Saturday, March 06, 2021

Myanmar coup 2021 and Aung San Suu Kyi

LONG READ

by Shwe Lu Maung | Published: 00:00, Mar 06,2021




A map of northern Arakan shows the area occupied by the Arakan Army as of November 2020. The label AA indicates the Arakan Army-occupied areas.

THIS article is written to mark March 2, 1962, the day the Myanmar Armed Forces seized power and enslaved the peoples under the military colonialism. On that very night, a meeting of the Rangoon University Students Union was held. About 300 students attended the meeting. Some 50 of them pledged to oppose and fight the junta. I was one of them. Now, after 59 years, I am the only one surviving and talking. With this humble article, I honour my comrades who sacrificed their lives in our fight for freedom from the military colonialism. You can find the brief account of the student meeting in my book Burma: Nationalism and Ideology.


Déjà vu

ON THE 1st day of February 2021, there was a ‘coup’ in Myanmar, again! The military takeover in Burma, aka Myanmar, is nothing new. As a matter of fact, calling it a ‘coup’ is a misnomer because the Burmese military has been in power since 1962. It never left power. The Revolutionary Government of the Union Burma (1962–1974), the Socialist Government of the Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma (1974–1988), the State Law and Order Restoration Council (1988–1997), and the State Peace and Development Council (1977–2010) were the military governments. As per the 2008 constitution, the Myanmar military stays at the ‘backstage’ behind the curtain rather than at ‘frontstage’ in front of the curtain. Now, the Myanmar military comes out to the ‘frontstage.’ The word ‘coup,’ though, is catchy and easy to use, with a punch.



Suu Kyi’s dilemma

IN 2010, a general election was held as per the 2008 constitution, and the so-called ‘democracy transit’ took its first step. However, the very essence of the constitution is the military rule. The constitution itself was approved by a national referendum held at gunpoint by the SPDC. Aung San Suu Kyi and her party, the National League for Democracy, boycotted the 2010 election. It did not accept the constitution and did not recognise the 2010 Naypyitaw government led by president Thein Sein, a former general and chair of the pro-military Union Solidarity and Development Party.

However, Aung San Suu Kyi changed her mind in 2015, took part in, and won the election to form the Naypyitaw government. As such, Aung San Suu Kyi recognised the constitution-2008 and legitimised the military power in the Myanmar government. Aung San Suu Kyi voluntarily entered into the trap laid by the Myanmar military. This was her big mistake. She should have remained aloof from the party politics and power struggle. She should have let the National League for Democracy go into the power struggle while she remains as the ‘democracy icon’ opposing the 2008 constitution. After a momentary refusal, she accepted the ‘dinner invitation’ and then criticised the host for the ‘bad dinner.’ This is a bad policy.



Suu Kyi’s struggle for presidency

SUU KYI won the 2015 election with over 60 per cent majority in both houses of the parliament. After the win, her struggle was to revoke Section 59(f) of the 2008 constitution that makes Suu Kyi ineligible for the presidency due to her marriage to a foreigner so that she can be the president of the country. Her adviser Ko Ni, a lawyer by profession with specialisation in the constitutional laws and a Burmese Muslim of Indian ancestry, charted out the office of state counsellor. Suu Kyi took his advice and bypassed the president in her capacity as the state counsellor, becoming the de facto ruler. Ko Ni was assassinated in broad daylight at Rangoon Airport on Sunday, January 29, 2017. The mastermind of the assassination was a retired Lieutenant Colonel who vanished into the thin air, as per media reports.

Despite becoming the de facto ruler, her power remained limited due to the various constitutional provisions.



Constitutional game

THE most known part of the Myanmar Constitution-2008 is the Section 109 that gives the 25 per cent of the parliamentary seats to the military representatives at all levels from the state and regional to the union or central legislature. However, the key is that the Myanmar armed forces known as the Defence Services or Tatmadaw is a totally independent body and is not under the government. Although Section 342 says, ‘The President shall appoint the Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Services,’ the President is required to appoint the person ‘proposed and approved’ by the Tatmadaw-controlled ‘National Defence and Security Council.’ In short, Tatmadaw is a state within the state that controls the state.

The term ‘the Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Services’ appears 51 times in the constitution in contrast to only one time in the US constitution. The Myanmar president is not the commander in chief. The ministries of defence, home affairs, and border affairs are completely under Tatmadaw. The other ministries are under the president. Nevertheless, the catch is here. Under the ministry of home affairs is the general administrative department. No administrative or government business can be done without the knowledge and approval of the department in the entire Myanmar.

In order to be the real power holder, Suu Kyi wanted to bring the department under her command.



A technical move

AUNG San Suu Kyi successfully removed the general administrative department from the military-controlled ministry of home affairs to place it in the newly created Suu Kyi-controlled ministry of the office of the union government by a law adopted by the NLD-led union parliament in December 2018. The general administrative department, a copy of the British colonial public administration or Indian Civil Service, is the key of the Myanmar civil administrative machinery. Her success in bringing the department under her control was hailed as a major achievement of Suu Kyi’s democratisation.

In reality, it is hard to call it ‘democratisation’ because the department is a copy of the British colonial Indian Civil Service system of 1858, which was a child of the East Indian Company Act 1853. It was and still is not a civil service but a surveillance system. Therefore, the oppression and exploitation go on as usual. The most known example is the conviction of the two Reuters journalists, Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, for their 2018 exposure of the Myanmar military 2017 massacre of the Rohingya people at Inn Din village. Aung San Suu Kyi called the journalists ‘the traitors.’

