We Should Never Forget
Burma 
By John Pilger ŠJanuary 24, 2005
ZNet Commentary
http://www.zmag.org
I tried to phone her the other day. I still have a number
she gave me, which I could call infrequently and exchange
a few words. It was fruitless to try this time; the
hurried click at the other end was an echo of her
Kafkaesque oppression. The isolation of Aung San Suu Kyi
is now complete, in the tenth year of her detention. The
last time I got through, I asked her what was happening
outside her house. "Oh, the road is blocked and
there are soldiers all over the street... for my own
security, of course!"
(Aung San Suu Kyi is Burma's opposition heroine, but 30
years ago her life was simpler, here with late husband
Michael Aris.)She thanked me for
the books I had sent her, hand-carried through the
underground that now struggles to maintain contact.
"It has been a joy to read widely again," she
said. I had sent her a collection of her favourite T S
Eliot, as well as Jonathan Coe's political novel, What a
Carve Up!, whose gentle irony must have seemed strange in
jackbooted Rangoon. She told me she relished biographies
of those who had also suffered through isolation:
Mandela, Sakharov. Little has reached her since then, and
it is not known if she still has her old Grundig
shortwave radio. The regime has now removed her personal
security guards from her compound beside Inya Lake.
Having tortured and killed her closest allies, they must
believe that, if the world looks the other way, they can
do the same to her.
"For the media, Burma is seldom fashionable,"
she told me. "But the important thing to remember
about a struggle like ours is that it endures, whether or
not the spotlight is on, and it can't be turned
back." For one so alone, these are salutary words; I
recommend them to those who lose heart when their
participation in one demonstration fails to stop an
invasion.
Fortunately, Aung San Suu Kyi and the democracy movement
she leads are supported by a tenacious solidarity network
throughout the world; and I am indebted to John Jackson
and Yvette Mahon of the Burma Campaign UK for never
letting us forget that, if the often debased cry of
democracy means anything, its true test is Burma. In the
current issue of Metta, the campaign's journal, Desmond
Tutu reminds us that Aung San Suu Kyi and her party, the
National League for Democracy, won 82 per cent of the
parliamentary seats in Burma's 1990 election, the signal
for a military junta to hunt, imprison, torture and
murder the victors, and enslave much of the nation.
"Suu Kyi and the people of Burma," writes Tutu,
"have not called for a military coalition to invade
their country. They have simply asked for the maximum
diplomatic and economic pressure against Burma's brutal
dictators."
As the public's response to the tsunami and the invasion
of Iraq has shown, the fastest-growing division in the
world is between people and those in power claiming to
act morally in their name. Burma exemplifies this. Take
the European Union's disgusting policy. Clearly with an
eye to its vast Asian market, the EU, promoter of
"human rights" when the price is right, has
shamelessly appeased the Burmese junta. Consider what
happens in Burma today. Rape is used as a weapon of the
state against ethnic woman and children. Forced labour is
widespread, described by the UN's International Labour
Organisation as a "crime against humanity".
The junta holds more that 1,350 political prisoners, many
of whom are routinely tortured. Up to a million people
have been forced from their land. Half the national
budget is spent on a brutal, peacock military whose only
enemy is its own people, while next to nothing is spent
on health; one in ten Burmese babies die in infancy. And
the true leader, elected in a landslide, is incarcerated,
rising at four o'clock every morning to meditate on such
an epic injustice.
 She has a
Masters degree from Oxford University in
Philosophy, Politics and Economics
Current and Previous Positions: General
Secretary of the National League for Democracy in
Burma and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. A symbol
for democracy in the military run state of
Burma/Myanmar and daughter of a national hero,
Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi worked as an Assistant
Secretary at the UN (1969-71) and as a Research
Officer for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in
Bhutan. In 1988 she became General Secretary of
the National League for Democracy which won a
landslide victory in the Burmese elections in
1990 but this was not recognised by the ruling
State Law and Order Restoration Council and she
remained under house arrest, despite widespread
international condemnation, until her release 6
May, 2002.However she has since been put under
house arrest again, that is becoming more and
more restrictive.
Publications: Ms Aung San Suu Kyi is
the author of numerous books and articles
including Aung San of Burma: A Biographical
Portrait by his Daughter, Burma and India:
Some Aspects of Intellectual Life under
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Meanwhile, the EU shores up the regime by increasing
imports, worth around 4bn dollars between 1998 and 2002.
Last October, the fifth summit of the 39-state
Asia-Europe Meeting (Asem) was held in Hanoi and attended
by representatives of the junta for the first time.
Instead of announcing a boycott, the Europeans turned up
and said nothing. Rather, France's president, Jacques
Chirac, said he hoped stronger sanctions would not be
necessary because they "will hurt the poorest
people". For "poorest people" read Total
Oil Company, part-owned by the French government, the
largest foreign investor in Burma, where the oil
companies' infrastructure of roads and railway access
have long been the subject of allegations of forced
labour. Total's euros allow the junta to re-equip its
state of fear.
"None of the EU officials I have met," says
John Jackson, "denies that foreign investment and
military spending in Burma are closely linked. In the
week the regime received its first payment for gas due to
be piped to Thailand from a gas field operated by Total
Oil, it made a 130m dollar down-payment on ten MiG-29 jet
fighters."
Jackson points to the farce of present EU sanctions.
After as many as 100 of Suu Kyi's supporters were
publicly beaten to death by soldiers in 2003, the EU
extended its visa ban to the junta and Germany froze no
less than 86 euros of German-based Burmese assets. In
contrast, and through direct action, the international
campaign has chalked up major disinvestments, such as
Premier Oil, Heineken, PepsiCo, British Home Stores. The
current "dirty list" of investors includes the
oil companies Total and Unocal, Rolls-Royce, Lloyd's of
London and so-called prestige travel companies such as
Bales, Road to Mandalay and Orient Express. The
bestselling Lonely Planet guidebook is a fixture on the
list. Lonely Planet has long made a fool of itself by
claiming, in the words of one of its writers, that Burma
is "better off" today, and that although the
junta is "abominable", "political
imprisonment, torture" and "involuntary
civilian service to the state" are not new and
"have been around for centuries".
Tell that to the people of Pagan, the ancient capital,
which used to have a population
of 4,000. Given a few weeks to leave, their homes were
bulldozed and they were marched at gunpoint to a
waterless stubble that is a dustbowl in the summer, and
runs with mud in the winter. Their dispossession was to
make way for foreign tourists. "I shall welcome
tourists and investors," said Aung San Suu Kyi,
"when we are free." There is an abundance of
evidence that foreign tourism has benefited the regime,
not the Burmese people, and that much of the tourist
infrastructure was built with "involuntary civilian
service" - an idiotic euphemism for bonded or
outright slave labour.
Filming secretly in Burma nine years ago, I came upon
what might have been a tableau from Dickensian England.
Near the town of Tavoy, in the south, gangs of people
were building a railway viaduct, guarded by soldiers.
These were slave labourers, and many were children. I
watched one small girl in a long blue dress struggle to
wield a hoe taller than herself, falling back exhausted,
in pain, holding her shoulder. "How old are
you?" I asked her. "Eleven," came the
reply.
Just as we should not forget the people of Fallujah and
Najaf and Baghdad, and Ramallah and Gaza, so we should
not forget this little girl, and her people, and their
leader, who ask for the most basic rights and deserve our
support.
The Burma Action Campaign website is www.burmacampaign.org.uk
E-mail: info@burmacampaign.org.uk or phone (44) 20 7324 4710
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