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Maung Aye visit: just a photo-op? Published on Apr 23, 2002 Burma's
army chief General Maung Aye arrives in Thailand, today and his old pal General
Chavalit Yongchaiyudh is tickled pink at the opportunity to play him at a game
of golf. For the two friends, this will be a good opportunity to discuss a
number of problems affecting their two countries - border insurgencies, drug
trafficking, overlapping claims and overall military and diplomatic ties.
Maung Aye, number two in the State Peace and Development Council, or SPDC, is
making a four-day visit to the Kingdom as a guest of the government. His trip
has been billed as part of what the two governments call "improving
bilateral ties", which reached their lowest ebb in decades when a year ago
the two countries' armies engaged in daylong cross-border shelling from disputed
territories.
But a closer look shows things are not as rosy as Chavalit and the government
might assume. The fa็ade of cordial relations and the spirit of
brotherhood with Rangoon are misleading.
Though Maung Aye's visit is an indication that things may be moving in the
right direction, our leaders should not fool themselves that bilateral dealings
with the junta are smooth. For one thing, the Burmese generals don't forgive and
forget easily.
Just recently, top intelligence officer Maj-General Kyaw Win displayed to the
public three rebels who had allegedly defected from the Shan State Army. With
the help of Kyaw Win, the three men told a Rangoon-based envoy that on April 1 a
combined force of 60 Thai government soldiers and troops from the Shan State
Army had crossed into Burmese territory and attacked a unit of the United Wa
State Army, a pro-Rangoon drug army. There was no mention of the death of a Thai
soldier, nor of the fact that HM the Queen had had to cancel her planned visit
to a hilltribe village in Chiang Rai's Wieng Haeng district.
What irked a number of people was not whether the allegations were true or
false - because these types of allegations have been rejected in the past - but
that they came at a time when both sides had agreed to stop mud-slinging.
Indeed, mud-slinging is nothing new. Top brass on both sides of the border often
engage in a war of words, accusing the other of taking kickbacks from drug
dealers and so on. That supposedly ended just weeks before Thaksin's
fence-mending visit to Rangoon last year.
For years, since his visit to Burma shortly after Burmese troops gunned down
thousands of students and innocent people in 1988 - a visit which helped to
legitimise the regime - Chavalit has unabashedly boasted about his friendship
with the generals. What he doesn't say is that while they are his
"friends" none seems to trust him. His so-called defence diplomacy has
done little to change the fundamental problems that continue to bog down
bilateral ties.
Thai officials sympathetic to the Burmese generals have consistently cited
our long common border, as well as Burma's internal problems, suggesting it's
inevitable that violent incidents will spill over to the Thai side. Such excuses
are unacceptable. The country's sovereignty must be respected, and the
government must speak out. It's time to go beyond high-profile photo-op visits
and get straight to the root cause of the bilateral problems. Source: The Nation |
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