The thought of the Myanmar military’s coming to the ‘frontstage’ was born when the general administrative department was revoked from the military-controlled ministry of home affairs and invoked in the Suu Kyi-controlled ministry of the office of the union government in 2018. As mentioned earlier, the general administrative department is a copy of the 19th century British colonial administration system. Without it, the Bama majority will not be able to rule the 134 non-Bama minorities. For example, the world witnessed the rise of the Arakan Army in the Rakhine State in 2018. All through from December 2018 to December 2020, the Myanmar military had to engage in deadly battles with serious losses. The question is: how the Arakan Army was able to field more than 5,000 well-trained fighters in Arakan while it was headquartered and trained in the Northern Kachin State? One explanation is that the Myanmar army was devoid of intelligence since the General administrative department was taken away from its hand in 2018. I believe it was just a sheer coincidence of the time in the rise of the Arakan Army and the transfer of the general administrative department. Nevertheless, it is highly probable that the general administrative department under Suu Kyi deprived the Myanmar military of the intelligence to a considerable extent in 2019 and 2020. The Myanmar military considers the department to be a crucial instrument in intelligence collection for ‘the non-disintegration of the Union, non-disintegration of National solidarity, and perpetuation of sovereignty’ as highlighted in the preamble of the 2008 constitution. Section 20(e) of the constitution says, ‘The Defence Services is mainly responsible for safeguarding the non-disintegration of the Union, the non-disintegration of National solidarity and the perpetuation of sovereignty.’ There it goes. The defence services is just doing its duty!

In bottom line, the general administrative department must be shredded and trashed. A brand new citizen-friendly, decentralised and transparent public service system to meet the need of the 21st century must be introduced.



The game of election

THE ‘changing hands’ of the general administrative department is a drastic change of the personnel of the pro-military to pro-Suu Kyi. Rigorously, Suu Kyi reshuffled the department with her people and prepared for the great 2020 election victory. In Myanmar, since the days of U Nu, the elections are ‘made’ by the ruling party through their faithful. Strictly speaking, in Myanmar, election fraud is a common feature though it is done using the various loopholes of the law. Bribes such as a government job, a promotion, a business license, a business loan, and intimidation such as arrest with the charges of insurgent-connection, sedition, and corruption are very common. Irregularities can hardly be seen on the election day. Suu Kyi government and her National League for Democracy party did the same ‘Myanmar customary election business.’ On the top of that the party was quite successful in changing the ‘demography,’ especially in the Chin, Kachin and Karen States, in its favour. In addition, the National League for Democracy-controlled election commission fully or partially cancelled the election in a number of ethnic constituencies, amounting to 15–20 parliamentary seats, in the Rakhine, Kachin, Shan, Karen, and Mon States, where the party was sure to lose.

The result was that the National League for Democracy won 315 of 440 or 71.5 per cent in the House of Representatives and 161 of 224 or 71.8 per cent of the House of Nationalities. This amount of majority is not large enough to change the constitution, which, though Sections 6(f), 109(b), and 141(b), enable the military participation in politics and allotment of 25 per cent of parliamentary seats to the military. Similarly, it is not good enough to change Section 59(f) that makes Suu Kyi ineligible for the presidency due to her marriage to a foreigner. It needs a 75 per cent majority and a national referendum to repeal these sections. Such a national referendum will never happen because the military will surely stop it for reasons of national security.

The 2020 election result is not the main cause of the military coming out to the ‘frontstage,’ but a convenient excuse. It is true, though, that Tatmadaw is deeply concerned of Suu Kyi’s ambition for the presidency. So, why wait until the moonless midnight?


Street protests

THROUGHOUT the 20th century, in no country, street protests changed the government.

The Myanmar new military government, known as the State Administrative Council, has made the prisons ready for the new prisoners by releasing nearly 24,000 old prisoners. It appears to be a well-calculated plan, and many protestors will end up in the jail for up to 20 years, and many may get killed on the streets and in detention. It is a story of heart-breaking anguish. I went through it in my days, and I ended up as a revolutionary in the armed insurrection. I am still carrying on the revolution, though unarmed, with a heavy cost on my scientific career.

The big question is to create a condition that will make Tatmadaw withdraw from the politics. This is a very big task. It needs a philosophy, a strategy, and the tactics as well as the techniques. A street protest is simply symptomatic and emotion-driven. It is largely without any philosophy, strategy and tactics. It has some techniques only.

In Myanmar, it was not successful in 1962, 1974, not even in the most famous 1988 protest. It will not be successful in 2021 either.


Ethnic politics

UNFORTUNATELY, the ethnic tension, that is Bama-non-Bama tension, grew in the days of Suu Kyi government. Serious human rights violations against the Rohingyas in the Rakhine, amounting to ethnic cleansing and genocide, occurred in 2017 under the watchful eyes of Suu Kyi, and she, regardless of the Nobel Peace Prize, defended Myanmar at the International Court of Justice in December 2019. The rise of the Arakan Army in the Rakhine State in 2018 and the serious battles with great loss to the Myanmar military is another significant failure of Suu Kyi. The ‘terrorist’ classification of the Arakan Army by the Suu Kyi government keeps the peace-talk impossible.

In 2015, Tatmadaw and Thein Sein government planned out a 7-point nationwide ceasefire agreement and invited the ethnic armed organisations to enter into the ceasefire agreement. The most significant part of the agreement is that the term ‘ethnic armed organisations’ is used and such conventional terms as ‘insurgents,’ ‘rebels,’ or ‘minorities’ are completely discarded. The agreement was signed by eight organisations, and the government and Tatmadaw at Naypyitaw on October 15, 2015 and with another two organisations on February 13, 2018, bringing to a total of 10 ethnic armed organisations into the agreement. The agreement was also signed by China, India, Japan, Thailand, the EU, and the United Nations, as the international witnesses.

There are 21 ethnic armed organisations in Myanmar. Among the remaining 11 organisations are the powerful groups like United Wa State Army, Kachin Independence Organisation/Army, Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, Ta’ang National Liberation Army, and United League of Arakan/Arakan Army, five of which together make up a fighting force of 60,000 under the banner of the Northern Alliance.

