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: Burma
Burmese military cracks down on escalating protests
By Sujeewa Amaranath
27 September 2007
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The military in Burma (Myanmar) unleashed its troops yesterday
on unarmed demonstrators in a bid to stamp out mounting protests
against the juntas stifling rule, and price rises that have
made life for broad layers of working people unbearable.
A series of clashes took place in the former capital Rangoon
(Yangon) as protestors, including many Buddhist monks, took to
the streets in defiance of the military. On Tuesday, the junta
imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew in Rangoon and Mandalay, the countrys
second largest city, and banned assemblies of more than five people.
Heavily-armed troops were stationed in key positions, including
outside major monasteries that have become centres of protest.
The state media yesterday reported that at least one protestor
was killed in clashes in Rangoon between demonstrators and security
forces. An unnamed official told the AFP that three people were
deadone was killed after trying to seize a soldiers
rifle and two others were beaten to death. Other reports from
individuals and opposition groups indicate that the toll could
be higher. Another 300 people were reportedly arrested.
The clashes began outside the Shwedagon Pagoda but failed to
deter an estimated 10,000 young monks and students from marching
toward the Sule Pagoda in downtown Rangoon. Hundreds of troops
fired warning shots and tear gas then broke up the protest using
batons. Several hundred monks also tried to reach the house of
detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, followed by trucks
carrying troops. In Mandalay, an estimated 10,000 people took
part in protests.
The protests have been building since the juntas decision
on August 15 to suddenly double the price of diesel and raise
the price of natural gas by 500 percent. Within days, as transport
prices jumped, the cost of essential items rose by between 10
and 50 percent. Eggs, cooking oil and poultry increased by an
average of 35 percent. The regime, which has a monopoly on fuel
sales, had previously subsidised prices.
Initially the marches, which were organised by students and
began on August 19, were quite small. The protests, however, have
continued to swell despite arrests and police violence. Over the
weekend, tens of thousands took part in demonstrations in Rangoon.
On Monday, protests took place in at least 25 cities including
Mandalay, Stitwe and Pakokku. The march in Rangoon was estimated
at between 50,000 and 100,000 people.
The demonstrations are by far the largest since 1988 when huge
protests involving students, workers, monks, and the urban and
rural poor challenged the military dictatorship, demanding democratic
rights and improved living standards. The army responded by gunning
down hundreds of protesters, jailing opposition leaders and suppressing
any form of political opposition. An estimated 3,000 people were
killed by the military and many more were detained and tortured.
Speaking over state radio on Monday night, the juntas
religious affairs minister, Brigadier General Thura Myint Maung,
denounced the destructive elements behind the protests
and warned actions will be taken against the monks according
to the law. On Tuesday, police arrested U Win Naing, a senior
leader of Suu Kyis National League of Democracy (NLD) and
Zaganar, a popular comedian who is known for satirising the regime.
Zaganar had appealed for people to join the protests. Yesterday
the crackdown intensified.
The international media has highlighted the role of Buddhist
monks in the current protests. Their prominence, however, is a
function of the timidity and conservatism of Suu Kyi and other
NLD leaders, who appear to have been caught off guard by the demonstrations.
Far from seeking to challenge the junta, the NLD is seeking to
limit the protests and exploit them as a bargaining chip to establish
negotiations with the generals.
The British-based Times noted yesterday: Opposition
leaders in Rangoon are struggling to contain the energy of the
demonstrations to prevent anything that could be used as a pretext
for a crackdown by the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC),
as the junta calls itself. They fear a split between radicals,
who want to bring down the regime, and moderates, who believe
that the most important thing is to avoid frightening off ordinary
Burmese and bring them out in an overwhelming display of moral
authority.
NLD leader Sann Aung told the Times: There should
be no agitation to topple the military regime. It will make people
much more wary of a military response and people will become reluctant
to join the movement. The newspaper also pointed to the
limited character of the demands made by senior monks: an apology
for abuse by the regime, a reduction in fuel prices, the release
of political prisoners and political dialogue with the junta.
