Santa Cruz Sentinel

No peace in Myanmar 1 year after takeover by military

- By Grant Peck

BANGKOK >> The army takeover in Myanmar a year ago that ousted Aung San Suu Kyi not only unexpected­ly aborted the country’s fledgling return to democracy: It also brought a surprising level of popular resistance, which has blossomed into a low-level, but persistent, insurgency.

Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the commander of Myanmar’s military — known as the Tatmadaw — seized power on the morning of Feb. 1, 2021, arresting Suu Kyi and top members of her government and ruling National League for Democracy party, which had won a landslide election victory in November 2020.

The military’s use of deadly force to hold on to power has escalated conflict with its civilian opponents to the point that some experts describe the country as being in a state of civil war.

The costs have been high, with some 1,500 people killed by the security forces, almost 8,800 detained, an unknown number tortured and disappeare­d, and more

than 300,000 displaced as the military razes villages to root out resistance.

Other consequenc­es are also significan­t. Civil disobedien­ce hampered transport, banking services and government agencies, slowing an economy already reeling from the coronaviru­s pandemic. The public health system collapsed, leaving the fight against COVID-19 abandoned for months. Higher education stalled as faculty and students

sympatheti­c to the revolt boycotted school, or were arrested.

The military-installed government was not at all anticipati­ng the level of resistance that arose, Thomas Kean, an analyst of Myanmar affairs consulting for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think tank, told The Associated Press.

“We saw in the first days after the coup, they tried to adopt a sort of business-as-usual approach,” with the generals denying they were implementi­ng any significan­t change, but only removing Suu Kyi from power, he said.

“And of course, you know, that unleashed these huge protests that were brutally crushed, which resulted in people turning to armed struggle.”

The army has dealt with the revolt by employing the same brutal tactics in the country’s rural heartland that it has long unleashed against ethnic minorities in border areas, which critics have charged amount to crimes against humanity and genocide.

Its violence has generated newfound empathy for ethnic minorities such as the Karen, the Kachin and the Rohingya, longtime targets of army abuses with whom members of the Burman majority now are making common anti-military cause.

People opposed the army takeover because they had come to enjoy representa­tive government and liberaliza­tion after years of military rule, said David Steinberg, a senior scholar of Asian Studies at Georgetown University.

 ?? PETER DEJONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi waits to address judges of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherland­s. The army takeover in Myanmar a year ago that ousted the elected government of Suu Kyi brought a shocking end to the effort to restore democratic rule in the Southeast Asian country after decades of military rule.
PETER DEJONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi waits to address judges of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherland­s. The army takeover in Myanmar a year ago that ousted the elected government of Suu Kyi brought a shocking end to the effort to restore democratic rule in the Southeast Asian country after decades of military rule.

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