Flowerless Insein:
Indian Realism Will Backfire
By Sreeram Chaulia
Mizzima News (www.mizzima.com)
June 24, 2003 : Britain has just conveyed news that Daw Aung
San Suu Kyi, the hope of Burma and the most famous wearer
of jasmine flowers in the world, has been interred in the
dreaded Insein prison after a violent clampdown launched on
pro- democracy activists by state-sponsored militias in May.
Insein is Burma’s Lubyanka, a ‘Special Jail’
outside Rangoon where political prisoners are systematically
tortured and broken down by the military junta, the dead house
where hundreds of NLD workers have perished from starvation,
disease and abuse for the last 12 years.
Believed to be crammed with as many as 10,000 inmates at
any given time, Insein is perennially short of bare essential
supplies. Paucity of syringe needles has generated repeated
HIV AIDS-epidemics. Paucity of clean water has led to mass
dysentery deaths. Paucity of space is an incentive to daily
rapes and stabbings. If at all anything is available in plenty,
it is barbed electric wire, iron chains, manacles and other
diabolical weapons to inflict physical pain on detainees.
I doubt if Daw Suu Kyi will be allowed to adorn her hair
with fragrant jasmines in Insein because everything in this
confined penitentiary runs by writ of bribes and espionage.
Perform a favour for the guards and maybe you can get three
square meals a day. Since oiling the palms of the SPDC would
lower the dignity of democracy fighters, the latter have universally
preferred death to ingratiating jailors. But then, Razali
Ismail, the UN Secretary General’s Special Envoy says
that she is “well and in good spirits.” Compared
to the rank-and-file NLD workers, the junta has tended to
treat her like a VIP throughout her decade-long house arrest
ordeals. Ismail “did not see any signs of injury on
her…no scratches on her face, no broken arm.”
The coarse and inhuman conduct reserved for ordinary captives
will obviously not be meted out to someone as high profile
as Daw Suu Kyi, but then it would be a lie to claim she has
not suffered much for standing up to dictatorship and injustice.
In 1999, her husband Michael Aris was in the advanced stages
of prostate cancer in England. He requested permission to
visit his wife one last time, but the military rulers denied
entry, arguing that there are no appropriate facilities in
the country to tend to a dying man. They suggested instead
that Suu Kyi visit him in England, hoping to exile her permanently
and stoke propaganda that she is a “foreign woman”
who leads a scandalous lifestyle in the west. She refused,
fearing that leaving the country would result in banishment.
Aris passed away without seeing her. Sacrifice is in her blood,
made votive by the scented jasmines that symbolically defy
Burma’s harsh fate and her own.
In his spare time, Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee
pens Hindi poetry hailing heroic women studded with aromatic
flowers who will inherit the earth and bring peace. Not unaware
of the tribulations Daw Suu Kyi and the Burmese people are
being subjected to right in India’s immediate neighbourhood,
he and his foreign office have failed to issue even a murmur
of protest on the latest grotesque twist at Insein. Navtej
Sarna, the Indian External Affairs spokesman laconically commented,
“we are watching the situation in Myanmar carefully…solutions
to internal problems must come from within.” Poetry
and politics don’t mix for Vajpayee. Poetry and so-called
national interests are even more incompatible in ‘realist’
India.
Trade and cultural exchange between Burma and India date
back to the age of Emperor Ashoka (3rd Century BC). Buddhism
travelled through eastern India to Burma. From 1885 to 1937,
Burma was a province of British India, a period of administrative
harmonisation between the two countries. During the freedom
struggle against colonial rule, the national leaders of the
two countries developed close political links which stood
the test of time for years after independence. Jawaharlal
Nehru and U Nu shared a common worldview of nonalignment and
India helped the newly independent Burma tide over crisis
after crisis. In the fifties, Nehru extended military assistance
to U Nu, saving his "Rangoon Government" from advancing
insurgents. Daw Khin Kyi, Suu Kyi’s mother, was ambassador
to India in the 1960s and her daughter studied at Delhi’s
Lady Shriram College. Over the years, Burma has acquired in
the Indian mind an emotional nostalgic image immortalised
by the 1949 Bollywood classic Patanga, where the hero croons
into the telephone to his beloved- ham Burma ki galiyon mein,
aur tum ho Dehradun (I gallivant the lanes of Burma while
you stay unhappy in Dehradun, an Indian hill station).
