Bangkok Post

Peace still eludes Suu Kyi in Myanmar

- SIMON LEWIS ANTONI SLODKOWSKI

At the beginning of this year, Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi sat down with one of her advisers to go through priorities for the coming months. She began with an apology for the slow pace of economic reform.

“You must be very disappoint­ed,” she said. “You know, my plan had been that we would get the peace process done and then I would be able to bring my attention — personally — to the economy.”

The remark, recounted to Reuters by the adviser speaking on condition of anonymity, offers a rare insight into Ms Suu Kyi’s thinking on what some critics say are the defining issues of her first year in power: continued fighting with ethnic armed groups in the north, sluggish progress on retooling an economy stunted by decades of military rule, and a reluctance to delegate power to others.

Ms Suu Kyi — who had been globally celebrated as a heroine of democracy — took over last April, forming Myanmar’s first civilian government in half a century amid soaring hopes among both her backers in Western government­s and ordinary voters at home.

A year on things look very different. Last week, the United Nations Human Rights Council moved to probe allegation­s of crimes against humanity committed against Rohingya Muslims by Myanmar soldiers on the watch of the Nobel Peace Prize winner.

Ms Suu Kyi’s support for the security operation in northweste­rn Rakhine State, during which about 75,000 members of the stateless Rohingya minority have fled to Bangladesh, has strained relations with the West. UN officials say more than 1,000 people may have died.

Meanwhile, the government’s domestic performanc­e has struggled to match the optimism that swept her National League for Democracy (NLD) to a landslide election win.

“Many voters feel frustrated,” said NLD lawmaker Myo Zaw Aung, citing pervasive low-level corruption as one source of disaffecti­on among a population who also face ramshackle public services and wages among the lowest in Southeast Asia.

“People had sky-high expectatio­ns for NLD, but actually the change can’t be that dramatic — they are not seeing an obvious change at the grassroots level.”

Ms Suu Kyi’s spokesman, Zaw Htay, did not respond to Reuters’ questions about the government’s first year in office. Requests for an interview with Ms Suu Kyi have gone unanswered or have been rejected over the past year. She has given only two interviews, both to broadcaste­rs overseas, in that time.

‘FIGHTING NEVER GOES AWAY’

When she came to power, Ms Suu Kyi said her number one priority was ending the myriad ethnic conflicts involving more than 20 rebel groups that have kept Myanmar in a state of near-perpetual civil war since independen­ce in 1948.

That goal remains as elusive as ever, and some critics say that, mired in complex, on-off peace talks, Ms Suu Kyi has taken her eye off the economy.

Growth, albeit still relatively strong, has slowed since she took power, while foreign direct investment has fallen sharply.

“She had the whole world and everyone at home on her side. And look what happened: she has alienated the ethnics, she has lost the battle over Rakhine ... and has not delivered on the economy,” said a recent former senior Western diplomat to the country.

Ms Suu Kyi’s defenders say she is hamstrung by a constituti­on written by the military that — along with disqualify­ing her from the presidency — left the army in control of key security ministries and much of the apparatus of the state.

Some say they believe she has supported the military because her ultimate goal is to coax the generals into accepting a rewriting of the constituti­on — over which they wield a veto thanks to the bloc of seats reserved for the army in parliament.

“It might be part of her strategy to change the military’s mindset and to lead them into the democratic change,” said Myat Thu, chair of the Yangon School of Political Science. “But after one year, many people want to see concrete results.”

When she took charge of the peace process Ms Suu Kyi dismantled a peace centre — set up by the previous semi-civilian government — that was leading talks with ethnic armed groups.

Some observers say that was a mistake, because experience­d negotiator­s who had built up trust with ethnic minority representa­tives were removed.

“Ethnic leaders describe their meetings with her as like a headmistre­ss and her students,” said one former negotiator, who was briefed on the talks and whose account was broadly backed up by other observers. “She’s always up high, and treats them like they are below her.”

Several conflicts have reignited since Ms Suu Kyi took power, displacing an estimated 160,000 more people, according to UN data.

Most recently, fighting with Kokang rebels in the hills along the Chinese border sent about 20,000 refugees fleeing to China’s Yunnan province.

“This fighting never goes away,” said one of those who fled, 75-year-old Tao Xiaoshun, still looking for her son lost amid the chaos. “The Myanmar government is too far away. They don’t take care of us.”

SPOILT CHILDREN

A criticism of the NLD in power has been the extent to which decision-making is concentrat­ed with Ms Suu Kyi, who rules through the specially created position of “State Counsellor”.

“She doesn’t have a process in place to tackle several issues at the same time,” said the former Western diplomat. “She gets easily distracted and she micro-manages. There’s no one driving the smart thinking, no one manages the in-tray.”

There are few signs of a new generation of leaders emerging from within the NLD, which has always been run by a narrow group close to the charismati­c Ms Suu Kyi. Most are fellow former political prisoners, shut out from government for decades and with little executive or lawmaking experience.

Some advisers said the problem was not with Ms Suu Kyi but with senior civil servants in the capital Nay Pyi Taw who she mostly retained, despite many being former army officers or having close military ties.

“In every sector the bureaucrat­s are still using the same old tactics ... denying every accusation, stonewalli­ng everything,” said Han Tha Myint, one of NLD’s leaders, adding that the administra­tion had been trying to foster a more open attitude.

Ms Suu Kyi wanted to run the government “like a mother”, he said, bringing everyone on board in the spirit of national reconcilia­tion and treating officials “like her children”, but that the loyalties of some remained with the country’s former military rulers.

“This style is very dangerous. The children are already spoilt and need more strict measures,” said Han Tha Myint. “I think mainly it’s a cultural problem, but there are elements of sabotage.”

‘MOMENT, NOT MOMENTUM’

Ms Suu Kyi made a brief push in September, courting investors during a visit to the United States where she oversaw the cancellati­on of Washington’s economic sanctions on the country, while moving to finalise a long-awaited investment law.

But rather than generating momentum, another adviser to the government said, the push turned out to merely be a “moment”.

Ms Suu Kyi took months to install members to a panel that approves investment­s. A new Companies Act, to replace an early 20th century law and ease rules on foreign ownership, has floundered in the parliament.

This has meant approvals for projects from overseas in the 11 months to February stood at just US$6 billion, compared with almost $9.5 billion in the full fiscal year to March 2016, government data show.

The World Bank says GDP growth will fall to 6.5% in the current fiscal year from 7.3% a year earlier and 8% in 2014-15.

Washington DC-based Anthony Nelson, a director at consultanc­y Albright Stonebridg­e Group, says when it comes to rural developmen­t and infrastruc­ture, “it’s important for [the government] to spell that out and lay out what they are going to prioritise”.

Ms Suu Kyi’s supporters point to positives — state banks are being restructur­ed, loss-making enterprise­s shuttered, and the first NLD budget is fiscally stable.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman poses next to a graffiti depiction of Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi outside the NLD headquarte­rs in Yangon.
AFP A woman poses next to a graffiti depiction of Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi outside the NLD headquarte­rs in Yangon.

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