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Where Is She? (Burma's Aung San Suu Kyi)
Washington Post ^ | 6/6/03

Posted on 06/06/2003 5:56:16 AM PDT by jalisco555

AWEEK HAS PASSED since one of the world's most courageous women, Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, came under attack by goons controlled by the military regime in her Southeast Asian nation of Burma. No credible source has seen her since. She is reported to be injured and in custody at a military facility. Many of her supporters also were attacked, in many cases reportedly killed or seriously injured. A number of members of Congress, including Republican Sens. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and John McCain of Arizona, have expressed eloquent outrage, but world leaders have been slow to follow suit. Reactions, in fact, have ranged from the inappropriately cautious to the unspeakably fatuous. We're thinking in the latter case of Japan, whose foreign minister responded to the attack on and arrest of Burma's rightful leader with an expression of satisfaction in the pace of democratization.

President Bush and United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan should take the lead in demanding that U.N. diplomats and Red Cross officials be given access to Aung San Suu Kyi; that she be released from custody; and that the regime at long last take steps toward its promised transition to democracy. Burma is an important country of 50 million people at the crossroads of India, China and Southeast Asia. Its people voted overwhelmingly in parliamentary elections in 1990 for Aung San Suu Kyi's party, the National League for Democracy, though she was even at the time under house arrest. The ruling junta nullified the results and kept her confined for the better part of the past 13 years. A year ago, the junta allowed her to resume meeting with supporters. But her evident continuing popularity with the Burmese people may have been more than the corrupt generals could stand.

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: aungsansuukyi; burma; liberalhypocrisy
This is the first I've heard of this in any media outlet. Why isn't the vaunted "human rights community" up in arms over this?
1 posted on 06/06/2003 5:56:16 AM PDT by jalisco555
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To: jalisco555
Well, I can tell you the Burmese community in DC is well aware. President Bush called the rulers to inquire about her as well.

If she turns out to have been killed, there will be a bloodbath in Burma.

2 posted on 06/06/2003 6:02:54 AM PDT by ko_kyi
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To: jalisco555
Jalisco555, if you want my FR opinion, I would say the low visibility of the horrible plight in Burma is caused by the fact that the Burmese were many times wealthier, happier, and better off by any objective measure when they were a British colony.

The left, which believes that all things Europe are evil (except France), doesn't want to talk about that.

3 posted on 06/06/2003 6:05:48 AM PDT by ko_kyi
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To: ko_kyi
The left, which believes that all things Europe are evil (except France), doesn't want to talk about that.

They're far too busy complaining about non-existent antiquities looting in Baghdad or the "mistreatment" of prisoners at Guantanamo to bother with Burma's ongoing nightmare.

4 posted on 06/06/2003 6:08:59 AM PDT by jalisco555 (Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain.)
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To: jalisco555
Unless the Burmese government rapidly allows American or European diplomats access to her person, it may be increasingly probable that Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel Peace Laureate of Burma, is dead. The Washington Post reports:

"A week has passed since one of the world's most courageous women, Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, came under attack by goons controlled by the military regime in her Southeast Asian nation of Burma. No credible source has seen her since. She is reported to be injured and in custody at a military facility. Many of her supporters also were attacked, in many cases reportedly killed or seriously injured."

Injured in a deliberate ambush, according to the US Government sources quoted by the Associated Press.

The US official said the two diplomats who visited the scene of the attack found signs of ''great violence,'' including bloody clothing. The official would not detail all the information suggesting a premeditated attack but said it included photographs and physical evidence.

''What they found corroborates eyewitness reports circulating of a premeditated ambush on Aung San Suu Kyi's motorcade,'' the official said on condition of anonymity.

... Exile opposition groups have also claimed that Suu Kyi, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, was hurt in the violence, perhaps suffering severe head injuries. The junta insists that Suu Kyi and colleagues detained with her are fine -- although it refuses to divulge where they are held.

US Government interest in Burma is driven primarily by it's concern over drugs, and not altruistic concern over the welfare of the Burmans. The Burmese dictatorship, created by Ne Win, is almost wholly dependent on illegal drug trafficking for income. Senior Tatmadaw  (Burmese Army) officers are paid in tablets, a divisional commander's stipend being 200,000 amphetamine tablets per month, according to the Daily Telegraph. Despite that, or perhaps because of it, Burma's internal organization is on the brink of collapse. Ordinary Burmese Army footsoldiers are not being paid at all. The New York Times reported mass rapes by Tatmadaw troopers in central Shan Province, which suggest a terminal breakdown in unit discipline and cohesion.

