BURMA: SURRENDER TIMING
By Roland Watson
March 16, 2014
There is now a desperate push by Burma's military dictatorship,
including one of its public faces, the Myanmar Peace Center (MPC), and
also ethnic traitors, to complete a nationwide ceasefire by early April.
All sorts of announcements have been made saying that this timetable
will be achieved. Of course, there have been months of such
announcements regarding earlier deadlines, all of which were nothing
less than regime propaganda, and which due to the insistence by the
ethnic nationalities for achieving a fair deal for their people and for
all of Burma, were not realized. The question should now be asked: Why
does the regime view April as being so important?
The first thing to understand is that Burma's generals are demanding a
unilateral or one-sided ceasefire, in other words, a complete
surrender. The push for April therefore is nothing less than a
negotiation over the surrender's timing. The regime is yielding nothing!
It will not stop Burma Army attacks against the ethnic forces and
peoples. Indeed, it has publicly stated, even in the face of
unassailable evidence, that it is doing no such thing. Similarly, it
will not stop its never-ending commission of gross human rights crimes,
including murder, rape, arrest and torture, destruction of villages,
extortion of and theft from villagers, etc. Nor will it agree to remove
its forces from the ethnic areas, or even genuinely discuss the
establishment of codes of conduct, which codes it has already agreed to
negotiate and implement in its separate ceasefire agreements with the
different ethnic armies. Ultimately, it is demanding that the ethnic
forces disperse, give up their arms, and "join the legal fold."
Moreover, the regime refuses to discuss, much less agree to, the
different ethnic demands including not only the cessation of attacks and
abuses, and creation of codes of conduct, but also the drafting of a
completely new Constitution to consign the military to its appropriate
role in a democracy, and to establish a truly federal state and federal
army.
In view of its continuing if not perpetual obstinacy, there is no
reason for the ethnic groups to agree to anything, and given that the
rightful representatives of the ethnic peoples can hold off the
traitors, they won't.
The ethnic nationalities have now agreed to establish a joint
committee with the regime to continue the discussions. From the regime's
perspective, not to mention MPC and the traitors, the function of this
committee is to prepare the specific terms of the surrender. It is
therefore essential that sincere, uncorrupted representatives of the
ethnic peoples are appointed to the ethnic side of the committee, not
the corrupt traitors, so that ethnic and real Burma-wide interests are
served.
This still leaves the question, though, why is the regime pushing for
April? The answer to this is simple. The dictatorship knows that the
upcoming census will be fraudulent. Its plans for this are already set.
It further understands that much of the fraud will be uncovered, and
that this will precipitate a popular reaction. In such an environment,
an ethnic surrender will be precluded.
The regime has seen that its separate ceasefire agreements
effectively defanged the resistance groups. Even in the face of the
Burma Army repeatedly breaking and otherwise failing to fulfill the
agreements, the ethnic forces, other than in Kachin and Northern Shan
States, have done nothing. The dictatorship is confident that with a
nationwide ceasefire/surrender in place, the ethnic forces, under the
command of traitorous leaders, will also not react to the census fraud.
The ethnic groups should not agree to anything until after the census
is completed and the results have been publicized, and further not
until after any proposed deal has been presented for comment to the
ethnic publics and civil society organizations.
Indeed, for the census, Kachin groups have already said that they
will not recognize the results, and Karen groups have called for it to
be postponed. Shan and Mon groups are planning their own count, to
counter regime lies. Even worse, the regime has announced that Burma's
most oppressed group, the Rohingya, will not even be counted.
Burma is still a military dictatorship, with a civilian facade. The
recent announcement that the rights of the military to veto any
constitutional amendments, will not be changed, not to mention its
constitutional ability to act with impunity and with no legal
consequences, is proof of this.
This leaves us once again with elementary arithmetic. For Burma to be
freed, there must be a new popular uprising, and/or renewed armed
resistance. Nothing less will suffice.
For an uprising, a trigger is required. The people of the country,
from all ethnic groups, both ethnic nationality and Burman, are very
angry, but something is needed to take them over the edge into
large-scale action. While it is impossible to predict what will set a
subjugated population off - witness Tunisia - a number of potential
flash points in Burma are clear:
In other words, they should once again protest for freedom and democracy, not only against land thefts and other types of abuse.
To kick all of this off, one can only ask: Where are Burma's revolutionary graffiti artists?
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