When Suu Kyi came to power in 2015, she undermined the nationwide ceasefire agreement by initiating her own peace programme known as the Panglong-21, citing her father Aung San’s initiative of the 1947 Panglong Agreement that brought in the Chin, the Kachin, and the Shan into the Union of Burma. This action of hers visibly annoyed Tatmadaw. The result was that neither the nationwide ceasefire agreement nor the Panglong-21 made any progress in the last five years. The peace process was completely stalled. Only the cosmetic once-a-year celebrative meetings were held for publicity with no substance.

It is interesting to note that on December 9, 2020, Tatmadaw had an ‘informal’ meeting with the Arakan Army at Wa Self-Administered Zone’s capital, Panghsang, Northern Shan State, near the China border. They agreed to an ‘informal’ unconditional ceasefire as long as needed to reach a ‘formal’ agreement. To my amazement, the meeting was facilitated by a Japanese mediator and the United Wa State Army, a friend of China. When asked why the Tatmadaw talked with the terrorist organisation, Arakan Army, Tatmadaw replied that it never called ‘AA, terrorist,’ implying that the ‘terrorist’ designation is the job of Aung San Suu Kyi. The ‘informal’ ceasefire happened at a snap, much unexpected and much out of the way. I was totally puzzled.

Only when the coup took place on the February 1, 2021 the reason for the rush of the ceasefire with the Arakan Army was enlightened. Tatmadaw cannot afford a war while taking over power at Naypyitaw.

Soon after the coup or assuming the duty assigned by the Union president as per Section 413(b) of the 2008 constitution, the commander-in-chief Min Aung Hlaing formed the state administrative council consisting of 17 members, with him in the chair or chief administrator. Out of the 17 members, eight are from the military, and nine are civilians. All soldiers are ethnic Bama, but among the civilians, six are non-Bama, from the Chin, Kachin, Karen, Kaya, Rakhine, and Shan ethnicity. Except for one banker, the rest of the civilians are seasoned politicians with their own parties that compete with the National League for Democracy, Suu Kyi’s party. This is the first time in the history of Myanmar that the top state administrative body is constituted with the inclusion of the non-Bama ethnic peoples, who constitute up to 35 per cent of Myanmar’s population.

After the formation of the state administrative council, the new junta announced nine objectives in three categories: 1. Political affairs, 2. Economic affairs, and 3. Social affairs. Each category has three objectives. In the political affairs, the two top objectives are (a) formation of a federal union, and (b) establishment of peace through the nationwide ceasefire agreement. Obviously, Tatmadaw is making alliance with the non-Bama ethnic forces to counter Aung San Suu Kyi.


The Arakan Army

AS DESCRIBED earlier, the rise of the Arakan Army is phenomenal. It started with 15 youths in 2009, and in November 2018, it fielded some 1,000 fighters in the Northern Arakan, it increases to 3,000 in 2019 and to more than 5,000 in mid-2020. In March 2020, the Arakan Army wiped out one whole company of Tatmadaw airborne soldiers and captured some 40 men, including its commanding officer, a major. Only the heavy air raids saved the Tatmadaw field command headquarter. At present, in the Northern Arakan, Tatmadaw controls only the city municipal areas, which is only 20 per cent. That means the Arakan Army controls 80 per cent of the Northern Arakan or the Rakhine State. Bordered with Bangladesh and India, it creates a worrisome situation for Tatmadaw. In particular, the Arakan Army is making good progress in forging a friendship with the Arakan Muslims. History evidenced the rise of Arakan and Mrauk-U glory with the Buddhist-Muslim alliance from 1430 to 1784.

Tatmadaw believes that Aung San Suu Kyi, in the last five years of her being in power, had every opportunity to cooperate with Tatmadaw in the nationawide ceasefire agreement peace process to achieve the goal of a federal union, but Aung San Suu Kyi simply wasted her time with her struggle to become the president of the country. The weakening of the agreement peace process due to her launching of Panglong-21 excluding the ‘terrorist Arakan Army’ was a contributing factor to the rise of the Arakan Army. It also believes that Suu Kyi’s cancellation of the election in the ethnic areas where she was sure to lose, in particular in the Rakhine state, created a grave situation that can escalate the ongoing deadly armed conflict to an unmanageable level. In November 2020, with the guarantee of peace and smooth election, the Arakan Army and Tatmadaw both called for the Rakhine state cancelled elections to be held. Unfortunately, Suu Kyi and her election commission turned down the call. Also, in the same time, the Rakhine State Parliament, including the military representatives, unanimously presented an official request to the Suu Kyi government to repeal the terrorist designation of the Arakan Army in order to enable a ceasefire talk. Suu Kyi turned it down.

In the given situation, Tatmadaw made an ‘informal’ ceasefire with the Arakan Army and also set free the top Rakhine politician Dr Aye Maung and his young colleague historian-writer U Wai Hin Aung from the infamous InSein prison on February 15, just two weeks after the coup. The duo was arrested by the Suu Kyi government in January 1918 on the charges of high treason and connection to the ‘terrorist’ Arakan Army under the Penal Code Articles 122 and 505, and sentenced to 20-year imprisonment in March 2019. At present, the Rakhine State is peaceful and quiet, while Rangoon and Mandalay boil with the protests. The protests in the Kachin, Karen, and Shan areas are minimal while there are no protests in the Chin, Kaya, and Rakhine States.

The Arakan War is the major factor in the 2021 coup, just like the Shan factor was in the 1962 coup. In a short time in late 2020, the Arakan Army strength went up to about 10,000 with a combat force of more than 7,000. This is the main concern.


Military withdrawal from politics

Now and then, Tatmadaw had said that it would withdraw from politics when the ethnic armed conflict ends and no more internal danger to ‘the Union integrity, the national solidarity, and the sovereignty.’

Myanmar needs to create a condition that will make Tatmadaw withdraw from the politics. Tatmadaw came into politics with the 1962 coup d’état putting up a strong reasoning that the Union of Burma was at the brink of disintegration due to the ethnic tension. Since then, the army stays on in power. Section 20(e) of the 2008 constitution says, ‘The Defence Services is mainly responsible for safeguarding the non-disintegration of the Union, the non-disintegration of National solidarity and the perpetuation of sovereignty.’ On this ground, Tatmadaw again comes out to the ‘frontstage’ that we conveniently call a ‘coup.’

