The not so new rulers

By ZAW NAY AUNG
Published: 16 July 2012
Military Members of Parliament arrive to attend a meeting at the Lower House of Parliament in Naypyitaw
Military members of Parliament arrive to attend a meeting at the Lower House of Parliament in Naypyitaw on 9 July 2012. (Reuters)

American oil and gas companies are now free to suck out Burma’s resources along with global corporations. President Obama gave US companies the green light to invest in Burma and work with the notorious State-owned MOGE, the Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise on Wednesday.

Now, those who were once blacklisted by the governments for their association with the military junta will become the west’s new partners. Although Burma’s natural resources should contribute to the general welfare of the public, the generals, ex-generals and their associates have sold the country’s resources off for their own personal interests.

Despite Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s warnings that increased transparency and accountability from state enterprises and western investors were needed before corporations begin pouring into the country, sanctions have been dropped.

Genuine reconciliation between the nominally civilian government and the pro-democracy opposition groups has yet to be completely achieved, while reconciliation between the ex-generals and western governments – so-called supporters of Burma’s democracy movement – seems to have been cemented.

The country’s natural gas and oil reserves have served as the military’s lifeline and continues to fund the recently installed civilian government of Thein Sein. With the revenues flowing in from these profitable enterprises, the military has increased its capacity with respect to personnel and weaponry.

Behind the largely symbolic and practically ineffective sanctions, western oil giants Unocal, Chevron and Total have worked as long-term business partners with the generals, the war-criminals and some of the most brutal tyrants in the world.

Exact figures on how profitable these firms have been in Burma are hard to come by. However, one indicator of their wealth is the amount of the state budget that is allocated to the government’s military.

The regime has spent millions of dollars training military officers in Russia who study nuclear and missile technology. According to media reports, at least 10,000 officers have been trained at Russian universities during the past few years.

While the regime spends a substantial amount of funds to strengthen the country’s military and enrich the generals, those who have been oppressed continue to suffer. The war in Kachin state, where more than 70,000 people have been displaced, still has no end on the horizon while fighting continues to break out in southern Shan state after ceasefires and several rounds of talks have been held.

Recent sectarian strife in Arakan state and the arrests of student activists across the country points out that something ominous is going on behind the scenes. The riots in western Burma diverted the public’s attention from assessing the government’s reform measures, while the Tatmadaw seems to have successfully won back the public’s support. The regime’s cronies also played off the country’s inflamed nationalism and provided generous donations to the victims of the riots.

“But who is truly able to properly identify the military’s entities and separate the wheat from the chaff?”

But still justice is lacking.

The three Rohingya men who were convicted of raping and murdering an Arakanese woman, which helped spark the riots, were all sentenced to death behind closed doors (one of the men was posthumously sentenced after he committed suicide while incarcerated according to officials).

And what about the people behind the mob attack that brutally beat ten Muslims to death in the middle of the street in Taunggup? The team assembled by the government to investigate the matter was due to report their findings by the end of June. However, state media groups have said that authorities are struggling to find an individual that will provide testimony, while eyewitness accounts reportedly saw local authorities at the scene who failed to intervene to put a stop to the carnage.

Earlier this month, authorities arrested 20 activists the day before commemoration ceremonies were supposed to held to remember the 50th anniversary of the military’s attack on university students. The activists were detained overnight and questioned before being released the next day. Such lawless and authoritarian gestures targeting students reveal that the Thein Sein regime may not be so different than their predecessors.

What the so-called reformist government of Thein Sein wants is simple: the termination of all western sanctions and concessions from the opposition. Since the parliament convened and the civilian government was installed last year, the ultimate political objective of the junta-turned-civilian government is to make the opposition accept Burma’s militarized 2008 constitution. At the same time, nominal reforms were carried out to attract the west’s attention.

So who wins the game in the end?

The cronies and generals clothed in civilian garbs and uniforms are now set to be the business partners with the country’s new corporate investors. President Obama warned potential investors not to deal with military entities. But who is truly able to properly identify the military’s entities and separate the wheat from the chaff?

While the generals and their associates go about their business as usual behind the scaffolding propping up the superficial decorations lauding reforms, war continues in ethnic areas and hundreds of political prisoners waste away behind bars.

-Zaw Nay Aung is the Director at Burma Independence Advocates

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Comments


  1. Ohn says:

    First Aung San Suu Kyti surrenders.

    Then everyone follows.

    Burmese public is now most chauvinistic ( Rohingya issue), coveting ( drools for American dollars) and selfish (totally ignores ongoing Kachin killings and displacements.

    At the same time naive (does not have a clue about likely effect of the pipes they are physically laying for the Chinese) and scared like babies ( couldn’t say “boo” to the Generals).

    The Dam is going to start again soon.

    Burmese will becomes landless minimal wage earning work/ strike cycle labourers,happily eating KFC in their own country truly owned by others.

    With current attitude that is all they deserve. Slaves with iPAD’s.

  2. anonymous says:

    The Generals are very keen to start working now with the new Colonial master,the Western capitalists who blissfully ignored that they have neen murderers before without any further accounts of their responsibility,
    they do believe sincerely that the Burmese are suckers and idiots.

  3. tocharian says:

    You didn’t answer your own question:

    “So who wins the game in the end?”

    but after reading your long-winded article it seems like that you know the answer.

  4. No Difference says:

    Nice article. But most of the politicians and business men are only thinking of their profit. Before the so called civilian government got into power, everything was privatized. Guess who owns those private companies. If you were Burmese, then you know the answer to that. Its all the same old trick. Why can’t the world see Burma is the same as before? Just by changing the shirt won’t make a different person. But sadly, the politicians and business men blindly accepts as the new person.

  5. Gloom and Doom says:

    Burma’s grand chess master is brilliant. He has more time to think after putting up Thein Sein as president. With due respects to the Lady, she was given a pat on the back by the world whose mere interests were to exploit Burma. She holds the key. Now she is to visit the US for another pat on the back.

  6. maungg maungg says:

    If the lake water is muddy and dirty,
    one can not put a bucket of water and hopes that clear water comes out from it. Indonesia after Suharto has five government changed before it has come to term with a slightly better status. It still has many problem in hand to resolve. We do not have time sit and dream. We must work and work and along the way resolve the problem not one at a time but many at a time. At this computer age, one has to work 2 or 3 tasks at any one time to go faster and even faster. Sorry that is what we are now. Phayee aung loke . Never mind who got the most shares and who gains more. We look for them to participate with good Burmese hearts to contribute their wealth to the poor by teaching them, giving them jobs, opportunities, etc. By this way of their helps, Burma can progress faster. Lets us work for it together instead of doing and talking against them. Their hearts are much closer than other strangers from elsewhere.





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