Have the generals won in Burma?
Oct 3rd, 2007
Have the generals won in Burma?
Category: General
Posted by: Raja Petra
Anil Netto
http://malaysia-today.net/blog2006/index.php?itemid=8753
So thousands of heavily armed soldiers are patrolling the streets of the Burmese capital, Rangoon, forcing the peaceful protesters off the streets.
Have the hopes and prayers for democracy in Burma been totally crushed? Have the pro-democracy protesters been defeated?
Not by a long shot.
When a government resorts to bullets and clubs to suppress peaceful demonstrators, you know they have lost all moral authority and it is just a matter of time before the regime is dumped into the ash heap of history.
I remember a powerful scene from the movie “Gandhi”, starring Ben Kingsley. The scene is the Dharasana Salt Works, and British and Indian officers commanding a large troop of Indian police personnel are confronting rows of unarmed Indian protesters after Gandhi had been detained the night before. Row by row, the demonstrators bravely step forward, only to be struck down and clubbed by the police armed with lathis.
Flash to the next scene, and a western journalist is reporting the story over the phone to his newsroom: “They walked, with heads up, without music, or cheering, or any hope of escape from injury or death. It went on and on and on. Women carried the wounded bodies from the ditch until they dropped from exhaustion. But still it went on.”
Shuffling his notes in his hand, the journalist concludes emotionally, “Whatever moral ascendance the West held was lost today. India is free for she has taken all that steel and cruelty can give, and she has neither cringed nor retreated.”
Similarly, the Burmese people have taken all that batons, bullets, cruelty and hard labour can give. But it is the Burmese junta that has lost all moral credibility – a long time ago. And thus, it is just a matter of time before these ruthless generals are unceremoniously booted out – with or without Asean’s help.
You see, it is no longer a worldly struggle but also a spiritual battle. That explains why the monks have been at the forefront of the struggle, the same way that priests and nuns led the People Power revolution in the Philippines that ousted the US-backed dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
And if India had the indomitable will of Gandhi to count on, the people Burma draw their inspiration from the steely resolve of the courageous Aung San Suu Kyi.
Meanwhile, Razali Ismail, the former UN special emissary to Burma, says: “The people should be allowed to march on the streets and protest. The economic policies of the junta are wrong. It has not benefited the people,” he said.
I hope he will also defend the right of Malaysians to protest against unjust and wrong socio-economic policies, judicial manipulation and unfair elections.
Maybe that is why Asean has been so quiet – because many of the Asean member nations themselves display little tolerance for peaceful demonstrations in their own countries. And some of these governments have also propped up the military junta in Burma through their “business as usual” dealings with them.
I couldn’t help noticing something else: while The Star’s Wong Chun Wai has backed the demonstrators in Burma, his own paper has a record of casting peaceful Malaysian demonstrators seeking justice on a variety of issues in a negative light or portraying them as trouble-makers and “rioters”. Double standards, perhaps?
3 Responses to “Have the generals won in Burma?”
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October 4th, 2007 at 3:32 am
[...] Have the generals won in Burma? [...]
October 4th, 2007 at 8:03 am
Dear Petra,
You’re right. The generals may seem to have won on surface but deep down they’ve losy BIG TIME! Do you think that they would ever dare to face a monk (you have to differentiate between the conventional or samudhi sangha and ariya sangha here) especially an ‘ariya sangha’? No way!
If they claim themselves to be buddhists then they are to be abandoned forever in the ‘neither worlds’ throughout the samsara.
I don’t about India but China should be very worried if they keep on supporting the military regime. They have much to lose. Olympics is just one of them. There’s not much time left for them to play their part as a ‘responsible international citizen’ by putting pressure on the generals for change. The issue on Burma is just but one of the things that China for it’s narrow economic gains is causing a lot of sufferrings to the people in both Asia and Africa.
Will members of the ASEAN (for which its creation was mainly to protect themselves against China) feel safe to deal with China if it became clear that China will do anything, ethical or not, if it is for its narrow economic interests.
One thing China has to remember is that “she can choose her friends but she can’t choose her neighbours”.
October 8th, 2007 at 12:01 pm
[...] Have the generals won in Burma? …the independent existence of one neighbour (Sikkim) and restricted the independence of many of the others (Nepal, Bhutan and Sri Lanka) … In… [...]