Arab News

Myanmar and the farce of democracy

- DR. AZEEM IBRAHIM Dr. Azeem Ibrahim is a director at the Center for Global Policy in Washington, DC. Twitter: @AzeemIbrah­im www.arabnews.com/opinion

Myanmar is preparing to go to the polls for the third time since it implemente­d its 2008 constituti­on. That new constituti­on was meant to ensure a transition toward a full democracy in the country, but instead Myanmar looks more and more like a “managed democracy” in the style of Russia or Turkey. The main culprit is the former pro- democracy movement, the National League for Democracy ( NLD), led by Aung San Suu Kyi.

To have a democracy means that every individual should be able to express themselves politicall­y, that the law and the political culture allows for, and indeed fosters, a plurality of opinions and points of view, that political parties do not have guaranteed monopolies over government institutio­ns, and that party elites can be replaced by their members. Little of this is in evidence in Myanmar at the moment.

Some of this is not new. The 2008 constituti­on guaranteed a portion of parliament­ary seats to military representa­tives, which thus function as a continuati­on of the previous military junta. Since the NLD victory in the general election in late 2015, that part has become functional­ly irrelevant as the NLD enjoys a large and unassailab­le majority in parliament.

The much more consequent­ial part is the fact that all aspects of government to do with defense, internal security, and foreign affairs remain squarely and explicitly in the hands of the military.

For this reason, the military had the constituti­onal authority to carry out its “clearance operations” against the Rohingya in the 2016-17 period, and is also why it can continue to wage war on a number of other border ethnic groups. What is new is that the NLD civilian government has, for the past four-and-ahalf years, explicitly abandoned democratic notions such as that all individual­s should have access to political representa­tion. It has endorsed ethnic cleansing and genocide against the Rohingya, and has, within its authority, systematic­ally eliminated the franchise for all but a handful of Rohingya — not a case of people choosing their politician­s, but rather a case of politician­s choosing even who

“the people” are.

Another pillar of the new political establishm­ent in Myanmar is government control of the media. This is much more recognizab­le in places such as Russia or Hungary but even more explicit.

The civilian government of the NLD inherited the media control structures of the military juntas. Rather than let such an asset go to waste, the NLD has decided to use it instead to shore up its own power base, and marginaliz­e and delegitimi­ze any other democratic party or, indeed, any other movement in the country. So the Union Solidarity and Developmen­t Party (USDP), which represents the interests of the military, is an acceptable party and the NLD is the only other acceptable party, and the sole claimant to the “democracy” label.

In this manner, the military and the NLD have carved between themselves a duopoly into which they do not tolerate any outside encroachme­nt.

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