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Myanmar, Sri Lanka, and the impact of militarism

23 Feb 2021

By Basil Fernando   The recent coup in Myanmar has created an interest once again to look into the impact of the military rule in Myanmar which began with the 1962 coup and continued up to 2011. Burma (now Myanmar) was a British colony and the style of the British administration had also been introduced to that country. Around the same time as India and Sri Lanka, Myanmar also gained its independence. Prior to the independence, a leadership emerged from among the freedom fighters of Myanmar who were preparing themselves to be the new rulers of the country. The acknowledged Leader among them was General Aung San. However, Aung San and those close colleagues of his who were tipped to be the Cabinet of Ministers after independence were all assassinated when they were having a meeting. Thus, at the beginning of the independence in Myanmar, there was a vacuum of leadership. After a few years of independence, the first coup was attempted and lasted for a short time. Thereafter, there was a brief period of democratic government, which was overthrown by way of a coup led by General Ne Win in 1962. What was the impact of the long years of military rule in Myanmar? First of all, the entire system of governance was changed gradually by replacing all the norms of liberal democracy and the rule of law. The law under the military rule was any of the orders issued by the Leader of the Military General Ne Win. The whole structure of public institutions was changed and the administration was gradually handed over to be entirely controlled by the military. During the colonial period, the Burmese had developed a very sophisticated civil service structure. Within this structure, very able leaders emerged. After the coup, many of them left or were forced to leave Burma. Many of them held quite senior positions in international organisations as well as in the administrations of some other countries. Among such able leaders was U. Thant who became the Secretary General of the United Nations (UN). Among the civil servants were also many Indians who had migrated to Burma and got assimilated into the Burmese society. The military regime expelled most of them out of Burma. The result was that the entire administration was conducted through the military officers chosen by General Ne Win. Unlike in the time of colonial rule, there was no legal order that the military was bound to follow. This meant that the rule of law was completely replaced. As a scholar has put it, “the rule of law was replaced by the un-rule of law”. This meant that all the guarantees of fairness that were inbuilt into the rule of law philosophy were discarded and in its place, the rules of preserving the military regime were installed. The electoral system which was to be the means by which representatives were to be selected to govern the country was discontinued. Instead, the Leader of the military with those who he chose personally to hold senior positions, ruled over the country. It was the system of the administration of justice which was established during the colonial period that was completely replaced. By a gradual process, the independence of the judiciary was discarded and the defence of the military regime became the main target assigned to the judiciary. The complete executive control of the judiciary happened over a period of time and the tradition of the independence of judiciary established in the earlier period was discarded. Various types of theories were developed in order to justify this change. This went on to such an extent that even after the end of the direct military rule in 2011, the courts would read judgements which were dictated to them by the executive. There are instances where the judges, before reading such judgements, apologised to the litigants, stating that they are merely handing down the judgement that was given to them from above. The policing system was changed completely by displacing all the rules that were introduced earlier in order to protect personal freedoms by preventing illegal arrests and detentions. The period of military rule was a period where large numbers of persons were arrested and imprisoned over long periods of time for engagement in any activities of trying to promote democracy and the rule of law. Such activities were seen as subversive activities and for which it was possible to imprison persons for indefinite periods of time. The marked feature of the military period was the acquisition of public property for private purposes by the military leaders. Myanmar is a country with much natural resources and these resources were plundered by the military for their use. This process which started with General Ne Win himself acquiring enormous wealth by utilising what was formally the national resources for his personal gain was followed by his closest colleagues. Then it spread into even the rank and file among the military. There was a period when there was large-scale fleeing away from Myanmar, particularly among the peasants because their lands began to be acquired by interested military officers in different areas. As a result of such forced acquisitions, the people often fled to other unclaimed areas like forests. They cleared land and began to cultivate. However, when the harvesting time came, military officers would come to grab what they had produced and thereby, there was an increase of poverty and even instances of starvation. In short, Myanmar became virtually a place controlled entirely by the military where neither the personal freedoms nor even the right to personal properties were respected or protected. Also, in Myanmar, there had been long-protracted armed struggles led by minority groups. The military approach to these conflicts was not to seek political solutions to these problems but to engage in military confrontations. Thus, there were protracted periods of armed conflicts throughout the period of military rule. The military used these situations of armed struggles in order to justify its