Arab News

Myanmar’s brutal civil war must not be ignored

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The viciousnes­s of the civil war in Myanmar is strong enough to take the breath away — if only the world would pay attention. Recent reporting from The Times describes a hellish conflict, in which the soldiers of the military government patrol rebelling areas of the country from helicopter­s, shooting down at helpless children.

This is part of the landscape of a conflict that has become savage and cruel, largely out of sight of the internatio­nal community.

Since the coup against the mixed-democratic and army government in 2021, Myanmar’s military has been back in control. It has fought a multifacet­ed civil war ever since: Against ethnic groups on which it has perpetrate­d genocide in the past, along with remnants of the old democratic opposition, which has reorganize­d on armed lines, behind a national unity government and its armed forces, the People’s Defense Force. Internatio­nal media is severely restricted within Myanmar. For such a large country, the outside world is badly connected to what happens there and to its people. Major reporting, in the line of The Times investigat­ion, is significan­t news.

The newspaper describes a strategy in which the military seeks to use its technologi­cal advantages — including Russian-produced aircraft — to overwhelm both guerrilla fighters and the civilian population­s they live among. This is a conscious strategy that is notably cruel. “The generals increasing­ly favor attacks from above, predominan­tly with weaponry bought from Russia, the regime’s most enthusiast­ic backer. Nearly 140 such attacks have been reported and the number of strikes has increased steadily since September, passing more than one a day last month,” The Times noted, quoting a report from Myanmar Witness, an advocacy group.

The asymmetric manner of this war is no problem for the junta, given that many of the civilians are not from the Burman ethnic majority and are instead Kachin and from other ethnic groups, against which the military has pursued decades-long campaigns of marginaliz­ation and violence.

The conduct of this war is not something widely discussed internatio­nally. Many within Asia consider the war a question for Myanmar, to be worked out by the factions there, and not worth major campaignin­g or even paying attention to.

But the conduct of this war has effects even beyond the suffering it creates. Violent civil conflicts tend to spill over into other areas. They proliferat­e weapons and military training. If armed groups fighting in Myanmar are forced from the country, they will carry on their struggles from elsewhere.

And if Myanmar’s ethnic minorities believe they are being subjected to genocide within Myanmar, they will not stop fighting the regime there, no matter how limited their supplies of arms or internatio­nal support.

One option — not a solution, but a necessary preconditi­on for a solution — is open to the internatio­nal community: The continued investigat­ion of the junta’s past conduct, notably regarding the Rohingya minority, which has been subjected to genocide for the past decade.

The treatment of the Rohingya in many ways preceded the civil conflict we now see. Investigat­ing it will teach the world lessons, and the search for justice there will lead to the bringing to justice of military figures who have committed or will commit other crimes. If nothing else, the world must learn to pay attention to this most violent of civil conflicts. Or else crimes will be committed in silence and nothing will be done to bring the criminals to a just end.

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