After the post-1988 pro-democracy uprising caught the Burmese
military in a bind and led to the annulment of NLD’s
election victory, India was the first and only neighbour to
clearly and openly take the side of Daw Suu Kyi. Rajiv Gandhi,
who knew Suu Kyi from her student days in Delhi, instructed
border troops to not deter genuine Burmese refugees and dissenters
seeking asylum in India. Ubiquitous ‘Burma colonies’
appeared in major Indian cities and public sympathy for the
NLD was on prominent display on the streets.
Around 1992, foreign policy pundit J.N. Dixit initiated a
new ‘Look East policy’ for India that would steer
the locus of Indian external interests from the problematic
Northwestern side towards the economically promising Southeast
Asia. Geostrategically, India was announcing to China that
its interests stretched into the hitherto neglected Asia Pacific
and that it will compete with Beijing’s predominance
in that region. China was inching ever closer to India’s
sphere of influence in South Asia via friendly Burma and Indian
intelligence was rife with reports that Pakistan and China
were infiltrating arms, drugs and insurgents into Northeast
India through the Burmese border. Under these circumstances,
India reasoned that a ‘working relationship’ with
SLORC was essential, no matter what the moral qualms were.
Dixit’s initial foray paved the way for India-Burma
cooperation in border controls, resumed trade, business joint
ventures and even extradition of anti-junta figures resident
in India (in 1997, 12 Burmese defectors who joined with pro-democracy
groups based on the Indo-Burma border were secretly deported
by Indian military intelligence agents). In 2001, Jaswant
Singh, Vajpayee’s first foreign minister, inaugurated
the ‘India-Myanmar Friendship Road’ linking the
town of Moreh in Manipur to central Myanmar and then Mandalay.
This year, India, Burma and Thailand are discussing a road
that would connect all three countries as well as a deep-sea
port in Daiwe, southern Burma to facilitate Indian and Thai
ships to refuel here instead of waiting to cross the Malacca
Straits. A pro-India faction within SLORC has been identified
in the Burmese junta, led by Vice-Senior General Maung Aye
and Foreign Minister U Win Aung The deepening of such political
ties was hailed by the Indian government as a step that would
“earn a lot of goodwill from this part of the world.”
Would it really? Far from a ‘working relationship’
premised on indefinite continuation of SLORC rule in Burma,
India seems to be getting into the ‘thick relations’
department with Rangoon’s bloody regime, thereby strengthening
its internal terror apparatus, of which Insein is the apotheosis.
Tibetans were sacrificed by Nehru in 1954 in return for Beijing’s
hand of friendship, a move that ricocheted in 1962. The long-suppressed
democratic aspirations of the people of Nepal have also felt
betrayed by India’s recent “cautious policy”
that has not questioned monarchical usurpation of power. As
a reward for its ambivalence, India is being accused by the
monarchical government in Kathmandu of aiding the Maoist insurgency!
For Bangladeshi Hindu minorities too, India’s lackadaisical
interest in the fundamentalist violence unleashed by Islamists
tied to the ruling Khaleda Zia government has come as a shock.
What kind of “goodwill” is being earned for India
in Burma that will be long lasting? Can it match the goodwill
of the Nehru-U Nu era? The Indian government may have awarded
the Jawaharlal Nehru Peace Prize in 1995 to Daw Suu Kyi as
a token, but the substantial policy trend in the last decade
has been a colossal let-down of the Burmese people by a myopic
Delhi. In the lure of short-term benefits, India has forgotten
that when democracy triumphs in Burma, its legitimation and
connivance with SLORC will rankle and affect relations. India’s
size and economic potential (23% of Burmese exports reach
India) are often considered permanent interests that will
override sentimentality when there is regime change in Rangoon,
but it is instructive to note that like in most democratic
polities, Burmese public opinion will inform foreign policy
when Daw Suu Kyi takes over. Burmese people do not have a
say in the current set-up, but one day they will and India
may have to pay a heavy price.
Nonintervention in internal affairs of other countries is
a word of faith in Delhi and for a medium world power, it
should be so. But nonintervention should not be translated
into apathy when crimes against humanity are happening in
India’s backyard. The realism that nods at flowerless
Insein as an “internal affair” will boomerang.
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