Saturday | 29/12/2012
Andrew R.C. Marshall
Reuters
December 28, 2012
Reuters
December 28, 2012
Pyinyananda was chanting with dozens of
fellow Buddhist monks when an object landed in the folds of his orange
robes and blew up.
The canister contained tear gas, the
police later said, but the explosion flayed so much skin from his arms
and legs that he remains in hospital weeks later.
"The police gave no warning before they fired," said Pyinyananda, 19, nursing his bandaged arms.
He was one of at least 67 monks and six
other people injured on November 29, when riot police raided camps set
up by villagers protesting against a $1 billion expansion of the Myanmar
Wanbao copper mine in northern Myanmar.
The raids sparked nationwide outrage that
dented the reformist credentials of President Thein Sein, a former
general whose quasi-civilian government replaced a decades-old
dictatorship in 2011. They also underscored how, after a year of often
breathtaking change, the bad old Myanmar still looms over the new.
"Our leaders haven't kicked their
dictatorial habits," said former monk Nyi Nyi Lwin, better known as
Gambira, who was jailed for his role in 2007 pro-democracy protests.
"We're no longer an absolute dictatorship, but we're not yet a genuine
democracy."
Few ordinary Burmese have felt the impact
of reform, but most have high expectations and feel emboldened to speak
out. The mine dispute suggests that while 2012 was Myanmar's year of
hope and change, 2013 has the potential to be a year of protests and
crackdowns.
INTERSECTION OF GRIEVANCES
The copper mine sits at a crowded
intersection of grievances and interests - local, national and
international; political, economic and religious.
Myanmar Wanbao is a unit of China North
Industries Corp, a Chinese weapons manufacturer. It operates the mine -
the country's largest - with the Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings Ltd
(UMEHL), a vast holding company belonging to the powerful Myanmar
military.
Villagers say the expansion at Letpadaung,
a set of low hills on the west bank of the Chindwin River, involves the
unlawful confiscation of thousands of acres of their land. Monks say it
has destroyed or damaged the holy sites of a famous Buddhist teacher
who died in 1923.
Their months-long protest ended in a
pre-dawn, military-style operation reminiscent of the suppression of
monk-led protests in 2007. Back then, Thein Sein, a former general, was
the loyal prime minister of retired dictator Than Shwe.
The November crackdown triggered a
public-relations nightmare. A government headed by an ex-general and
filled with former soldiers had used force to protect the business
interests of the Myanmar military and of the giant neighbor that had
armed and supported it during decades of Western sanctions: China.
Amid nationwide street protests by monks,
Thein Sein cancelled a state visit to Australia and New Zealand to focus
on damage control. Police and ministers apologized to the monks, and a
commission was established to investigate local grievances about the
mine. It is headed by Nobel Peace Prize-winning opposition leader Aug
San Sul Kyi.
The crackdown came just 10 days after
Myanmar basked in a visit from U.S. President Barack Obama. His November
19 appearance in the former pariah state lasted just six hours, but for
many Burmese it heralded their re-entry into the world after decades of
isolation.
Obama's trip followed news that the U.S.
military would invite Myanmar counterparts to observe war games in
neighboring Thailand in January 2013. The invitation was a powerful
symbolic gesture toward a Myanmar military that has yet to acknowledge
its well-documented human rights abuses.
The mine crackdown now has some wondering
if the U.S. rapprochement is too hasty. In a paper published December
12, the Heritage Foundation, a conservative Washington think tank, said
the Obama Administration's policy "lacks sufficient protections against
Burmese backsliding on reforms." It urged Congress to re-impose major
U.S. sanctions if Myanmar's progress was insufficient.
DENTED OPTIMISM
Myanmar's reforms have not stalled. But
they have entered a complex and less headline-grabbing phase that could
test the nerve of Thein Sein's reformers and the patience of his
long-suffering people.
This year the government has held a free
and fair by-election, all but scrapped media censorship, reformed
Myanmar's antiquated currency, and set in motion a crowded legislative
agenda to tackle rural poverty and encourage foreign investment.
But there have been setbacks. A year that
began with the release of hundreds of political prisoners ended with
activists alleging that the government is arresting dissidents almost as
fast as it is freeing them. In the days after their crackdown at the
mine, police detained at least eight activists in Yangon.
The government still has the trust of the
people, said Aung Min, minister of the president's office and one of
Thein Sein's top reformers. "It was not a crackdown. It was crowd
control," he said, adding that the government has already apologized for
the injuries.
The year also started with a slew of
ceasefires with ethnic insurgent armies. Several are now looking shaky,
and a 20-month conflict in Kachin State between government troops and
Kachin rebels is escalating.
