BURMA

Burma (Myanmar) lies between India and China, with a population in 2020 of 55  million. 

Burma was colonised  from the early 19th century by the British  who,  protected  by the Imperial Army, made vast profits from the  extraction  of natural resources of oil, gas and teak forests,  leaving vast  dust bowls behind them. Rice and precious stones were  also exported.

An Independence  movement started in the 1930s amongst the  students and  monks,  led by Aung San, who exploited  Japanese  occupation during the Second World War to win independence in 1946. Aung San was  assassinated in 1948, with the declaration  of  independence imminent.  Aung San united the ideas of Buddhism,  Socialism  and democracy, combining the ideas of Marx, Nehru and Voltaire.

1958. A Military Coup is led by General Ne Win. Undermined by an election victory by Aung San’s Deputy, Nu, Ne Win leads another military coup in 1962. He abolishes the constitution and free press and imposes strict censorship on the rest of the media in  one of the most literate societies in Asia. Ne Win  abolishes currency  and  introduces a new currency,  leading  the  nation’s people (most with savings in cash) into poverty overnight.  Burma becomes the least developed country in Asia while Ne Win  invests in  property  in  London and Tokyo and  amasses  a  huge  fortune through trading in gem-stones.

1988. Democracy uprising.  Ne Win’s lucky number is 9,  so  the uprising takes place on the 8th minute of the 8th hour on the  8th day  of the 8th month of 1988. It starts with a dock strike  and is quickly supported by all sections of the population. Suu  Kyi (pronounced “Su Chi”), daughter of Aung San, returns from her home in  England  and agrees to join the democracy movement.  Suu  Kyi addresses  half a million on the streets of Rangoon  calling  for restoration  of democracy and elections. The National League  for Democracy (the NLD) is formed.

Burmese army move in and shoot  to kill everyone out on the street. 3,000 die. Doctors at Rangoon hospital, refusing to release the injured to the army until they are treated, are shot. Protests forming in front of the hospital are also shot dead. The bodies of the dead and injured are forcibly removed  by convoys of army trucks to Rangoon Crematorium and burnt, dead  or alive.   Suu  Kyi  is placed under house arrest for  the  next  6 years,  eventually being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.  She  is released  in 1995 but remains under constant  military  surveillance  and forbade from seeing her English husband and two  sons. 3000 party workers are also arrested. After the uprising Ne  Win appears  in person on television – “If there are more  demonstrations, the army will shoot to kill”.

1990. The generals, thinking they are now safe, call  elections. Suu Kyi’s NLD win 82% of the vote. Aung San Suu Kyi is the elected  leader  of Burma. The Generals refuse to give up  power

Since  the  coup, 65% of the Generals’ money has  come  from  oil companies.  The oil pipeline to take oil from Burma  into  neighbouring  Thailand,  is being built by Total (half  owned  by  the French Government) and Americans Unacal. It will make the  Generals an estimated $400 million per year.

And the British are back in Burma. The Scott inquiry put pressure on the receiver dealing with the winding up of BMARC. The receiver  revealed to Gerald James, then-Chair of Astra when they  took over BMARC, that BMARC, implicated in illegal trading with  Iraq, were  also  trading arms to the Burmese regime in 1990,  2  years after  the crack-down against the democracy movement.  This  arms trade  was in spite of the British Government’s declaration  that they  would  not be supplying arms to Burma.

BMARC had  a  secret order book that also contained information on other covert operations  that  they were conducting on behalf of  the  Intelligence Community.  British Foreign Office minister Jeremy Hanley  states that contacts with British business will help Burma move  towards democracy  (like  Indonesia  and Saudi  Arabia  presumably).  The Australians did the same, the Prime Minister Bob Hawke,  condemning the regime and then leading a Trade Mission there.

The “Death Railway”, built in Burma by the Japanese during  World War  2  at the cost of 16,000 allied lives and  100,000  Burmese lives,  was extended by the Generals, again  using slave  labour, including children. A family who cannot supply  an adult to do the work, or who cannot make a payment, are forced to give up a child for slave labour. The children are also forced to make bricks for the army, who sell them to the contractors. 

Over a 3 year period, 200,000 people were drafted in  and  300 lives lost by execution, disease and exhaustion. A man,  attempting  to  video the evidence, lost his wife to  the  military  who strung  her  up in her own village and beat her  for  three  days before an army captain came along and cut off both her hands with a  knife.  In response to this, the Burmese Government  say  that there is a long and proud history of “volunteer” labour in Burma.

The  Death  Railway  is for the transportation  of  soldiers  and supplies into the region where Total and Unacal are building  the pipeline for the Military Dictatorship.

British Airways, Kuoni and Orient Express also share the military junta’s point of view of Burma, and invest heavily.  Prisoners in chains prepare the moat around the Imperial Palace in  Mandalay for 1996, declared the “Year of the Tourist” by  the military. The regime says that these labourers are criminals, but this is in a country where you get 10 years for writing a poem or singing a song in favour of democracy.

