Aung San in Kayah State: inside the political storm

Authorities arrest and charge protesters who on 3 July demonstrated against the erection of a bronze statue of General Aung San (Pic: Khun Athan)

LOIKAW — One night in 2012, in the Kayah State capital of Loikaw, a group of ethnic Karenni youths were engaged in clandestine activity.

In advance of Martyrs’ Day, 19 July, they crept around the town putting up posters of General Aung San, the Independence hero assassinated along with eight of his colleagues on that date in 1947. They also cleared the weeds around a stone monument for the nine martyrs in a central park, and 50 youths marched on the street to commemorate them.

Over the last four years, Martyrs’ Day has become a major public event. The veneration of Aung San is being actively promoted by a civilian government led by the man’s daughter, State Counsellor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, and her National League for Democracy (NLD) party.

Formerly, the ruling military suppressed or downplayed the memory of Aung San, fearing it would bolster popular support for their political nemesis, Aung San Suu Kyi. The Karenni youths were making a defiant, and potentially dangerous, act.

 

 

However, six years on, the same Karenni youths and local ethnic groups who wish to promote their own histories and heroes are resisting the public veneration of Aung San, whose memory they now see as a vehicle for cultural domination by the ethnic Bamar (Burman) majority in Myanmar.

In July this year, more than 20 local youths were charged with incitement and sedition for demonstrating against the Kayah State government’s plan, announced in February, to use public funds to erect a bronze equestrian statue of Aung San in central Loikaw—one of many being put up across Myanmar, against protests by ethnic minority groups—and for distributing pamphlets about the area’s long history of independence.

 

 

The issue, and the way it has been handled since a July 3 protest in Loikaw ended in scuffles with the police, has fed growing tensions between local communities and the NLD-appointed state government. The NLD swept most seats in Kayah State in the 2015 general election, as part of a landslide win nationwide, but locals complain of being neglected by the victorious party.

Both the Union government and the NLD leadership have declined to intervene in, or take responsibility for, the statue controversy, saying it’s up for the state government to resolve it with local communities.

After warning that the army could be called on in the event of future protests, the chief minister appeared to soften on July 23, declaring that responsibility for erecting the statue would be taken out of government control and put in the hands of a committee of community-based organisations. This prompted local youth activists to announce a suspension of protests the next day, though they remain opposed to the statue.

This report examines how the bitter dispute over the statue has been fuelled by ethnic pride in the area’s largely independent history, local perceptions of betrayal by the ruling NLD, and what some see as the unscrupulous ambition of the state’s chief minister.

Past autonomy, present underdevelopment

In June, a group of ethnic-based associations in Kayah State sent an open letter to the state government laying out their objections to the Aung San statue.

It said Aung San had no meaningful ties to the area and visited only once, in 1946, when it was known as the Karenni States. He was then lobbying frontier areas—where ethnic minority populations enjoyed administrative autonomy under British rule—to unify with mainland Burma on Independence. Because successive governments did not honour his promises of equality and autonomy, a statues of him would stoke tensions, they wrote.

The letter mentioned a treaty signed by delegates of the Burmese king Mindon and the British in 1875 that recognised the independence of the five Karenni States, allowing them even greater freedom than other frontier areas during colonial rule. These details were contained in the pamphlets disseminated locally in early July.

On independence in 1948, the Karenni States were joined to form Karenni State. Along with other states named in the 1947 constitution, it was given the right to secede from the Union of Burma after ten years. In 1951, it was renamed Kayah State.

Kayah State is Myanmar’s smallest and least populous state, with almost 290,000 people, less than half the population of the single township of Hlaing Tharyar in Yangon. It remains severely underdeveloped. According to the 2014 national census, only half of all residents have access to electricity, despite the presence of Lawpita hydroelectric dam, which supplies power to a substantial chunk of Myanmar.

A model civil servant

Kayah State’s 39-year-old chief minister, L Phaung Sho, is a Buddhist of mixed ethnic Kayan and Shan heritage. He was little known, even among politicians and NLD activists, before his ascension to power with the new government in 2016.