own arbitrary powers, not only to control the minorities but also to control the entire population. Under the military, gradually Myanmar became a mafia state. The large-scale production of illegal drugs such as heroin and other things became industries controlled by the military. Every kind of illegal activity was allowed for those who had the patronage of the military leaders. During the military regime, gradually Myanmar came under severe international condemnations and there were the impositions of sanctions. Virtually, Myanmar became a bankrupt state with which other countries did not want to engage in normal business transactions. Burmese currency became highly worthless and devaluations of currency took place constantly. This affected both the internal trade as well as the living conditions of the people and also the international trade. The result of all these was that under the military regime, Myanmar became one of the most corrupt states in the world. With the enlargement of corruption which spread into everything, there was the large-scale fleeing of people to other countries such as Thailand, where they often remained as illegal migrants working in virtually semi-slave conditions. It was all this that led to a constant struggle by the people against the military, which climaxed in an uprising in 1988. With that began the demand for rapid transfer to democracy. However, that too was a protracted struggle. Aung San Suu Kyi, the present Leader of the National League Democracy (NLD) was kept under house arrest for a long period and many political prisoners spent long years in prisons because of their support for the democracy movement. It was for the first time that a democratic form of government was elected in 2015. However, despite the election of representatives, the actual control of governance as well as the economy was mostly in the hands of the military itself. It was a difficult compromise for the newly elected democratic Government. However, due to the long period of military rule and the complete destruction of all the infrastructure of democracy, the process of democratisation was naturally to be a slow one. And it had to be done within a framework where the military was still controlling most aspects of life. Despite not a very spectacular performance by the first democratic Government, the people re-elected the NLD with a larger mandate in November 2020, where the party won 83% of the votes. That showed how much frustration there was among the people about the manner in which the military had destroyed their country. However, the military perceived such a massive victory with such an overwhelming mandate, of the representatives of the people, as a threat to the continuity of military control over all affairs of Myanmar because with such an overwhelming mandate, it was possible for the NLD to pass stronger legislation to strengthen the democratic institutions and also to strengthen the national economy. The very fact of the national resources being reclaimed from the military itself would have brought new resources which would have benefited the nation as a whole. The coup was meant to counteract this process of democratisation and the re-strengthening of the national capacity to control its own resources and also to protect the rights of the people. In Sri Lanka, the process of attacking democratic institutions and the rule of law did take place without there being a military coup. The 1972 and 1978 Constitutions introduced the idea of a semi-dictatorship. The 1978 Constitution virtually gave all power to a single person by creating the position of executive presidency. Major consequences of change from 1978 up to now have affected the Sri Lankan society to a great extent the same way that military rule had affected Myanmar. In the same manner, particularly the acquisition of national properties for private use, has become a major threat to the Sri Lankan economy. The mismanagement of the economy has made Sri Lanka one of the most indebted nations. In the area of the protection of civil liberties also, there have been heavy losses and the constitutional protection of rights have been undermined severely by the use of various types of draconian national security laws. The use of enforced disappearances which has happened several times after 1978 also undermined the criminal justice process altogether. The arrest, detention, torture, and killings followed by the disposal of bodies is what is meant by enforced disappearances. This has happened on a large scale in Sri Lanka during this period. In one aspect, that is regarding extra-judicial killings by various means such as enforced disappearances, the Sri Lankan experience is much worse than in Myanmar. Their imprisonments were more than in Sri Lanka, but killings after arrest were much less. In Sri Lanka, after the election of the new President and the Government, there have been more and more military being brought directly into the running of public affairs. This will aggregate the already desperate situation created since the enactment of the 1978 Constitution. If this process of militarisation continues and if the basic concept of semi-dictatorship as introduced through the 1972 and 1978 Constitutions are not replaced, Sri Lanka will also acquire the same problems as experienced by the people of Myanmar. Further, Myanmar had acquired the reputation of being a pariah state in the international community from the economic point of view as well as political relationships. If Sri Lanka continues in its present path, it also cannot avoid falling into the same trap. Both in Myanmar and Sri Lanka, the State is dysfunctional and the State is incapable of carrying out the normal functions of governance. In Myanmar, people are desperately intervening to restore democracy, and the military coup is an attempt to counteract and stop the process of restoring functional governance that is responsible to the people.   (The writer is the Director of Policy and Programmes of the Asian Human Rights Commission)


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