International praise and grassroots realities

By NANCY HUDSON-RODD
Published: 7 December 2012
Myanmar's President Sein talks during his first news conference since his re-appointment as head of ruling party Union Solidarity and Development Party at presidential palace in Naypyitaw
President Thein Sein talks during his first news conference since his re-appointment as head of the ruling party Union Solidarity and Development Party at the presidential palace in Naypyidaw on 21 October 2012. (Reuters)

President Thein Sein is being honoured by the International Crisis Centre Group (ICCG) at its annual “In Pursuit of Peace, Prosperity and the Presidency Award” dinner to be held in New York on 22 April 2013. This award is given to recognise and “celebrate inspirational figures whose visionary leadership has transformed the lives of millions and brought forth the promise of a world free of conflict”.

According to ICCG, Burma is being rewarded for “it’s remarkable and unprecedented set of reforms since President Thein Sein’s government took over in March 2011, freeing hundreds of political prisoners, liberating the press and promoting dialogue with the main opposition party”.

Consistent praise of Burma’s current leadership means turning away from the truth. It is amazing how forgetting enables the truth to be ignored. The 2008 Constitution was enforced in Burma, led by the current President, to ensure nothing would change and the military would still be in control following the transition from military to ‘civilian’ rule.

President Thein Sein first started receiving major accolades from the international community for beginning a dialogue with the Nobel laureate after Aung San Suu Kyi was freed from house arrest in 2010. But does a few meetings between Thein Sein and Suu Kyi constitute a dialogue?

After failing to kill Suu Kyi in 2003 at Depayin and amid strong international support for Suu Kyi and the National League for Democracy (NLD), the military learned that it would benefit them to have her as an ally. After the military annulled the 1990 elections that saw the NLD win in a landslide, President Thein Sein allowed Suu Kyi and the NLD to participated in the by-elections were 45 seats in parliament were contested in April.

Now the military has begun ruling with a golden touch after handing over a small portion of the parliament’s seats. Under the guise of development, Burma’s resources are being sold off to the highest bidder. Foreign investors can now lease land for a period of 50 years with two 10 year extensions. In ‘undeveloped and remote’ areas in Burma, the government will allow foreign investors to hold even longer leases.

This seals away swathes of land and ecosystems for generations of farmers and residents – seriously jeopardising their right to food and a secure livelihood. Burma’s President has proven he’s willing and eager to sell out its residents for personal gain and the benefit of his friends’ benefits. Is this the way to feed the poor of Burma?  

The military and maintaining power

The Constitution is not a citizen document, rather it allows the military to continue to rule and financially benefit from more international investment.

Political prisoners, which the government stated did not exist, were released during several presidential amnesties that often coincided with significant events, including the visits of international figures to Burma. U Myint Aye, a prominent human rights defender in Burma, was released when President Obama visited Burma in November.

However, none of the country’s draconian laws have been removed or changed, which are used to entrap individuals who continue to speak truth in Burma. Those released during the presidential amnesties can be thrown back into prison if they offend the government. There has been no unconditional release of political dissidents. There is no compensation for unfair prison time. There is no medical treatment for the years of prison and torture political prisoners were forced to endure. There is no independent judiciary.

”None of the country’s draconian laws have been removed or changed”

Recently, many individuals have been arrested in Burma. Among those arrested are leaders of demonstrations against the Letpadaung Mountain copper mining project in northern Burma. In July 2012, villagers in Letpadaung took action against the expansion of the mine. People from around Burma came to offer their support.

The mine, a joint venture between a Burmese military-owned group and a Chinese company, was displacing local villagers and polluting the environment. By the end of November, protests against the mine’s expansion had spread to cities around Burma. On 29 November, police assaulted the protesters camped near the mine site, which left dozens of monks and other citizens hospitalised.

In November, Rangoon police arrested six leaders of one rally supporting the anti-mine expansion protests. Six people were charged with disrupting public tranquillity and are now in prison. Earlier this month, four shopkeepers in Kachin state were sent to prison for filming a demonstration over the relocation of a marketplace. On 1 December, about fifteen police in Rangoon went to the home of U Gambira to arrest the former Buddhist monk for entering a monastery earlier in the year that authorities had closed following the monk-led protests in 2007.

Instead of praising President Thein Sein, the ICCG and foreign leaders should encourage him to suspend large scale land transactions, demand that he stop oppressing and criminalising people who are defending their land, and release all detained political prisoners.

