The prospects for the
country’s beleaguered Rohingya appear bleak.
When Myanmar’s Parliament voted on February 2 to approve a bill governing regulations for
a planned referendum on constitutional amendments, it unleashed a firestorm.
Included in the bill was a provision explicitly allowing holders of temporary
ID cards – also known as “white cards” – to vote in the referendum.
White cards are primarily
held by Rohingya, a Muslim minority group in western Myanmar’s Rakhine State.
Despite Rohingya’s decades-old presence in the area, many in Myanmar,
particularly Rakhine Buddhists, consider them to be illegal immigrants. The
military regime provided white cards in the 1990s as temporary documentation
pending a citizenship verification process that never materialized. This
left Rohingya and other minorities that hold the cards in a precarious legal
limbo.
White
card holders were allowed to vote in past elections, including the 2008
constitutional referendum and the 2010 parliamentary elections – both widely
seen as fraudulent. But following inter-communal violence that rocked
Rakhine State in 2012 and continues to simmer, the question of white card
holder suffrage has emerged as a hot-button political issue.
Opponents
contend that it amounts to granting the vote to foreigners. As a result, the
Rakhine National Party (RNP) vowed to fight the
decision and challenged the
constitutionality of the law in court – a challenge that was endorsed by Myanmar’s
Constitutional Tribunal on February 16. Angry Rakhine Buddhists, led by
nationalist monks, protested in Yangon and townships across Rakhine State.
President
Thein Sein ultimately caved to the pressure. Only a day after signing the
controversial bill into law, on February 11 he issued an executive
order that all white cards will expire on March 31, effectively overriding the
granting of suffrage to their holders.
The
episode highlights the explosive politics surrounding Rohingya in 2015 and the
confusing arrangement of political forces aligned on either side.
While
many human rights advocates have accused President Thein Sein and his
government of stoking anti-Rohingya sentiment, his moves seem increasingly
confused and easily influenced by populist public pressure. His flip-flopping
on the suffrage question demonstrates his inability to navigate competing
demands from domestic voices vilifying all Rohingya and international actors
calling on the government crack down on hate speech and respect Rohingya
rights.
Meanwhile,
veteran democracy campaigners are split. Some have stood up for Rohingya
rights. But several lawmakers from Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for
Democracy (NLD) signed on to the RNP’s legal challenge against the bill, and an
NLD MP initially proposed removing the
clause granting suffrage to white card holders back in November.
Suu Kyi
herself has been reluctant to speak out
forcefully in support of Rohingya rights. Appearing to support
Rohingya citizenship could be political suicide in a country where anti-Muslim
sentiment is rising rapidly, and some of her closest advisers, who wield
substantial influence over her decision-making, are Rakhine Buddhists.
Then
there are the electoral implications. Many see the referendum rules as a
preview of regulations for the general election planned for late 2015. Several
Myanmar politicians voiced concern that the granting of suffrage to white card
holders represents a vote-buying scheme by the ruling Union Solidarity and
Development Party (USDP). Majority-Rohingya townships in Rakhine State voted
strongly for the party in 2010. If Rohingya are not allowed to vote in
future elections, it could undermine the USDP’s prospects in Rakhine State and
benefit the otherwise-dominant RNP (hence that party’s particularly strong
stance on the issue).
The
debate distracts, however, from a far more pressing concern at stake: the need
to amend the deeply antidemocratic 2008 constitution. With heavy media focus on
white card suffrage, critical questions about other parts of the recently
passed referendum bill have been overlooked.
Few –
even among veteran politicians – seem to know the referendum’s precise intended
outcome. Parliament Speaker Shwe Mann has insisted that no
amendments will be fully approved prior to the 2015 general election. But if
the referendum, which is tentatively scheduled for May, is intended as an
official up-or-down vote on specific constitutional changes passed by
Parliament, that assertion seems misguided, since the vote would constitute the
final stage of the amendment process. Alternatively, the referendum could
simply be a general gauge of popular opinion on constitutional change. In that
case, it would be essentially meaningless – just another stalling tactic of the
military and political establishment.
Moreover,
the military remains vehemently opposed to changing key articles that would
loosen its control over Myanmar’s political system. Regardless of any public
referendum, without some movement on that front, real constitutional reform
will not be possible.
In the
end, all that the referendum bill and the associated frantic politicking
achieved was to strip Rohingya and other vulnerable minorities of the only
documents they had. As conditions in Rakhine State worsen and anti-Muslim
sentiment grows nationwide, prospects for resolving the Rohingya question look
bleak. A durable solution to the problem likely must involve citizenship for
Rohingya. But that will be an even more difficult task to accomplish – one that
the current government (and likely future governments as well) will be loath to
attempt.
Oren
Samet is an independent journalist and researcher based in Bangkok, Thailand.
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