Nobel Peace Laureates Aung San Suu Kyi and Obama FAIL
No
wonder, that disenchantment with state-led peace efforts is growing among
minorities. Although the KIA attended Miss Suu Kyi’s Panglong gathering, the
Burmese army has been pounding it for months, reportedly seizing the Kachins’
mountain outpost of Gidon this month. The Northern Alliance has recently
attacked Burmese army and police forces along the Chinese border. At times it
has claimed to hold various border towns. The fighting has driven thousands of
people to seek refuge in China, which has reportedly beefed up its military
presence along the frontier. The alliance may hope that a riled China will put
pressure on Myanmar to make concessions to the ethnic groups (the Kokangs are
ethnic Chinese). So far, however, China has not risen to the bait.
SYED, a 33-year-old Muslim religious teacher, feared the worst. On October
9th Rohingya militants attacked border posts near Maungdaw, a township in the
north of Rakhine state in western Myanmar, killing nine Burmese border guards.
Syed, himself a Rohingya from Rakhine, was sure that a vicious crackdown by
Myanmar’s army would follow. So he put on non-religious clothes and shaved his
beard. Along with 16 others he left his home village. For days the group hid in
a forest. Eventually they crossed the Naf River, which separates Myanmar from
Bangladesh, and found their way to the sprawling, ramshackle Kutupalong camp
near the coastal town of Cox’s Bazar.
Syed’s fears were justified. Myanmar’s army has blocked access to much of
Maungdaw, keeping away journalists, aid workers and international monitors
(troops claim to be searching for stolen guns and ammunition). But reports have
emerged of mass arrests, torture, the burning of villages, killings of
civilians and the systematic rape of Rohingya women by Burmese soldiers. At
least 86 people have been killed. Satellite imagery analysed by Human Rights
Watch suggests that soldiers have burned at least 1,500 buildings—including
homes, food shops, markets and mosques (one devastated area is pictured). The
organisation says this could be a conservative estimate; it includes only
buildings not obscured by trees. Amnesty International says the army’s “callous
and systematic campaign of violence” may be a crime against humanity. Myanmar’s
government denies all such allegations, dismissing many of them as
fabrications.
Around 27,000 Rohingyas—members of a
Muslim ethnic group native to Rakhine—have recently, like Syed, fled to
Bangladesh. But about 1m of them remain. Before the recent turmoil, tens of
thousands of Rohingyas in northern Rakhine relied on aid for food, water and
health care. The blockade has severed that lifeline.
Such brutality does not reflect well on Aung San Suu Kyi, a winner of the
Nobel peace prize who has led Myanmar since her party’s resounding electoral
victory in 2015. Neither does ethnic conflict, which has been intensifying on
the other side of the country, speak well of her skills as a peacemaker. She
entered office saying her priority was to resolve Myanmar’s decades-long civil
wars. Recently, however, a long-running insurgency in Shan and Kachin states
has spilled into the area’s towns for the first time in years (see map). It
involves the Northern Alliance, a group comprising the Kachin Independence Army
(KIA), the Arakan Army, the Ta’ang National Liberation Army and the Myanmar
National Democratic Alliance Army. The alliance accuses the national army of
detaining, torturing and killing locals, despite the government’s pledge to
“resolve [problems] through a peace dialogue.”
This is par for Myanmar’s post-independence course: the country has long
been racked by civil conflicts fuelled by an army operating without any
civilian constraint. But Miss Suu Kyi was supposed to change this grim status
quo. The recent violence shows how far she has to go. A solution will require
Miss Suu Kyi to rethink the country’s ethnic policies and restrain an army that
is still reluctant to accept civilian command. It is far from clear how
committed she is to trying.
Hopes were high when Miss Suu Kyi convened four days of peace talks in
Naypyidaw, Myanmar’s capital, beginning in late August, with representatives of
17 of the country’s 20 insurgent ethnic groups. The event was described as the
“21st Century Panglong Conference”—a reference to one held in 1947 at which
Miss Suu Kyi’s late father, General Aung San, a hero of the country’s fight for
independence from Britain, agreed to give the minority Shan, Kachin and Chin
populations “full autonomy in internal administration”. (Miss Suu Kyi, like
nearly 70% of Myanmar’s population, is ethnic Bamar—the group from which the
country’s old name, Burma, is derived.)
This year’s gathering achieved nothing so momentous. Miss Suu Kyi made
grandiose statements, the army chief made vague promises, the ethnic-army
leaders stated their positions and everyone promised to meet again early in
2017. Encouragingly, the ethnic armies reassured the government that they
wanted not secession, but more freedom within a federal state. Miss Suu Kyi and
the Burmese army also voiced support for federalism. But what that might mean
in practice, and what the army is willing to cede, remain unclear. The army has
enriched itself by grabbing land and resources in ethnic regions; it shows
little sign of wanting to give them back. The military-devised constitution,
imposed on the country after a sham referendum in 2008, gives Miss Suu Kyi’s
civilian government no real power to compel the army to do so.
