By Maung Zarni
In two days, US President Barack Obama is scheduled to make a brief
visit to Burma, Asia’s hottest destination. While there, he should look
beneath the surface and try to see the ugly realities of the country’s
reforms and hear the cries of the wretched of Burma, such as the Muslim
Rohingyas and the Christian Kachins.
President Thein Sein’s government embarked on reforms a year ago,
ending the country’s international pariah status and a half-century of
isolation, both self-imposed and externally maintained. In response,
just about every leader of both the “free world” of the West and
“un-free and semi-free worlds” of the East has hurried to Naypyidaw.
Development and humanitarian packages worth hundreds of millions of
dollars have been pledged, a significant quantity of foreign debt (to
the tune of US$ 3.7 billion) has been forgiven, and lavish praise has
been showered on the formerly reviled regime.
New offices are springing up in Rangoon, the former capital. Every
other visitor to the country seems to be involved in “institution- and
capacity-building” of one kind or another. Investors, insurers and
do-gooders alike are all elated.
Burma has arrived, finally.
But, there is more to this “model transition,” as Washington has put it, than meets the eye.
For Burma’s erstwhile dictators, genuine reforms and an equal
partnership with opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi were the last
resort. Until recently the generals’ survival strategy was
self-sufficiency. They strove to be left alone, regionally and
internationally. Their opposition to even international emergency aid in
the aftermath of the devastating Cyclone Nargis in 2008 was a case in
point.
Indeed, despite their monopoly on power, the generals have never
really felt entirely secure. They always felt they were riding on the
back of an angry, wounded tiger—the oppressed and impoverished
population.
Shwe Mann, the speaker of the Lower House of Parliament, has admitted
the generals’ collective fear. Within an hour of his meeting with the
visiting US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton last December, the
third-most powerful general in the former ruling council was telling
Burmese journalists, “We do not want to end up like the Arab dictators.
One day they were very powerful. The next day they died ignoble deaths.”
Of course, Washington’s new strategy of “pivoting” back to Asia has
also made it possible for the generals to come out of their bunkers,
literally and figuratively. The Americans wanted the Burmese to walk
away from Beijing’s embrace, and for their part, the ex-generals are
grateful to the Americans for helping to wean them off of their
dependency on China’s international protection.
On the domestic front, the ex-military officers and their active-duty
brethren retain complete control over the entire change process. In the
new era of “democratic” transition, these men, in skirts or in green
shirts, continue to hold all the levers of state power at all levels of
administration. And it is they—not collaborating dissidents or the
developmental technocrats—who determine the nature, scope, priorities
and pace of reforms.
The generals are, however, pursuing reforms only for their own
long-term survival, both as powerful military families and as the most
powerful institution in the country. As a direct consequence, they will
remain wholly unprepared to do the needful in terms of what will really
promote public welfare and advance the cause of freedom, human rights
and democracy.
As a matter of fact, the generals’ reforms are contradictory,
reversible and fragile, as Aung San Suu Kyi herself has repeatedly
stressed. They are confined to such narrow domains as freedom of speech,
new business regulations and investment laws—that is, the areas
important to middle-class Western liberals and attractive to venture
capitalists and corporations. Importantly, reforms bypass active
conflict zones, strategic buffer areas and resource-rich virgin lands.
When it comes to economically and strategically important regions on
the country’s peripheries—that is, the ancestral homes of ethnic
minorities who make up 40 percent of the total population—the reforms
simply translate into forced displacement, a rise in militarization, a
sharp increase in war-fleeing refugees, loss of livelihoods, and so on.
It is indeed not merely coincidental that all fresh waves of violence,
atrocities and raging wars happen to be in the zones which are
designated to be homes of multi-billion-dollar mega-development
initiatives, commercial projects, resource extraction, special economic
zones and industrial agricultural schemes.
Curiously, both the origin and tail of China’s 2,800-plus-km-long
twin pipeline bear witness to the unfolding violence: ethnic cleansing
of the Rohingya in the coastal region where the pipelines begin and the
hot war against the Kachin in the Sino-Burmese highlands of northern
Burma, the pipelines’ tail end, before they snake their way into the
southern Chinese province of Yunnan.
On the western front, an estimated 110,000 Rohingyas have been caged
in new UN-financed refugee camps along the Arakan coast, while a
slightly smaller number of Kachin have fled towards the Sino-Burmese
border. To the east, along the Thai-Burmese border, donor agencies and
host nation Thailand are preparing to prematurely repatriate another
150,000 Karen and Karenni war refugees, despite the absence of either a
meaningful and functioning ceasefire or lasting peace.
Because these wars and atrocities are off the beaten path and largely
inaccessible to the UN and other aid agencies, the dark side of Burma’s
economic reforms goes largely unnoticed. They also lie outside the
purview of the growing pool of visiting dignitaries, renowned experts
and politicians on their whirlwind visits to Burma.
More ominously, many international agencies and national governments
view this ugly side of development—ethnic and class conflicts,
large-scale displacement, pervasive land confiscation, absence of human
and food security, growing income disparity—as “inevitable.”
For President Thein Sein and the Burmese military, the pursuit of
peace is not an institutional goal in and of itself, but rather a
strategic means to developmental and commercial ends, including control
of land, local populations and strategic routes, and the bountiful
natural resources of ethnic minority regions.
Myanmar’s reforms are, upon a closer look, more about the interests
and longevity of the country’s military and army-bred cronies than about
peace, public welfare or democracy. As such, the hyped-up reform moves
lack real potential to result in a new democratic polity which will
build, and feed off, a new and sustainable economic system.
Maung Zarni is a Visiting Fellow at the London School of
Economics. He was the founding director of the Free Burma Coalition from
1995-2004.
*Copy from Irrawaddy *
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