Suu Kyi falls short of great expectations - Many in
Myanmar expected miracles when Aung San Suu Kyi's elected government took
office after decades of military misrule. The political reality has been more
prosaic
Myanmar State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi attends an
event marking the 69th anniversary of Martyrs' Day at the Martyrs' Mausoleum
dedicated to the fallen independence heroes in Yangon July 19, 2016
Myanmar’s
first genuinely democratically elected government in more than half a century
is barely a year old but a growing sense of disappointment is already apparent
even among the ruling National League for Democracy (NLD) party’s most avid
supporters.
In a February 26 speech at a memorial
ceremony for the party’s fallen top lawyer, Ko Ni, de facto national leader
Aung San Suu Kyi must have sensed the
letdown as she appealed to those gathered for patience. At the event, Suu Kyi
underlined that her elected government was formed after decades of military
rule and that change would take time. “Ten months or a year is not much,” she said.
“This is just a short period.”
With her peace process stuck, her
political and economic reforms stalled, and international criticism mounting
against military rights abuses in ethnic areas across the country, how much
time does Suu Kyi and her NLD really have to put their democratic agenda back
on track?
Domestically, Suu Kyi has been
roundly criticized for mishandling a peace process with the country’s many
ethnic armed groups which the previous military-dominated, quasi-civilian
government initiated in 2011. Rather than a new approach, Suu Kyi has so far
done little more than urge armed groups to sign an elaborate – and many say
confusing – ceasefire agreement drawn up under the supervision of the previous
military-dominated regime.
Internationally, her perceived as
callous attitude towards the suffering of the Muslim Rohingya minority in
western Myanmar has come under severe scrutiny, as United Nations investigators
and human rights organizations have documented serious human rights violations
committed by the Myanmar army in the remote area. Nor is the economy doing
particularly well, with foreign investment commitments down and poverty as
widespread as ever.
To be sure, popular expectations
were unrealistically high when voters danced in the streets of the main city
Yangon on November 8, 2015 as it became apparent the NLD had scored a landslide
victory in Myanmar’s first democratic election in decades. Many citizens
literally expected miracles of governance when Suu Kyi and the NLD were
installed in power after decades of military misrule.
The political reality, however, has
been more prosaic. That is in large part because the three most important
ministries in government are still controlled by the military, which appoints
the ministers of defense, home affairs and border affairs. The home ministry,
in turn, maintains control over the powerful General Administration Department,
which appoints civil servants at all levels of government across the country.
“She should have brought in an
entirely new team here in Naypyidaw,” said a government insider speaking on
condition of anonymity from the secluded national capital. “Instead, she has
kept the old bureaucracy, including the permanent secretaries in the
ministries. And they are competent in running a rigid military-controlled
system, not a government that’s accountable to the public.”
The same insider says it has been “a
slow slog against the power of the cronies,” reference to the military-aligned
businessmen that still dominate nearly all aspects of the economy. Nor has the
NLD promoted policies to lure in badly needed foreign capital. In comparison,
when Vietnam liberalized its economy to foreign investment in the 1990s, one of
the first decisions it took was to allow foreign banks to establish operations
that facilitates bricks and mortar investments like factories, offices and
hotels.
In Myanmar, foreign banks have been
awarded licenses but are highly restricted in the transactions they can handle.
As such, the financial sector remains in the hands of a group of mostly
military-connected businessmen. It is unclear if the foreign banking
restrictions are deliberate or oversight, as the restrictions have helped to
stall several environmentally and politically sensitive large-scale mining
projects and hydro-electric power schemes.
Employees work at the Myanmar central bank’s
headquarters in Naypyitaw. As Myanmar opens up after almost 50 years of army
rule, and foreign investors descend on the resource-rich country of 60 million,
its long-isolated institutions are struggling to keep up. Picture: Reuters /
Soe Teya Tun
The main issue hobbling Suu Kyi and
the NLD, however, is the imbalance of power between the elected government and
autonomous military, analysts say. “What we have seen is not a transformation
to democracy or even a process leading to democracy but the emergence of a
hybrid system where the government is in charge of day-to-day duties and the
military hold effective power over the administration,” says a local political
scientist who requested anonymity.
Rather than a functioning
relationship, as it has been described in some international media, there is
still a large degree of mutual suspicion. According to the Naypyidaw insider,
the military knows that Suu Kyi could, if deemed necessary, mobilize tens, if
not hundreds, of thousands of people to the streets, a scenario the military
clearly aims to avoid. At the same time, Suu Kyi and her NLD government know
that they have to work with the military if they want even their modest reforms
to be implemented.
While many feel she should push back
more firmly against the military, Suu Kyi apparently senses she must tread
carefully to maintain balance and stability. NLD lawyer Ko Ni was the only
prominent party member who took a more assertive approach — and he was murdered
in broad daylight outside Yangon’s international airport. The NLD’s president’s
office released a statement that said a retired lieutenant colonel, still at
large, was suspected of paying for the assassination.
Under the current 2008 constitution,
which was drafted under military auspices and approved in a farcical
referendum, more than 75% of all parliamentarians must vote in favor of any
charter changes. With the military directly appointing 25% of all lawmakers,
any proposed amendments that aimed to trim the military’s power or interests
are thus unlikely to ever pass.
Ko Ni, however, had argued in
private discussions that there is no provision in the 2008 constitution that
says it cannot be abolished outright by a simple majority vote in parliament, a
loophole the military’s drafters apparently overlooked. It is widely known that
Ko Ni was quietly working on a new progressive constitution that could have
been quickly adopted in such a scenario when he was shot and killed.
With Suu Kyi’s government hamstrung
by parliament and the bureaucracy to implement reforms — and with support for
the NLD on the wane among the country’s many ethnic minorities who still face
deprivation and conflict under her democratic rule — the military appears to be
preparing for a political comeback at the next general election scheduled for
2020.
Commander-in-Chief Senior General
Min Aung Hlaing will by then have retired and is apparently already angling to
run for the presidency or vice presidency under the military’s United
Solidarity and Development Party’s (USDP) banner. Even though Min Aung Hlaing’s
military has been subject to widespread criticism of rights abuses, he has
managed to engage the international community and is viewed by many as more
open and approachable than previous commanders.
Suu Kyi can not be held solely
responsible for her government’s inability to quickly forge a prosperous new
Myanmar. The military, over which she wields no power, has successfully
torpedoed her peace drive through renewed offensives against ethnic armed
groups and stifled reforms through its hold on the bureaucracy. That resistance
has undercut Suu Kyi’s popular support and could boost the USDP’s, or any other
military-backed political party’s, prospects at the next polls.
If those tactics are sustained and
Suu Kyi fails to achieve the democratic reform, economic progress and national
unity many voters expected of her elected NLD government, it is possible that
her long awaited rule will be a fleeting, ineffectual interlude in a country
that’s politics have been dominated by soldiers for more than half a century.
Naypyidaw photo: Reuters / Soe Zeya Tun
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