By Kenan
Malik
21
Feb 2021
For
almost three weeks there have been mass protests on the streets of Myanmar. On
1 February, the Tatmadaw, or military, moved against the government of Aung San
Suu Kyi, claiming fraud in last November’s elections, which her party, the
National League for Democracy (NLD), comprehensively won.
Since
then, civil servants and teachers, bus drivers, and garment workers have taken
to the streets. Myanmar’s main city, Yangon, was brought to a standstill by a
“broken-down” rally, where drivers left their cars parked across the roads,
with bonnets open. There are even stories of police having joined in.
The
nationwide defiance of the military coup has been courageous and impressive and
echoes similar protests in Russia, Belarus, and elsewhere. But, as welcome and
important as these demonstrations are, they also lead to a difficult and
uncomfortable question. Where was all the marching and shouting and defiance
over the past four years as the Tatmadaw organized a brutal campaign of ethnic
cleansing against the Rohingya people, razing their villages, killing
thousands, and forcing hundreds of thousands to flee to neighbouring
Bangladesh?
The
Rohingya, Muslims who live mostly in the north-west state of Rakhine, bordering
Bangladesh, are the most persecuted of Myanmar’s many ethnic groups. Though
Rohingya have lived in Rakhine for generations, they are treated, officially
and unofficially, as foreigners. The authorities refer to them as “Bengalis”,
and the 2014 census refused to include Rohingya as an ethnic category.
The
military junta that came to power in Myanmar in 1962 (or Burma as it was then)
fomented hatred against the Rohingya as a means of cementing support. The
latest and most vicious drive began in 2017. Under the pretext of a campaign
against “terrorists”, the army implemented a programme of ethnic cleansing,
which many deem as possessing “genocidal intent”, a clampdown as brutal as
China’s suppression of the Uighurs.
And
yet, the assault on the Rohingya was met with at best indifference, at worst
active collusion, both from the majority population and democracy activists.
The Tatmadaw began loosening its control in 2011, leading eventually to
elections in 2015 which Aung San Suu Kyi’s NLD comprehensively won, as it did
again last year. For all the talk of democracy, however, the Tatmadaw never
relinquished power. The constitution, written by the generals, reserved a
quarter of parliamentary seats for the military, gave it sole control of the
three key ministries of defence, home affairs, and border affairs, and a veto
over constitutional change.
Aung
San Suu Kyi provided a cover of democratic legitimacy. She also gave cover for
brutality against the Rohingya. Many members of her NLD have been openly
involved in extremist anti-Rohingya organizations. Aung San Suu Kyi herself
first stayed silent, then dismissed claims of atrocities as “fake news”, and
eventually backed the military’s campaign against “terrorists”. In 2019, she
personally defended the military against charges of genocide at the
international court of justice in the Hague.
Her
supporters have claimed that she had no choice, that it was not possible to
challenge the might of the military; that if she did, it would turn on her, and
so she had to accommodate it. As the coup demonstrates, accommodating the
wishes of the military has made little difference. The generals still turned on
her when it suited them.
There
is a deeper question, too: what price is a movement for democracy willing to
pay to win a slice of power? Compromise may be inevitable in a situation such
as Myanmar’s, where the choice may be between working with the military or
continued military rule. For many, though, and most especially for the
Rohingya, the difference between the two has been hard to discern.
Failing
to defend the Rohingya has only weakened the movement for democracy. There can
be no form of democracy or freedom bought at the expense of the most vulnerable
or despised in society. This is true not just of the Rohingya in Myanmar, but
of Muslims in India, of women in Saudi Arabia, of migrant workers in South
Africa, of undocumented migrants in Europe.
There
are stories now of new links being forged between the democracy movement and
Rohingya activists. Many Rohingya have joined the anti-coup protests, while
democrats’ hostility towards Rohingya seems to have reduced. Trade unions, too,
are beginning to forge new relationships with the struggle both for democracy
and for Rohingya rights.
Whether
these tentative steps develop into a proper movement remains to be seen. But
one thing is certain: there can be no democracy unless there is democracy and
equal rights for all.
Original
Headline: Where were the protesters when the Rohingya were being murdered?
Source: The
Guardian
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/failing-defend-rohingya-resulted-weakening/d/124364
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