The landslide victory by Aung
San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party in the 8 November 2015
Myanmar election, after decades of Suu Kyi being held under house arrest, marks
one of the world’s most extraordinary political turnabouts.
But Suu Kyi’s political
ascendancy is less unique in Asia than it may at first appear. As the daughter
of the country’s independence leader Aung San, who was assassinated in 1947,
she is only one of several prominent female dynasts — the daughters, wives or
widows of ‘martyred’ male leaders — to lead major democratic opposition
movements across Asia and then assume political power. Other prominent examples
are Corazon C Aquino in the Philippines, Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, Megawati
Sukarnoputri in Indonesia, as well as Khaleda Zia and Sheikh Hasina of
Bangladesh.
So why have so many dynastic
female leaders emerged during democratic struggles in the region? At first
glance, the success of women in politics may seem surprising because Myanmar
like many other Asian countries is often seen to be patriarchal and
paternalistic.
Although women played
prominent political roles in pre-colonial times and during the Burmese
nationalist struggle, military rule in Myanmar after 1962 drastically reduced
female participation in politics.
Many women in Myanmar also
lack adequate employment opportunities and have inadequate access to health
care and education. Myanmar ranks relatively low
(at 150 out of 187 countries) in the most recent Gender-related Development
Index (GDI) rankings of the United Nations Development Programme.
Traditional religious
practice is also normally seen as an obstacle for the advancement of women. In
Myanmar, the discriminatory race and
religion bills passed in 2015 — which force women (but not men) to
seek permission to marry someone from a different faith and punish adultery,
thus potentially endangering women
who lodge a rape accusation — are one recent example.
Yet, along with Myanmar,
predominantly Buddhist countries such as Sri Lanka and Thailand have also had
female dynastic leaders. Likewise there have been female dynastic leaders in
the Christian Philippines and, perhaps most surprising, many predominantly
Islamic countries in Asia have had women as opposition leaders who later became
heads of government.
What then explains the
success of female politicians in Asia?
The case of Aung San Suu Kyi
and other dynastic female leaders in Asia shows that gender stereotyping can
sometimes prove to be a political plus in a crisis situation. As a woman Suu
Kyi could be portrayed as non-political — a virtuous alternative to the country’s
corrupt, Machiavellian military leaders that have ruled since the 1988
anti-military protests.
Women have also, perhaps
counterintuitively, benefited from their association with the family. Suu Kyi,
like other dynastic female leaders, promised to cleanse the soiled public realm
with private, familial virtue. Suu Kyi is often called ‘sister Suu’ by her
supporters. Other female leaders have similarly been called ‘aunts’ or
‘mothers’. Suu Kyi’s courage in the face of repression, tenaciousness over decades
of opposition and eloquence in criticising military rule further increased this
‘moral capital’.
The choice of Suu Kyi as
opposition leader was also advantageous as she acquired what the German
sociologist Max Weber called ‘inherited charisma’. A male dynast successor is
more likely to be judged on his own merits, making it more difficult for him to
inherit the mantle of charisma from a father or brother to whom he may be
compared unfavourably. But a widow, wife or daughter is often seen to better embody
their husbands’ or fathers’ charisma.
Suu Kyi’s ‘national
inheritance’ enabled her to keep the military regime on the defensive for
decades.
The examples of female
dynastic leaders in power elsewhere in Asia also points to some particular
problems that Suu Kyi may face in the near future. Male opponents are likely to
try to portray her as a ‘weak woman’. The NLD coalition may face fragmentation
after she leaves the political scene unless she is able to adequately
institutionalise her legacy. At least parts of the military may try to
challenge her hold on power, as they did Corazon Aquino’s in the Philippines or
Benazir Bhutto’s in Pakistan.
Suu Kyi will also have to
face up to the challenge of ethnic and religious divisions in Myanmar. During
Myanmar’s recent political liberalisation and the election campaign, ethno-chauvinist forces
emerged, particularly among hard-line Buddhist monks who fanned
hatred of the Rohingya minority and used anti-Muslim rhetoric.
Many human rights activists
have criticised Suu Kyi for not speaking up to defend the Rohingya and for not
running a single Muslim candidate on the NLD slate. The NLD’s strategy has been
to keep the focus on their democratic opposition to years of military rule,
while largely ignoring this religious strife. With the election won and power
tantalisingly close, it remains to be seen whether Aung San Suu Kyi becomes
more outspoken on injustices perpetrated against the Rohingya
or takes action to counter general anti-Muslim sentiments.
It is still uncertain
whether Suu Kyi can actually translate the NLD’s electoral victory into democratic civilian rule
after more than a half century of military dictatorship. But to have gotten
this far against very long odds is in large part due to the qualities of moral
leadership she inherited and further built upon as a female dynastic leader.
Mark R Thompson is acting
Head and Professor of Politics at the Department of Asian and International
Studies, and Director of the Southeast Asia Research Centre, City University of
Hong Kong. He is co-editor, with Claudia Derichs, of
Dynasties and Female Political Leaders in Asia: Gender, Power and Pedigree
(Berlin/London: 2013).
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