April 27, 2013
The Nation/Asia News Network
These past few weeks have been
somewhat hectic for the government of Myanmar. First, there was the
prestigious peace award given to President Thein Sein by the
International Crises Group, recognizing his work toward a peace that can
be achieved.
Then came the lifting of all sanctions by the European Union, except
for its arms embargo. Afterward the government released 100 prisoners,
56 of whom were said to be political internees. More than 800 political
prisoners have been freed in amnesties between May 2011 and last
November.
But later the mood among the country's political leaders wasn't so festive, nor among Western countries.
A 153-page report from the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW)
entitled “All You Can Do is Pray: Crimes against Humanity in the Ethnic
Cleansing of Rohingya Muslims in Burma's Arakan State” quickly
re-established a sense of reality about Myanmar.
HRW accuses the
Myanmar government and other local authorities of taking part in the
displacement of more than 125,000 minority Rohingya and other Muslims.
“Burmese officials, community leaders, and Buddhist monks organised and
encouraged ethnic Arakanese, backed by state security forces, to
conduct coordinated attacks on Muslim neighborhoods and villages in
October 2012 to terrorize and forcibly relocate the population. The tens
of thousands of displaced have been denied access to humanitarian aid
and been unable to return home,” the report said.
Critics also
slammed the Myanmar government for not doing enough in the recent
anti-Muslim disturbances in other parts of the country.
As expected, Myanmar dismissed the report and other allegations.
It wasn't that long ago that many in the international community were
using terms such as “war crimes,” “crimes against humanity” and “ethnic
cleansing” to describe the atrocities committed by the then-military
government of Myanmar.
There were reports accusing government
soldiers of using rape as a military weapon to demoralize ethnic people
such as the Shan and Karen. Countries including the U.S. threw their
weight behind some of these reports. Myanmar, in short, was the big bad
wolf, a pariah among nations.
And then came the political reform,
and with it a breath of fresh air. The international community rushed
in along with foreign investors looking to establish a presence in this
resource-rich country sandwiched between China and India.
From
the geo-political point of view, one can't deny the strategic appeal of
Myanmar. But the world hasn't fully decided whether it's willing to let
bygones be bygones. Have we forgotten about the alleged atrocities from
the reams of reports over the past decades?
Certainly the rape
victims and the displaced villagers — thousands of whom are stranded in
makeshift camps on the Thai side of the border — have not forgotten.
What is just as appalling is the fact that the country's leaders
continue to cynically deny that their troops committed any of these
atrocities.
Perhaps it is too early to abandon the
carrot-and-stick approach when it comes to Myanmar. Western countries
that claim to be champions of human rights and democracy seem all too
eager to extend all sorts of incentives to the government.
While
we can't deny that much progress has been made over the last couple of
years in terms of political and economic reform, the world must think
carefully about completely closing the book on alleged atrocities over
the past five decades.
If so, can we also apply this logic and
treatment to the drug lords, some of whom, like the Wa leaders, have
been indicted in Thai and U.S. courts for heroin trafficking?
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