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: Burma
Burmese troops gun down protestors
By Sujeewa Amaranath and Peter Symonds
29 September 2007
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Over the past two days, the Burmese military regime has brutally
suppressed large anti-junta protests in the major cities of Rangoon
and Mandalay, breaking up crowds with tear gas, batons, rubber
bullets and live rounds. The state media reported that nine people
died in clashes on Thursday, but reports from activists, diplomats
and a handful of foreign journalists suggest the figure could
be considerably higher.
The crackdown began on Wednesday night and early Thursday morning
when troops raided monasteries, including the Shwedagon Pagoda
and Sule Pagoda in Rangoon, arresting hundreds of Buddhist monks.
Five key monasteries, which have been centres of opposition, were
declared no-go areas and sealed off to prevent protestors from
gathering.
In one incident, soldiers forced their way into the Ngwe Kyar
monastery in South Okkalapa, a suburb of Rangoon, Wednesday night
and arrested about 100 monks. Thousands of people gathered in
nearby streets and began pelting the troops with stones. Eight
people, including a high school student, died when soldiers opened
fire with automatic weapons.
Up to 70,000 people defied a military ban and marched in Rangoon
on Thursday. Protests reportedly took place in Mandalay and other
centres, including Sittwe, Pakokku and Moulmein. In central Rangoon,
near the Sule Pagoda, some 20 truckloads of troops and police
set up roadblocks. As protestors threw stones and bottles, the
security forces responded with shots and tear gas. Eyewitnesses
said the military gave people 10 minutes to disperse and started
firing.
Among the dead was a Japanese journalist, Kenji Nagai, 50,
who was photographing the clashes. The state media claimed that
a stray bullet had killed him, but amateur video shown on Japans
Fuji television showed him being deliberately shot.
Reports of protests yesterday were scanty. The countrys
main Internet connection had been cut, blocking the stream of
photographs, video and reports that were reaching the outside
world in previous days. The mobile phone network was also not
functioning. While officials reported damage to an undersea cable,
there is little doubt that the generals have ordered the censorship.
A correspondent for the London-based Times described
smaller protests near the Sule Pagoda and clashes of young demonstrators
with heavily-armed security forces. It was a loose, ragged,
frustrating day in Rangoon, a day of baton charges, beatings and
many rumours of much worse. I saw soldiers levelling guns, firing
volleys of hard rubber pellets, as well as chases and arrests,
he wrote.
Agence France Presse reported that up to 10,000 people were
involved in protests yesterday in central Rangoon and repeatedly
confronted troops and police. A separate group of around 500 marched
through the streets and were applauded by onlookers. In Mandalay,
thousands of young people on motorbikes rode down a major thoroughfare
toward a blockade set up by security forces, but were driven back.
The police round up of opposition leaders, including members
of the National League for Democracy (NLD) led by Aung San Suu
Kyi, is continuing. An NLD official told the media that two prominent
leaders, Hla Pe and Myint Thei, were arrested in raids on their
homes. Members of the 88 Generation Students Group, an organisation
formed last year by veterans of the 1988 protests against the
junta, have been detained.
International hypocrisy
Students, young monks and ordinary people are displaying great
courage in confronting the junta and its troops, and demanding
basic democratic rights and better living standards. However,
the limited character of the oppositions political perspective
is underscored by its appeals to the UN and major powers to intervene.
The condemnations of the junta by US President George Bush,
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and other leaders reek of
hypocrisy. The Bush administration and its allies are no more
concerned about democratic rights in Burma than in Iraq, where
the US military is every bit as ruthless as its Burmese counterparts
in suppressing popular opposition to its continued occupation.
Washingtons objection to the Burmese junta is not its
suppression of democratic rights, but its close alignment with
China. Over the past week, the American media in particular has
tried to pin the blame for the juntas violence on the failure
of Beijing to take sufficiently strong action. A Washington
Post editorial on Thursday, for instance, was entitled Save
Burma: Will China and Russia give green light to a slaughter of
monks? It criticised the two powers for blocking a UN resolution
condemning the violence in Burma.
No doubt, China and Russia are cynically supporting repressive
regimes to advance their economic and strategic interests. But
they are not alone. In the case of Burma, India quietly dropped
its criticism of the junta and is seeking to extend its economic
and diplomatic influence in the country. Burmas largest
trading partner is not China, but neighbouring Thailand, which
is ruled by a military dictatorship with tacit US support. The
Bush administrations campaign on Burma is not motivated
by concerns for ordinary Burmese, but is aimed at establishing
a pro-US regime in Rangoon as part of its strategic encirclement
of China.
Moreover, one can safely predict that the present media adulation
for the protestors would rapidly change if the demonstrations
and marches began to take a more radical direction. Unlike the
protests of 1988, which involved significant sections of workers,
the recent demonstrations have been, to date, largely dominated
by monks and students. The entry of substantial sections of working
people into political action would not only shake the junta, but
would reverberate through the region and internationally.
Far from being endowed with great strength, the Burmese junta
is acting from a position of weakness. Despised by the majority
of the population, the generals are confronting a profound economic
crisis. Despite the development of offshore gas fields, the economy
is plagued by inflation, which is running at an estimated annual
rate of 20 percent, and chronic shortages of investment and foreign
exchange. Economic analysts generally treat the official claims
of high growth rates with scepticism. In 2003, the regime declared
a growth figure of 5.1 percent, even as it confronted a private
banking crisis and banned the export of six major crops.
The gulf between the pampered lifestyle of the generals and
the poverty confronting the majority of the population is staggering.
More than 90 percent of the population live on less than 300,000
kyat (about $US300) a year. An estimated 43 percent of children
under the age of five are malnourished. On average, nearly 70
percent of household income is spent of foodthat is, surviving
from one day to the next. Spending on health care and education
amounts to just 1.4 percent of GDPless than half that of
Indonesia, the regions next lowest spender.
The latest protests were triggered last month by the juntas
decision to slash price subsidies on petrol, diesel and gas, increasing
transport costs and sending the price of basic items skyrocketting.
Opposition leaders, however, have not sought to mobilise the social
discontent of ordinary working people to bring down the junta,
but rather deliberately limited the protest demands.
A statement released by the 88 Generation Students and the
All Burma Monks Alliance last week listed just three demands:
the release of political prisoners, economic well-being and national
reconciliation. Like Aung San Suu Kyi and the NLD, these groups
are seeking to use the protests and international diplomacy to
pressure the regime into dialogue and a compromise power-sharing
arrangement. The NLDs basic program, which consists of implementing
IMF-dictated reforms to open Burma up to foreign investors, would
be just as catastrophic for ordinary working people as the juntas
economic policies.
The conclusion that some of the veterans of the 1988 protests
appear to have drawn is that their previous demands were too radical.
In fact, the opposite is the case. In 1988, the junta was reeling
under the impact of strikes in the oil industry, transport, postal
services, telecommunications and factories, as well as widespread
protests. It managed to cling to power by striking a deal with
the NLD to end the protests in return for elections in 1990. Having
stabilised their rule, the generals simply ignored the outcome
of the poll, suppressed the opposition and continued in power.
See Also:
Burmese military cracks down on escalating
protests
[27 September 2007]
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