The Sun (Malaysia)

Bridge name makes troubled waters for Suu Kyi

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YANGON: Thousands of people protested in eastern Myanmar yesterday against plans to name a bridge after Aung San Suu Kyi’s father, the latest flashpoint between her administra­tion and the country’s restless ethnic minorities.

The issue highlights some of the deep distrust among Myanmar’s patchwork of minorities towards the Bamar ethnic majority from which Suu Kyi and most of the political establishm­ent hail.

Thousands hit the streets of eastern Mon State yesterday, the biggest rally yet against plans to rename the local Thanlwin bridge spanning the wide Salween River.

Lawmakers from Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party have proposed calling it the Bogyoke Aung San bridge.

Aung San was Suu Kyi’s father, seen as the founder of postcoloni­al Myanmar who was assassinat­ed before the country won its independen­ce from Britain.

Many of those protesting said locals felt their wishes to keep the old name were being ignored.

“The NLD is powerful in the parliament and nowadays they can do whatever proposal as they like,” demonstrat­or Lin Htet, 34, said.

“But for us and for all ethnic people, we value many things in our culture and they should listen what the local ethnics want.”

Saw Kyaw Moe, who hails from the nearby Karen ethnic group, was part of a contingent of protesters who joined in support of the Mon.

He said many minorities felt Suu Kyi’s government was deaf to their wishes.

“The MPs should listen to the wishes of the people who appointed them as MPs but now they don’t listen to the voices of the people,” he said.

The fight over the bridge’s name is seen as more than just a symbolic designatio­n, but part of a larger fight for ethnic self-determinat­ion.

Suu Kyi’s father is regarded as a national hero, especially among the Bamar majority.

But many ethnic groups see Aung San as a more controvers­ial figure who failed to deliver on promises of greater autonomy and federalism for them.

For decades Myanmar’s border regions have been plagued by insurgenci­es and civil wars against the Bamar-dominated military which is widely loathed by ethnic minorities. – AFP

 ??  ?? Monks and ethnic Mon shout slogans during a rally in Mawlamyine in Myanmar's Mon State yesterday.
Monks and ethnic Mon shout slogans during a rally in Mawlamyine in Myanmar's Mon State yesterday.
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