Search Asia Times

Advanced Search

 
Southeast Asia

Deviation in the democracy roadmap
By Phar Kim Beng

In another sign that Myanmar's military junta is eliminating internal differences, Prime Minister General Khin Nyunt was replaced by a top member of the country's ruling junta, Lieutenant General Soe Win, 56; described as a trusted deputy to the country's top general, Than Shwe.

Senior General Than Shwe, 71, currently heads the ruling junta and controls the army. As the country's highest-ranking leader and a military hardliner, he is strongly opposed to allowing any political role for opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Together with Vice Senior General Maung Aye, who is widely considered the second-most powerful man in the country and a career solider, both have exerted a grip on Myanmar. And now that Soe Win has been installed as prime minister, the first three positions in the junta belong to the hardliners for the first time since 1988.

"Low-ranking officers have been removed before, but never this high. This is new for this dog-eat-dog business," Aung Zaw, editor of the Irrawaddy, a news magazine published by Myanmar journalists in exile, told Inter Press Service. "The timing is also surprising," he added, since Yangon had let Khin Nyunt acquire a high international profile by nominating him as the prime minister last year.

Although Khin Nyunt was part of the group that in 1988 crushed pro-democracy demonstrations during widespread street clashes that left more than 1,000 people dead, unlike the hardliners, he was at least prepared to discuss the release from house arrest of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi. All other hardliners were against such a move.

According to The Washington Post, "Khin Nyunt was the principal figure on whom Southeast Asian officials counted to build a policy of engagement with a reclusive regime. Regional officials preferred that approach to strong economic sanctions, such as those imposed on Burma [Myanmar] by the United States."

Khin Nyunt's reputation as a relative moderate was partly a result of his having negotiated ceasefire agreements with 17 armed ethnic organizations, including several major groups. Prior to his arrest, he was in the process of opening negotiations with the Karen ethnic minority.

Nevertheless, Khin Nyunt's removal should not be seen as a surprise, especially in the context of Myanmar's history of factionalism. The junta that took power in 1988 (initially called the State Law and Order Council, or Slorc), has seen its share of power struggles. In November 1997, much of the top tier of both Slorc and the cabinet were fired; some individuals were placed under house arrest. Slorc was renamed the State Peace and Development Council, or SPDC.

The only members of Slorc still active in the current government are Than Shwe and Maung Aye.

Khin Nyunt, however, was no defender of political and civil liberties, either, during his years as the head of Myanmar's military intelligence wing. He was seen as part of the powerful troika that suppressed a nation of nearly 50 million people.

But with Khin Nyunt's removal, the so-called "roadmap" to restore the democratization process in Myanmar is now effectively dead. Just last month, Khin Nyunt played a major role in reconvening the National Convention, which had been stalled since 1996. The goal was to draft a new constitution, the first step in the junta's seven-step roadmap to reintroduce democracy, despite a boycott by the main opposition party.

The opposition National League for Democracy (NLD), led by Suu Kyi, boycotted the convention after the military government refused to release Suu Kyi and NLD vice chairman Tin Oo from house arrest. The Shan Nationalities League for Democracy, which is allied with the NLD, also joined the boycott.

With Khin Nyunt gone, the first step is therefore eliminated. This lends credence to the belief that the junta's hardliners were never interested in peace anyway.

"Khin Nyunt[s] attempt to convince the international community that the SPDC is serious about change has finally been unraveled with his arrest," Win Naing, managing editor of New Vision, told IPS. "He never had any power to decide change," added Win Naing, whose monthly journal is published by Burmese journalists in exile. "Than Shwe has remained in control and he has proved this by crushing Khin Nyunt," he stressed.

To be sure, the National Convention has also run into its own difficulties: the 13 ethnic groups that participated in the convention all sought to have their own separate provinces and prime ministers, something the junta clearly opposes. Instead, the junta is seeking a tightly centralized polity, apparently to prevent the breakup of Myanmar due to its ethnic diversity. 

Myanmar's 50 million people reflect the country's ethnic diversity, which includes the Burmans, the largest minority group, and seven others with sizeable numbers - the Chin, Kachin, Karen, Karenni, Mon, Rakhine and Shan.

The idea of achieving equality among all these ethnic groups was a feature recognized in the 1947 Panglong Accord, the document that defined Myanmar's - then known as Burma's - independence from British rule. However, military-dominated regimes have failed to uphold the accord in practice, resulting in decades-long armed conflicts between Yangon and ethnic rebels.

Hints of Than Shwe going after Khin Nyunt to consolidate the power of the junta's hardliners began to emerge in late September following the firing of foreign minister Win Aung, a moderate and ally of Khin Nyunt. Myanmar watchers also saw cracks appearing within the military regime over the growing international criticism being leveled against it, ranging from UN secretary general Kofi Annan, to the US government to the European Union.

"The power struggle between the intelligence wing and the army had been brewing for some time," said Aung Zaw, the editor. " Now the hawks in the army have come on top."

That raises the question, will the 10 countries in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) seek to remove Myanmar, a threat raised by former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohammad in July 2003? Expulsion is not likely as ASEAN's policy on Myanmar was first derived from the policy of "constructive engagement" initiated in 1991 by the Thai government of prime minister Anand Panyarachun. This policy was later regionalized as an ASEAN policy.

For Thailand, the reasoning that led to the formulation of the policy on constructive engagement was based on both realities and aspirations, according to its former deputy foreign minister, Sukhumband Paribatra: "Myanmar and Thailand [have] been permanent neighbors, sharing a 2,400 kilometer border. Most of this border has not been demarcated and passes through difficult mountainous and jungle terrain, inhabited by common ethnic groups, which historically both governments have not found it easy to rule."

The border of the two countries is also porous, with more than 70 passes, mostly in remote areas. Therefore events in Myanmar often have repercussions on Thailand.

Aside from ASEAN, Japan remains one of the few developed countries in direct talks with the junta in Yangon. Its senior foreign policy officials have been flying regularly to Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur, even Hanoi, to fine-tune Tokyo's policy of engagement.

In 2001, the latest year for which figures were available, Tokyo gave Myanmar US$78 million in aid. Before 1988, the year of the pro-democracy crackdown, Japan's grants to Myanmar made up 60% of all foreign aid and grants to the country.

But even Japan's influence on the hardliners, by way of economic largess, is progressively waning, as Myanmar's bilateral trade with China has already improved by 10 times in the past decade to reach $500 million, a figure some believe to be a low estimate.

With the removal of Khin Nyunt, whom UN special envoy Tan Sri Razali Ismail said was the key person he dealt with in Myanmar, it is clear that an important interlocutor is now gone. And for now, at least, hopes for bringing democracy to the country may be as well.

Phar Kim Beng is a regular contributor to Asia Times Online. He is currently on a Sumitomo Foundation fellowship, where he is studying the state of Japanese social sciences. He was trained in international relations and strategic studies, first at Cambridge University, later the Fletcher School and Harvard University.

(Copyright 2004 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact content@atimes.com for information on our sales and syndication policies.)


Oct 21, 2004
Asia Times Online Community




Myanmar's junta hardliners gain upper hand (Sep 22, '04)

The case for sanctions on Myanmar (Sep 10, '04)

One year on, Myanmar marks time (Aug 24, '04)

 

         
         
No material from Asia Times Online may be republished in any form without written permission.
Copyright 2003, Asia Times Online, 4305 Far East Finance Centre, 16 Harcourt Rd, Central, Hong Kong