The National - News

DOCUMENTIN­G AN ATROCITY AGAINST HUMANITY IN MYANMAR

▶ Ronan Lee, a scholar on genocide, talks to James Snell about his latest book on the crimes committed against the Rohingya, and his fears for the community in light of the latest coup

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When Ronan Lee heard that Myanmar’s military was in the process of overthrowi­ng the civilian elements of the country’s government, including state counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, he felt a particular disappoint­ment and concern distinct from others’ worries about the state of democracy in the country. He felt “concerned about what it meant for Myanmar and the aspiration­s of its young people, and for the Rohingya whose situation is always worse when the military have power”.

In his new book, Myanmar’s Rohingya Genocide,

Lee in effect predicted the current seizure of power by the military. “The Tatmadaw [the country’s military] has undertaken coups in the past, and enforced decades of dictatorsh­ip.”

Lee cites scholars (Taeko Hiroi and Sawa Omori) who note that in political systems such as Myanmar’s, where the military has significan­t power but also allows some civilian government to exist in pretence, coups are more likely. This is provided the military has strong popular support – something the instigator­s of Myanmar’s recent coup thought they did.

For years, Myanmar’s military and its civilian government have co-operated, in a fashion, in power. This co-operation had tarnished the reputation of Suu

Kyi before her latest imprisonme­nt. She spent the past few years defending the military against a grave charge: that of committing one of the century’s worst instances of ethnic cleansing, amounting to genocide.

Lee is a scholar of genocide with a focus on the persecutio­n of the Rohingya people of Myanmar, who have been imprisoned and subjected to violence in Rakhine state. More than 700,000 have been driven from the country by the military since 2017, many becoming refugees in neighbouri­ng Bangladesh.

“The Rohingya are now the world’s largest stateless group … while those who remain in Myanmar are subject to apartheid conditions, mass incarcerat­ion and genocide crimes,” Lee writes.

His book documents a litany of these crimes, from direct violence at the hands of the military to the squalid conditions of camps where the Rohingya are housed within Myanmar, where “normal life cannot continue ... educationa­l opportunit­ies are scarce, medical facilities are limited, and there is little hope of work”.

The Rohingya are even provided with degraded identity documents, which reduces their rights to residency and citizenshi­p.

Lee conducted fieldwork in Myanmar and its neighbouri­ng countries, and his book is determined to tell the stories of the Rohingya themselves. But recent events meant we spoke also about the coup, and the activities of the civilian government that preceded it.

Is it helpful to understand Myanmar before the coup, as a democracy that it is possible – as some countries now demand – for the military to “restore”?

“Pre-coup Myanmar had elements of procedural democracy, with regular elections, but was far from the kind of system that would be widely understood as real democracy,” Lee says. “The military had a quarter of the seats in parliament reserved for them, could appoint their own government ministers to key portfolios and held a veto on constituti­onal change.”

What the military did not expect was the strength of popular opposition its seizure of power would encounter. Many across Myanmar have protested against the coup and the measures – such as restrictin­g internet access – the military has used to cement its control.

“We are witnessing a battle of wills between a military that desires total power, and popular aspiration­s of Myanmar’s people for a genuinely democratic future.”

Before the coup, the civilian government worked closely with the military while the latter perpetrate­d an alleged genocide. The government did not draw attention to the crimes as they happened, nor condemn those it could not deny. Suu Kyi appeared personally before an Internatio­nal Court of Justice tribunal in defence of the country’s military.

When asked why so many Rohingya were fleeing the country, she feigned puzzlement, saying: “We want to find out why this exodus is happening.” In December 2016, Suu Kyi’s official Facebook page dismissed well-founded claims of sexual violence perpetrate­d by the military. These instances shattered her internatio­nal reputation, something the coup may ironically reverse.

Was her support for the genocide a calculatio­n intended to retain a veneer of civilian control? Suu Kyi’s support “went well beyond what would have been necessary for her to placate the military. She has presented herself to the public in Myanmar at numerous instances as an enthusiast­ic supporter of the military’s approach to the Rohingya,” Lee says.

“But if acquiescin­g to genocide crimes, war crimes, and other crimes against humanity was the price of keeping the military on-side to avoid a coup, then that price was far too high.”

In any case, the civilian administra­tion was unable to hold on to power. “When the military has power in Myanmar, it is always bad news for the Rohingya,” Lee says.

“Min Aung Hlaing [the coup’s leader] has described removing the Rohingya from Myanmar as ‘unfinished business’ from the Second World War, so it is unlikely now that he has grabbed political power that his views have changed.”

But there is hope. While it was assumed by the military and complicit civilian leadership that the genocide was broadly popular, public resistance to the coup shows the gulf between the military and the people of Myanmar.

“It is in the Rohingya’s collective interest for Myanmar to resist the coup and create a fully democratic country,” Lee says. “That’s why we have seen solidarity from Rohingya refugees with the protesters and even some of Yangon’s usually hidden Rohingya community joining protests in the city to demand real democracy.”

It is possible that if the coup might be resisted, so too could the worst excesses of the military.

We are witnessing a battle of wills between a military that desires total power, and popular aspiration­s of Myanmar’s people for a genuinely democratic future

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 ?? Photos AFP; Bloomsbury ?? Top, the coup in Myanmar this month; Ronan Lee, right, has written on the country’s crises, above
Photos AFP; Bloomsbury Top, the coup in Myanmar this month; Ronan Lee, right, has written on the country’s crises, above

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