Vancouver Sun

Stifling critics with a midnight visit

Military’s late-night ‘inspection­s’ shine light on the power junta continues to wield

- TODD PITMAN AND ESTHER HTUSAN

YANGON, Myanmar — The knock at the door of her family’s home came without warning in the dead of night, just as it always did during Myanmar’s long era of military rule.

Outside, a group of government officials announced they had come to verify who was living there, citing a law that empowers the state to enter private homes any time they wish. When the woman opened the door, they hauled her son away.

Such intrusions, known here as “midnight inspection­s,” have declined dramatical­ly since Myanmar’s army ceded some power in 2011 and opened the country as never before. But the law that facilitate­s them is still on the books and being employed to suppress dissent. It’s just one facet of the massive power the military continues to wield here despite the country’s much-touted transition from junta rule.

“They knocked on the door saying they needed to conduct a midnight inspection, but when we opened it, they took my son,” the distraught mother said of the 1 a.m. visit last week. The woman spoke on condition of anonymity because she feared both for her safety and that of her son.

Several of those detained recently had been deemed sympatheti­c to students whose protests against a new education law were brutally crushed by police this month. The night the woman’s son was taken into custody, The Associated Press documented three other inspection­s that ended with student activists being detained.

The legislatio­n allowing “midnight inspection­s,” known as the “Ward or Village Tract Administra­tion Law,” has been on Myanmar’s books for nearly a century, since British colonial times. It was adopted by successive military juntas, which used it to monitor political opponents and restrict their movements, helping smother pro-democracy uprisings in 1988 and 2007.

The law requires families to obtain permission from the state to host guests in their own homes, in some cases every three days, regardless of how long the visitors are staying. People who rent their homes are also considered “guests,” as are squatters who have built dwellings on land they don’t own.

In the impoverish­ed Yangon neighbourh­ood of Dala, residents say administra­tors drive around on rickshaws equipped with speakers reminding people to register guests or “face charges according to the law.” Violations are punishable by seven-day jail terms and fines of about $50.

The law gives administra­tors the right to examine “the places needed” to ensure compliance, paving the way for “midnight inspection­s.”

This grants local officials “almost boundless authority” over their subjects, according to the Bangkok-based advocacy group Fortify Rights, which is releasing a report called Midnight Intrusions Thursday urging the government to dismantle the law.

The group says the law “represents a systematic and nationwide breach of privacy” that has been used to obstruct public gatherings and stymie political activists, some of whom have sometimes been refused permission to host guests for training workshops.

“It’s a remnant of authoritar­ian rule that’s still being used to control the population,” Fortify’s executive director, Matthew Smith, told The Associated Press. He said he fears that as Myanmar moves toward elections expected later this year, “we’re going to see this implemente­d more and more.”

Although the local administra­tors who enforce the law are elected, they report to and must be approved by the Home Affairs Ministry, a portfolio overseen by the army. The home affairs minister, Lt. Gen. Ko Ko, was accused in a Harvard study last year of bearing responsibi­lity for the execution, torture and enslavemen­t of civilians during his time as a military commander.

The government says the law is aimed at ensuring peace and security. Parliament member Thein Nyunt said the law is essential in a country still racked by rebel fighting and ethnic tensions.

“It’s too early to speak of abolishing it. You can’t look at it solely from a human rights perspectiv­e. We need stability first,” he said.

But he added: “We need to ensure the law is used to protect, rather than oppress.”

Changing the law is not a priority for opposition parties, which are more focused on amending the nation’s charter, in part to ease the military’s hold on power. At present, soldiers are guaranteed 25 per cent of parliament seats and the army commanders hold the “right to take over and exercise state sovereign power” if an emergency is deemed to threaten the union.

Smith also said many people are so habituated to submitting to the midnight inspection­s law that they don’t even consider it intrusive, or a violation of human rights.

 ?? GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Administra­tive officers in Dala, a suburb of Yangon. In Myanmar, a nearly century-old law empowers the state to decide what guests, if any, a family may have in their own home, illustrati­ng just how much power the military retains despite the country’s...
GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Administra­tive officers in Dala, a suburb of Yangon. In Myanmar, a nearly century-old law empowers the state to decide what guests, if any, a family may have in their own home, illustrati­ng just how much power the military retains despite the country’s...

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