Tatmadaw put the blame on the politicians and the ethnic armed organisations for creating a condition that endangers the very existence of the Union of Myanmar. In response, the ethnic armed organisations have announced and promised that their fight is for a genuine federal union, nothing more, nothing less. In return, in 1990, Tatmadaw admitted that it was wrong to equate federalism with secessionism. Tatmadaw stops calling the ethnic armed organisations secessionists, separatists, insurgents, or rebels and honours them with a respectful nomenclature of ‘Ethnic Armed Organisations’. Tatmadaw, also in 1990, erased out the term ‘minorities’ and introduced ‘ethnic peoples’ or ‘Taiyinthar’ that was happily welcomed by the ethnic peoples. At that time, General Than Shwe told the nation that Tatmadaw knows the ethnic peoples more than anybody else because of the Tatmadaw’s long experience in the ethnic areas in the civil war. His wife, Daw Kyaing Kyaing, is a Pa-O. They have eight children, a large family in Myanmar. Then and again, Tatmadaw highlights that it is the Tatmadaw that initiated the peace process with the first peace-talk in 1964. The main objective of the present Tatmadaw-led state administrative council is to build a genuine federal union through the nationwide ceasefire agreement peace process.


What shall we do?

IN THE light of the above discussion on the core issue, although it does not cover many other important aspects of Myanmar life, it will be reasonable for us to help Myanmar achieve a federal union with genuine democracy through the nationwide ceasefire agreement peace process. It is especially so because Aung San Suu Kyi’s politics is filled with ‘personality cult,’ casting a shade on the post-Suu Kyi era. It is also a fact that under her rule Myanmar witnessed increased armed conflicts and atrocities, and poverty escalation in the ethnic areas. Without peace and adequate social-economic security in the ethnic areas, Myanmar’s ‘democracy transit’ is meaningless.


How to help

1. To accord international recognition of autonomy struggle of the Myanmar ethnic peoples and their armed organisations in accordance with (1) the promise of the UN Charter Preamble objective 2: ‘to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small,’ and (2) the UN Charter, Chapter 1, Article 1.2 ‘the principle of equal rights and self-determination.’

2. To hold a UN-sponsored all-inclusive peace conference with all openness and fairness to help the Myanmar peoples formulate a new peaceful and lasting peace and federation in accordance with the promise of the UN Charter Preamble objective 3: ‘To achieve international co-operation in solving international problems of an economic, social, cultural, or humanitarian character, and in promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion.’


Epilogue

MYANMAR is in crisis for more than 70 years. The world is wrong to lock it up in the conventional, outdated, and rotten dungeon of ‘domestic affairs.’ Jumping and shouting only when the fire flares up is sheer stupidity. The problem is not just a question of a power struggle between Tatmadaw and Aung San Suu Kyi or democracy and authoritarianism. It is a struggle of all Myanmar peoples ‘for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion.’


Shew Lu Maung is a writer. He has written books on Myanmarism and issues relevant to the area

Asian companies stay quiet as Western peers condemn Myanmar coup

Coca-Cola, Facebook and H&M among those voicing concern for rights and democracy

A group of 43 mostly Western international companies operating in Myanmar have signed a statement expressing concern over the military coup. (Source photos by Reuters and AP)

TOKYO/YANGON -- Nearly 50 mostly Western international companies in Myanmar, including Coca-Cola, Facebook, H&M, Heineken, Nestle and Unilever, have signed a statement expressing concern about the country's military coup. Asian businesses, however, are largely keeping their heads down.

"As investors, we inhabit a 'shared space' with the people of Myanmar, including civil society organizations, in which we all benefit from respect for human rights, democracy and fundamental freedoms -- including freedom of expression and association -- and the rule of law," said the document organized by the Myanmar Centre for Responsible Business, a Yangon-based group that advocates for human rights in business.

MCRB began gathering signatories in February, but corporate interest has only picked up a month into the coup. Following the deaths of 18 civilian protesters last week, foreign governments and businesses are now shaking off an initial hesitance to speak out against the junta.

Nishimura & Asahi, one of Japan's big four law firms, became the most recent to join the MCRB statement on Thursday. The same day, foreign chambers of commerce in Yangon representing American and European businesses released a joint statement saying they will not meet with the junta despite an invitation from military officials to hold talks.

Sanctions have been imposed on certain military leaders by the U.S. and U.K., both permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, as well as Canada. In the MCRB statement, the 49 companies -- the number as of March 5 -- pledged to comply with sanctions and due diligence on human rights and business integrity.

The statement comes as international pressure on businesses is mounting. The Norwegian central bank said on Wednesday it will place Japanese beverage group Kirin Holdings under observation for possible exclusion from its $1.3 trillion sovereign wealth fund over the group's alliance with a Myanmar military-affiliated company.

Last month, a group of civil society groups including Human Rights Watch submitted to the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights a complaint about Japanese businesses involved in a commercial development project in Yangon called Y Complex. The complainants asked the agency to investigate whether the project was creating "immovable assets" for the military.

People line up for free bottles of Coca-Cola during an event in Yangon in 2013: Many international companies entered the Myanmar market hoping for strong growth.   © Reuters

Other signatories to the MCRB statement include Adidas, Carlsberg, L'Oreal, Maersk, Metro and Total.

"What our statement is seeking to show is that companies are sharing a space with human rights defenders and journalists. If that space is closed off, it's also bad for business," said Vicky Bowman, MCRB director and former U.K. ambassador to Myanmar. MCRB was founded in 2013 as an initiative by the Institute for Human Rights and Business, and NGO that has special consultative status with the United Nations, and the Danish Institute for Human Rights.

