The National - News

Suu Kyi’s contempt for her victims is clear

▶ The human rights icon has proven to be as ruthless as the generals who once jailed her

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Naypyidaw, the purpose-built city inaugurate­d as Myanmar’s capital in 2006, is six times the size of New York. People vanish in its immensity including, it would seem, Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s de facto leader. As Rakhine, a large province on the country’s west coast, became a theatre of ethnic cleansing directed at its Muslim Rohingya inhabitant­s, she was nowhere to be seen. Internatio­nal luminaries implored her to intervene to halt the violence. Dr Muhammad Yunus, Ms Suu Kyi’s fellow Nobel laureate, from Bangladesh, took to this newspaper’s opinion pages to deplore her reticence and demand corrective action. Was she listening, or had she, too, become lost in Naypyidaw’s stupefying sprawl?

On Tuesday morning, she finally addressed the mounting criticism directed at her in a speech to a gathering of diplomats and journalist­s. She reminded the world that Myanmar’s democracy is young and fragile; that her own government, elected in 2015, has been in power for less than 18 months; that she had already taken steps to settle the uncertain status of the Rohingya by inviting foreign experts, led by former United Nations chief Kofi Annan, to study the crisis and make recommenda­tions for its resolution; and that the recent violence erupted when Rohingya militants attacked police and army outposts last month.

Even the most sympatheti­c observer cannot have failed to notice that Ms Suu Kyi, for the all the apparent constraint­s on her, shares the most virulent prejudices against the Rohingya. She began her speech by saying that her government was working to “promote harmony between the Muslim and Rakhine communitie­s”. This distinctio­n between the “Muslim” and the “Rakhine communitie­s” is a reiteratio­n of the argument that Muslims are aliens in Rakhine. She revealed her contempt, rather than concern, for the Rohingya when she said she was “concerned to hear that numbers of Muslims are fleeing across the border to Bangladesh”. Some 400,000 Rohingya have escaped in a matter of weeks, and Ms Suu Kyi, who refuses to call them by their name, says now that she wants to “find out why this exodus is happening”.

Any hope that the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh might be permitted to return home was doused by Ms Suu Kyi’s invocation of “verificati­on” processes. But how do you “verify” the status of a people who have been denied citizenshi­p and driven from their homes? It’s a trick to make their expulsion permanent. Ms Suu Kyi deployed some clever language to convey that only some of Mr Annan’s recommenda­tions will be implemente­d. Citizenshi­p for the Rohingyas? Perish the thought.

“Let me be clear”, Ms Suu Kyi told an interviewe­r in 2010. “I would like to be seen as a politician, not some human rights icon”. On Tuesday, she showed the world that she had finally become a politician, one that is as ruthless as the generals who built the soulless city in which she assumed power.

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