Rudyard  Kipling’s dreamy ‘Road to Mandalay’ (that he never  saw) has  been widened to form an expressway, again by slave labour  – they know it as the “Road of No Return”. Amnesty reports that two “volunteers” attempting to escape were executed on the spot,  one of them hacked to death.

American James Sherwood is the chairman of Orient Express  Hotels and “Road to Mandalay” River Cruises. He gave $35 million to  the  Burmese for “shore facilities to promote river tourism in Burma”. Sherwood  only visits the principle cities, does not travel  into forbidden regions and has been informed by the senior CIA  representative  in the area that the allegations of slavery  are  completely unsubstantiated, and that any abuses that do  occur  are related  to the “Drugs War”. This in spite of the fact that  even the US State Department confirm that slavery is a fact in  Burma. Sherwood rests in the knowledge that he has no personal  evidence of  abuse  occurring in Burma, therefore it isn’t happening  –  a simple act of denial. Look the other way.

The  United  Nations have reported a  million  people  displaced, untold  thousands  massacred, tortured and  subjected  to  modern slavery.  Amnesty  International  call Burma  “a  prison  without bars”.

Since  John  Pilger’s documentary on Burma in the nineties, news coverage has  increased  from zero. The National League for Democracy have been able to conduct a  peaceful democracy rally with the Generals knowing  that  they are  now  under scrutiny from the international media.  The  fact that the rally did not end in slaughter is progress of a kind and was reported.

If my account stopped there, the reader may be forgiven for thinking that the situation has of course improved with time. But if there has been no momentous confrontation of Imperialist behaviour, no enlightenment amongst International Capital that a new approach is required, then why would things have changed? Let’s take a look at the more recent developments in Burma, or Myanmar as the Generals would have it.  

The Military Dictatorship continues in Burma, with continued international investment from the US, Russia, China, Britain, France – the whole range of previous Imperial players in the region, only a tiny bit shy about co-investing in Burmese companies wholly owned by the Dictatorship. More concerned by their inability to run business in a coherent and profitable manner, and always tainted by their image abroad as the unacceptable face of capitalism. Meanwhile the Burmese people themselves, starved of any revenue from the exploitation of their resources, decline.  By  2014, The United Nations ranks Burma at 147 out of 189 countries in relation to human development – a country that used to be amongst the most educated in the region.

In 2011, in order to soften their image, the Generals dissolve the Military Junta and set up a “civilian” but nevertheless unelected Government, with General Min Aung Hlaing as Leader. This is sufficient for Big Business to start investing in the country led to ruin by the ineptitude of the military dictatorship. But, as always, the Military own and control the Nation’s resources and foreign investment remains, as always, in partnership with the Generals. 

In 2014, according to The National Resource Governance Institute who monitor global mineral wealth, $926 billion dollars of Burmese oil revenues are pocketed by the Burmese Military with only $600,000 finding its way back to the Burmese Treasury.

In 2015, the elections was won by Suu Kyi’s NLD. International companies, now openly, move straight back in to set up joint ventures with Burmese companies directly controlled by the Military. A token Democracy is all that is required to set the corporate PR machine rolling. All sorts of corporate sponsored social programmes abound, if not in deed then in word. Empty corporate PR gestures do however serve a a function, that used to be fulfilled by religion, absolving corporations of guilt in their complicity with thugs to remove a nation’s wealth to line their own pockets.  

2017. in spite of Suu Kyi’s NLD party being in power, 700,000 moslem Rohingya flee to Bangladesh to avoid a genocidal campaign against them. The genocide is enacted by the Military. Suu Kyi has, in practical terms, zero control over their activity but nevertheless incurs the condemnation of western liberals, along with sanctions. The Military will of course never see themselves as being under the jurisdiction of an elected Government, but that Government can handily take responsibility for the genocide.

2020. February 1st. Following a landslide election victory for the NLD,  and as you might be expecting by now, the Military organise a coup and hold Suu Kyi under arrest without trial. They assert without evidence that the election was rigged. Amid imposed curfews and an internet shutdown, the people react by organising national Strikes. Business is disrupted.  U.S. express “disappointment” (presumably at the disruption to business) and impose minor sanctions. International capital originating from the US now has more competition from Russia and China and the US will not be too punitive on the military regime if this disrupts big business income. Just enough to show the world that they don’t approve of Dictatorships, but not too much to prevent disruption of income flows from Dictatorships. A fine balance indeed.

An elected Government, with the backing of the people, will eventually find its way back to power in Burma. But it will be many, many years beyond this before they are able to actually claim control of the country’s resources by way of revenues and taxes. This position is the most optimistic outcome that can be expected in the prevailing circumstances of the current world order.

Western democracies should not feel too superior at this point, given how beholden our Ministers are to Big Business Lobbyists and Party Sponsors. The objective is to create Systems and Governments that are genuinely of the people and for the people. Burma will merely head for an improvement where there is less overt brutality and killing and, under the current global system, will arrive at a system similar to ours in the West – a Government of the privileged for the privileged, military uniforms a little more in the background. We are all a long way from a meritocracy, and the objective of this book is to acknowledge the problem and hopefully to consider the action proposed here.

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