No wonder, then, that disenchantment with state-led peace efforts is
growing among minorities. Although the KIA attended Miss Suu Kyi’s Panglong
gathering, the Burmese army has been pounding it for months, reportedly seizing
the Kachins’ mountain outpost of Gidon this month. The Northern Alliance has
recently attacked Burmese army and police forces along the Chinese border. At
times it has claimed to hold various border towns. The fighting has driven
thousands of people to seek refuge in China, which has reportedly beefed up its
military presence along the frontier. The alliance may hope that a riled China
will put pressure on Myanmar to make concessions to the ethnic groups (the
Kokangs are ethnic Chinese). So far, however, China has not risen to the bait.
Those caught up in the conflict feel let down by all sides. Miss Suu Kyi’s
party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), “made a big noise but now,
where are they? We cannot see them,” says an ethnic-Shan resident of one
strife-torn town, Namtu. Sai Philip, a Catholic of Indian descent, says tactics
used by ethnic groups to sustain the fight, such as the occupation of villages,
forced recruitment and heavy taxation, have alienated many people.
But, to the ethnic armies, popular support matters less than it once did.
The Northern Alliance groups—three of which did not attend the Panglong talks
and have signed no ceasefire agreements—are not really fighting for a cause.
Instead, they and the army are trying to maximise their gains on the ground in
readiness for eventual negotiations to end the fighting. That is driving them
further apart. The Burmese-army-dominated Shan state parliament has labelled
the Northern Alliance “terrorists”. In response, a broad coalition of ethnic
groups has blamed the army for the current hostilities, and Miss Suu Kyi for
failing to live up to her own rhetoric.
In Rakhine state, the Rohingyas have not even received a rhetorical
acknowledgment from Miss Suu Kyi of their plight. She has kept shamefully
silent about it, fearful, perhaps, of upsetting ethnic Bamar, who are mainly
Buddhists and many of whom look down on the Muslim Rohingyas. They see them as
outsiders, culturally linked more to Bangladesh. Even though Rohingyas have
been living in Rakhine for well over a millennium, most are denied citizenship.
Miss Suu Kyi is sensitive to international criticism of her government’s
stance: on December 19th she convened a meeting in Yangon of foreign ministers
from the Association of South-East Asian Nations in an attempt to assuage their
concerns. She has also appointed two commissions to investigate abuses in
Rakhine state. But she avoids using the word “Rohingya”, calling it
“controversial”. The minority is not one of Myanmar’s officially recognised
ethnic groups.
This matters because some of the rights guaranteed by Myanmar’s
constitution, such as to health care and education, are only conferred on
citizens. When the government insists that soldiers in Rakhine are acting in
accordance with the “rule of law”, it may be telling the truth: the
constitution does not protect non-citizens from arbitrary detention, so mass
arrests of Rohingyas may not violate the law. Neither, the government would
say, does keeping them in camps, where around 120,000 Rohingyas in central Rakhine
have been held since communal riots four years ago. Last year thousands of them
took to the sea in rickety boats, but that escape route has been disrupted by
Thailand’s crackdown on people-smuggling networks.
The country’s ethnic policies are a relic of the colonial era. They accord
each of eight “major national ethnic races” a designated statelet. The rest of
the 135 officially recognised groups are classified as subcategories of these.
Many ethnic Rakhines worry that if Rohingyas are recognised as such a group and
granted citizenship, they will start agitating for their own homeland—which
would come out of Rakhine state. As U Thein Maung, an NLD member of Rakhine’s
parliament, puts it: “I have nothing against any religion or any kind of
people. But I will not accept a single inch of my fatherland becoming Rohingya
land.” Such fears—and Myanmar’s preference for talking about the rights of
ethnic groups rather than of individuals—make the conflict even more
intractable, as they do in other border areas.
Yet talk of recognising the Rohingyas is rare. Mr Thein Maung seems
moderate compared with some other ethnic Rakhines. A woman who works in a
tea-shop on the outskirts of Sittwe, the state’s capital, says that Muslims and
Buddhists could never live together because “Muslims do not know what goodness
is.” Maung Hla Kyaw, an older man, says that because “Muslims slaughter their
chickens by themselves, that means they will not hesitate to kill us fiercely.”
U Pinya Tha Myint, the head monk of a monastery in Sittwe, wants foreign powers
to “help the Bengali non-citizens to leave for abroad to any Islamic country
that wants to take them.”
The danger of
inaction
Myanmar’s ethnic crises may demand more political capital than Miss Suu Kyi
is willing to spend. But if left unresolved they risk creating huge problems
for her country. One is the possible growth of jihadism. So far the Rohingyas
have shown little interest in Islamist extremism. But many of them see a bleak,
hopeless future in Myanmar. The International Crisis Group, a think-tank,
reckons the attacks in October by Rohingya militants were planned by a
well-funded insurgent group whose leaders had been trained in guerrilla-war
tactics. Defending Rohingyas from persecution could become a tempting new cause
for disaffected young Muslims around the world. Miss Suu Kyi fears paying a
political price for speaking out, but silence carries costs.
Another danger is that an upsurge of fighting will impede Myanmar’s
economic development, not least by rendering large, resource-rich chunks of the
country off-limits or unappealing to investors. The ceasefires that the
previous government signed with many, but not all, ethnic armies, look hollower
by the day—as does Miss Suu Kyi’s ability to achieve peace and tame the army.
The fewer good jobs are available to young men, the more tempting it will be
for them to take up arms.
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