By GRANT PECK Associated Press, May 26, 9:43 AM EDT ...
Protesters hold candles during a candlelight vigil in Yangon, Myanmar Friday, May 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Khin Maung Win)
BANGKOK (AP)
-- Protests in Myanmar over persistent power shortages have provided a
test of how the country's elected but military-backed government will
respond to rising expectations sparked by the past year's democratic
reforms.
Small demonstrations over the last
week in Myanmar's two largest cities and several towns could be seen as
an indicator of the new openness under President Thein Sein, who has
overseen the country's emergence from decades of authoritarian rule and
diplomatic isolation.
From another point of
view, the peaceful protests - which have been limited to a few hundred
people - serve as a reminder of the early stages of past unrest.
Previous uprisings have started as small affairs sparked by complaints
over the economy and then snowballed into large-scale challenges to
authority.
In 2007, the former military regime
used force to put down the so-called Saffron Revolution led by Buddhist
monks. That rebellion began as small, localized protests over fuel
price hikes.
"Protests like this in Myanmar
always have the potential to escalate and lead to political unrest,"
said Trevor Wilson, a former Australian envoy to Myanmar who now teaches
at Australian National University. "It is hard to predict how these
protests might develop."
Thein Sein was prime
minister of the previous repressive military government but shed his
formal links with the army to run with its proxy political party in a
2010 general election. Those polls were boycotted by the party of
democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who was under house arrest at the
time.
Last year, Thein Sein embarked on a
reform program whose main objective was to win the easing of economic
sanctions imposed by the United States and the European Union. That goal
has already been largely accomplished.
Also
as a result of the reforms, the government won the cooperation of Suu
Kyi, the once-implacable foe of army rule and Nobel Peace Prize laureate
who was freed after the 2010 elections. Suu Kyi and her National League
for Democracy party even agreed to run for parliament in last month's
by-elections, snaring 43 seats to play a small but historically
significant legislative role.
Along with the
revival of parliamentary politics there has been a new assertiveness in
civil society, especially in lobbying on environmental issues. One
campaign, opposing the Chinese-funded Myitsone hydropower dam on the
Irrawaddy River, won an astonishing victory when the government
announced the cancellation of the project.
Still,
the potential for conflict in Myanmar - also known as Burma - lies in
the space between the political reforms achieved so far and the
shortfall in other fundamental changes, particularly in the economy.
Suu Kyi has endorsed the protests, which have seen demonstrators holding candlelight vigils and marching in public streets.
Speaking
Tuesday at the opening of a branch office for her party, Suu Kyi said
"the country suffers from power shortages because of mismanagement. I
believe that the system has to be changed to get electricity or to get
water or to get jobs."
The challengers to the
government are the same activists who used to struggle against military
rule, but are now emboldened by the new democratic opening.
Their
antagonist is the same military that smashed their dreams five years
ago. Though he came to power through election, Thein Sein heads a
government that serves at the sufferance of the military, which together
with its civilian allies controls parliament and security affairs.
The
immediate prospects for strife are hard to calculate. The protests have
been peaceful and relatively unassertive so far, with the crowd in
Yangon - Myanmar's biggest city - topping out at about 300 on Friday
night.
The peaceful demonstrations continued
for a fifth night Saturday in Yangon, though the number of protesters
dropped to about 200. Truckloads of riot police looked on but did
nothing.
Out of habit, deliberation or
misunderstanding, the authorities are clearly nervous. In the central
city of Mandalay, Special Branch political police held several
protesters briefly for questioning.
On
Thursday in the central town of Pyay, police pressure on demonstrators
led to a brawl and six arrests. The angered comrades of those detained
gathered outside the local prison until the detainees were released,
then carried on protesting.
"Police violence
encountered during the protests against power cuts shows just how Burma
continues to grossly neglect and violate the basic rights to human
dignity and freedom of expression," said the Thailand-based Assistance
Association for Political Prisoners (Burma), a group that feels reforms
have fallen way short of what is desirable. "It is clear that peaceful
dissent is still not tolerated."
Others are not so pessimistic.
"The
timing of these protests is interesting because the new laws about
peaceful assembly are in place and the new government's attitude is
different from that of its predecessors," said Australian National
University's Wilson. "One would expect both sides to be more reasonable
and tolerant now, and early signs are that this seems to be the case."
Thein
Sein's reforms included the passage of a bill allowing citizens to
stage peaceful demonstrations - although still-existing security laws
continue to put protesters at legal risk.
Myanmar
has suffered from power shortages for more than a decade. It has
plentiful natural gas supplies, but a poor power distribution
infrastructure that has lagged even more as the economy has grown.
Sean
Turnell, an economist at Australia's Macquarie University, said he
believes what is significant about the current protest movement is "how
it highlights the way that economic reform, and the changes that need to
be made to make life easier here for the great bulk of people, are
seriously lagging."
Up to now, much of Myanmar's natural gas has been earmarked for neighboring Thailand and China, he noted.
"For
the previous regime, domestic considerations and the lives of the
citizenry (as well as domestic business) took a back seat to the desire
to secure foreign exchange," Turnell said. "The current government, I
think, is hopeful of doing something better, but at the moment the
legacy of the past is weighing on them."
---
Associated Press writer Aye Aye Win in Yangon, Myanmar, contributed to this report.
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