The foreign companies were joined by over 100 local ones, including Yoma Group, one of Myanmar's largest conglomerates, as well as the country's largest private bank KBZ Bank. Most companies contacted by Nikkei Asia declined to comment beyond the statement.

One of the international businesses that signed it is Telenor Group. The Norwegian telecommunications company, which has been present in Myanmar since 2014, was one of the few that publicly voiced concerns shortly after the coup.

The Australian business chamber in Myanmar raised its concerns on Wednesday. "The change in Myanmar's risk profile since 1 February 2021 means that it is now difficult for many responsible investors to make large investments in Myanmar," it said in a statement. "We call for an end to violence and a return to stability under democratic government as soon as possible," it added.

The American Chamber of Commerce and its European counterparts also made their stance clear, saying in their Thursday statement: "We have been requested to meet with representatives of the military government. We have declined all invitations."

Facebook also took the step last week of banning the Tatmadaw -- Myanmar's military -- and military-controlled agencies and media from its platforms Facebook and Instagram. The social media giant also banned ads from businesses affiliated to the military, including Myanma Economic Holdings (MEHL).

Japan's Kirin, which jointly owns two local breweries with MEHL, announced days after the coup that it would seek to sever business relations with the military within this year. Kirin has not joined the statement but has denounced the coup as "against our standards and Human Rights Policy."

European companies dominate the list of signatories, despite the significant investment presence of Asian businesses, including Japanese and Thai companies, in Myanmar.

Heineken's brewery opened outside Yangon in 2015. Rival Kirin has decided to end its alliance with Myanma Economic Holdings, which has ties to the country's military.   © Reuters

"The embassies for those countries tend to advise them in these situations to keep their heads down rather than standing up for international principles, even when the governments themselves like Thailand and Japan have actually published guidelines on business and human rights," MCRB's Bowman said.

The MCRB statement was also endorsed by the European Chamber of Commerce in Myanmar. The Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Myanmar, responded to Nikkei Asia's inquiry by saying it is "considering" its response. 

Both Thailand and Japan released national action plans last year to implement the U.N.'s guiding principles on business and human rights. Canada's action plan goes even further, withholding embassy services for Canadian businesses that act irresponsibly abroad.

A cautious approach toward the coup is shared by many Asian companies and investors. For example, Ascent Capital, a private equity fund registered in Singapore and among the most high-profile and media-active commercial players in Myanmar, has not said a word in public. The fund said via its PR agency that "Ascent Capital is currently not offering comments to [the] media."

Their silence has not been lost on young protesters who have taken to the streets in Myanmar's cities in the tens of thousands amid a major escalation of violence by the security forces.

"Don't be on the wrong side of history. There's still time to speak up for democratic reforms," said a protester in Yangon who asked to be identified as Constance, referring to Ascent Capital and other companies who have fled under the radar since the Feb. 1 military takeover. "The people will appreciate companies who stand by them and welcome their ambitions to do business responsibly in the country."

Protesters are calling on businesses in Myanmar to speak out against the coup, posing a serious challenge to multinational companies concerned about reputational risk.   © Reuters

Phyo, a 25-year-old female protester who works in the development sector, criticized the silence of businesses.

"I think it's completely irrational and irresponsible for investors and private businesses to stay quiet... Even if you don't care about human rights atrocities, your business ethics are extremely questionable when you side with an illegitimate government without calling out their actions," she said.

Such views are echoed by the coup resistance movement, backed by large segments of the Myanmar public boycotting military-owned products.

Shortly after Singapore Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said the city-state should focus on doing business in Myanmar and not weigh in on its "politics," Singaporean brands Beauty in the Pot, Crystal Jade, BreadTalk and Ya Kun Kaya Toast were among boycott targets identified on social media with their logos crossed out.

"Businesspeople are struggling to stay neutral between the military and the massive public backlash against the junta, and deal with both sides," said a Myanmar-based analyst, adding that some companies expect the junta to outlive the democracy movement and as a result are being careful not to burn bridges with the regime.

"The corporate community -- especially business groups and funds and investors -- should stand up publicly for human rights, unrestricted flow of information and transparent and fair governance," he added. "They carry some weight in the eyes of the international community and of the regime."

Even though many large Asian corporations remain silent, three Japanese-owned small and medium-sized enterprises in Myanmar did join the MCRB statement. "Our company position is very clear: We stand on the people's side and we're against any kind of violence and any challenge to basic human rights," said the owner of one of the companies.

The owner asked major Japanese companies to look to their own environmental, social and corporate governance standards. "Major [international] companies have already signed on so I don't see that big a risk," he said. "They have strong messages on ESG in Japan so they should follow that."

Additional reporting by a contributing writer in Yangon

Myanmar coup latest: NLD members risk treason charges

After grabbing power, junta threatens death penalty for elected MPs

9:30 a.m. The Global New Light of Myanmar, a state newspaper that serves as a government mouthpiece, publishes an official statement declaring the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH), or the Committee of Representatives to the Union Parliament, to be illegal.

The CRPH is mainly made up of members of the National League for Democracy elected to parliament in a landslide general election victory in November, and has described itself as a "provisional government." The NLD is led by Suu Kyi, who served as de facto head of state from 2016 in the specially created position of state counselor -- an office already abolished by the State Administration Council, the ruling junta.

The announcement warns that attempts to act "like public administrative organizations" violate Section 122 of the penal code "for high treason ... to be punished with death or transportation for life or 22 years of imprisonment." The CRPH on Tuesday appointed nine acting ministers, including foreign minister, a position previously held by Suu Kyi.

The State Administration Council is the official name of the junta that seized power in a coup on Feb. 1. 

After seizing power unlawfully on Feb. 1, the State Administration Council, Myanmar's new junta, has announced that elected members of parliament who created the CRPH, a "provisional government," risk being charged with high treason and could face the death penalty.

1:15 a.m. "The messages and measures of the international community should be conducive for the parties in Myanmar to bridge differences and resolve problems, and avoid escalating tensions or further complicating the situation," China's permanent representative to the United Nations says in a statement after Security Council consultations.