He resigned as a government education officer and joined the NLD only months before the November 2015 general election. He won one of two seats in the state parliament for the southern township of Mese, which has little more than 6,000 people, before the NLD leadership handpicked him for the chief minister post.

L Phaung Sho was born in Lawpita Shan village in Loikaw Township, in the north of Kayah State, and went to the University for the Development of the National Races of the Union in Sagaing Region in northwest Myanmar.

The university was founded in 1964 under General Ne Win, who seized power in a military coup d’état two years before that. Since 2012, the university has been administered by the military-controlled Ministry of Border Affairs. All students must first pledge allegiance to the Three National Causes, as defined by the military, and must vow not to get involved with political parties.

Graduating with a Bachelor of Education, he landed a post as assistant district education officer in Mese Township. He earned a good reputation in government circles, as one who diligently followed rules, and was awarded two medals for his service.

According to NLD insiders, who asked to remain anonymous, the secretary of the NLD’s Central Committee for Research and Strategy Studies, U Myo Yan Naung Thein, visited Mese before the 2015 election and found L Phaung Sho a man of great potential.

Myo Yan Naung Thein recommended him to the party, which duly nominated him as a candidate. L Phaung Sho won his state parliament seat gaining 725 out of 1319 votes, beating the USDP candidate with a margin of 461.

Another man, 49-year-old Dr. Aung Kyaw Htay, a former assistant doctor at Loikaw General Hopsital, was then tipped for the chief minister job.

Yet, within days of the election, youth groups and members of ethnic armed groups held a public meeting, which concluded that the chief minister should be a local ethnic person. Aung Kyaw Htay is an ethnic Kayin, or Karen, from Kawhmu Township in Yangon.

They requested state-level NLD leaders to relay this decision to Aung San Suu Kyi, and their wishes seemed to be heeded when L Phaung Sho was appointed chief minister.

“My opinion is the NLD had no choice but to appoint him as chief minister,” said 30-year-old Khun Athan, from the local Kayan ethnic group, who took part in both the 2012 martyrs commemoration and the recent protests against the Aung San statue.

Yet, this apparent deference to local wishes overlaid a history of tense factionalism, and difficult questions of legitimacy, within the NLD in Kayah State, which can be traced back to 1990.

‘They did not listen to what we said’

Accompanying their landslide win elsewhere in Myanmar, the NLD won four out of eight parliamentary seats for Kayah State in the 1990 election. After the military junta dismissed the results nationwide, they cracked down particularly hard on the NLD in Kayah State, declaring it an “NLD-free zone.”

“When they [military intelligence] got the list of township coordinators, they didn’t know who they were and arrested everyone with the same name,” said 83-year-old U Aung Tin, who won a seat in 1990 with the NLD.

Due to continued repression and the jailing of several friends, Aung Tin left the NLD in 1994, and NLD activity in the state reduced to nothing.

When the NLD re-registered, following Aung San Suu Kyi’s meeting with newly installed president U Thein Sein in 2011, NLD activists and election candidates from 1990 tried to rebuild the party in the state.

Concurrently, however, a new group of people tried to build a party structure and win the approval of the central NLD leadership. They eventually succeeded, to the dismay of the veteran activists in the former group.

“The NLD’s decision was so tyrannical. They did not listen to what we said,” said Aung Tin, sitting in his living room with a picture of Aung San Suu Kyi on the wall.

At a loss, Aung Tin’s colleagues founded the Kayah Unity Democracy Party, which competed in the 2015 election. Though they failed to win a seat, they merged last year with another local party, the All Nationals’ Democracy Party, which won a seat in an April 2017 by-election, to form the Kayah State Democratic Party.

Meanwhile, the party chapter anointed by the central NLD leadership won most seats in the state in the 2015 election.

Local civil society and community groups, who campaigned for the NLD, saw in Aung San Suu Kyi’s party the best chance of preventing the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which then held all seats in Kayah State, from returning to power.

“We campaigned for the NLD [in 2015], especially targeting the constituencies where former ministers such as U Aung Min and U Soe Thein were running, to make sure local people won in the election,” said Khun Athan.