The amnesia that seems to be affecting some in the international community cannot continue. Truth will emerge. It seems ironic that as the rest of the world praises the leader of Burma, the Burmese people from all walks of life continue to be deprived of their basic rights. The people are revolting in mass demonstrations. They are fighting for their lives, their land, their livelihood and their voice in government.

The former members of the State Peace and Development Council, the authors of the 2008 Constitution, ensured support for military and have failed to address the severe human rights violations committed by the armed forces in the past.

In 2006, Paulo Sergio Pinheirio reported to the UN General Assembly that sexual violence, forced labour, and child soldiering had been “widespread and systematic over the last decade so as to suggest they are not simply isolated acts of individual misconduct of middle or low rank officers but rather the result of the upholding of a system under which individuals and groups have been allowed to breach the law and human rights without being held to account”.

These crimes fall under the International Criminal Court’s Statute; however, the government of Burma is unwilling to prosecute such crimes.

International groups now focus on supporting the very men who committed these crimes. Aung San Suu Kyi states that no person will be tried for their past acts. She recommends reconciliation. How can there be reconciliation with the men who perpetrated crimes against humanity still in power?

Why is the world so vulnerable to being seduced by socio-political doctrines and a readiness to accept totalitarian terror for the sake of some ‘potential’ peace? Why are so many citizens of Burma being denied the support they need now to create a country based on democratic principles? Why is there not rage against the murderous powers of injustice being committed in Burma? Why after decades of protest by truth seekers in Burma is there not support for the defenders of human freedoms?

Nancy Hudson-Rodd PhD, human geographer, former director of the Centre for Development Studies, honorary research fellow, Edith Cowan University, has conducted research in Burma for the past decade on the confiscation of farmers’ land by the military regime.

-The opinions and views expressed in this piece are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect DVB’s editorial policy.

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Comments


  1. Ohn says:

    “The opinions and views expressed in this piece are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect DVB’s editorial policy.”

    Poor DVB. Again here is the best chance to rejoin the “human world” by endorsing humanly written analysis with informed and balanced wisdom, and the rat is scurrying away from it.

    Rare view of the truth Ms Nancy Hudson-Rodd keeping long tradition of yours.

    Only point to make is the world is not naive as you assume. The world is the collaborator and promoter of this heinous regime as they have the whole country in tighter grips and suppression than ever in the history of Burma.

    And Aung San Suu Kyi is so thoroughly turned against the people of Burma that only thing she can see right is the fancy so-called western “Neo-liberal” policies which is just smoke screen for rape and pillage of the land after evicting the rightful owners all over the country in he name of “development”.

    People are not as dumb as either the Thein Sein fronted military thinks or Aung San Suu Kyi fronted international business communities think in Burma.

    Burma is a land like no others.

    Yes, the Burmese are now cast to come to grief. But so will others!

  2. Ann Mullen says:

    I agree with your comments, however, you failed to mention the ethnic cleansing that is occurring with the Rohingya people. How and why is President Thein Sein receiving an award from the ICCG while he is currently committing crimes against humanity?

  3. Zin Linn says:

    Dear Dr. Nancy, your analysis is really correct and concrete. It’s amazing the ICCG honored Thein Sein too much while everybody knows he’s the man who chaired the national convention which produce the controversial constitution allowing absolute power to military. Here, I want to mention a sharp comment of Global Justice Center.In its letter dated 20 September 2011, the Global Justice Center urges the ICG to immediately revoke its longstanding policy of supporting unconditional engagement with Burma’s military rulers. “Both the constitution and the “new Myanmar government” are null and void under international law and must be treated as such by the global community. Burma’s new constitution, further, guarantees the military impunity from prosecution, encouraging the military’s continuing crimes against humanity, genocide, and war crimes,” GJC wrote in its letter.
    In brief, I fully agree with your analysis. I do support your view: “It seems ironic that as the rest of the world praises the leader of Burma, the Burmese people from all walks of life continue to be deprived of their basic rights.”

  4. Zaw Myat Lin says:

    Totally out of touch and emotionally biased. Does not reflect the reality at all all and too pessimistic. Obviously not the type of critique the country needs right now.

