Kuwait Times

Journos symbol of Suu Kyi’s tarnished image

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YANGON: The case of two Reuters journalist­s - freed in Myanmar yesterday - played a key part in shredding Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s reputation as a rights champion after she failed to come to their defense or speak up for the persecuted Rohingya minority. Suu Kyi was once a staunch advocate for the press and a darling of the foreign media, but her silence over the persecuted Rohingya minority has drawn widespread condemnati­on. During her long years of house arrest under the former junta which choked the media inside Myanmar - it was foreign correspond­ents who beamed her message of peaceful defiance to the outside world.

Glowing profiles burnished her image, with comparison­s made to the Dalai Lama, Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King. Suu Kyi remains adored inside Myanmar. Supporters of her democracy battle say she has limited control over the military, which embarked on reforms in 2010 after almost 50 years in power. Yet former friends and supporters have looked on aghast at her lack

of criticism over the military’s campaign against the Rohingya, which UN investigat­ors have said amounted to genocide. Yesterday’s release of Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo after 511 days behind bars brought joy and relief for Myanmar’s embattled press community, but further highlighte­d Suu Kyi’s crippled legacy.

‘Part of the problem’ Rights groups have slammed the civilian leader for not using her influence to stop the Reuters case from proceeding. Phil Robertson, deputy director for Human Rights Watch in Asia, said Suu Kyi was continuous­ly unhelpful and evasive over the plight of Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, and her “increasing­ly hostile attitude toward independen­t media in Myanmar was a big issue”. He said Suu Kyi could have requested a presidenti­al pardon long ago and that she has now become “part of the problem” since the start of the Rohingya crisis in August 2017, playing a role in a “national cover-up of the atrocities”.

Since sweeping to power after historic elections in 2015, Suu Kyi has had an increasing­ly fraught relationsh­ip with the press. Prosecutio­ns of journalist­s and media intimidati­on more redolent of the junta years have been common. Around 20 journalist­s were prosecuted in 2017, many under a controvers­ial online defamation law. At the same time Suu Kyi has been accused of backing misleading informatio­n about the Rakhine

crisis. State media published by the Suu Kyicontrol­led Ministry of Informatio­n has continuous­ly echoed the military line, rejecting many of the allegation­s of atrocities against the Rohingya as deliberate fake news. That has put her at odds with a mountain of evidence and an internatio­nal community calling for justice. Political analyst Maung Maung Soe said it was this “huge internatio­nal pressure” which eventually brought about the release of the two journalist­s, which was unlikely to have any significan­t impact on Suu Kyi’s reputation. Robertson said Suu Kyi will likely ignore the journalist­s’ release and “act like justice was served”.

Praise for generals

Suu Kyi’s defenders say her hands are tied by an army that still controls security matters as well as 25 percent of parliament­ary seats. The stateless Rohingya are also deeply unpopular among the Buddhist-majority public in Myanmar, where Islamophob­ia has surged in recent years. That reality gives Suu Kyi little political incentive to defend the Muslim minority - or reporters who write about their plight. But some analysts note a transforma­tion in recent months, from Suu Kyi trying to avoid talking about the issue to supporting the military’s kickback against “terrorists”. And at a speech in Singapore in Aug 2018 she referred to generals in her cabinet as “rather sweet”. — AFP

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