Sunday, June 1, 2014

Democratic Voice of Burma

Democratic Voice of Burma


Why the UN Sec-Gen must act now to address impunity in Burma

Posted: 01 Jun 2014 03:02 AM PDT

On 14 March, the secretary-general of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, called on the government of Burma "to fully investigate and respond to current and historical human rights violations and abuses, including crimes of sexual violence."

The inclusiveness of this call is unprecedented.

On 26 March, the UN Human Rights Council called for an investigation into human rights violations in Arakan State.

At the end of April, the outgoing UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Myanmar, Tomás Ojea Quintana, asserted that "elements of genocide" are being inflicted on the Rohingya. He was right so to do: the Genocide Convention specifically includes the slow, indirect methods of destruction now being inflicted on Rohingya and, arguably, some Kachin civilians.

On 15 May, the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect identified Burma as being at imminent risk of mass atrocities.

The UN secretary-general’s call is, however, almost certain to be rejected by the Burmese government: it will probably prevaricate and then offer to set up its own investigation as cover to protect the impunity of real perpetrators. It knows it can play for time. Over time it will wear down the demands till a new batch of diplomats and NGOs eventually arrive on the scene. The call will then get forgotten, like many other UN exhortations.

The demand will also be rejected by other Burmese players. Aung San Suu Kyi herself, immediately after her release, dismissed the need for retributive justice and effectively ended a decade-long struggle to address impunity at a stroke. Her spokesman, in relation to the Rohingya, has even gone so far as to warn the international community, "Not to interfere in the internal affairs of Myanmar." (Such years of "interference" were, of course, precisely what led to her release.) The former prime minister of Norway, the home of the Nobel Prize (and Telenor and Statoil,) also summarily dismissed the genocidal plight of the Rohingya as, "An internal Myanmar matter." Welcome to the Golden Land, where globalisation and "peace" meets crony capitalism against a back drop of low intensity genocide.

Meanwhile, there is no meaningful transition to democracy. The 2010 election was rigged and the 2008 Constitution, which holds the country in a vice-like military grip, was inflicted on the people through intimidation and manipulation. There is little realistic possibility of the Constitution being meaningfully amended and little likelihood of a civilian, democratic government coming to power being able, or willing, to bring perpetrators to book.

In fact, a democratically elected government may enshrine impunity further: so systemic is Burman racism that such a government coming to power may actually inflict further persecution with the complicity of the majority population.

Little can be done through economic sanctions due to the extent of international collaboration. The latest congressionally inspired US sanctions have just been shrugged off by Naypyidaw. Sanctions cannot realistically be re-imposed and international organisations now collaborating with the military-controlled government will not support prosecution of the regime they have chosen to work with.

In conclusion, the international community’s decades-long policy of appeasement, half-hearted sanctions and collaboration, choreographed post-2011 with naïve optimism, underscored in reality by geopolitics and greed, has been disastrous for the ethnic peoples of Burma. The Burman military officer class and its associated business cronies has got everything he wanted: consolidation behind a Janus-faced civilian government; reconfiguration as a "democracy"; impunity from prosecution; wealth; legitimacy.

“Many NGOs collaborate in silence. Some journalists have been co-opted. Burman -centred, top-down academics and diplomats who avoid setting foot in the mire of internally displaced camps often downplay and misrepresent the systematic nature of the violations.”

Reality, however, demands an honest and human response. Two hundred and sixty thousand additional Rohingya and Kachin people have been terrorised out of their homes since the "democratic transition" began. Some 800,000 Rohingya are now effectively banged up in a vast concentration camp. Hundreds of thousands have been burnt out, pillaged, plundered, murdered, raped, bombed and generally terrorised out of their homes during previous decades. Continuous since 1948, the total figure may run, as the former SLORC leader Saw Maung stated, into "millions".

These violations, many inflicted in the service of a racial policy of "Burmanisation", amount to crimes against humanity and, arguably, attempted genocide. It is this reality that the UN secretary-general is directly and personally confronting when he demands a "full" and, we should note, "historical investigation".

The issue is in his hands. He is the last best hope that something will be done. He alone can present his recommendation to the Security Council without prior approval from anyone. Success is likely. China and Russia would find it difficult to veto a proposal coming from the Secretary General. Carefully prepared, with all members of the Council properly briefed, supported by overwhelming evidence and effective lobbying in New York, the case for addressing the systematic, targeted destruction of Burma’s ethnic peoples will be overwhelming.

Implementing the secretary-general’s call at the Security Council offers the only realistic way of preventing and punishing crimes against humanity. Internally, many NGOs collaborate in silence. Some journalists have been co-opted. Burman -centred, top-down academics and diplomats who avoid setting foot in the mire of internally displaced camps often downplay and misrepresent the systematic nature of the violations. The entire Burman political class, including so-called democrats, has collectively failed to show moral leadership. Even the call by the UN special envoy to end incitement of hatred has been mostly disregarded. As a result, most institutions, including the army, many Buddhists, the political class and much of the civilian population are either actively or passively complicit.

