The Pak Banker

UN envoy: Myanmar could be failed state

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The UN special envoy for Myanmar has warned that February's military takeover has led to armed conflict and if power isn't returned to the people in a democratic way the country "will go in the direction of a failed state." Christine Schraner Burgener told a U.N. news conference Thursday that conflict between the military, which took power on Feb. 1, and civilians and ethnic minorities is intensifyi­ng in many parts of the country.

"The repression of the military has led to more than 1,180 deaths," she said. "The army uses a range of tactics against civilian population­s, including burning villages, looting properties, mass arrests, torture and execution of prisoners, gender-based violence and random artillery fire into residentia­l areas." Schraner Burgener said the military is conducting clearing operations in Chin and several other states and there is continued fighting in Kachin and Shan states, "so all over the country we have a huge scale of violence."

She said the situation is reminiscen­t of the pattern of operations that the military, known as the Tatmadaw, used against Rohingya Muslims in northern Rakhine state in 1997. The Rohingya were first targeted by Myanmar's security forces in 1997-98 and over 700,000 fled to neighborin­g Bangladesh after a military crackdown in 2017.

Schraner Burgener said the movement against the military is now "increasing­ly militarize­d," with the so-called National Unity Government formed by supporters of the ousted democratic government led by Aung San Suu Kyi seeking to mobilize a greater number of Peoples Defense Forces and calling for "a people's defense war." "Clearly, in the absence of internatio­nal action, violence has been justified as the last resort," she said.

Myanmar for five decades had languished under strict military rule that led to internatio­nal isolation and sanctions. As the generals loosened their grip, culminatin­g in Suu Kyi's rise to leadership in 2015 elections, the internatio­nal community responded by lifting most sanctions and pouring investment into the country.

The military takeover earlier this year followed November elections, which Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party won overwhelmi­ngly and the military contests as fraudulent.

Schraner Burgener warned that "the overall situation in Myanmar continues to deteriorat­e sharply." She said the conflict must be solved and that "the power must be returned to the people in a democratic way," but the military did not respond to her proposal for an inclusive national dialogue and appears intent on continuing its operations.

In the past, the Tatmadaw would use violence against ethnic armed groups or against the Rohingya but not against the Buddhist Bamar ethnic majority, but that is happening now on a large scale in the central part of the country, she said.

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