But while the European Union and the United Nations have spared no effort to safeguard the welfare of Yasser Arafat, it has paid scant attention to to the fate of fellow Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, possibly because, as the Wall Street Journal caustically observed, Arafat had more in common with Suu Kyi's jailors than with Suu Kyi. Nor was Burma, renamed Myanmar by its rulers, unwelcome by its Asian neighbors who admitted it to membership in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 1997, a fact that may have less to do with any sort of Asian nonconfrontationalism than a desire to preserve an important center for money laundering -- and drugs. And there was no shortage of businessmen willing to defy the embargoes of their own government in order to take advantage of the unique advantages in slave labor that a country like Burma could provide. During the Clinton era, some military contractors were caught importing clothing from Burma.

If Suu Kyi has been killed or seriously injured, the problem will be finding an appropriate response. Certainly the United Nations will do nothing and ASEAN even less. In the past, the US foreign policy tool of choice in situations where US national security did not seem directly threatened was the application of sanctions. But sanctions, as the Cato Institute pointed out, have neither toppled the regime nor improved human rights, while impoverishing Burma. And now we may be thrown, in our puzzlement, back upon the dictum of Sherlock Homes who said: "that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth" -- that sanctions having proved impossible, we should now consider whether action is all that remains. Burma does in fact constitute a threat to the security of the United States and of the region. For surely drugs like amphetamines are an assault not just upon the youth of America, but the youth of the world.

Aung San Suu Kyi was America's proxy soldier in the War on Drugs in Burma. She was, in her own brave way, an entirely for her own reasons, an army of one set against a pack of socialist drug lords. And her death, which God pray may not have transpired, will be a mark of shame upon so great a nation as the United States of America, who in her power, chose to wage war against so mean an enemy with so slender a force.

On August 21, 1983, the murder of another brave man in a strategic backwater finally provoked a rethinking of American policy. In the crisis following the death of Benigno Aquino at the hands of the Marcos dictatorship, Paul Wolfowitz persuaded then President Reagan that the time had come to actively topple the dictator of the Philippines. "'I actually thought it probably was the high point of my career,' Wolfowitz said. 'I never expected to do anything as interesting or as important' again."

Ralph Peters argued that "the Shah always falls"; that dictators are always toppled in the end, and that therefore, it was in America's interest to support the forces of freedom whatever the temporary inconvenience. The Burmese junta could use some toppling.

5 posted on 06/06/2003 6:10:31 AM PDT by wretchard
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To: jalisco555
FYI - A quick search on Amnesty International's website turned up 13 articles relating to Aung San Suu Kyi, dating back to 1996. To those of us who have followed nascent independence and democracy movements throughout the world, this is not a new story.
6 posted on 06/06/2003 6:13:34 AM PDT by olorin
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To: olorin
Lovely Burma; one of the dominoes the Liberals promised would not happen.
7 posted on 06/06/2003 6:18:39 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: jalisco555
" John McCain of Arizona, have expressed eloquent outrage,"

Once Jerk McLame has expressed 'eloquent outrage', what else can be said?
8 posted on 06/06/2003 6:27:14 AM PDT by lawdude (Liberalism: A failure every time it is tried.)
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To: wretchard
If Suu Kyi has been killed or seriously injured, the problem will be finding an appropriate response. Certainly the United Nations will do nothing and ASEAN even less.

The UN, which passes resolutions every time an Israeli policeman fires a rubber bullet, has been deafening in it's silence over the genocide of the Karen people.

9 posted on 06/06/2003 8:51:18 AM PDT by jalisco555 (Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain.)
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To: ko_kyi
What has happened in Burma is a total disgrace. I had heard recently that "Myanmar" was poised for a recovery from isolation/abject poverty, but this news doesn't augur well.
10 posted on 06/06/2003 12:21:10 PM PDT by JohnnyZ (I barbeque with Sweet Baby Ray's)
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To: JohnnyZ
My wife is from Burma, I get news about it all the time, all bad.

The currency is crashing, the natural resources are all licensed to China, disease and drugs are everywhere.

The government seems to wish to keep the population so worried about their next meal that they can't revolt. One day it will all come crashing down, and the people are so oppressed that the bloodbath will seem worth it.

My wife wishes that oil or uranium or something would be found there, just so the US would overthrow the government. She thinks the Iraqis are lucky.
11 posted on 06/06/2003 12:27:35 PM PDT by ko_kyi
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To: ko_kyi
She thinks the Iraqis are lucky.

The Iraqis are lucky. I was under the impression that Burma had bottomed out and reached the "nowhere to go but up" stage, but it sounds like you think it may well get even worse.

I'm not sure what the US can do without cooperation from the current government. If the UN was any use at all this would seem like a good situation for it.

12 posted on 06/06/2003 12:57:06 PM PDT by JohnnyZ (I barbeque with Sweet Baby Ray's)
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