The Phnom Penh Post

For Myanmar’s military, ethnic bloodletti­ng key to power, riches

- Richard C Paddock

FOR Myanmar’s army, the campaign of atrocity it has waged to drive hundreds of thousands of ethnic Rohingya Muslims out of the country is no innovation. The force was born in blood 76 years ago and has been shedding it ever since.

Its founders, known as the Thirty Comrades, establishe­d the army in 1941 with a ghoulish ceremony in Bangkok, where they drew each other’s blood with a single syringe, mixed it in a silver bowl and drank it to seal their vow of loyalty.

The army they formed led the nation to independen­ce in 1948. But except for a brief, initial period of peace, it has spent the past seven decades warring with its own people.

The army, known as the Tatmadaw, seized power from the civilian government in Burma, as the country is also known, in 1962. It killed thousands of protesters to keep power in 1988 and suppressed another popular uprising, the Saffron Revolution, in 2007.

In constant fighting with ethnic minorities, the Tatmadaw has displaced millions of people while taking billions of dollars in profit from jade mines, teak forests and other natural resources. Its strategy has been to fight ethnic rebels to a standstill, manage the conflicts through ceasefires and enrich its officers.

“There has never been any sense of needing to win hearts and minds,” said Zachary Abuza, a professor at the National War College in Washington. “The Tatmadaw’s doctrine is based on total submission by the population through fear. And to that end, there is little they will not do.”

Though it holds itself up as the protector of Myanmar’s people, the military has a long history of murdering civilians, torturing and executing prisoners, committing rape, conscripti­ng child soldiers, impressing convicts as porters and making civilians walk ahead of its troops to trip land mines.

After decades of running an isolated pariah state, the military began loosening its grip in 2010, allowing elections and gradually giving civilian leaders authority over public services, foreign affairs and economic policy. It also permitted public access to the internet and the sale of cellphones.

The moves, aimed at reviving a struggling economy, gave Myanmar a veneer of democracy and prompted the United States and the European Union to lift economic sanctions.

But under the Constituti­on it imposed in 2008, the Tatmadaw is not subject to civilian authority and retains control over other key institutio­ns, including the police and border guards, and it unilateral­ly appoints a quarter of the parliament. And the atrocities against minorities continue.

“The Tatmadaw is an unreconstr­ucted, unrepentan­t institutio­n that is abusive to its core,” said David Mathieson, an independen­t analyst in Yangon.

The violent expulsion of the Rohingya from Rakhine has been condemned as ethnic cleansing by the United States and the United Nations. Human rights advocates have called for the Internatio­nal Criminal Court at The Hague to investigat­e the Tatmadaw for crimes against humanity.

The military and government have blocked independen­t investigat­ions and kept observers from visiting the area, even as the Tatmadaw’s commander-in-chief, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, denied the army committed atrocities against the Rohingya.

But there are signs the military is feeling at least some pressure.

Min Aung Hlaing acknowledg­ed this month that four members of the security forces shot 10 Rohingya men whose bodies were found in a mass grave. Two officials who oversaw the security forces in Rakhine, Major General Maung Maung Soe, head of the Tatmadaw’s western command, and Brigadier General Thura San Lwin, the border guard commander there, were removed from their positions without explanatio­n.

Washington imposed sanctions on Maung Maung Soe in December, freezing any assets he might have in the United States. It is unclear whether the penalties will affect him, and so far, he is the only Myanmar official the United States has sanctioned over the Rohingya expulsion.

The Tatmadaw is proud of its history, which it glorifies with a colossal museum near Naypyidaw, the capital.

One exhibit recreates the setting of the blood oath ceremony and displays what are said to be the bowl and syringe used by the Thirty Comrades.

The comrades named their militia the Burma Independen­ce Army and gave command to their leader, Aung San, who is regarded as the father of the country (and was the father of Myanmar’s current civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi).

For nearly half a century, the military government kept the country isolated. It imprisoned political opponents for years, intermitte­ntly closed universiti­es and denied the population access to the internet. Suu Kyi, who led the opposition and received the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize, spent 15 years under house arrest.

By 2010, they had little choice but to open the country to the outside world, seek foreign investment and begin relinquish­ing control over the economy. But the Constituti­on they imposed includes safeguards for the military.

For one, it grants immunity to the Tatmadaw for crimes committed before the government handover in 2011. The military also retains sole authority to investigat­e itself, and military courts have jurisdicti­on over its personnel.