However, the same local groups say that, despite all this support, the NLD government has ignored them since the election. Worse, it has tried to exert tighter control over local civil society, demanding government approval at multiple levels even for cultural events.

“It is not easy to rebuild trust. We are now following different paths,” Khun Athan said.

Shortcuts

The planned Aung San statue is not without some local support. When Myanmar Now interviewed 15 local people in Loikaw, almost half of them—particularly, but not exclusively, those of Bamar ethnicity—said they supported it. The support was linked to approval of the chief minister, who, they said, had improved public transport in the state.

“It doesn’t harm them,” said a 21-year-old ethnic Kayan woman, referring to those opposing the statue. “I think we should erect it as a memorial, no matter what.”

Those in opposition accuse the chief minister and the NLD party of exploiting the memory of Aung San for electoral gain, as a substitute for effective governance.

“They want to follow the easy way and not build up a good image through their own abilities,” said local Karenni activist Dee Di, who was formerly sentenced to 32 years in prison for protesting against the new military-drafted constitution in 2008.

U Aung Naing Oo, a USDP member and former state minister, joined in the criticism: “When people see Bogyoke [Aung San], they will see Daw Su [Aung San Suu Kyi]. When they see Daw Su, they will see the NLD. This is using shortcuts for political gain.”

Critics allege that the chief minister, by backing the statue, is also trying to please higher-level leaders in the NLD to further his political ambitions.

L Phaung Sho has already risen through the NLD ranks swiftly. Despite having no history in the party prior to 2015, he is now a member of its central committee.

Myanmar Now sent a letter seeking comment from the chief minister in the second week of July but received no response. On phoning his office, his personal assistant said the chief minister was too busy respond.

L Phaung Sho told Radio Free Asia in early July that the state government had been transparent from the beginning about the statue.

“When the sculpting of the bronze statue of Bogyoke [Aung San] began, we invited all the ward administrators and ethnic literature and cultural committees in the state, and we continued with the plan only when they agreed to the plan,” se said.

He claimed the majority supported the plan, with objections only coming from a small group of people. He said the government would fulfil the majority’s wish.

However, the state-level NLD chapter said in July that they warned the chief minister and the state government five months ago about the sensitivity of the proposed statue.

“The [state-level] party decided in February that the project should be postponed and should only proceed with the people’s support,” said Kayah State NLD chairman U Thaung Htay.

‘The fire has already started’

Former ministers in the state government said they were concerned about communal tensions, given local ethnic people’s pride in their independent history.

“We cannot touch issues related to race, ethnicity and religion here,” said U Ye Win, a USDP member and former state minister of forestry and mineral resources.

“The government will now struggle to handle the situation. The fire has already started,” said the former Geba ethnic representative in the state government.

Some worry that ethnic armed groups will also be drawn into the dispute, threatening a fragile peace in the state.

The state’s biggest armed group, the Karenni National Progressive Party (KNPP), who have fought the Myanmar army for decades, has written to Aung San Suu Kyi expressing their concern at the arrest and prosecution of locals who opposed the Aung San statue. Activists in the state even urged the KNPP to protest against the third Union Peace Conference held in mid July in the capital Naypyidaw. The KNPP ultimately chose to attend, without protest.

Expressing frustration with the impasse over the statue, Karenni activist Dee Di, who was among those arrested, said, “We didn’t expect it would end up like this. Now we just have to write our own history.”

Editing by Ben Dunant

An ex-convict businessman says that he gave the State Counsellor more than $550,000 in cash when ‘there was no one around.’ 

Published on Mar 18, 2021
Maung Weik (first from left) is pictured near State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi at the opening ceremony of a government housing built by his Say Paing Company. (Maung Weik/ Facebook)

The military council announced on March 17 that it would attempt to charge State Counsellor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been detained since Myanmar’s February 1 coup, with corruption.

The junta’s move is linked to new allegations against Aung San Suu Kyi by businessman Maung Weik. The owner of the Say Paing construction and development company, Maung Weik was formerly imprisoned on drug charges and is known to have close relationships with members of the military’s inner circle.  