  5. Nancy, I know the international community want to encourage U Thein Sein, but it is all too soon and too much, as peoole are confusing activity with change on the ground, and as you say a lot more has to happen. The worst of the worst of the laws must be repealed, people’s reputations and lives must be restored in some way, criminal records for political activity must be expunged, either have amnesty for all involved in the struggle, not just military and/or have a debate on these issues, transparency is the key and plans there are no concrete plans for government, the parliament is passing some good laws well with good intent, but there is no machinery of government to support them, and land is a big issue and the land laws that the government got through parliament do not change this. A Land Commission is needed urgently, with wide powers. Janelle

  6. tocharian says:

    What people in the West totally underestimate is that the Burmese oligarchy (new and old) is still under Chinese control. Chinese meddling is ubiquitous in Burma, bribing, bullying, exploiting, …
    Most Burmese are really afraid of the Chinese, but they don’t to admit it, of course!

  7. Ohn says:

    janelle saffin ,

    Indeed Land Commission IS the most important one to have.

    But funny, the ones advocating are few and far in between and the ones made are totally ignored. Show the poor, poor understanding of the real event by the commentators and the “champions” of people, but only in their imagination.

    For example, the exemplary hard fact study and comment by Scott Leckie attracted only one comment in two weeks!

    You see Thein Sein g=fronted new look old crowd is most to gain. At the expense of the majority population who will be summarily pushed off their ancestral land and farms to the Aung San Uuu Kyi demanded Sub-subsistence wage labour camps called “SEZ’s” all over the country living in crime, disease and drug infested ghettoes – yes- watching the latest rerun of “Friends” and Korean soaps on flat screen TV’s with electricity.

    As the “west” is hell bent on supporting the most authoritarian military with cosmetic makeover vouched for by no less than a “Democracy Icon” whatever that means, Thein Sein has no reason whatsoever to form that land commission or back off the EVICT, LOOT, ENSLAVE plan for the adulating public of Burma.

    Zaw Myat Lin, pull your head out of sand.

  8. Thein Sein and all his war criminal partners must be booked for trail at ICC.They committed many genocidal crimes in the area of Rohingyas,Kachin ,Shan,Chin ,Karen etc for years.
    How this bloody dictator is awarded prize ??
    SHAME!

  9. maungg maungg says:

    Dear All,
    The whole process of transfering the millitary power to the so called people power has been planned sme years ago by a strongman. He made sure that the elected body has more than 75% of total public votes to enable the constitution to be adopted and changed where necessary. This is a mixture of both true democracy with a Burmese way of adoption. Believe me he knew it very well too. He planned it so nicely by picking what he wants and what he would get from it in later years. The result is though he is faded slowly now and peacefully into other world before his departure to next life. His family members are protected too. Let us see, which dictator in the world, like him can or could have done it in the past. Do not think that this idea comes out from a poorly educated person though most school in Burma are lowly rated.
    Burma schools may be rated low, but they do have many good teachers with very good hearts and dedication hard to find elsewhere. The rest is history. We did / do not like him at all. But he had done something which Ne Win and followers had failed to do it in the past. Thein Sein was hand picked by him and some important instructions did come from him during first year of the initial process. Thereafter, T S is on his own and the world sees the difference very clearly. Who is the real power broker ?

  10. royalist says:

    The plan to transfer power step by step started in 1988. SLORC had to stablise the situation to usher in disciplined democracy. Suu Kyi was playing tantrums as she was in a hurry for power.
    1990 elections were meant to form a national assembly that was to write a constitution to be agreed upon by overwhelming majority. The military did ask the elected representatives to write the constitution. But none of them had any idea how to write a constitution. Our investigators reported that Peter Limbin had an audience with HRH Crown Prince Shwebomin in 1990s in London. Crown Prince was disappointed to hear Peter Limbun say ‘ We won, so we can have power and we can do what we like.’ That was about the 1990 elections.It is true that Shwebomin had reconnected with the Burmese embassy in 1988, believing that the military coup of September 1988 was a military coup on the socialist military regime that he hated. He had refused to serve in the BSPP regime and chose to live in exile ,stateless. It was also reported that in 1971 he and Aung San Oo discussed the need to overthrow the BSPP regime of General Ne Win, whom Crown Prince Shwebomin called ShuMaung.
    It seems that there were many secret dealings about advancing democracy in Burma. Our agents reported that Shwebomin considered Senior General Than Shwe as his Regent. Judging by the websites about Crown Prince Shwebomin, it seems his life in exile isn’t so bad. Nobody seems to know where he is at any one time,though.
    DVB should encourage a very wide range of opinions on their messageboard. For and against SuuKyi, for and against theinSEin, for and against the military, for and against than Shwe, for and against Crown Prince Shwebomin. Against him would not be difficult. CRDB(UK) hated him. Most activists hated him. Why?Nobody knew the reason. Perhaps his life style.
    We hope DVB willnot censor this message as it contains ‘Shwebomin’.





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