These appeals for restraint are, however, opening the door
for further military repression. By confining the anger of ordinary
working people, the opposition leaders will only embolden the
generals to go on the offensive against the protests. That is
the central political lesson of the events of 1988, when Suu Kyi
and the NLD struck a deal with the junta to hold elections and
shut down the protest movement. The junta seized the deal with
both hands, stabilised their rule and then ignored the outcome
of the 1990 poll, in which the NLD won an overwhelming majority.
For nearly two decades, the NLDs perspective has been
confined to using the pressure of sanctions imposed by the major
powers to reach a compromise with the junta. As for its professions
of concern for the Burmese population, the NLD supports the IMF
and World Banks free market policies of opening up the country
to foreign investors. The social consequences are evident in the
juntas slashing of fuel subsidies last month, entirely in
line with this agenda.
Even before the latest price rises, inflation was running at
more than 30 percent and 90 percent of the population lived below
the poverty line of $US1 a day. The 450,000-strong army accounts
for 40 percent of the annual national budget. An unemployed economics
graduate told the Sydney Morning Herald: Many people
can no longer afford to send their children to school. Theyre
down to one meal a day, its that bad. As a result many are
malnourished and theyre falling ill. But then they cant
even find the money for medical bills. Sure, we had difficulties
before, but the price rises broke the camels back. Living
standards have gone down and down. The middle classes have become
poor, and the poor have become destitute.
International rivalries
The military crackdown has produced an outpouring of hypocrisy
from world leaders, led by President Bush, and in the international
media. Speaking at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, Bush condemned
the Burmese junta and announced the imposition of new sanctions
against individual leaders. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown
denounced the regime as illegitimate and repressive
while French President Nicolas Sarkozy urged the EU to impose
tougher penalties against the junta. An emergency meeting of the
UN Security Council was convened behind closed doors yesterday
to consider the situation.
None of this has anything to do with concern for the Burmese
people and their rights. Elsewhere in South Asia, the Bush administration
maintains the closest of relations with the Pakistani military
dictator General Pervez Musharraf and keeps a diplomatic silence
on Indias police-state measures in Kashmir, the repressive
activities of the military-backed regime in Bangladesh and the
autocratic methods of the Sri Lankan government as it wages a
vicious communal civil war.
Washingtons objection to the Burmese junta is not its
repressive methods, but its close alignment with China. Burma
is strategically situated between China and India, next to South
East Asia and close to key shipping lanes, in particular the Malacca
Straits. The country also has significant natural resources, including
an estimated 3 trillion cubic metres of natural gas and 3 billion
barrels of crude oil.
For Beijing, Burma is an important strategic and economic partner.
China provides weapons and diplomatic support to the military
and is involved in developing the countrys infrastructure.
In return, Beijing is seeking rights over the countrys oil
and gas as well as strategic access to Burmese ports and military
bases. During the first seven months of this year, China-Burmese
trade reached $US1.1 billion, up 39.4 percent compared to the
same period last year.
At the same time, there is growing rivalry for influence in
Burma between China and India. High-level visits by Indian officials
have been on the rise, two-way trade is increasing and India has
provided loans and aid to the junta in a bid to win favour. In
2004, junta leader Than Shwe was given the red carpet treatment
when he became the first Burmese head of state to visit India
in 24 years. This year Indian oil company ONGC made a bid to buy
Burmese gas, but lost out last month to Petro-China. Thailand
is also investing in a huge $6 billion hydroelectricity project.
The steady stream of articles, particularly in the US, insinuating
that China is to blame for the Burmese junta and demanding action
from Beijing, is not matched by similar comments about India,
an increasingly close US ally, or Thailand, another military dictatorship,
which enjoys tacit US backing. The Bush administrations
calls for democracy in Burma are a pretext to press
for the installation of a pro-US regime.
The US administration is no more concerned about democratic
rights and the plight of the population in Burma, than it is in
Iraq. As far as Washington is concerned, the ousting of the Burmese
junta is an element of a broader US strategy of encircling China,
which is emerging as a key strategic and economic competitor,
as well as gaining access for American corporations to Burmas
natural resources and cheap labour.
See Also:
Sanctions provoke
deepening economic crisis in Burma
[14 January 2004]
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