Negotiators say Karen guerrillas could become US-style “National Guard.”
Patrick Winn, May 5, 2012 06:00 ....
BANGKOK, Thailand — Since World War II’s end, anti-colonial
revolutions, communist takeovers and other conflicts have come and gone
in Southeast Asia.
But one has outlasted them all: war between Myanmar’s army and the jungle-dwelling Karen ethnic group.
Sixty-three years and running, the civil war is often labelled the
world’s longest. It pits guerilla fighters toting a hodgepodge of
weapons — from rusty carbines to M-16s — against army battalions. It has
littered jungle paths with land mines and driven more than 150,000 into
refugee camps along the Thai border. Its horrors have helped give
Myanmar (formerly Burma) its dark reputation.
But now, under Myanmar’s great experiment with reform, there is hope the war could soon end.
A “peace negotiation team” representing the Karen ethnic group —
roughly 7 percent of the 50-million population country — has just
returned from sit downs with top-tier government officials.
Members of the Karen National Union, the minority’s political wing, and
the Karen National Liberation Army, its armed wing, have finally come
face to face with Thein Sein, the country’s reformist president. They
are also in talks with Myanmar’s best-known figure: political
prisoner-turned-parliamentarian Aung San Suu Kyi. There is talk of
allowing their political faction, still deemed “illegal,” to compete for
office.
For the first time in decades, an end to this war is within sight,
senior Karen negotiators tell GlobalPost. Peace talks could bring
dramatic change to their claimed territory, a Maryland-sized zone with
vast natural resources and an eager labor pool next to Thailand.
Though daily warfare has been suspended, army outposts remain inside
Karen State. Skepticism among the Karen group’s senior leaders remains
high. As the central government parlays for peace with various rebel
armies across the country, its military continues to battle another
ethnic group, the Kachin, who occupy territory along the Chinese border.
Western governments, including the US, insist some sanctions will
remain as long as Myanmar’s insurgencies rage on. But ending the
conflict could unlock more aid and investment from America, which has
absorbed thousands of Karen refugees seeking asylum.
May-Oo Mutraw, one of the negotiation team’s top members, was once one
of them. She is now a US citizen. At 16, she fled her Karen homeland
(commonly called “Karen State”), landed in a Thai refugee camp and later
emigrated with her family to California. Now 40, she is based on the
Thai-Myanmar border as a fellow with the Indiana University’s Maurer
School of Law, where she earned her master’s degree.
In an interview with GlobalPost, May-Oo describes the negotiation
team’s progress, the future of Karen State and the possibility of
transforming their liberation army into a US-style national guard.
On trusting the government:
May-Oo: Trust is a very heavy word. We have a saying in Burmese: "You
can’t even trust your own knees." They could betray you at any time and
you can fall. We just negotiate for the benefit of the nation and its
people and look for common ground.
We don’t want to fight if we don’t have to. Currently, the Burmese
government doesn’t want to fight either. They have their own reasons.
But for now we have a common interest ... and we can start from there.
On transforming the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA):
KNLA was born to protect the interests of the Karen people. If any
situation comes that makes the KNLA feel a need to defend and protect
us, they’ll do that.
The name itself is "liberation army." If we’re actually liberated, and
it's only there for our protection, we might have to change its name as
well as its form.
In the United States, we have the national guard. We’re really looking
into that. It’s completely under the sovereignty of a state government.
But even though the state has complete control over its national guard,
their duty is to the constitution of the entire union.
On the future of Karen State:
At this point, I can’t say there will be peace five years from now.
Should there be peace — but peace that’s not on our terms — there might
be lots of factories in Karen State. A lot of plantations owned by two
or three rich men. Very likely, the Karen would be the laborers.
But is that what we want? Our vision of Karen State has schools,
clinics, hospitals, home-grown doctors, professors and lawyers. It will
develop as any normal state should develop.
A message to American businesses eyeing Myanmar:
Anywhere we go as American citizens, we have an obligation to uphold
our constitution. If we go out of its jurisdiction, is it legitimate to
do things that amount to crimes in the United States? We should be aware
of our conscience. In the US, we talk about fair wages, excessive
working hours, safety hazards. In Burma, just because there’s no law to
protect workers ... we should not turn a blind eye.
Often I only see businesses coming to countries like Burma when things
are unstable and there’s no rule of law. They don’t necessarily have
intentions of developing the country. I see them as opportunists.
This is a country that still has ongoing war. If you’re going to a
war-torn country to do business, you might as well share responsibility
in the peace process.
On legalizing the Karen National Union (KNU):
When we raised that, the government was sincerely surprised. The
president said he didn’t even think about it. I like to think it was
sincere carelessness. We hope that, sooner rather than later, this will
be solved. The deputy attorney general mentioned it could be done by
presidential decree. It doesn’t have to go through parliament.
We’ve witnessed for many years now that successive Burmese governments
put our people in jail, torture them, kill them because they are
allegedly in communication with the KNU. That’s exactly what the KNU
doesn’t want.
On removing sanctions:
The international community displays excitement beyond measure:
individual governments and groups including the United Nations. It’s
much to our dismay that, (UN) Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is talking
about lifting sanctions in their entirety.
The Burmese government has so much to prove. They’ve proved to us, time
and again, that they can be ruthless beyond measure. Now they want to
change. They deserve the benefit of the doubt. Just as we deserve the
right to be (suspicious).
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/asia-pacific/120504/myanmar-karen-rebels-may-oo-mutraw
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Myanmar: ending the world’s longest-running civil war
2:01 PM
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