2005 November | AIPMC

Group of ASEAN MPs call for Myanmar junta ejection

Bangkok: A group of Southeast Asian politicians called on Friday for Myanmar’s military junta to be kicked out of the ASEAN regional political bloc within a year unless it gets serious about democratic reform.

“We cannot tolerate this any more,” outspoken Thai senator Kraisak Choonhavan — an old friend of detained Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi — told a news conference. “We need our respective governments in Asia to do more.” Claiming some of the credit for the junta’s decision to skip its turn as chairman of ASEAN (the Association of South East Asian Nations) in 2006, the MPs said the international community should not ease the pressure on Yangon’s generals.

Teresa Kok, secretary of the ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Myanmar Caucus (AIPMC), said: “The AIPMC resolves to call for the suspension of Myanmar from ASEAN if it fails to bring democratic reforms in the country in the next 12 months.”

They also backed a call from retired South African archbishop Desmond Tutu and former Czech president Vaclav Havel — both of whom, like Suu Kyi, are Nobel Laureates — to have Myanmar referred to the United Nations Security Council.

“The deteriorating situation in Myanmar is affecting not only those within the country, but people outside its borders as well,” AIPMC said in a statement.

“Quite apart from its truly disgraceful human rights record, Myanmar’s troubles, ranging from ethnic conflicts and refugee outflows to drugs and the unchecked spread of HIV/AIDS, have become a serious cause for concern for ASEAN and the international community.”

Myanmar, or Burma as it was called, has been under military rule since 1962. The current junta, which seized power in 1988 and ignored a crushing defeat in 1990 elections, says it is restoring civilian rule via a seven-step “roadmap to democracy”.

Nearly all foreign officials consider the plan a sham, especially while Suu Kyi remains under house arrest.

ASEAN admitted Myanmar in 1997 in the hope of teasing out democratic reform. So far, that effort has failed and the generals’ pariah status has damaged the group’s credibility.

ASEAN constructive engagement with Burma junta complicates situation

Democratic Voice of Burma

The Association of South East Asian Nations’ (ASEAN) so-called

constructive engagement with Burma’s military junta, State Peace and

Development Council (SPDC), is making democratic reforms in Burma more

complicated, said ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Myanmar Caucus (AIPMC).

The criticism came after a meeting of AIPMC members with their European

Union counterparts at Brussels to discuss the situation in Burma on 4

October.

They insisted that ASEAN’s decision to allow Burma to forgo its chance of

taking the rotating chairmanship in 2006 is only an attempt to avoid

diplomatic pressures and it would not solve the problems in Burma without

looking for new approaches.

The meeting was attended by AIPMC members from Thailand and the

Philippines led by its chairman Malaysian MP Zaid Ibrahim, EU experts on

Asia, some MEPs and Harn Yawnghwe of Euro-Burma Office.

Op Ed: The next move to help Myanmar change

Written by Jon Ungphakorn

New Straits Times, Malaysia

THE news blackout imposed by Myanmar’s military junta on its decision to forego its turn as chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) next year shows that it has received a severe blow to its prestige. Indeed, the decision was far from voluntary.

Junta leader Senior General Than Shwe “lost face” and promptly disappeared from public view so completely that some Myanmar thought he had died.

The protagonists that pressured the regime into relinquishing the Asean chair were not the usual Western human rights campaigners, but Myanmar’s closest Asean neighbours.

This must have made the retreat doubly painful for the generals, as Asean was previously one of the junta’s strongest shields against international pressure.

For Asean, the episode was a lesson in assertiveness. It showed that persistent pressure works better than the “constructive engagement” that it had pursued, to no avail, for the eight years since Myanmar joined the organisation.

This shift has been led by an embryonic grouping of elected regional parliamentarians known as the Asean Inter-Parliamentary Caucus on Democracy in Myanmar (AIPMC), of which I am a member.

Established last November to spur progress on democratisation in Myanmar, parliamentarians from Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Cambodia took the unprecedented step of crossing national and party lines to review critically Asean policy on Myanmar, seek the release of Aung San Suu Kyi and disqualify Myanmar from chairing.

Now, we will move for the suspension of Myanmar’s membership of Asean unless Suu Kyi and other political prisoners are released and clear progress towards democracy is made through negotiations involving the Suu Kyi‘s National League for Democracy and representatives of the various ethnic groups.

As elected legislators in Asean’s established and budding democracies, the members of AIPMC feel that our voices have merit and legitimacy. We know that Myanmar’s political destiny is inextricably linked to that of our own countries.

When Myanmar joined Asean in 1997, there were only 210,000 Myanmar refugees and asylum-seekers throughout the region. Now, nearly one million people have fled Myanmar’s political and economic chaos for neighbouring countries, and another million people remain internally displaced.

Our youth are at an all-time high risk of drug addiction from the massive flow of narcotics, particularly amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS), from Myanmar, while the generals there maintain congenial ties with notorious drug lords.

In mid-September, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime admitted that Myanmar and China were the world’s top producers of ATS. Amphetamine drugs produced in eastern Myanmar seem to be transported with such ease that significant quantities have been found in northeast India, on Myanmar’s western border.

That, together with the heroin that is trafficked from Myanmar to India, China, Thailand, and other countries in the region, poses a serious threat to our political and economic security.

It is both tragic and inevitable that the areas of India and China bordering Myanmar now suffer from those countries’ highest concentration of drug addiction and HIV infection.

My own country, Thailand, receives up to 900 million amphetamine pills from Myanmar every year, and about a third of our regular drug users are below the age of 16. If this is the impact on Thailand, what about the young people and children of Myanmar, who have been restricted from access to education, information, and health care?

It is scandalous that drug lords enjoy more freedom to operate than aid agencies, while basic access to food, education and health care suffers many restrictions, with up to 70 per cent of Myanmar’s children chronically malnourished in some border areas.

Indeed, in August, World Food Programme executive director James Morris revealed that the WFP had delivered only 430 tonnes of the 5,500 tonnes of rice earmarked for vulnerable people in Myanmar’s northern Arakan State because of restrictions imposed by the regime.

Two weeks later, the Global Fund for HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria pulled its funding for programmes in Myanmar, citing government restrictions that had created “an impossibly difficult environment”.

Preventing aid from reaching those in need is bad enough. But Myanmar’s regime actually perpetuates conditions that sustain and worsen the HIV/AIDS epidemic by restricting access to counselling, medication and other support services.

In order for HIV/AIDS programmes to be effective and sustainable, affected communities must have the freedom to organise and empower themselves. Only then can they be assured access to the resources essential for treatment options.

Suu Kyi’s eloquent plea, “Please use your liberty to promote ours”, has special resonance for us in AIPMC, who enjoy the benefits of representative democracy.

This is why we feel obligated to call on the highest levels of the international community — including the UN Security Council — to address the question of Myanmar, for we must show that we are serious about peace, democracy and human rights. The courageous people of Myanmar, like people everywhere around the world, deserve what far too many of us take for granted. — Project Syndicate

The writer is an elected member of the Thai Senate and committee member of the Asean Inter-Parliamentary Caucus on Democracy in Myanmar. (This article has also appeared among others, in the Bangkok Post and Taipei Times)