Military-run media aired a recorded statement made by Maung Weik alleging that he had given Aung San Suu Kyi more than US$550,000 in cash-filled envelopes on the four occasions he met her between 2018 and 2020. 

“There was no one around when I gave her the money,” he said in the video statement. 

Under Myanmar’s earlier military regime, Maung Weik maintained ties to several generals, including former intelligence chief Khin Nyunt.

He was sentenced to 15 years in prison on drug charges in 2008, but was released in 2014 while the country was led by the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party.  

Upon his release, Maung Weik founded Say Paing–a construction company–and ran various business ventures through his connections to military officials.  

Maung Weik’s wife is also the niece of military-appointed Vice President Myint Swe, who was also the former chief minister of Yangon under the former military administration. 

The coup council announced on March 11 that the now-ousted National League for Democracy’s (NLD) Yangon Region chief minister Phyo Min Thein had given Aung San Suu Kyi $600,000 and more than 11 kilograms of gold. The announcement provided no reason as to why the money and gold were allegedly given to the State Counsellor by the chief minister. 

A top NLD figure told Myanmar Now that the funds in question were donations to build a pagoda. 

“They’re trying to fabricate this and ruin [Aung San Suu Kyi’s] reputation, but the public already clearly knows it’s not true. There’s no need to say anything else,” the official said. 

The junta has also accused the Daw Khin Kyi Foundation and an affiliated project, the La Yaung Taw Academy, of losing public funds. The foundation was founded by Aung San Suu Kyi and named after her late mother. 

According to the military council, the land lease for the Daw Khin Kyi Foundation’s headquarters, located on Yangon’s University Avenue, is not commensurate with the market price for land in the area. It argues that the country had lost more than 1 billion kyat (more than $700,000) in public funds as a result.

The junta declared that from 2013 to 2021, more than $7.9 million in donations from foreign NGOs, INGOs, companies and individual international donors flowed into the foundation’s three foreign currency accounts.

Also under investigation by the junta is the La Yaung Taw Academy in Naypyitaw, which trains young people in environmental conservation and horticulture in association with the Daw Khin Kyi Foundation. The military said the rate at which the land for the project was purchased came at a discount of at least 18 billion kyat (more than $12.7 million), which was subsequently a loss to the state. 

It also reportedly included some plans—such as the construction of a museum—that used funds in a way that strayed from the project’s, and the Daw Khin Kyi Foundation’s, original aims.

“The construction of a building with finance from the foundation for the chair of the foundation has deviated from the foundation’s objective,” the March 17 announcement in the military-run newspaper said. 

Prior to the corruption allegations, the military council had hit Aung San Suu Kyi with four charges at the Zabuthiri Township court in Naypyitaw.

She has been accused of violating Section 505(b) of the Penal Code for incitement, which carries a sentence of two years in prison; Article 67 of the communications law for possession of unauthorized items; an import-export charge for owning walkie-talkie devices; and a charge under the Natural Disaster Management Law for not following Covid-19 measures during the 2020 election campaign period.

The military council has not allowed Aung San Suu Kyi to meet with her legal team. 

“I’ll most likely see her via video conferencing on March 24 for the next hearing,” lawyer Min Min Soe told Myanmar Now. 

The military council has only allowed lawyers Yu Ya Chit and Min Min Soe to take on Aung San Suu Kyi’s case, ignoring the requests of more established legal experts, including Khin Maung Zaw and Kyi Win, to be granted power of attorney.

 

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading

A month and a half after the military seized power, most banks in Myanmar are barely operating

Published on Mar 18, 2021
People queue in front of a KBZ Bank branch in Yangon on March 17. (Supplied) 

Banking in Myanmar has come almost to standstill in the more than six weeks since the February 1 coup, with only basic services still available at a limited number of locations.

In the commercial capital Yangon, only a handful of branches of two of the biggest domestic banks, KBZ and AYA, remain open, according to customers.

As of Wednesday afternoon, every bank in the city’s Yankin, Tamwe, Bahan, Thingangyun and South Okkalapa townships appeared to be closed, Myanmar Now found in an effort to confirm these reports.

