Thousands of monks detained in Burma's main city of Rangoon will be sent to prisons in the far north of the country, sources have told the BBC.
About 4,000 monks have been rounded up in the past week as the military government has tried to stamp out pro-democracy protests.
They are being held at a disused race course and a technical college.
Sources from a government-sponsored militia said they would soon be moved away from Rangoon.
The monks have been disrobed and shackled, the sources told BBC radio's Burmese service. There are reports that the monks are refusing to eat.
The country has seen almost two weeks of sustained popular unrest, in the most serious challenge to the military leadership for more than two decades.
Reports have emerged of monks being attacked and killed
The authorities said 10 people were killed as the protests were dispersed, though diplomats and activists say the number of dead was many times higher.
The banned opposition broadcaster Democratic Voice of Burma has issued a picture which they say shows the body of a monk floating near the mouth of the Rangoon river.
Last week several monasteries were raided, and there were reports of monks being beaten and killed.
Now, with many monks behind bars, the demonstrations have now died down.
On Monday, the centre of Rangoon was almost back to normal, a reporter, who cannot be identified for security reasons, told the BBC.
Most shops and temples have reopened and people appear to be getting on with their lives. But there seemed to be a group of soldiers around every corner, and very few monks about, the reporter said.
Their eyes are on the international community, their only hope is that the world will see their plight and help them
A Buddhist activist
This is notable in a city where monks can usually be spotted going in and out of temples, shopping at street stalls and chatting in tea shops.
The atmosphere in Rangoon is tense, the reporter said. Local people are well aware that the monks have been locked away and are afraid that they will be next.
The crackdown, in which unarmed protesters were beaten, tear-gassed, and shot at, has attracted condemnation from abroad, and even from Burma's neighbours in the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean).
Envoy still waiting
As well as preventing the demonstrations, the military junta has tried to block news of the unrest filtering out. Troops are stopping young men on the streets and in cars, searching for cameras that may be used to smuggle out images.
Most internet links are still down and mobile phone networks disrupted.
Official media has been warning Burmese people against co-operating with or using foreign news outlets.
A TV message on Monday referred to the BBC, Voice of America and Radio Free Asia as "assassins on air".
UN special envoy Ibrahim Gambari was set to meet Burma's military leader General Than Shwe on Tuesday, officials said.
On Saturday, when Mr Gambari travelled to the new capital Naypidaw, he was allowed to meet only more junior members of the government.
On Sunday, Mr Gambari held talks with detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Rangoon - the first foreigner to be permitted to do so for 10 months.


Are you there?
The situation is appalling!! I planned to go to Burma this winter and still do in spite of the latest events. I do not think it's dangerous for a westerner at all. We are not their targets unless we are seen documenting murders of Monks.

No I am not going there, I plan to go to Nepal for Xmas time, but I may go to Burma instead, and see this for myself, and give the people hope.

take a couple extra sd cards for your camera. one for temples, one for the "sensitive subjects"

Although we were invited to Burma by a monk friend to meet his family this winter, I don't think I could live with myself if I gave one hair to the junta.
I hope my friend is alright.
My heart is heavy and it is difficult not to cry. What can we do? As I type, monks could be getting beheaded!

Hi Ono-
I understand your dilemma. Let me ask you this: Would the joy your presence brings to your friend outweigh the very small sum of money the junta will gain from your visit? I am asking you that seriously. It is a problem faced by many of us on this board.
Let's pray that the horrors we are reading about are exaggerated. If they are not, Myanmar is looking at yet another generation of trauma victims.

I am living life day by day. Things are always changing. Whether I go or not is moot at this time.
I always justified going because I felt I gave my ear to all and bore witness to thier stories of horror. I also knew my visa money is nothing compared to the money from China. Now India clamors for the oil off Burma's shores. Thailand wants the water in the Salween River. And Russia? Probably oil too?
I'd sure like to know what the astrologer(s) told those generals back when they decided to move to Pyminia.
Peace Now!