Reiterating that China is "a friendly neighbor of Myanmar," Ambassador Zhang Jun says the international community should support dialogue and reconciliation "on the premise of respecting Myanmar's sovereignty, political independence, territorial integrity and national unity."

"The military and various political parties are all members of the Myanmar family, and should all take up the historical responsibility of maintaining the country's stability and development," Zhang says.

Zhang Jun, China's ambassador to the United Nations, speaks at a Security Council meeting in 2020.   © Reuters

1:00 a.m. Estonia's permanent representative to the United Nations, Sven Jurgenson, says his country "continues to strongly condemn the military coup in Myanmar and the violent repression by the Myanmar security forces against peaceful protesters."

"Estonia reiterates that there needs to be accountability for all those responsible for violations of international human rights law," the ambassador says in a statement on the U.N. Security Council consultations on Myanmar. "It is important to immediately secure the safe and unhindered access to humanitarian aid to ensure that the basic needs of the most vulnerable groups, including Rohingya and populations in Chin, Kachin, Rakhine, and Shan state."

Estonia is one of the current non-permanent members of the Security Council.

Myanmar Coup - Nikkei Asia


Myanmar coup latest THE CANADIAN CONNECTION

Saturday, March 6

 Myanmar's generals are keen to leave politics after the coup and seek to improve relations with the U.S. and distance themselves from China, an Israeli-Canadian lobbyist hired by the junta tells Reuters.

Ari Ben-Menashe, a former Israeli military intelligence official who has previously represented Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe and Sudan's military rulers, says the generals also want to repatriate Rohingya Muslims who fled to neighboring Bangladesh.

Ben-Menashe says he and his firm Dickens & Madson Canada had been hired by the generals to help communicate with the U.S. and other countries who he said "misunderstood" them.

Suu Kyi had grown too close to China for the generals' liking, he says.



Officers maced, trampled: Docs expose depth of Jan. 6 chaos

AP NEWS
By MARTHA MENDOZA and JULIET LINDERMAN
yesterday


1 of 4

FILE - In this Jan. 6, 2021, file photo, police stand guard after holding off rioters who tried to break through a police barrier at the Capitol in Washington. Hundreds of emails, texts, photos and documents obtained by the Associated Press show how a patchwork of law enforcement agencies from all directions tried to give support as protesters poured into town. But a lack of coordination and adequate planning left the Capitol vulnerable, and resulted in a deadly_and potentially avoidable_breach.(AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

Two firefighters loaned to Washington for the day were the only medics on the Capitol steps Jan. 6, trying to triage injured officers as they watched the angry mob swell and attack police working to protect Congress.

Law enforcement agents were “being pulled into the crowd and trampled, assaulted with scaffolding materials, and/or bear maced by protesters,” wrote Arlington County firefighter Taylor Blunt in an after-action memo. Some couldn’t walk, and had to be dragged to safety.

Even the attackers sought medical help, and Blunt and his colleague Nathan Waterfall treated those who were passing out or had been hit. But some “feigned illness to remain behind police lines,” Blunt wrote.

The memo is one of hundreds of emails, texts, photos and documents obtained by The Associated Press. Taken together, the materials shed new light on the sprawling patchwork of law enforcement agencies that tried to stop the siege and the lack of coordination and inadequate planning that stymied their efforts.

The AP obtained the materials through 35 Freedom of Information Act requests to law enforcement agencies that responded to the Capitol insurrection.

“We were among the first mutual aid teams to arrive and were critical to begin the process of driving protestors off the Capitol,” wrote Blunt.

Five people died in the attack, including a police officer. Two other officers killed themselves after. There were hundreds of injuries and more than 300 people, including members of extremist groups Proud Boys and Oathkeepers, have been charged with federal crimes. Federal agents are still investigating and hundreds more suspects are at large. Justice Department officials have said they may charge some with sedition.

The Arlington firefighters ended up at the Capitol because, two days earlier, Washington Metro Police Chief Robert J. Contee had formally asked the Arlington County Police Department, along with police departments from Montgomery and Prince George’s counties in Maryland, and Arlington County in Virginia, to lend them some officers trained for protests and riots, according to the documents.

Arlington’s acting police chief Andy Penn said they’d send help for the “planned and unplanned first amendment activities,” according to emails.

At the time, the Capitol Police department had issued a security assessment warning that militia members, white supremacists and other extremists were heading to Washington to target Congress in what they saw as a “last stand” to support President Donald Trump.

Federal agencies not responding were also preparing for potential violence. On Jan. 4, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said staff should try to telework for the week.

Two days later, it was 3:39 p.m. when Penn emailed county officials that he had “just been notified” that Arlington officers were responding to the Capitol attack and had been absorbed into the overall response led by Capitol Police.

That was almost 90 minutes after the mob first busted into the Capitol and more than an hour after the medics began treating injured police on the steps.

Members of Congress, who were locked down or rushed to safety that day as the attackers approached the House and Senate chambers, are holding hearings this week to get to the bottom of what went wrong with the law enforcement response that allowed the crowd to enter and ransack the Capitol building.

One question they are looking to answer is why the Capitol Police didn’t have more help on hand early in the day, before the rally near the White House devolved into insurrection at the Capitol.

The emails obtained by AP — hastily written and including misspellings and incomplete sentences — show that nearby police agencies were alerted two days earlier that there might be trouble and were prepared to help.

The night before the breach, after hours of rallies and speeches across the city, Federal Protective Service officers, who protect federal property, had noticed protesters trying to camp out on federal property and were “being vigilant for any suspicious activity,” according to an email from the agency.

They were expecting large crowds, and by the next morning they were monitoring them closely.

At 9:45 a.m. a protective service liaison to the Capitol Police wrote, “Good morning Sir, what I have is the Ellipse is permitted for 30k but they expecting for there to be much more. Freedom Plaza original permit was 5k and it was raised to 30k, the permit outside Sylven Theater is permitted for 15K.”