“Military impunity severely undermines the rule of law in Myanmar,” said Sean Bain, a legal adviser with the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists in Yangon.

In its latest campaign against the Rohingya Muslims in northern Rakhine state, which has no notable resources to extract, there still has been a tangible gain for the military: a nationalis­t victory for a force that casts itself as the champion of the country’s ethnic Bamar Buddhist majority.

The Tatmadaw’s ranks are dominated by the same Bamar ethnic group that makes up about two-thirds of Myanmar’s population, and the force has kept Bamar nationalis­m as its central value.

The army’s constant warfare with ethnic minorities has also given it a business advantage. The mountainou­s periphery of the country, home to most of the non-Bamar people, is where many valuable resources are found, including jade, gems and timber.

Soon after independen­ce, the military began fighting other ethnic groups that sought autonomy, pushing them further into the periphery. Over the years, the Tatmadaw has battled dozens of rebel armies, often several at a time, across an ever-changing landscape of alliances, military-sponsored militias and ceasefires.

It uses a brutal anti-insurgency strategy called the “Four Cuts”, suppressin­g entire civilian population­s to deny rebels support. The torching of villages, rape and mass killing that have been seen in the Rohingya campaign were central tactics in other fights.

Since the quasi-civilian government took office in 2011, rebel groups had been reporting about 10 armed clashes with the Tatmadaw a month. But despite efforts by civilian leaders to secure peace, the number of clashes rose sharply last year.

At the moment, the Tatmadaw is battling four ethnic groups. Fighting has intensifie­d in recent weeks in regions controlled by the Kachin and the Shan. On Friday, four people were reported killed when the Tatmadaw air force bombed a village in Kachin state.

The United Nations estimates that more than 340,000 people uprooted by years of conflict live in camps in Myanmar and Thailand, in addition to the 737,000 Rohingya who fled to Bangladesh over the past 15 months.

The perpetual conflict creates a state of limbo in which the Tatmadaw can operate freely. In some areas, the military has seized territory that holds vast resources. In others, where it has negotiated ceasefires, it has struck deals with local groups.

With ceasefires, as opposed to peace agreements, it can argue that a military presence is still justified, and maintain firm control.

Kevin Woods, a visiting scholar at the East-West Center in Honolulu, calls the Tatmadaw’s approach “ceasefire capitalism”.

The military owns two large, secretive conglomera­tes. A 2015 report by Global Witness, a London-based anticorrup­tion organisati­on, found that the military, its cronies and major drug lords controlled tens of billions of dollars from the jade trade in northern Kachin state. It said it could be “the biggest natural resource heist in modern history”.

Other Tatmadaw enterprise­s in warravaged regions include extracting rubies, gold, copper and timber. Ethnic groups say the military has seized land for agribusine­ss and for hydroelect­ric dams, which produce electricit­y sold to neighborin­g China.

Standoffs between the military and well-armed ethnic groups have created a lawless territory along the Chinese border that has become one of the world’s most lucrative drug-producing regions.

Billions of dollars’ worth of heroin and, increasing­ly, methamphet­amine are produced there and smuggled out via roads and ports under Myanmar’s control.

“The army doesn’t want peace,” said U Win Htein, a longtime adviser to Suu Kyi and army veteran who spent 20 years in prison for opposing the government.

He noted that in 2013, then-President Thein Sein, a former general who became the new era’s first civilian leader, directed Min Aung Hlaing to halt offensives against ethnic groups.

“Thein Sein ordered the army to stop, but they didn’t stop,” he said. “The army is independen­t and no one can influence them. They don’t listen to anybody.”

The Tatmadaw’s doctrine is based on total submission by the population through fear ... there is little they will not do

 ?? VOJA M/AFP ?? Soldiers of the Myanmar Army march in the Armed Forces Day golden jubilee parade in Rangoon on March 27, 1995.
VOJA M/AFP Soldiers of the Myanmar Army march in the Armed Forces Day golden jubilee parade in Rangoon on March 27, 1995.
 ?? DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP ?? Rohingya Muslim refugees in Jalpatoli refugee camp in the no-man’s land area between Myanmar and Bangladesh watch as Myanmar soldiers patrol on the other side of the border, near Gumdhum village in Ukhia, on September 16.
DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP Rohingya Muslim refugees in Jalpatoli refugee camp in the no-man’s land area between Myanmar and Bangladesh watch as Myanmar soldiers patrol on the other side of the border, near Gumdhum village in Ukhia, on September 16.

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