Marin Independent Journal

Myanmar cracked down brutally on protests. It might get even worse.

- By Victoria Milko and Foster Klug

TOKYO » Myanmar’s security forces have killed scores of demonstrat­ors protesting a coup. The new junta has jailed journalist­s — and anyone else capable of exposing the violence. It has done away with even limited legal protection­s. The outside world has responded so far with tough words, a smattering of sanctions and little else.

The slide from a nascent democracy to yet another coup, as rapid as it has been brutal, opens up a grim possibilit­y: As bad as it looks in Myanmar now, if the country’s long history of violent military rule is any guide, things could get worse.

Protesters have continued to fill the streets despite violence that left 38 people dead one day this week — though they have turned out in smaller numbers than the weeks right after the Feb. 1 coup. They have used smartphone­s to capture the brutality. Recent videos show security forces shooting a person at point-blank range and chasing down and savagely beating demonstrat­ors.

The military, however, has the clear upper hand, with sophistica­ted weapons, a large network of spies, the ability to cut telecoms, and decades of fighting experience from civil conflicts in the country’s borderland­s.

“We are at a crisis point,” Bill Richardson, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations with long experience working with Myanmar, told The Associated Press, pointing to the arrests of journalist­s, including AP’s Thein Zaw, and the indiscrimi­nate killing of protesters. “The internatio­nal community needs to respond much more forcefully, or this situation will degenerate into complete anarchy and violence.”

So, will it? Government­s around the world, including the United States, have condemned the coup, which reversed years of slow progress toward democracy. Before that opening up began, Myanmar had languished under a strict military rule for five decades that led to internatio­nal isolation and crippling sanctions. As the generals loosened their grip in the past decade, the internatio­nal community lifted most sanctions and poured in investment.

Despite the flurry of recent global criticism, however, there’s not much hope that pressure from outside will change the course of events inside the country. For one thing, coordinate­d action at the U.N. — like a global arms embargo that the world body’s independen­t expert on human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews, called for — is unlikely. Russia and China, Myanmar’s most powerful supporter, are still selling arms to the military — and they each have a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council and thus could veto any such measure. The Security Council will take up the crisis in Myanmar on Friday.

Myanmar’s neighbors, the countries that make up the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, are generally loath to “interfere” in one another’s affairs — a policy that means they are unlikely to do anything more than call for talks between the junta and the ousted government of Aung San Suu Kyi.

That leaves sanctions from the United States and other Western countries. Washington imposed sanctions on Myanmar’s top military leaders after the Feb. 1 coup. More pressure came after a U.N. envoy said security forces killed 38 people on Wednesday. Britain imposed sanctions on three generals and six members of the junta in response to the coup and the crackdown. The European Union is drawing up measures to respond to the coup.

But even tough sanctions from those countries are unlikely to yield anything, though they may weigh heavily on ordinary people. Myanmar has ridden out decades of such measures before, and the military is already talking about plans for “self-reliance.”

U.N. special envoy for Myanmar, Christine Schraner Burgener, told reporters this week that she had warned the military that tough sanctions may be coming — and the response was that the generals knew how to “walk with only a few friends.’”

“Myanmar’s history suggests the military will use ever increasing brutality and violence in an attempt to put down the protest movement,” said Ronan Lee, a visiting scholar at the Internatio­nal State Crime Initiative at Queen Mary University of London. “In the past, the military has been prepared to murder thousands to quell civil unrest or to meet its goals.”

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