The State of Myanmar is thus now probably institutionally responsible for crimes against humanity, violations of Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, and, arguably, in the case of the Rohingya, incitement of, and attempt to commit, genocide.

Effective internal jurisdiction by the Burmese government is not feasible or realistic. A Security Council Resolution, implementing the secretary-general’s call, is the only hope that crimes against humanity can be addressed, full-blown genocide prevented, and impunity challenged.

Ban Ki-moon must act to implement his own call. Not in Burma, but at the Security Council.

 

Guy Horton has worked on Burma and its border areas since 1998. His 2005 report, "Dying Alive" and supporting video footage, received worldwide coverage and contributed to the submission of Burma to the UN Security Council in January 2007. As a result of the report, the UN Committee on the Prevention of Genocide carried out an investigation and placed Burma/Myanmar on the Genocide Watch list.

Since 2005 Guy Horton has focussed on establishing a coalition of governments, funders, institutions and leading international lawyers with the aim of getting the violations investigated and analysed so that impunity can be addressed. He is currently a researcher at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.

He was short-listed for the post of UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Myanmar 2014.

He can be contacted at: ghrtn7@gmail.com

 

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the author's alone, and do not reflect a DVB editorial stance. DVB welcomes contributors to offer counter-arguments to any article on its website.

Burma plays diplomatic card to diffuse Bangladesh dispute

Posted: 01 Jun 2014 02:05 AM PDT

A dispute between Burma and Bangladesh following a fatal armed clash at the countries' common land border is now being resolved through diplomatic channels, according to the director of the Burmese President's Office, Zaw Htay.

"We are continuing discussions," he told DVB on Saturday. "This incident provides a challenge to both countries to ensure stability and peace in the border region.

On Wednesday, Burmese border guards opened fire on two men in yellow camouflage uniforms allegedly on the Burmese side of the border between boundary markers 51 and 52. One man was reportedly shot and killed while the other escaped back to Bangladeshi territory.

The Burmese claim that their border patrol opened fire on insurgents assumed to be members of the Rohingya Solidarity Organisation (RSO) who are known to be active in this area.

Speaking to DVB on Friday, Pol-Col Min Aung, the deputy-director of the Burmese Defence and Security Department in Naypyidaw, pointed out that the suspects were not wearing Border Guard of Bangladesh (BGB) uniforms nor Bangladeshi insignia, and were therefore assumed to be insurgents.

"None of the men we encountered had insignia," he said. "They were in yellow camouflage uniforms without armbands. If they had been BGB, they should have been wearing their insignia. They were shot at because they encroached on our territory without any identifiable insignia, leading our troops to assume they were insurgents."

Bangladesh said its border guards were fired upon by their Burmese counterparts, and that one of their troops, Corp. Naik Md. Mizanur Rahman, remains missing.

An agreement was made for the Burmese to hand over the body of the dead man for identification on Friday at a prearranged spot at a common border post, however gunfire broke out and the handover was not completed. Both sides blame each other for the altercation.

Dhaka has since issued a letter of complaint after summoning Burmese Ambassador Myo Myint to its Foreign Affairs Ministry.

In a statement on Saturday, Bangladesh's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it had protested strongly to the Burmese ambassador over the "unprovoked eruption of gunfire" by Burmese border troops on Friday afternoon, and said it was calling for "immediate measures" to identify the dead body to ascertain whether it is Corp. Naik Md. Mizanur Rahman.

However, in its own statement on Saturday, Burma's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that "these two diplomatic notes from the Bangladesh side are totally far from the real situation on the ground."

It maintained that Burmese troops "opened fire on two suspected armed Bengalis … who were intruding into Myanmar territory about 80 feet from the border line. The Myanmar troops neither opened fire on any BGB members nor captured a BGB corporal. It was found out that the outfit worn by the person caught dead did not match the BGB uniform."

"Bengali" is a commonly used term in Burma for members of the Rohingya community.

Following the statement, Burmese President's Office Director Zaw Htay told DVB: "We have strong evidence that the RSOs are conducting maneuvers and creating problems."

While maintaining that Burma would not tolerate any incursions into its sovereign territory, Zaw Htay said that the matter would be better resolved through diplomatic means.

"It is better to resolve this dispute through border committees and government channels in a spirit of mutual understanding," he said. "But the point is that we cannot accept any insurgent group on our land. We work with India on this issue, and I hope we can also work with Bangladesh.”

Zaw Htay maintained that Burma's security forces had made no mistake and that they had engaged with an armed group thought to be RSO.

"Our ambassador in Bangladesh explained this to their government and provided evidence," he said. "The fighting took place on our territory. Our security forces shot at men in guerrilla uniforms who were not sporting any insignia or arm bands. The clash occurred along a route frequently used by the RSO."