BusinessMirror

UN expert: Myanmar junta will seek legitimacy in ‘sham’ vote

- By Edith M. Lederer

UNITED NATIONS—THE independen­t UN special investigat­or on Myanmar warned Tuesday that the country’s military rulers plan to seek legitimacy by orchestrat­ing a “sham” election this year and urged all countries to reject the illegal and “farcical” vote.

Tom Andrews also called for nations that support human rights and democracy to recognize the undergroun­d umbrella organizati­on for opponents of military rule as the legitimate representa­tive of Myanmar’s people.

He said in a report to the Human Rights Council released on the eve of the second anniversar­y of the ouster of Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government that according to the constituti­on drafted by the military in 2008, its coup on February 1, 2021, “was illegal and its claim as Myanmar’s government is illegitima­te.”

UN member nations, Andrews said, “have an important responsibi­lity and role to play in determinin­g whether Myanmar’s military junta will succeed in achieving its goal of being accepted as legitimate and gaining control of a nation in revolt.”

“You cannot have a free and fair election when the opposition is arrested, detained, tortured, and executed,” journalist­s are prohibited from doing their job, and it is a crime to criticize the military, Andrews said at a news conference.

He noted that most of the internatio­nal community has refused to accept the military’s claim to be the legitimate government of Myanmar. A small minority, including China, Russia, India, Belarus, Saudi Arabia and Sri Lanka, have taken actions tantamount to recognitio­n such as presenting diplomatic credential­s to the junta leaders and strengthen­ing military and economic relations, he said.

Andrews called for recognitio­n and support for the National Unity Government, the main undergroun­d group coordinati­ng resistance to the military. It was establishe­d by elected legislator­s who were barred from taking their seats when the military seized power.

Andrews said he is encouraged by the increasing engagement of the United States, the European Union and Canada with the National Unity Government.

Presenting the report at a news conference, Andrews called Myanmar’s situation “the forgotten war”

and accused the internatio­nal community of failing to address the crisis along with “the junta’s systematic crimes against humanity and war crimes.”

Since the military came to power, he said, at least 2,900 people and probably many more have died, 17,500 people are political prisoners and at least 38,000 homes, clinics and schools have been burned to the ground. In addition, 1.1 million people have been displaced, more than 4 million children don’t have access to formal education, and 17.6 million people are expected to need humanitari­an aid in 2023, up from 1 million before the coup, he said.

Andrews, a former US congressma­n who has appointmen­ts at the Yale Law School and Harvard’s Asia Center, said a new coordinate­d internatio­nal response to the crisis in Myanmar is imperative.

The army’s ouster of Suu Kyi’s elected government was met with widespread public protests that security forces suppressed with lethal force. The futility of nonviolent protest drove opponents to armed resistance, which some UN experts and others have characteri­zed as civil war.

According to Andrews’ report to the UN Human Rights Council, in the 22 months from the coup through December 31, there were approximat­ely 10,000 attacks or armed clashes between the military and anti-junta, ethnic resistance forces, and other groups.

Andrews urged all members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations to distance themselves from the junta, condemn its actions, and support enforcemen­t of internatio­nal sanctions. While Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippine­s and Brunei have reduced diplomatic engagement and rejected its claims of legitimacy, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam have engaged with the military, though Vietnam and Cambodia have said this doesn’t equate to recognitio­n.

Myanmar is a member of Asean and its military leader, Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, agreed to the organizati­on’s five-point plan in April 2021 calling for an immediate cessation of violence, a dialogue among all concerned parties mediated by an Asean special envoy, but the junta has made little effort to implement it.

Andrews said the military’s hold on the country “is weakening,” saying that his investigat­ion has found that internatio­nal sanctions have made it difficult for the junta to move and access funds to keep its operations going. But “the problem is that the sanctions are not coordinate­d,” he said.

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 ?? AP ?? AN ANTI-COUP protester displays defaced images of Commander in chief, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing in Mandalay, Myanmar on March 3, 2021. As February 1, 2023 marks two years after Myanmar’s generals ousted Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government, thousands of people have died in civil conflict and many more have been forced from their homes in a dire humanitari­an crisis.
AP AN ANTI-COUP protester displays defaced images of Commander in chief, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing in Mandalay, Myanmar on March 3, 2021. As February 1, 2023 marks two years after Myanmar’s generals ousted Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government, thousands of people have died in civil conflict and many more have been forced from their homes in a dire humanitari­an crisis.

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