ျမန္မာႏုိင္ငံက မြတ္စလင္ ဆန္႔က်င္ေရး အၾကမ္းဖက္မႈေတြနဲ႔ ပတ္သက္ၿပီး
၁၉၉၁ခုႏွစ္ ႏုိဗဲလ္ၿငိ္မ္းခ်မ္းေရး ဆုရွင္ ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ဟာ အေဝဖန္
ခံေနရပါတယ္။
ဒီအေၾကာင္းကို အေမရိကန္ အေျခစိုက္ ဝါရွင္တန္ပို႔စ္ သတင္းစာမ်က္ႏွာမွာလည္း အက်ယ္တဝံ့ ေဖာ္ျပထားပါတယ္။
ဝါရွင္တန္ပို႔စ္က အဓိက ေဝဖန္ေထာက္ျပထားခ်က္က မႏွစ္က စတင္ျဖစ္ပြားၿပီး ဒီႏွစ္ ထဲမွာလည္း
ျမန္မာႏုိင္ငံ အလယ္ပုိင္းနဲ႔ ေနရာတခ်ိဳ႕မွာ
မြတ္စလင္ဆန္႔က်င္ေရးလႈပ္ရွားမႈေတြကေန အၾကမ္းဖက္မႈ ေတြျဖစ္ေပၚခဲ့တဲ့အေပၚ
ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္က ေရငံုႏုတ္ပိတ္ေနခဲ့တယ္ဆုိတာပါဘဲ။
ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ဟာ လက္ရွိ အာဏာမရွိေပမယ့္ လြတ္လပ္ေရး ဖခင္
ဗုိလ္ခ်ဳပ္ေအာင္ဆန္းရဲ႕ သမီးလည္း ျဖစ္တဲ့အညီ အခုထိ ျမန္မာႏုိင္ငံတဝန္း
ၾသဇာတိကၠမ ႀကီးသူျဖစ္တာကိုလည္း ဝါရွင္တန္ပုိ႔စ္ က ေဖာ္ျပပါတယ္။
ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ ေဝဖန္မႈမ်ားနဲ႔ ရင္ဆုိင္ေနရပုံအေၾကာင္း ေရးထားတ့ဲ
ဝါရွင္တန္ပို႔စ္ ေဆာင္းပါးရွင္ Joseph J. Schatz ရဲ႕ သတင္းေဆာင္းပါးကို
ျပန္လည္ေဖာ္ျပေပးလုိက္ပါတယ္။
ဧရာ၀တီ
Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi, a human-rights icon, is criticized on anti-Muslim violence
RANGOON, Burma — When it comes to human rights, few names carry quite as much weight as Aung San Suu Kyi’s.
In more than two decades of facing down Burma’s former military junta,
the opposition leader earned reverence at home and admiration across the
globe — not to mention the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize. Her release from
years of house arrest in 2010 and her election to Burma’s parliament
last year helped persuade Western nations to relax sanctions on the
current, civilian-led government.
So to some of Suu Kyi’s admirers
in the West, and ethnic and religious minorities here in Burma, the past
few months have been disconcerting.
That’s because “the lady,”
as she is known, has been resisting calls to wield her moral authority
on behalf of the Rohingya, a Muslim minority group that faces
state-sponsored discrimination and has suffered attacks by extremist
Buddhists in western Burma.
Suu Kyi, however, is making no
apologies for sounding less like a human rights icon and more like a
politician playing to the country’s Buddhist majority.
“Please
don’t forget that I started out as the leader of a political party. I
cannot think of anything more political than that,” Suu Kyi said at a
Dec. 6 news conference in Rangoon. “Icon was a depiction that was
imposed on me by other people.”
Suu Kyi’s situation is
particularly sensitive as she attempts to persuade the country’s
still-powerful military to change the constitution before national
elections in 2015 and, among other things, remove a provision that bars
her from becoming president.
At 68, Suu Kyi — the daughter of
Burmese independence hero Aung San, who was slain in 1947 — remains the
country’s most popular public figure.
But critics say Suu Kyi, a
member of the country’s Buddhist, Burman elite, is softening her
long-standing support for human rights to appease the military and
protect herself from ruling-party politicians who might play the ethnic
card against her. The complaints are particularly strong among Burma’s
Muslims and other ethnic minorities, such as the largely Christian
Kachin population.