The agents were particularly interested in the right wing extremist group, Proud Boys. They noted how many were in Washington, that they were staying at a downtown hotel, and what they planned.

In a briefing at noon on that day, just as Trump was encouraging supporters to “ fight like hell,” a Federal Protective Service email said about 300 Proud Boys were at the U.S. Capitol.

“No incidents at this time,” the email said. But then it warned, “The Proud Boys are threatening to shut down the water system in the downtown area, which includes government facilities.”

The email noted there was a man in a tree with what appeared to be a rifle near the Ellipse, and about 25,000 people were around the White House, including some who were hiding bags in bushes outside the building.

“Together we stand!” the officer signed off.

About 20 minutes later, a protective service officer whose name was redacted sent an email that read, “POTUS is encouraging the protesters to march to capitol grounds and continue protesting there.” POTUS stands for president of the United States.

In a series of emails that followed, protective service officers messages offered a blow-by-blow account of the march to the Capitol from the rally where Trump spoke.

“Protesters moving towards the capitol down Pennsylvania, Constitution and Madison in numbers estimated 10-15,000,” read an email sent at 12:28 p.m.

The officers tracked them across the city and at 12:57 p.m. a message read, “Large group just breached the USCP barricade on the West Front,” referring to the Capitol Police barriers on west side of the Capitol Building.

About a half hour later, they reported several police officers were injured, and then at 2:14 a message screamed “CAPITOL HAS BEEN BREACHED. PROTESTERS ARE NOW INSIDE THE CAPITOL.” Two minutes later they reported the House and Senate chambers were being locked down.

“Shots fired 2nd floor house side inside the capitol,” read a message at 2:45, probably the moment when a Capitol Police officer fatally shot Ashli Babbitt, a Trump supporter who tried to hurl herself through a broken interior window into the Speaker’s Lobby just outside the House chamber where lawmakers were taking cover.

Intelligence agents used Facebook to monitor dozens of protests planned for Jan. 6 and beyond, according to emails. These rallies had names such as the “Yugest Trump Parade of All (45 Exclamation Points)!,” “Fight for President Trump and Your Rights,” and “Wild Protest for Donald Trump (The Republican Mandate).” Some events were permitted, others were not.

Officers in the Virginia suburb of Vienna were already on edge two days before the Capitol breach after a video of a small, half-hour protest at the home of Republican Sen. Josh Hawley __ a Trump supporter __ attracted more than 100,000 pageviews.

“They claim they are coming back tonight,” Vienna Deputy Chief Daniel Janickey said in Jan. 5 emails to Fairfax County officials.

“WE will have some officers out there tonight monitoring in case (the) group shows up,” Janickey wrote. “Hawley and his staff have hired armed private security for (the) next 48 hours.”

Those protesters didn’t return. But within 24 hours, Fairfax County, Virginia, officials realized their Washington counterparts had much more trouble on their hands.

At 3:10 p.m. on Jan. 6, Fairfax County’s deputy county executive, Dave Rohrer, emailed more than 25 county officials: “Subject: Awareness - Police Mutual Aid Request U.S. Capitol Police.”

That was about two hours after the first windows had been broken.

The U.S. Capitol had been breached, he said.

“It is obvious to me based on my experience and knowledge that an emergency exists,” said Rohrer. He said he had authorized the Fairfax County Police Department to send Civil Disturbance Unit officers and commanders “to assist gaining control for safety reasons.”

He added that they were monitoring the deployment closely. The redacted email refers to an early June episode when police from several jurisdictions used tear gas to violently break up a peaceful and legal protest in Lafayette Square, across the street from the White House.

On Jan. 6, Rohrer said he reminded commanders on the scene “that they are to cease operations if at any point they determine they are being used in an inappropriate, unethical, illegal manner, or are not under a competent authority... Maintaining life safety, regaining and establishing a safe perimeter, etc., should be the initial focus.”

Just 12 minutes later, Rohrer had an update: They were suspending any fire, rescue or emergency service transportation to hospitals in the District of Columbia and “upgrading response and command structure.”

For hours, Fairfax County’s police monitored Metro stations and acted as back up to Washington police, according to the emails. They were also checking with hotels where some in the mob were staying. Rohrer noted that many had been staying in Alexandria and Arlington..

The hotels “reported some problems with crowds and disorderly conduct the past few nights,” he said.

That evening, at 8:31 p.m., a Federal Protective Service memo alerted “there is a report of an armed militia group headed to dc from west Virginia. Query ongoing.”

As midnight approached, Rohrer emailed again. Although the Capitol was quiet, “Intel will be monitored throughout the night and, unfortunately, PD and US Capitol Police are investigating several threats targeting residences of Capitol VIPs or family members received late tonight.”

By Jan. 7, Fairfax County Police Department Major Shawn Bennett was bristling at former Capitol Police Chief Terry Gainer’s critique of the police response.

“Gainer throws a lot of shame but he doesn’t offer any answers to what ‘specifically’ he would have done differently to keep the initial group from breaking down the barriers,” emailed Bennett.

Also on Jan. 7, Fairfax County Executive Bryan Hill was thanking his staff.

“Our Police Department’s Civil Disturbance Unit answered the call yesterday, and as much as I hated to activate you, it was an activation to preserve our republic,” he wrote. “I am hopeful we will never again see what we witnessed yesterday, but I am most hopeful that yesterday’s events will galvanize our county and our nation as we do our best to vaccinate, maintain calm and create a sense of unity.”

MORE ON CAPITOL BREACH AFTERMATH

Associated Press writers Colleen Long in Washington and Garance Burke in San Francisco contributed to this story.


Loser Republican wants voter suppression to correct ‘Democratic-leaning imbalance’ in the electorate

Sarah K. Burris
March 02, 2021


Former Sen. David Perdue (R-GA) is still complaining about losing his election during the January runoffs.

Speaking on Fox News Tuesday, the lawmaker claimed proposed legislation making it easier to vote will exacerbate "Democratic-leaning imbalance" in the electorate.