And a relationship once considered
essential to the reform process is showing signs of strain. Suu Kyi
speaks privately with increasing bitterness of Thein Sein, say diplomats
and other visitors to her semi-fortified lakeside home in Yangon. Her
spokesman, Ohn Kyaing, denied there is any rift.
The mine protest also capped a year in
which Myanmar's monks returned as a major political force - for good and
for bad. Monks have been famed for years for their pro-democracy
stance. This year, some of them were shown to have an anti-Muslim stance
as well.
Monks have held street rallies to oppose
the mostly stateless Rohingya Muslims of Rakhine State in western
Myanmar. There, two eruptions of sectarian violence this year with
Rakhine Buddhists left hundreds dead and tens of thousands homeless.
In an October outbreak, monks openly
incited Rakhine mobs to attack Muslims. The ethnic cleansing that
followed has left Muslims elsewhere in Myanmar fearing for their own
safety.
The setbacks should serve as a reality
check for foreign investors eyeing business opportunities in one of
Asia's last frontier economies, some Myanmar watchers say. The reform
process will be lengthy and "very hostage to events," said Sean Turnell,
an expert on the Myanmar economy at Macquarie University in Australia.
"The mine illustrates the sort of event that could send things off the
rails."
"THEY ARE NOT OUR ENEMIES"
You could fit Yankee Stadium into the Myanmar Wanbao copper mine. Twice.
Giant trucks look like toys as they ascend
on switchback curves from its depths. The hole is surrounded by
towering heaps of copper ore which, with every new truckload, inch their
way towards surrounding villages.
The company's compound in Letpadaung is a
neat grid of bungalows surrounded by a fence topped with barbed wire and
security cameras. Outside the gate is a singed and threadbare lawn
where the main protest camp once stood. Inside, riot police march back
and forth, shouting and banging riot shields with their truncheons.
"Regular training," said Police Lieutenant
Colonel Thura Thwin Ko Ko, 49, one of commanders on duty the night of
the crackdown. He is a former army major decorated for bravery during
bloody jungle campaigns against rebels in Karen State. ("Thura" is a
military honorific meaning "brave.")
Thwin Ko Ko said police had been patient
with the demonstrators, who had no legal permission to protest. "They
are not our enemies," he said. "They are our brothers and sisters. They
are not educated and don't understand the law."
But he said this patience wore thin as
people from other areas joined the protest, along with "outside groups"
whom Thwin Ko Ko didn't identify. "Our country cannot stand it forever,"
he said. "So we had to take action."
On the evening before the crackdown, "we
asked them to go back to their homes and monasteries at least 15 times,"
he said. "Nobody wanted to make violent action." More warnings were
made at 3 a.m. on November 29, before police used water cannon and threw
tear-gas canisters.
The order to clear the protest sites, he
said, came from "our superiors" in the Ministry of Home Affairs, which
oversees the police, and from the office of the prime minister of
Sagaing state, of which Monywa is the capital.
Police were told not to fire rubber
bullets or even to use truncheons, said Thwin Ko Ko. "We only used water
cannon and tear gas." This action was "in accordance with the law." The
president's office issued a statement on the day of the crackdown which
used similar language.
BURN INJURIES
The burn injuries of dozens of monks still recuperating at Mandalay General Hospital tell a different story.
According to Western diplomats in Yangon,
two types of munitions were found at the protest site. One was a
canister bearing the letters "CS" - an abbreviation for the active
chemical in tear-gas. The other was a smaller, bullet-like munition with
no markings.
The munitions were standard-issue police
weapons for dispersing crowds, said Twin Ko Ko. If the police had known
what kind of impact the munitions would have, they would never have
deployed them, he said. "We were really surprised what kind of smoke
bomb it is."
Why did tear-gas canisters explode like
incendiary grenades? That's one mystery opposition leader Aung San Suu
Kyi's commission investigating the incident hopes to solve by the end of
December. "When we can find enough evidence, then we will announce who
is guilty and why," she said at a December 6 news conference.
At her request, four children with mental
disabilities aged from one to 16 years were sent to Yangon Children's
Hospital, after locals claimed they had been poisoned by emissions from a
sulphuric acid factory in the area that's owned by UMEHL.
Doctors found "no symptoms of exposing to
acid," said a government news release printed on the front page of the
state-run New Light of Myanmar on December 14.
BURMESE BIN LADEN
The state-run media also has been running
photos of Thein Sein making offerings at Buddhist temples. With the
monk-led Saffron Revolution of 2007 so recent a memory, the president
seems at pains to persuade his people that the mine crackdown was an
aberration.
The monkhood has about 400,000 members and
remains a powerful force in Myanmar. CDs with sermons by celebrated
monks take pride of place on street stalls that also sell pirated
Hollywood movies.
A key monk in the mine protest was Wirathu
(his holy name), a short, shaven-headed abbot at New Massoyein in
Mandalay, a vast monastic complex housing almost 3,000 monks.
