yeywey crematorium in Rangoon saw government personnel burning 71 bodies on the night of September 26, and people living near Insein prison have witnessed three to four dead bodies being brought out nightly from the notorious jail, where many of the protesters were detained and reportedly beaten.
In is unlikely that the full extent of the atrocities committed against Burmese revered monkhood and the laymen who joined their peaceful protests will ever be disclosed.
Calls for an independent investigation into the events have been ignored. Confidence in the United Nations' ability to do anything to pressure the regime is limited and dwindling fast, diplomats said.
UN special envoy Ibrahim Gambari visited Burma between September 29 to October 2 to deliver a strong message of disapproval to the country's ruling generals and returned to New York on Thursday with a report for the UN Security Council.
After the 15-member council met Friday it failed to reach a consensus on future actions against the regime or even a joint statement of condemnation.
What was decided was that Gambari will visit Burma again in mid-November, but whether he visits depends on whether or not the junta grants him a visa.
"After his critical statements in New York I doubt they will let Gambari come back again," said Lars Backstrom, the Finnish ambassador to Burma and Thailand.
Backstrom and the Danish ambassador were briefed by a deputy director of the Burmese Foreign Ministry in Naypyidaw, the country's new capital, on Friday.
"There were no surprises," said Backstrom of the briefing. Like many Burma-watchers, the diplomat expressed pessimism about Burma's prospects for democracy in the aftermath of the latest protests and crackdowns.
"This was just another sad chapter in a very sad history of the country," said Backstorm in an interview in Bangkok with Deutsche Presse-Agentur.
Senior General Than Shwe, who heads the ruling junta, has offered to meet with opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi on the precondition that she drops her calls for "confrontation" and support for western sanctions against the country.
Ironically, Suu Kyi has not been able to call for anything over the past four years as she has been kept in near complete isolation under house arrest in Yangon. She has no telephone, and the last person she has met besides her maid and personal doctor was Gambari, who held talks with her on September 30 and again on October 2.
Observers speculate that Than Shwe has set preconditions for a dialogue with Suu Kyi in order to blame their eventual failure on the 1991 Nobel peace prize laureate.
"The military has the upper hand. That's the fact," said Backstrom. "Time is on their side."
Deutsche Presse-Agentur