However, a customer who had used the AYA Bank branch on Sayarsan road in Yankin said it was still open for withdrawals.

Meanwhile, services in other cities were even more restricted.  In Mawlamyine, the capital of Mon state, local sources said there was only one KBZ Bank branch still in operation on Wednesday, while all banks were reportedly closed in Bago. 

While some banks continue to fill ATMs with cash, few other services are available, bank employees said. 

Unhappy customers

Large crowds have been reported at some of the few branches in Yangon that are still dispensing cash, occasionally resulting in tensions between staff and customers.

“At the KBZ Bank headquarters on Pyay road, they were writing down people’s names and phone numbers as the crowd got bigger. They said they would get back to us,” said Aye Aye Phway, a customer who was seeking to withdraw money.

KBZ Bank came under fire on Tuesday when four of its customers were arrested following a dispute with bank staff. 

On Wednesday, the bank released a statement denying that it had called the police, as alleged by some who criticized its handling of the incident. It also said that it would assist the customers who had been detained.

According to the junta-controlled broadcaster MRTV, the customers were arrested for pressuring bank staff to take part in the Civil Disobedience Movement (CDM) against military rule.   

Pressure from above

A month after many of their employees joined the CDM, privately-owned banks have come under growing pressure from the junta to reopen for business.   

Banks that haven’t reopened have been instructed to turn over all of their customers’ information to the state-owned Myanma Economic Bank or one of two military-owned banks, Innwa Bank or Myawady Bank. 

The Central Bank of Myanmar would not be responsible for the consequences if banks failed to abide by this demand, the regime warned.

The regime originally issued this order, through the Central Bank, on March 8, to no avail. Despite repeating it again on Wednesday, the situation remains unchanged.

Currently, private banks are required to allow regular customers to withdraw 500,000 kyat per day from ATMs or 2,000,000 kyat per week if they appear at the bank in person. 

Companies are permitted to withdraw 20 million kyat at a time, according to Central Bank instructions issued on March 1.

Myanmar has 27 private banks and 17 branches of foreign-owned banks.

Editor's note: This article has been edited to include KBZ Bank's statement on the arrest of four of its customers on Tuesday and the state-owned broadcaster MRTV's claims about the incident.

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading

Some of those released were made to sign a statement confirming military allegations of electoral fraud in their respective townships, an official said.

Published on Mar 18, 2021
An election official shows a ballot for verification in Yangon’s Kyauktada Township on November 8 (Myanmar Now)

The military regime on Wednesday released all election sub-commission members who were detained following last month’s coup, state and township level election officials said.

The coup regime detained the state, regional and township-level sub-commission members on February 11, ten days after it seized power, and tried to justify the move with unsubstantiated claims of fraud during Myanmar’s 2020 general election. 

They members were released on Wednesday morning, confirming rumours on Tuesday that they would be freed.

State and regional commission members were detained at divisional military headquarters, while township level members were detained at guest quarters inside battalion bases.

Some members of township-level sub-commissions were made to sign a statement before their release confirming the military’s findings about voting irregularities in their areas during the November 8 poll, said a chair of a state-level sub-commission who asked not to be named.

But one member of a township sub-commission denied that they had to sign such a statement.

Kyi Myint, chair of the Yangon Region sub-commission, said that the military didn’t ask him to sign anything and there was no interrogation. 

“We were summoned and asked to take a rest,” Kyi Myint said.

He added that he didn’t know why the military had allowed them to go home. Nor did he know the situation of members of the union-level commission who were also detained.

Kin Khanh Pawng, chair of the township sub-commission in Kale, Sagaing, was detained in mid-February and was among those released on Wednesday. He said he was called in to help with data and paperwork.

“I had to help them find the data they wanted to see,” he said.

A new union election commission body was formed a day after the military seized state power and arrested civilian leaders on February 1.

The new commission met with 53 political parties on February 26 and officially annulled the results of the 2020 general election.

Another 38 registered parties did not attend that meeting. They include the Shan National League for Democracy, the Democratic Party for a New Society, and the People's Party.

 

 

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading