For the junta, cementing military rule is more important than the cyclone victims.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

There are a lot of a lot of angles to look at when analyzing the effects of the recent cyclone in Burma that killed over 100,000 people and destroyed millions of dollars in properties.

One implication that would most certainly affect the Philippines is another surge in global rice prices. It is reported that the damages on agricultural land in the affected areas are so dire that Myanmar officials are already stopping its rice exports. In fact, the Nyawpyitaw junta is expected to actually start importing rice to feed the people.

This is the culmination of the regime’s bastardation of Burma’s agricultural sector. Where once Burma was a major exporter of rice, the country’s contribution to the international rice supply has dwindled through the years. One major reason was the fact that, aside from neglecting agricultural infrastructure, the ruling generals have since set themselves up as the sole domestic buyer of rice in the country, according to the report of the Los Angeles Times. The bad thing about this is that since the junta buys rice very cheap, most Burmese farmers grow only what their families need, thereby slowing production.

This highlights the Nyawpyitaw junta’s being a big liability to the international community. And this strengthens the arguments for the regime’s ouster.

Now back to the cyclone. Writing for the Associated Press, Grant Peck argues that the disaster raises the risks for the embattled military regime.

Cases of regime change and other radical reforms resulting from a natural disaster are numerous. Most notable examples include the 1972 earthquake in Nicaragua that led to the decline of the Somoza regime and the 1970 cyclone that led to Bangladesh’ secession from Pakistan. 

Peck argues that Burmese superstition has it that natural disasters are often signs that the government has lost the heavens’ approval. This, along with the regime’s slow response to the crisis, could possibly fuel additional unrest. 

One of the junta’s dilemma, Peck’s article says, is whether to allow an influx of relief assistance from the international community or not.

Writes Peck: “Allowing a major influx of foreigners carries risks, injecting unwanted outside influence and giving the aid givers rather than the junta credit for a recovery. But keeping out international aid would focus blame squarely on the military should it fail to restore peoples’ livelihoods.”

“The most extreme change potentially could come within the military itself, providing an opening for more moderate officers to expand their influence if relief failures discredit the hard-line leaders at the top,” the correspondent for Southeast Asia continues.

For my part, I think that this need for foreign aid only emphasizes the obvious: that more resources are needed to cater to the victims of the cyclone, and unfortunately Myanmar’s government has limited resources. 

Which leads me now to one basic question: why, then, is the ruling junta not postponing this week’s referendum on the military-backed constitution, which requires precious money that would be better spent for the victim’s relief?

The answer is that this proposed constitution is more important to the generals than those hundreds of thousands of Burmese lives affected by the cyclone.

This proposed constitution is supposed to be the culmination of the road map towards Burma’s  democratization. But it is not.

The charter was supposed to be written by a convention that would include all sectors of Burmese politics. But the junta’s refusal to give up, or even dilute, its powers made the opposition boycott the process. And instead of negotiating with the opposition, the ruling junta proceeded and handpicked the delegates to the constitutional convention.

And as expected, the convention came up with what the Japan Times called a sham constitution. One that gives the military the right to appoint 166 of the 664-member parliament, gives the non-elected president (sure to be appointed by the junta) the right to seize all government powers in case of emergency and bars beloved leader Aung San Suu Kyi, by virtue of her being married to a foreigner, from holding public office. 

It couldn’t get any more clever, really. Under this charter, the generals can claim to be operating in a democracy while exercising actual power and continuing their corruption. 

Now you see how important the referendum on the constitution is for the Nyawpyitaw junta. They need this constitution approved.

The question is, will going ahead with Saturday’s referendum be actually beneficial to the junta’s prospects of getting public approval for this constitution?  

At first glance, it would seem that postponing the polls would be a better choice for the regime. This is because the junta’s laggard response to the cyclone is sure to generate more “no” votes in this referendum.

If I’m the Than Swe, I would postpone the elections to appease the people’s emotions. That way, I’ll have more chances of getting more “yes” votes.  

But the thing is that this is not how the the generals think. They don’t think based on the idea that the referendum would be fair and square.

They don’t care if 100 per cent of the population reject their constitution. They won’t honor the vote anyway. They are poised to do a Garci.

So yes, I think it would be beneficial for the junta to push through with this Saturday’s referendum. This is because most of the Burmese people would still be busy grieving for their dead and trying to gather what’s left with their lives and would therefore be oblivious to whatever miracles the junta would do with the referendum’s results.

——-

 

 

Journalist Luis Teodoro’s suggestion for journalists to blog to set an example so bloggers can abide their journalistic code of ethics received mixed reactions from bloggers on FilipinoVoices.com.

Must reads are Atty. Butch’s Blog or Perish, Abe Margallo’s Blogging v. Journalism, My Take, cocoy’s Zeiteist: Why Blogging And Tradittional Journalism Is More Than That and Mark Ronald Rimorin’s The Us-Against-Them Mentality In The Blogging v. MSM Debate.  Benign0, meanwhile, calls traditional journalists “Old Farts” in his post.

For my part, I argued that writers- journalist or bloggers- must be judged neither by their medium nor for the entity they write for but by whether or not the write based on the truth- nothing more, nothing less. I also talked about the fundamental difference between blogging and traditional journalism and argued that code of ethics should merely be optional for bloggers. 

Read my article here.

There are still no takers for our Philippine Issues Writing Project. Maybe because the project is not well-publicized? 

For those who have a thing or two to say on any topic regarding Philippine society or culture, please join this contest. At stake here is PhP 10,000 worth of gifts and cash prizes, a free Flickr Pro Account and free one year blog hosting.

Click here for more details. 

—–

The photo of marching soldiers in Nyawpyitaw above was taken by Agence France Presse. 

Posted by thenutbox at 11:58 PM | permalink

Previous Comments

Watching Burma on TV, the faces you see may as well be Filipinos.

Lest we forget, we’ve had a shameful number of Pinoys die in mudslides and other environmental degradation-related “natural” disasters in the last couple of decades (starting with the 8000-dead Ormoc flashflood).

We are so passionate about this that we produced a short animated film about it:

Check it out (our first foray into animated cartoons!):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oaQ5_9G-33k

We’re thinking of using this deliver method to reach more Pinoys using. Nothing like simple stories and simple characters to convey deep systemic issues that plague ours and most other 3rd World countries. :)

Posted by benign0 at May 12, 2008, 6:17 am

@ Nick and J,

Myanmar’s ruling generals are now like cornered tigers. Pressure must be applied not only to Myanmar but to the countries which, in one way or another, coddled the regime. Russia, China, and to some extent, ASEAN Malaysia, Indonesia, and Thailand). But what do you expect, these states are also guilty of violations of human rights.

This we cannot deny PGMA: she has consistently called for more democratic space in Myanmar at the expense of alienating the more conservative leaders in ASEAN.

With almost 50,000 casualties, now more than ever, the rest of humanity shoul feel remorse. We owe this to the Myanmar people.

Posted by jakcast at May 12, 2008, 8:57 am

If ASEAN’s vision is to be a juridical entity and to be a real counterforce in the Asian balance of power, there must be a STRONGER political solidarity. Myanmar is becoming a political liability to this end and sooner or later, the ASEAN would have to intervene. If the ASEAN would not face the Myanmar question squarely, then the group can forget about being a major regional power in Asia.

On GMA’s hypocritical rethoric against Myanmar, we still don’t know if she can sustain that policy. GMA wants Burmese democratization before she ratifies the ASEAN Charter. ASEAN powers, including Malaysia, want this charter ratified. It remains to be seen whether GMA can defy these ASEAN powers: Malaysia has leverage on Mindanao, Vietnam and Thailand have leverage on rice supply.

More on GMA’s Burma stance and why it is feeble: http://thenutbox.i.ph/blogs/thenutbox/2007/11/25/reasons-why-myanmar-and-everyone-else-is-ignoring-manila/

Posted by J at May 12, 2008, 8:58 am

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