Suu Kyi “is after the majority vote because
she wants to be president,” said Khin Maung Myint, a Rohingya activist
who noted, wistfully, that he backed her when she rose to prominence in
pro-democracy protests in 1988.
Suu Kyi is regularly feted in foreign capitals, but the issue has raised concern among some of her global admirers.
Hans Hogrefe, the Washington director and chief policy officer at
Physicians for Human Rights, said his group wants all leaders in Burma —
not just Suu Kyi — to speak out for the Rohingya.
But Hogrefe said
Suu Kyi’s actions will carry undeniable weight. “If she doesn’t speak
out, that also sends a signal,” he said by phone from Washington.
Many Rohingya have lived in Burma — also known as Myanmar — for
generations, but their national origins remain a subject of bitter
contention. The government considers them illegal immigrants from
neighboring Bangladesh. Hundreds died last year in riots, which left
tens of thousands of Rohingya in squalid camps.
In an October
interview with the BBC, Suu Kyi rejected charges that the Rohingya
situation amounts to “ethnic cleansing.” She said that both Buddhists
and Muslims have fears about each other, noting that there is “a
perception that global Muslim power is very great.” Although Muslims
have borne the brunt of the recent violence, she equated the two groups’
suffering and said many Burmese Buddhists who fled military rule also
remain stranded as refugees in various countries.
Although other Muslims in Burma also face prejudice, the Rohingya are viewed with particular scorn by many in the country.
Nyan Win, a spokesman for Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party, said she has little room to maneuver.
“I understand the Western countries are giving pressure about the
Rohingya,” Nyan Win said. However, he said, “according to our history
and our law, we can’t accept the Rohingya.” Nyan Win made the comments
in the party’s small Rangoon headquarters, whose walls are plastered
with posters of Suu Kyi — an illustration of how the party she helped
found 25 years ago remains centered on her.
Some analysts
caution that Suu Kyi faces an enormously complicated political situation
in a country emerging from decades of isolation. She would undoubtedly
seek to heal Burma’s political, ethnic and religious divisions as
president, they say, if only she got the chance to serve.
“She
has to have a balanced approach,” said Thierry Mathou, the French
ambassador to Burma. “She has to do national reconciliation. When you
are doing politics, it is impossible to please everybody.”
Suu
Kyi’s situation is particularly difficult given that when it comes to
the presidency, she literally cannot win. The military overturned her
party’s victory in 1990, put her under house arrest and then wrote a new
constitution in 2008 that barred people with spouses or children who
are foreign nationals from becoming president. That appeared to target
Suu Kyi, whose husband was British and whose children carry British
passports.
In addition to repealing that provision, her party
wants to reduce the 25 percent share of parliament that the constitution
guarantees to the military.
Suu Kyi has been making it clear
that she respects the army and sees it as a key part of the country’s
future — words that many see as an effort to assure former generals that
they will not be put on trial, or lose their money, in a fully
democratic Burma.
But such comments are a letdown to longtime
anti-government activists and members of ethnic minorities, such as Khon
Ja, 43, from Kachin state, where largely Christian ethnic rebels are in
an on-again, off-again battle with the army.
Khon Ja, a member
of the Kachin Peace Network, has been trying to get Suu Kyi to address
the problem of rapes of displaced ethnic women in Kachin state. In a
recent news conference, Suu Kyi tiptoed around the issue of sexual
violence in conflict zones, saying that ethnic militias also are
complicit.
Khon Ja said Suu Kyi had been the “voice of people
who were suffering in Myanmar.” But she and other younger Kachin have
soured on Suu Kyi, she said.
“From my point of view, she is a
politician who lies to me,” said Khon Ja, adding that Suu Kyi is
isolated from civil society leaders, a common complaint.
Still,
in Burma’s nascent democracy, no one commands respect and attention
like Suu Kyi does, Khon Ja said, and the main alternative in national
elections is the military-linked governing party.
“The Myanmar people have no option when we come to 2015,” she said.
အိမ့္သံစဥ္
No comments:
Post a Comment