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COMMENTARY
Another Decision Day for Suu Kyi
By KYAW ZWA MOE Thursday, November 17, 2011


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Since entering Burmese politics in 1988, Aung San Suu Kyi's choices, like everything else in her life, have been severely restricted. And yet, she has had to make some of the most fateful decisions in her country's recent history. Tomorrow she will have to do the same again, as her party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), decides whether to re-register as a political party.

In 1990, she endorsed the NLD's decision to contest an election held by the then ruling regime, even though she herself was under house arrest at the time and barred from running. At first, some in the party opposed her decision, saying that there was no guarantee the result would be honored.

The critics’ point made sense, and proved well-founded after the junta refused to recognize the NLD's landslide victory. But does this mean that Suu Kyi made the wrong call? Would it have been better if the party had boycotted the election?

Kyaw Zwa Moe is managing editor of the Irrawaddy magazine. He can be reached at [email protected].

Looking back, it seems that contesting the election was the right thing to do, even if there were good reasons for opposing the move. Why? Because the election result was recognized by the international community, even if it was ignored by the regime, and served as a political stick with which to beat the ruling generals over the past 20 years.

At other times, however, Suu Kyi has chosen not to participate in the regime's “political process.” In 1993, when she was still under house arrest, the NLD took part in the constitution-drafting National Convention. But in November 1995, soon after her release, the party walked out of the convention in protest at the junta's efforts to maintain a stranglehold over debate.  

There can be little doubt that it was Suu Kyi's input that led to this decision. But was it the right thing to do? At the time, many dissidents and NLD supporters applauded the party's walk-out as a brave and necessary move. In terms of its impact, it effectively derailed the regime's efforts to enshrine a political role for the military for the next eight years. But in the end, the junta produced the document it wanted—the 2008 Constitution, Burma's first charter since 1988.

Would it have been better for the NLD to stick it out and try to push for more democratic provisions? Given the restrictions imposed on delegates to the National Convention—most of whom were handpicked by the generals—it's unlikely that such efforts would have had much success. The only long-term effect of staying in the convention would have been to lend legitimacy to the final product—something it still lacks.

So it seems that the NLD, guided by Suu Kyi, made the right call in 1995. But what about its decision to boycott last year's election, again under Suu Kyi's influence?

This time, there was far more ambivalence than in the past about whether to play along with the regime's plans. No one seriously believed that the election would be free or fair, or that the junta would tolerate any outcome other than the one it had planned in advance. But many argued that it was necessary for the NLD to reenter the political fray after more than a decade of playing cat and mouse with the authorities that had left the party struggling for its survival.

It was only after Suu Kyi (again under house arrest) issued a statement saying that she couldn't  imagine the NLD registering under the junta’s repressive electoral laws that the issue of whether to contest the election was resolved, albeit not to everyone's satisfaction (a small faction of the NLD formed a new party, called the National Democratic Force, and ran in the election).

A little over one year after the election, however, there are still some who say that the NLD should have  contested it, if only to force the regime to show its repressive true colors, or—in a more unlikely scenario—to give it some say in the country's political affairs through its representation in Parliament.

A year ago, some analysts even predicted that the NLD's decision to boycott the election, and in the process forfeit its legal status as a political party, would be the final nail in the coffin of its political relevance. But the events of the past year suggest otherwise.



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COMMENTS (10)
 
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Garrett Wrote:
21/11/2011
Dear Myanmar Patriot, aka Fook Kaung, aka Burmese people, aka Crown Prince Shwebomin, aka HM King Shwebomin II, et al, for once you're right, I have NOTHING to do with YOUR country, Great Britain.

Shwebomin, you pitifully sqeaking British mouse, you have a lot of nerve to pose as a Burmese citizen at all, much less as the Crown Prince or King of Burma!

Thank You for encouraging me to continue with my "diatribes', in which I shall continue to ram the truth down your throat & then work your jaws to make you swallow it.

By the way Shwebomin old chap, why exactly haven't you returned to Burma to claim your throne?

Surely the French embassy in Rangoon could keep you supplied with champagne, & with your deep pockets you could have your haggis, neeps & tatties flown in by private jet so that you can eat the foods you are accustomed to while you attempt to convince the Burmese people of your Royal Blood.
Most likely, they would place you in an asylum for the politically insane.

Myanmar Patriots Wrote:
20/11/2011
Get lost, Garrett! Neo-colonialist crap!
You have nothing to do with our country. Sort out your own problem: coloniser English subjugating your folks.