"It will absolutely clear the field for all these Democratic-leaning imbalances that we saw in Georgia," he told Fox News.

The comment comes just hours after Republican lawyers confessed to the U.S. Supreme Court that the reason they want tighter voting laws is that it's the only way Republicans can win.

The comment comes just hours after Republican lawyers confessed to the U.S. Supreme Court that the reason they want tighter voting laws is that it's the only way Republicans can win.

"What's the interest of the Arizona RNC here in keeping, say, the out-of-precinct ballot disqualification rules on the books?" asked Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

"Because it puts us at a competitive disadvantage relative to Democrats," said lawyer, Michael Carvin, according to Mother Jones. "Politics is a zero-sum game," he added.
Sexual abuse victims urge Canada to investigate Pornhub

Based in Canada, but registered in Luxembourg, 
Pornhub had 42 billion visits last year.

Agence France-Presse
March 04, 2021


A sad young woman (Shutterstock)

More than 100 victims of sexual exploitation, backed by 525 non-profit organizations, have asked Canadian authorities to criminally investigate the owner of Pornhub for facilitating and profiting from sexual abuses.

In a letter sent to the government's Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics last week they accuse Montreal-based MindGeek of violating child protection laws and distributing intimate images without consent.

"The Canadian government must urge law enforcement agencies to investigate MindGeek," they said in the letter.

The 104 victims and NGOs from 65 countries also called on Ottawa "to take immediate legislative and regulatory action to protect children from this predatory and unethical corporation."

"Anything less than full legal accountability," they said, "is an injustice to victims whose lives have been damaged as a result of MindGeek's knowing and wilful actions."

The company, which hosts more than 160 pornography websites including Pornhub, has come under fire in recent months over accusations it distributes exploitive videos and has failed to screen its content, effectively turning a blind eye to child abuse, rape and revenge porn.

The controversy followed the publication of a New York Times article claiming that of the 6.8 million new videos posted each year on Pornhub, "many" depicted "child abuse and nonconsensual violence," including scenes of incest and women being asphyxiated in plastic bags.

MindGeek has denied any wrongdoing, defending its safeguards to detect and remove illegal content in testimony before the parliamentary ethics committee last month.

The committee held hearings into the matter as the government prepares legislation to force online platforms to remove illegal content.


Based in Canada, but registered in Luxembourg, Pornhub had 42 billion visits last year.

After Visa and Mastercard announced they would no longer process payments to Pornhub, the site scrambled to respond with new measures against content uploaded by people who had not been verified.

© 2021 AFP
Republican Lawmakers Across The Country Push For Abortion Restrictions
March 5, 2021
Heard on All Things Considered
NPR

Transcript
In legislatures around the country, Republican lawmakers — encouraged by the confirmation of Judge Amy Coney Barrett — are pushing a new round of abortion restrictions.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Republicans picked up seats in statehouses across the country in November. And now, they are using those gains to push new abortion restrictions, some of which resemble laws previously blocked by the courts. NPR's Sarah McCammon reports.

SARAH MCCAMMON, BYLINE: In the last couple of years, federal courts have repeatedly struck down early abortion bans in Ohio, Georgia, Alabama and elsewhere. But this year, Republican lawmakers in South Carolina were undeterred.





(SOUNDBITE OF MONTAGE)

KATRINA SHEALY: This bill protects the life of the unborn with a heartbeat.

LARRY GROOMS: This is a sensitive issue. This is a controversial issue. But it shouldn't be. But it is.

MCCAMMON: Those voices were South Carolina Republican Senators Katrina Shealy and Larry Grooms during debate over a bill prohibiting most abortions after cardiac activity can be detected. That's often about six weeks into a pregnancy. Republicans were able to pass the bill after picking up several seats in the November election.

Almost as soon as Republican Governor Henry McMaster signed the law, a federal judge blocked it. A court hearing is scheduled for Monday.

Bonyen Lee-Gilmore is Planned Parenthood state media director. She says Republican gains in several state legislatures have set up a renewed battle over abortion rights.

BONYEN LEE-GILMORE: It is a very odd time where there is so much hope and opportunity with the Biden administration, pro-reproductive health majorities in Congress, yet incredibly extreme, hostile anti-reproductive health care majorities in state legislatures.

MCCAMMON: A new analysis from the Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion rights, reports an unusually busy year for anti-abortion legislation, with more than 300 proposed restrictions. Katie Glenn, with the anti-abortion rights group Americans United For Life, points to Republican gains in New Hampshire and Montana, where lawmakers have proposed restrictions on procedures performed later in pregnancy.

KATIE GLENN: You know, we've seen some really positive trends.

MCCAMMON: Glenn also says there are new efforts to restrict medication abortion, particularly via telehealth, which has become more popular during the pandemic. Ohio recently banned the use of telehealth for abortion. And Glenn says some states are considering new rules for doctors prescribing abortion pills.

GLENN: They can give the woman the information she needs so that she's making a fully informed decision and she understands that this is a multiday process at her home.

MCCAMMON: In Arkansas, lawmakers have approved a new requirement that patients call a counseling hotline before an abortion. At least two other states - Texas and Tennessee - are considering similar proposals. Tennessee lawmakers also have proposed an unusual bill that would give a man who impregnates a woman the ability to stop her from having an abortion.

Mary Ziegler, a law professor at Florida State University, says the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett appears to be triggering an onslaught of deeply restrictive abortion bills, including ones that courts already have said are unconstitutional under the landmark Roe v. Wade decision.

MARY ZIEGLER: I think now, some red state lawmakers are looking at this and thinking, well, surely, you know, there will be five votes to overturn Roe among those six conservatives.

MCCAMMON: Meanwhile, some states are pushing in the other direction, working to guarantee abortion rights. New Mexico recently repealed decades-old restrictions that were still on the books, anticipating that the federal courts may chip away at those rights in the years to come.

Sarah McCammon, NPR News, Washington.