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Burma: Forgotten Burma
Burma is back in the news in the wake of the
terrible cyclone. Ahead of this tragedy Rachel Aspden visited the
forgotten Burmese resistance. Here is her report.
May 1, 2008 – (New Statesman) As the sun sinks over the steep
jungle hills of the Thailand-Burma border, a saffron-robed monk
walks towards his temple's golden shrine. Across a shallow gully,
four grey- uniformed Burmese soldiers watch him through binoculars,
their rifles poised. Below them is a huddle of abandoned, burnt-out
houses.
"Six years ago, they destroyed the temple and ran the new border
straight through the middle," says the monk. "On the Thai
side we are safe for the moment. On the other . . ."
Pra Preecha is a refugee from Shan State in eastern Burma. Last
September, when his fellow monks led 50,000 street protesters against
the military government in Rangoon, the international media heralded
a "saffron revolution". It seemed that one of the world's
most brutal and insular regimes was about to crumble. But the ruling
State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) clamped down hard on
protesters and sympathisers - "scores, perhaps hundreds, of
monks were abducted, tortured and killed", says Pra Preecha
- and the moment for change passed.
Since then, for Pra Preecha and his monks, the situation has only
worsened. They have fled the world's longest-running civil war,
a 60-year conflict between the Burmese government and armed ethnic
groups led by the Shan, the Karen, and the Karennis of Kayah State,
who all live along the eastern border.
When the British left Burma in 1948, they promised its ethnic minorities
- one-third of the population - the option of independence within
ten years. But the promise was not honoured and fighting broke out
immediately. Since 1962, ethnic-minority civilians have borne the
brunt of brutal repression by successive military regimes. While
Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy are known
worldwide, this is the forgotten face of the Burmese resistance.
In a concession to international criticism of its vicious suppression
of the September protests, the SPDC has scheduled a referendum on
a new draft constitution for 10 May. But international observers
have already been banned, dissidents rounded up and imprisoned,
and a vast "Yes vote" propaganda campaign launched. Few
believe the referendum offers any real prospect of change.
I ask Pra Preecha if there will be more protests in May and he glances
towards the watching soldiers.
"Now, our people's first thought is fear," he says.
A mile from the temple, the owners of the burnt-out houses live
in the ramshackle bamboo huts of the Goong Jor refugee camp. For
civilians like these, the impact of the regime's "Four Cuts"
policy - designed to deprive rebels of access to information, supplies,
recruits and food - has been catastrophic.
"The SPDC steal crops, burn villages, enslave villagers as
army porters or roadbuilders, sow fields with landmines, rape women
and children and murder villagers and anyone connected with the
resistance," says Charm Tong, a 26-year-old Shan activist,
as she leads the way along the camp's red mud paths, past children
playing in the dirt and boys washing at a pump stencilled "Rotary
Club". Aid agencies estimate that at least half a million people
have been internally displaced in eastern Burma, and that a fifth
of them live in hiding in the malarial border jungles. The 160,000
living in Thai refugee camps are the lucky few - many, including
most Shan, are denied asylum and must either return to Burma or
fend for themselves as illegal immigrants.
Hazardous
Life in Goong Jor is hard. Prohibited from leaving the camp by the
Thai authorities, refugees are trapped in a limbo, dependent on
aid from a handful of courageous small NGOs such as the Humanitarian
Aid Relief Trust (Hart), which works for those trapped in conditions
too hazardous, remote or obscure for the large agencies. But the
conditions the refugees have fled are far worse than life in the
camp. Sitting outside her hut under a spiderweb shade of bamboo
and thatch, 40-year-old Ba Yoong remembers the warm May day, six
years ago, when SPDC soldiers came to her village. During heavy
fighting between government and rebel troops, her farmer husband,
Loong Mayta, was seized by a drunken officer who demanded money.
As Ba Yoong ran to him, holding her six-month-old baby, the officer
shot him in the chest. As Loong Mayta lay on the ground begging
the officer to spare him, he shot him in the throat, killing him
instantly. Tears spill over Ba Yoong's deeply lined face as she
tells her story. "I cannot forget," she says. "We
cannot go back, but there is no future for us here."