Get it? We don't want anymore of your diatribes. Get lost!

Ohn Wrote:
19/11/2011
What changed sure is not the military. Thein Sein sure is a cuttlefish changing color at will to fool the fools. Aung San Suu Kyi has definitely changed. While she still wields immense power, her quick change of heart and silence in the face of daily torture and rape in a large part of the country and lack of enunciation of any cohesive long-term plan for the betterment of majority (as opposed to the self-styled politicians and sycophants) has sure bewildered and alienated a significant number of people.

Ohn Wrote:
19/11/2011
What also changed is the sudden taking to heart of the military of the Chinese hegemony. Even though one needs to be pathologically delusional to believe the people' desire has anything to do with it. All the public demonstrations for Myitsone dam was tacitly sanctioned.

Try walking a group of ten along the Mandalay moat now and see how long it lasts?

Another change is the sudden emphasis of the Americans for countering the Chinese. Enemy of the enemy is the friend.

At least there is no reason for the Americans to put intersecting pipelines with attendant military installations and invasion or take the miserly gas found in the bay of Bengal. As their interest is purely strategic, there is less likelihood of exploitation of the nature or destruction of culture if there is no acceptance of physical American military installations on

Ohn Wrote:
19/11/2011
At least there is no reason for the Americans to put intersecting pipelines with attendant military installations and invasion or take the miserly gas found in the bay of Bengal. As their interest is purely strategic, there is less likelihood of exploitation of the nature or destruction of culture if there is no acceptance of physical American military installations on the soil.

First time in the history of Burma, here comes an opportunity for the military to be honest and at the same time really caring for the country. No one in the country is interested in extracting reprisals from anybody. All they want is to be left in peace to peruse their personal interest for the betterment of everybody.

Ohn Wrote:
19/11/2011
First time in the history of Burma, here comes an opportunity for the military to be honest and at the same time really caring for the country. No one in the country is interested in extracting reprisals from anybody. All they want is to be left in peace.

We want peace. We want technology- not manual labour on offer by the Chinese and our Asian benefactors. We want to keep the pristine nature which is the last standing in the world with elephants and tigers in the wild and various traditional culture and thrive. We want religious and personal freedom. That's all.

We have seen greed in the neighboring countries simply gets them into moral and social decay with loss traditional culture and perpetual violence and paranoia.

Ohn Wrote:
19/11/2011
The real time to eat the cake and have it is here. Keep the millennium old traditions of all the ethnicities(they have been compatible with each other all this time). Give everybody true freedom of worship and personal choice. Get technology and education from the best possible source and use that precious uncorrupting commodity for the advancement of the country.

Burma will then become the very first country on earth with advanced knowledge, technology and freedom still avoiding the social evils which usually accompany the pure blind greed.

Ohn Wrote:
19/11/2011
High rise buildings, wide open roads, fast trains and airplanes and broadband iPads are not progress. Education and technology is. Stable, contented, happy community caring for each other is the PROGRESS. Being rich is NOT a measure of social success. HAPPY community is. Free flowing rivers, fresh healthy fish, chirping birds, happy running hordes of children, monks walking, church bells ringing, mosque calling, people celebrating.

The Burmese (people in the geographic boundary of Burma) are hard working, industrious and intelligent as have been shown before. and peace loving and forgiving. They simply need opportunity and nurturing.

There is opportunity.

Garrett Wrote:
18/11/2011
Given the fact that the majority of Burmese citizens still remain apathetic towards major issues such as ethnic persecution & environmental pollution which don't directly affect them, Aung San Suu Kyi has very few options.

I think it is worth pointing out that while Aung San Suu Kyi may be steering her party, she herself only represents one vote.

The ever-pragmatic SLORC-cum-SPDC regime learned in 1990 that it is not a good idea to allow the people to decide the outcome of an election, & following the success of their sham elections of 2010, it seems unlikely that they will ever see the need to deviate from their formula of hand-picking the winners-including the opposition.

But the NLD members' votes WILL be counted, & if they vote against legitimizing the faux-democratic regime at this time, Aung San Suu Kyi will graciously accept that decision & move forward.

If they vote as if they trust the regime, Aung San Suu Kyi will certainly be hand-picked in the next election.

the Burman Wrote:
18/11/2011
Yes, anything is possible. It's about time NLD gets back into the game.

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bullet With Suu Kyi On Board, Is Burma Finally Moving Toward Real Change?

bullet The ‘Rule of Law’ in Burma

bullet New Doors are Opening in Burma

bullet A Good Beginning to the New Year






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