Wirathu, 44, lives in a monastery whose
walls are decorated with larger-than-life photos of himself. In an
interview, he said he dispatched 170 monks to Monywa - not to
demonstrate, he stressed, but to safeguard the protesters. The police
crackdown enraged him, he said.
"Honestly, I felt I wanted to fight weapons with weapons," he said.
Wirathu is also one of the most prominent
articulators of Burmese resentment against the country's Muslims, whom
he refers to by the pejorative "kalar."
He blames Muslim Rohingyas for recent
sectarian violence in Rakhine State, despite evidence, first documented
by Reuters, of ethnic cleansing by Buddhist Rakhines in October. He
alleged that Muslims deliberately razed their own houses to win a place
at refugee camps run by aid agencies. Wirathu said his militancy is
vital to counter aggressive expansion by Muslims, who he says marry and
forcibly convert Buddhist women.
"I am a Burmese bin Laden," he grinned.
Valerie Amos, the United Nations
humanitarian chief, visited the refugee camps in December and described
conditions as among the worst she had ever seen. Thousands of Rohingya
men, women and children are cramming onto ramshackle fishing boats and
setting sail for other Southeast Asian countries.
Former political prisoner and monk Gambira
said monks are less anti-Muslim than Wirathu's views suggest. In a
nation where a third of all people live below the poverty line, the
monkhood will inevitably reflect the beliefs of an ill-educated
populace, he said. Gambira also noted that Buddhist monks in Yangon
recently held an interfaith meeting with Muslim, Christian and Hindu
religious figures.
ANTI-CHINESE SENTIMENT
The copper mine is not the first Chinese
project to become the target of popular anger. Thein Sein stunned
Beijing after suspending the $3.6 billion Chinese-built Myitsone dam in
Sep. 2011 after fierce public opposition to its construction.
In the aftermath of the mine crackdown,
the fear now is that simmering resentment could spark protests over
Myanmar's largest project, also Chinese-built: a twin oil and gas
pipeline being built across the country into China's energy-hungry
Yunnan province.
In most of Myanmar, Chinese populations
are long-established and well-integrated. Not so in Mandalay and the
north, where the copper mine lies. Here, hundreds of thousands of
Chinese migrants have settled in the past 20 years, often with
citizenship papers obtained illegally.
Their access to credit and business
networks in China gives them an advantage over existing native-run
businesses, which has raised tensions with locals, reported the
Brussels-based think tank Crisis Group in November. "There is clearly a
risk of intercommunal violence, something that the Chinese government
has long been concerned about," it said.
Suu Kyi's investigation of the mine
crackdown will likely be highly critical of the Myanmar police. But it's
unclear how far she will risk antagonizing either of the mine partners,
Myanmar Wanbao (meaning China) or the military-run UMEHL. Both Beijing
and the military are powerful supporters of Thein Sein.
"There will never be an answer with which
everyone will be satisfied," she said at a December 6 press conference
in Yangon. "But our commission's only mission is to reveal the truth."
POLITICAL PRISONERS
Still, Suu Kyi feels that Thein Sein
reneged on promises to release all political prisoners, said activists
who have spoken with her recently. Fifty-one dissidents were released on
November 19, just as Obama arrived on the first visit to Myanmar by a
serving U.S. president. But at least 200 remain behind bars, according
to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a Burmese
human-rights group.
Obama spoke at Yangon University of "a
future where a single prisoner of conscience is one too many." Listening
from the front row was the former monk Gambira, a lantern-jawed
33-year-old with thick-rimmed glasses.
He had been sentenced to 68 years in
prison for his leading role in the 2007 Saffron Revolution protests by
monks. He was freed in January 2012 with many other prominent political
prisoners. He says he suffers from poor mental health due to torture and
abuse while in custody.
On December 1, less than two weeks after
Obama's speech, Gambira was arrested for an act of civil disobedience.
Soon after his January release, Gambira broke the padlocks on
monasteries shut down by the former junta, so that monks could occupy
them again.
He was charged with trespassing and vandalism, then released on bail after spending 10 days in the notorious Insein Jail.
Gambira believes he was arrested to
prevent him from organizing anti-mine protests. He admits to meeting
with "angry" Mandalay monks just after the crackdown. "The monks won't
budge until the whole (mining) project is cancelled," he said.
The opponents of the copper mine seem
unfazed by the government's tactics. As of two weeks ago, half a dozen
monks and about 60 lay people, mostly from surrounding villages, had set
up a new protest encampment east of the mine's Letpadaung expansion.
"Every crackdown creates a new generation of activists," Gambira said.
(Reporting by Andrew Marshall; Editing by Michael Williams and Bill Tarrant)
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