The tendency is to gloss over the effects of 20 years of sanctions, 30 years of self-isolation, 50 years of authoritarian rule, 70 years of internal war, and over 100 years of colonialism.
Myanmar: fierce fighting has erupted during the past few years and there are nearly 500,000 internally displaced people along the Thai and Chinese borders © Getty |
It is time to jettison the Myanmar fairytale
The Rohingya humanitarian crisis and economic woes create a bleak outlook
The writer is author of the forthcoming book ‘The Secret History of Burma’ (2018)
The outside world is absolutely right to prioritise the crisis at hand. It is equally important, though, to jettison once and for all the Myanmar fairytale, and to appreciate that working in Myanmar means working with a near-failed state; to redouble efforts to boost the country’s own abilities, in particular through investments in health and education; and, perhaps most of all, to help inject fresh thinking about an exciting future for all.
Myanmar today presents a more worrying picture than at almost any time since the darkest days of military dictatorship.
The world's attention has rightly been focused on the Rohingya crisis ;and
the plight of hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children fleeing
in one of the biggest refugee exoduses since the second world war.
The
worst may not be over. Humanitarian needs are far from met and
discussions have barely begun on possible refugee return or the
investigation of human rights abuses.
There is a chance that western countries may respond with targeted
sanctions. Even if formal sanctions are not imposed, international
investor interest and tourism numbers will doubtless plummet. This is at
a time when local business confidence is weak and banks unstable.
Millions of the poorest people in Asia may soon face an unbearably bleak
future.
Any economic downturn will directly threaten Myanmar’s
already fragile peace process. The country is home to approximately 20
“ethnic armed organisations”, the largest of which is fielding more than
20,000 troops, and hundreds of local militia.
Fierce fighting
has erupted at times during the past few years and there are
nearly 500,000 internally displaced people along the Thai and Chinese
borders. Economic growth alone will not lead to peace, but without the
pull of an inclusive and fast-developing economy, the peace process will
have no steam.
The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, responsible for the August attacks ;which
set off the latest round of violence, may well attack again. There is
an even worse scenario where international jihadi groups or others
inspired by them target cities in central Myanmar, where 2m other,
non-Rohingya Muslims, are for now living in peace with their Buddhist,
Hindu and Christian neighbours. Imported terrorism could easily spark
communal violence, with devastating consequences.
For many in the
west, Myanmar has been seen for decades almost exclusively as a
Manichean struggle between the democracy movement, led by Aung San Suu
Kyi, and a faceless junta. Few have wanted to understand the depth and
complexity of Myanmar’s challenges and or help find a pragmatic way
forward. Policy failures have had little political cost.
Inside
the country, there is a myth of Myanmar as a rich country gone wrong, a
belief in a golden age not long ago, ruined by military despots. The
corollary to this is believing that a single shift, say to democratic
government, is all that is needed to unlock potential and restore the
country to its rightful place as one of the most prosperous in the
region. An actual nuts and bolts programme for modernisation is nowhere
to be found.
The tendency is to gloss over the effects of 20 years of sanctions,
30 years of self-isolation, 50 years of authoritarian rule, 70 years of
internal war, and over 100 years of colonialism.
The impact of
generations of virtually no public spending on health and education is
everywhere to be seen. Xenophobic tendencies are entrenched across the
political scene. State institutions are brittle and in many parts of the
country practically non-existent. Progress on any front, even with
maximum political will, will not be easy.
Some things have
certainly improved in the past few years: political life is freer than
at any time in half a century and at least a tentative transition has
been made from military dictatorship to a quasi-elected government. No
one wants to go back to isolation.
But the mix of challenges now
facing the country is so great, it is hard to see a positive narrative
continuing. It is not just the peace process, the economy, and the
Rohingya crisis. Migration, urbanisation, climate change, and new
feelings and agendas unleashed by a revolution in telecoms are reshaping
the social landscape. Relations with China are at an inflection point,
with the possibility of huge new infrastructure projects remaking
Myanmar’s geography.
At the same time, almost no one is
considering the long view. Just take northern Rakhine, site of today’s
violence and tomorrow’s possible refugee return: what will it be in 10
or 15 years? A stop on a new super-highway between China and India? Or
will climate change sink it into the sea? Even an experienced government
aided by super technocrats would struggle to manage what Myanmar is
having to manage, let alone plan for the future.
The outside world
is absolutely right to prioritise the crisis at hand. It is equally
important, though, to jettison once and for all the Myanmar fairytale,
and to appreciate that working in Myanmar means working with a
near-failed state; to redouble efforts to boost the country’s own
abilities, in particular through investments in health and education;
and, perhaps most of all, to help inject fresh thinking about an
exciting future for all.
Otherwise, the current crisis will be just the first of many to come.
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