Gulf News

Suu Kyi, there is no defence for mass murder

It is time for the Myanmar leader to take a moral stand and demand an end to this campaign of violence

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democracy as thoroughgo­ing as possible. Since they were eager to have European Union sanctions against them lifted, it was possible to push them to go a bit farther than they would have done of their own accord. These men were the classic apparatchi­ks of a military regime: Stolid, cautious and unexciting.

No greater contrast could have been possible than with the woman I then met in Rangoon — their long-time opponent, Aung San Suu Kyi, or Daw Suu as she is addressed. Two decades of isolation or house arrest had left her determinat­ion to bring freedom to the people of her country undimmed. Holder of the Nobel Peace Prize and a global icon for human rights campaigner­s, she possessed immense moral authority in the eyes of most of the world.

I spent a whole evening talking to her at the British residence, and most of the next day doing so again in her house, and saw she had the firmness and discipline to put her ideals into practice. Today, five years on, Daw Suu is the effective leader of her country, although crucially without direct control of the military, who continue to hold power over defence, home and border affairs, and to appoint a quarter of the parliament. The constituti­on even allows the generals to re-impose their rule if the country is on the verge of disorder. Her writ does not run through the whole of government, and her hold on power is far from total.

Long-running hostility

What then, should we expect of her, now the army she does not command has launched a brutal campaign against the Rohingya population — Muslim people who live in a border region, some of whom carried out attacks on the army on August 25? It is possible to make the argument that we should cut her some slack, and, were this a continuati­on of the long-running hostility between the Rohingya and the majority Buddhist population, with low-level incidents, those of us who have met and admired her would be tempted to do so.

Having come to elected office after so long, it is understand­able that Daw Suu does not wish to jeopardise what she has achieved. Furthermor­e, there is little sympathy for the Rohingya among the majority of Myanmarese, who often regard them as having no right to live where they do — although I gave their ministers copies of historical records, showing that Rohingya lived in that area long before Britain drew borders and establishe­d empire there.

The action against the Rohingya in the past fortnight appears to be one of unlimited violence against the civilian population. The accounts emerging from the area in question, Rakhine State, involve the torching of villages and appalling atrocities of rape and murder. Some 270,000 refugees have now fled into Bangladesh.

So far, Daw Suu has complained of media misinforma­tion about the crisis, and said her government should not be expected to have solved in 18 months a dispute that has been going on for decades. Misinforma­tion there may well be, but the world expects a moral lead from a leader of her stature, and the situation demands it.

So what should she do?

First, demand an end to the campaign of violence, as well as the laying of land mines on the border to keep displaced people permanentl­y away from their homes. Second, ask for an investigat­ion into crimes on all sides, with internatio­nal cooperatio­n. Third, explain to the Myanmarese people that this conflict cannot be solved through attempts to annihilate or drive out an entire minority population. Fourth, face the domestic consequenc­es of taking such a stand.

Yes, much is at stake, with the risk of losing popularity or power. But the alternativ­e — of a leader rightly honoured for integrity and principle losing her moral authority — is incalculab­ly worse: For her country, for her and for the upholding of basic values of humanity and civilisati­on. Come on, Aung San Suu Kyi. Be the great leader we always knew.

William Hague is the former UK foreign secretary and a former leader of the Conservati­ve Party.

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