The Hamilton Spectator

Burma’s political idol has tarnished reputation

Aung San Suu Kyi not speaking up for persecuted Muslim minority in her country

- THOMAS WALKOM Thomas Walkom appears in Torstar newspapers.

Another idol bites the dust. The world had been told that Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi was a heroine of democracy and human rights. Now it turns out that her idea of human rights doesn’t include the roughly 1.1 million Rohingya Muslims living in Burma’s western state of Rakhine.

It seems she approves of Burmese military “clearance” operations that critics say amounts to ethnic cleansing.

In reprisal for insurgent attacks that killed 12 police officers, the army has reportedly set fire to Rohingya villages, causing about 125,000 Muslims to seek refuge in neighbouri­ng Bangladesh.

Suu Kyi has dismissed Rohingyan complaints as fake news.

Indeed, as the BBC has reported, some of the social media pictures purporting to describe military atrocities have been faked. But the gist of the story is correct. Members of a persecuted minority in Burma are fleeing the country in terror.

And the woman lauded around the world for her commitment to human rights has virtually nothing to say.

Around the world, there are calls to revoke the Nobel Peace Prize awarded her in 1991. In Canada, there are calls to take back the honorary Canadian citizenshi­p she was given in 2007.

How could we have been so wrong about her? The answer, it seems, is that we weren’t paying attention. Suu Kyi is by all accounts, a brave and determined person. She was under house arrest for 15 years. Her grace under pressure has earned her the nickname “the lady.”

But she is also a politician in a country where relations between nationalit­ies are fraught.

Since it became independen­t from Britain in 1948, Burma has faced numerous and long-running national rebellions, most notably from the Karens and Kachins in the east.

Yet tensions are also high on Burma’s western border where the Buddhist Arakanese majority co-exists uneasily with Muslim Rohingya.

The Rohingya remained second-class citizens. In 1982, Burma’s then military government passed a law taking away even that. The Rohingya were declared non-citizens and, unless they could prove they’d been in Burma for three generation­s, were deprived of the right to vote.

In 2012, communal violence between Buddhists and Muslims in Rakhine led the Burmese army to, in effect, occupy Rohingya villages.

None of this seemed to particular­ly bother Suu Kyi. But, to be fair, it didn’t much bother anybody else. In 2012, Western government­s were falling over one another to normalize relations with resource-rich Burma.

John Baird, then Canada’s foreign minister, trekked to Burma that year to lobby the government on behalf of Canadian firms. He also personally presented Suu Kyi with her honorary Canadian citizenshi­p.

Publicly, neither said anything about the Rohingya.

In 2015, she and her National League for Democracy won elections and were allowed by the military to form a government. Suu Kyi didn’t campaign for Rohingya rights. But at least, unlike some members of her party, she didn’t campaign against them.

Now, as de facto leader of the elected government, she uses the military’s terminolog­y. She refers to the Rohingya as Bangladesh­i foreigners; she says the army’s socalled clearance operations are designed to fight terrorism.

She ignores the criticisms of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights.

This June, she visited Ottawa and spoke to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. There is no indication that the plight of the Rohingya came up in their conversati­on.

Her reluctance to champion this particular group may stem in part from the fact that in Burma, the army still remains a powerful force. Or it may stem from the fact that Rohingya Muslims are not popular among Burmese voters, the majority of whom are Buddhist. Or it may merely reflect her view of the world.

In any case, it is an expression of who she is. She has been consistent in her inconsiste­ncy.

So it seems a bit churlish to complain now about the honors she has been awarded. Nobody asked Suu Kyi about her take on the Rohingya before she was awarded honorary Canadian citizenshi­p.

I expect that’s because no one wanted to know. Inconvenie­nt facts interfere with mythmaking.

 ?? DITA ALANGKARA, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Muslim protesters display a defaced poster of Burmese leader San Suu Kyi in Jakarta last Friday. Suu Kyi’s response to the plight of the Rohingya in Burma has disappoint­ed many.
DITA ALANGKARA, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Muslim protesters display a defaced poster of Burmese leader San Suu Kyi in Jakarta last Friday. Suu Kyi’s response to the plight of the Rohingya in Burma has disappoint­ed many.
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