Refugees such as Ba Yoong are a growing embarrassment to the new
Thai government, which took power in February after 17 months of
military rule. The administration is keen to build links with a
regime that offers an alluring abundance of natural resources to
energy-hungry neighbours. In 2007, Burma provided Thailand with
$2.7bn (£1.4bn) worth of natural gas - 45 per cent of its
total exports. But Thailand is increasingly forced to compete with
China and India for access to Burma's reserves of gas, hydroelectric
power, gems, teak, heroin and methamphetamines. The Salween River,
which flows through Shan, Karenni and Karen lands, is being harnessed
in huge hydroelectricity projects such as the Law Pi Ta power station,
co-sponsored by Chinese and Thai companies.
Early this year, construction started on a 900-mile pipeline carrying
Middle Eastern and African oil from the Burmese naval port of Kyaukphyu
to Kunming in southern China. With such strategic projects under
way, the SPDC must secure complete control of the rebel areas -
and there is no one, except the impoverished, desperate local militias,
to stop them.
"We are completely disillusioned with the UN," says Saw
Ber Htoo, a stocky 39-year-old Karen activist. We are sitting in
the grubby one-room office of a Karen aid organisation in the Thai
border town of Mae Sariang, where he receives new refugees. "[International]
representatives like Ibrahim Gambari promise to help us, but when
they go back nothing happens. Not just once but again and again."
He shows me a map of eastern Burma. The border states are divided
into "white" (government-controlled), "black"
(rebel-controlled) and "brown" (disputed) areas; the black
areas are shrinking rapidly. As the rebel armies have splintered
into an impenetrable tangle of acronyms, each with its own interests,
increasing numbers have accepted ceasefire agreements with the SPDC.
The roughly 6,000-strong Karen National Liberation Army is the largest
ethnic force left, and it is chronically short of money, arms and
supplies.
"We don't have enough of anything," says Saw Ber Htoo.
"I am a relief worker, but if our army had enough equipment
I'd be a soldier. I've seen my home destroyed and so many people
killed - my brother, my uncle, my cousin. I want revenge."
Desperate Villagers
Deprived of any political recourse, the Karen and Karenni refugees,
like the Shan, channel their energies into activism and development.
Within the camps, myriad self-run organisations attempt to provide
health care, education, skills training and even youth leadership,
democracy and IT classes funded by international NGOs. The frustration
is palpable.
"We are trying to prepare our people for freedom and democracy,
but as long as the SPDC is in power there will be no change,"
says Saw Ber Htoo. Yet they cannot give up, says a tough, wiry Karenni
who goes by the alias Lot Kata - "the Vulture" - and works
in the border jungles with the relief agency Free Burma Rangers
(FBR). Four-man FBR patrols risk their lives to cross the border
and deliver food, medicine and clothing to the desperate villagers
hiding - and often starving - in the Burmese jungle.
"Every time we go, I am afraid," he says. "But even
if the SPDC come, the Rangers will stay with them. If we're going
to die, we must all die together. We have to bring them hope."
Baroness Cox, founder of Hart, agrees: "The most important
thing we can offer the refugees is the reassurance that they haven't
been forgotten - whatever happens with the UN and the international
community."
With the resistance on its last legs, the options for Burma's battered
minorities are limited. Some groups, following Aung San Suu Kyi
and the Burman opposition, are risking imprisonment and torture
to campaign for a No vote this month. Others are calling for a boycott
and further protests. But the junta will never be toppled by a peaceful
"saffron revolution", says the political commentator Thant
Myint-U. After decades of impoverishment, abuse and neglect, the
army is the country's only viable institution. Under more sanctions
and isolation, its paranoid generals, holed up in their new multibillion-dollar
jungle capital of Naypyidaw, could drag Burma into anarchy. For
the international community to help the Shan, Karennis and Karen
it must, paradoxically, start a real dialogue with their oppressors.
From:http://www.newstatesman.com/200805010026
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