| U.N. Envoy's Visit
Means Judgement Day Is Nearing
Marwaan Macan-Markar (IPS)
Mizzima News (www.mizzima.com)
BANGKOK, Nov 4, 2003: By returning
to Burma this week, a U.N. human rights
envoy has set the stage for a political drama that could end
up putting the
strongest external pressure so far on Rangoon's military government.
This prospect has animated both Burmese political activists
living in exile in neighbouring Thailand and regional human
rights monitors.
Judgement day will be Nov. 12, when U.N. envoy Paulo Sergio
Pinheiro is due
to brief the U.N. General Assembly about the political climate
in Burma. He is now in Burma, and has met Burmese Prime Minister
Khin Nyunt.
“The report he will deliver to the U.N. General Assembly
will be important,
because if very critical, it will put the military government
under tremendous pressure,” said Bo Kyi of the Assistance
Association for Political Prisoners, a group of activists
who served time in Burmese prisons for their political views.
“Pinheiro's report and the response it receives at
U.N. sessions will help clarify world opinion,” added
Sunai Phasuk, an analyst at Forum-Asia, a regional human rights
lobby based in Bangkok. “If the Burmese government is
denounced, it will hamper its efforts to be given a second
chance to reform.”
The visit will make it difficult for the Burmese government
to deflect charges against its human rights abuses, Soe Aung
of the Network for Democracy and Development, a group of Burmese
exiles based in Thailand, said in an interview. “Pinheiro
is in a position this time to force Rangoon to be held accountable.”
There are ample hints to suggest that Pinheiro, a Brazilian
academic, will be far from charitable toward the State Peace
and Development Council (SPDC), as the Burma's junta calls
itself.
When he last visited Burma in March, Pinheiro ended his trip
in anger after he discovered that a room deemed safe for his
interviews with political prisoners had actually been bugged.
On May 30, thugs linked to the SPDC mounted an attack on
Burmese opposition
leader Aung San Suu Kyi and leaders of her National League
for Democracy (NLD) party in a town north of Rangoon.
This attack, which triggered global outrage, further eroded
the SPDC's credibility and so did its move to place Nobel
Peace laureate Suu Kyi and NLD leaders in military custody
for their ''protection''.
Pinheiro's week-long visit, his sixth trip to Burma, will
be the first since these three incidents.
There are hints that he will test the SPDC's commitments
to political reform and human rights based on where they stand
on the freedom for Suu Kyi, who has since been moved to house
arrest, and the NLD members still in prison.
Human rights activists are also confident that Pinheiro will
again turn the heat on Rangoon to release the estimated 1,300
political prisoners, including close to 100 women, being held
in the 39 prisons across Burma.
A year ago, Pinheiro used some of the strongest language
to date to criticise Burma during his report to the U.N. General
Assembly. The political crimes Rangoon had committed up to
that point included the rape by Burmese soldiers of some 625
women and girls in the country's eastern Shan state.
The human rights violations in this South-east Asian nation
include the forced conscription of child soldiers, the sending
of members of ethnic communities into forced labour camps,
the crushing of political opponents and its holding of political
prisoners.
Burma watchers consider that criticism in 2002 -- which was
denounced by the
SPDC -- a significant shift when compared with the language
used at discussions on Burma at the U.N. General Assembly
over the past 10 years.
Some feel that a more severe critique by Pinheiro at the
U.N. sessions this month may pave the way for a situation
the junta has been trying to avoid - Burma's case being brought
before the Security Council.
“From what we understand, Pinheiro is ready to place
the Burma issue with
the Security Council,” Bo Kyi told IPS. “That
will force the international community to take serious note
of Burma. It will not look good for the SPDC.”
Currently, Burma is taking a beating on the international
stage due to harsh
economic sanctions imposed since August by the U.S. government.
In October,
during a review of the political climate in Burma, Washington
threatened
Rangoon with more sanctions.
The European Union (EU) has imposed sanctions on Burma since
1996. But these measures - ranging from an arms embargo and
visa bans on SPDC officials
to freezing of assets - are to be reviewed in May 2004.
Human rights activists believe that a Pinheiro report more
damning of Burma would strengthen Washington and the EU's
positions toward Rangoon.
But that would not be the case for a group of Asian nations
who critics say are marching to the rescue of one of South-east
Asia's brutal regimes. ''A critical report at the U.N. this
month will be deeply embarrassing for these Asian nations,
since it will come before the Burma Forum for like-minded
countries,'' said Sunai, the human rights analyst.
Bangkok plans to host a meeting of this forum in late November.
The countries in the group are Thailand, its eight South-east
Asian neighbours, China, India and Burma.
“These Asian countries, led by Thailand, are trying
to rehabilitate the SPDC,” added Sunai. “The Thai
government, in fact, is trying to get the EU to lift its sanctions
on Burma despite the SPDC's record of abuses. That is how
sympathetic they are.”
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