Bangkok Post

SUU KYI UNDER FIRE AS CRISIS HURTS MYANMAR’S IMAGE

De facto leader caught in a tough position as Rohingya issue dominates headlines By Jason Koutsoukis and Kyaw Thu

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For decades Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi was one of the globe’s most famous political prisoners, winning a Nobel Peace Prize and receiving tributes from world leaders and rock stars like U2’s Bono. Now she’s under attack over her response to a fresh round of violence that has seen more than 145,000 minority Rohingya Muslims flee into neighbouri­ng Bangladesh since last month.

Myanmar’s army said more than 400 people have died in the past few weeks and most of them are “militants”, while human rights groups say hundreds of villagers have been killed.

The crisis threatens to sap investor confidence in the fast-growing Southeast Asian nation, which saw the US and European nations drop sanctions after the military junta released Ms Suu Kyi from house arrest in 2010. Foreign companies that rushed in are again worried about risks from human rights concerns.

“It certainly impacts sentiment,” said Hal Bosher, chief executive officer of Yoma Bank in Myanmar’s financial capital Yangon. “The Rohingya issue is giving foreign investors pause that maybe this is not the perfect story we had hoped.”

Ms Suu Kyi, 72, fought back on Wednesday. In a readout of a phone call with Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, she said “a huge iceberg of misinforma­tion” is creating divisions in society to promote the interests of terrorists. She noted that Turkey also dealt with terrorism, and said Myanmar is doing its best to ensure it doesn’t spread through its western state of Rakhine.

“We know very well, more than most, what it means to be deprived of human rights and democratic protection,” she said. “So we make sure that all the people in our country are entitled to protection of their rights.”

Zaw Htay, the official spokespers­on for Myanmar’s central government, said that attacks by Muslim militants aren’t getting enough attention. As many as 100 Rohingya targeted 25 locations in late August, killing a dozen security personnel.

“In the internatio­nal community, people are spreading fake news on social media,” Zaw Htay said. “They don’t emphasise the killing, they only emphasise the clearance operation conducted by the security forces. We see this is not fair.” Myanmar security officials blamed members of the Muslim minority for setting fire to their own homes and vehicles in a tour of a still smoulderin­g Rohingya village on Thursday, according to the Associated Press.

The treatment of the Rohingya in Buddhist-majority Myanmar has repeatedly generated accusation­s of mass murder in recent years. Many of the country’s 53 million people view the 800,000 Rohingya, who are denied citizenshi­p, as illegal migrants from what is now Bangladesh.

Ms Suu Kyi, who became Myanmar’s de facto leader after elections in 2015, has found herself caught between a world worried about the fate of the Rohingya and local interests concerned about terrorism.

Publicly criticisin­g the violence in Rakhine risks hurting the popularity of her National League for Democracy and could upset Myanmar’s former military rulers who still have significan­t power, said David Dapice, a fellow and economist of the Myanmar programme at the Ash Center in the Harvard Kennedy School.

“She is in a tough position,” he said. “The more she condemns the excesses in Rakhine, the more she weakens her public position and the NLD.”

United Nations secretary-general Antonio Guterres on Tuesday warned that Myanmar faced the risk of ethnic cleansing. He demurred on a question on whether Ms Suu Kyi should speak out more against human-rights abuses, saying the UN wants “a Myanmar where the Rohingya population will see their rights fully respected”.

At home, Ms Suu Kyi risks losing support if she even acknowledg­es that Myanmar has a Rohingya population — something the junta never did.

Thein Nyunt, a former NLD lawmaker, criticised Ms Suu Kyi for not invoking a terrorism law to better protect ethnic Rakhine, the majority group in the state.

“The internatio­nal community is telling us to acknowledg­e the Rohingya and redraw our laws,” he said. “I assume that internatio­nal community is attacking us for their political aim.”

Five UN agencies are working with aid groups to help Rohingya who have fled, Robert Watkins, the resident coordinato­r in Bangladesh, said by email. The most urgent needs include finding space for shelter in a border area. “We are of course overwhelme­d at this moment by a quickly evolving situation,” he said.

While Rakhine currently attracts very little onshore foreign investment, mainly due to its remoteness, the perception of increased security risks will reinforce its unattracti­veness for investors, said Vicky Bowman, director of the Myanmar Centre for Responsibl­e Business in Yangon. Most affected are companies dealing with tourism and oil and gas, she said.

Foreign investment plunged 30% last fiscal year after overseas investors pumped a record US$9.5 billion (3.15 trillion baht) into the economy in the preceding 12 months. The investment shortfall coincided with concern over the direction of the government’s economic agenda and increased attention over Rakhine.

Myanmar still has a bright economic outlook as it builds off a low base. The Asian Developmen­t Bank forecasts growth at 7.7% for 2017 and 8.0% in 2018.

Mr Bosher at Yoma Bank, which in June announced a two-year partnershi­p with the Netherland­s’ Rabobank Groep to offer financial products targeting agricultur­e, said that investors in emerging markets are used to doing business in countries with ethnic strife.

“The promise of Myanmar has not been dulled by this,” Ms Bosher said. “Everyone with a conscience is unhappy about it. But — without any moral considerat­ion, purely from a commercial point of view — this crisis has very little bearing on the commercial opportunit­ies of Myanmar. I’m not necessaril­y happy about that, but that’s the way it is.”

In the internatio­nal community, people are spreading fake news on social media ZAW HTAY GOVERNMENT SPOKESPERS­ON

 ??  ?? GROWING CHORUS: An Indian Muslim activist holds a placard during a rally against the Myanmar government to protest the treatment of the Rohingya in Myanmar, in Kolkata on Thursday.
GROWING CHORUS: An Indian Muslim activist holds a placard during a rally against the Myanmar government to protest the treatment of the Rohingya in Myanmar, in Kolkata on Thursday.
 ??  ?? RELIGIOUS ISSUE: Protesters hold a banner bearing a picture of Aung San Suu Kyi during a rally against violence in Myanmar, in Peshawar, Pakistan, on Thursday.
RELIGIOUS ISSUE: Protesters hold a banner bearing a picture of Aung San Suu Kyi during a rally against violence in Myanmar, in Peshawar, Pakistan, on Thursday.
 ??  ?? AFTERMATH: A Myanmar security officer walks past burned houses in Ka Nyin Tan village in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state on Wednesday.
AFTERMATH: A Myanmar security officer walks past burned houses in Ka Nyin Tan village in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? FLEEING PERSECUTIO­N: Rohingya refugees wait for a boat to cross the border through the Naf River in Maungdaw in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state on Thursday.
FLEEING PERSECUTIO­N: Rohingya refugees wait for a boat to cross the border through the Naf River in Maungdaw in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state on Thursday.

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