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		Lost idol: New wave of Myanmar youth 
		activists look beyond Suu Kyi 
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		 [December 01, 2018] 
		By Shoon Naing and Poppy McPherson 
 YANGON (Reuters) - Myanmar youth activist 
		and television host Thinzar Shun Lei Yi would once have called herself 
		one of Aung San Suu Kyi's greatest fans. Now, she is one of her most 
		vocal critics.
 
 The 27-year-old belongs to a small but high-profile group of liberal 
		activists, many former die-hard Suu Kyi supporters, who are growing 
		increasingly disillusioned with the administration they voted into power 
		with sky-high hopes three years ago.
 
 "I lost my idol, I'm confused, frustrated and lost," said Thinzar Shun 
		Lei Yi, who hosts an 'Under 30' talk show on a popular local website.
 
 "Most of the activists and youths are now thinking: 'What is next', 
		'What will happen?', 'What can we do?' At this stage, Daw Aung San Suu 
		Kyi is going her own way and nobody can intervene, and she won't listen 
		to civil society organizations," she said, using the honorific for women 
		in Myanmar.
 
 While Suu Kyi continues to inspire devotion among many ordinary Burmese, 
		the emergence of a dissenting youth movement – driven by anger over her 
		handling of ethnic minorities, including the Muslim Rohingya, as well as 
		curbs on the media and civil society – presents a new challenge for her 
		administration.
 
 At stake is the future of Myanmar's transition towards democracy after 
		years of military rule. With a general election looming in 2020, the 
		country's first civilian government in decades is confronted by growing 
		divisions among activists who once coalesced around her National League 
		for Democracy party.
 
 NLD spokesman Myo Nyunt said the party was trying to win over young 
		people, increasing the budget for education and supporting vocational 
		training programs.
 
 "The youth and the people expected a lot from our government," he said. 
		"We couldn't live up to their expectations, we admit. But we are doing 
		our best."
 
		
		 
		
 Suu Kyi took power in 2016 after a landslide election win, vowing to 
		continue democratic reforms and end the country's long-running civil 
		wars.
 
 Since then, the administration has come under pressure over its response 
		to a military crackdown against the Rohingya minority that the United 
		Nations has described as "ethnic cleansing" with "genocidal intent", as 
		well as faltering peace talks with ethnic armed groups and a stagnating 
		economy.
 
 FREE SPEECH
 
 Activists say the civilian government has also become increasingly 
		authoritarian, failing to use its overwhelming parliamentary majority to 
		scrap colonial-era laws used to stifle dissent, while tightening 
		restrictions on civil society.
 
 In recent months, they have staged several protests, including an 
		anti-war march in the commercial capital of Yangon in May that ended in 
		scuffles. A total of 17 people were charged with unlawful protest, 
		including Thinzar Shun Lei Yi. Their trial is ongoing.
 
 "Sensitive issues are banned, and protesters arrested and beaten," she 
		said. "The National League of Democracy, the party using the name of 
		democracy, must respect democracy and human rights."
 
 According to free speech organization Athan, which means 'Voice' in 
		Burmese, 44 journalists and 142 activists have faced trial since the Suu 
		Kyi government took power.
 
 The group's founder, poet and activist Maung Saung Kha, is one of them. 
		He was also among the protesters charged alongside Thinzar Shun Lei Yi 
		in May. Four months later, in September, they both helped organize 
		another demonstration, this time for free speech.
 
 Facing the crowd, Maung Saung Kha – who is still an NLD member – donned 
		the orange shirt traditionally worn by his party's lawmakers and draped 
		a green jacket resembling military garb over it. Armed with a copy of 
		the state-run daily newspaper The Mirror, he began beating journalists 
		gathered nearby.
 
 "The government has failed to use its power to protect people's rights," 
		he told Reuters.
 
		Myo Nyunt, the party spokesman, said the government was cooperating with 
		non-governmental organizations, but their activities needed to be 
		examined case-by-case.
 "If it is not related to security or not a divisive issue among ethnics, 
		we accept them," he said. "We are going forward to democracy so we 
		acknowledge the role of NGOs, but we have concerns that NGOs are being 
		influenced by sponsors instead of being independent."
 
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			Myanmar press freedom advocates and youth activists hold a 
			demonstration demanding the release of jailed Reuters journalists Wa 
			Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo in Yangon, Myanmar September 16, 2018. 
			REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo 
            
			 
            "ACKNOWLEDGE ROHINGYA"
 While she has no control over the military, Suu Kyi has faced 
			international criticism for failing to defend the Rohingya, more 
			than 730,000 of whom fled a sweeping army cracking in western 
			Rakhine state in 2017, according to U.N. agencies. The crackdown was 
			launched in response to insurgent Rohingya attacks on security 
			forces.
 
 Myanmar denies almost all the allegations of atrocities made by 
			refugees, saying the army was carrying out a legitimate campaign 
			against terrorists.
 
 While many among Myanmar's Buddhist majority revile the Rohingya, 
			the young activists offer a rare sympathetic voice.
 
 "We acknowledge Rohingya. We totally denounce the fact that they are 
			referred to as 'Bengali'," said Maung Saung Kha, referring to a term 
			commonly used in Myanmar to imply the Rohingya are interlopers from 
			Bangladesh, despite a long history in the country.
 
 "We haven't seen any acknowledgement or punishment for the things 
			that happened," he said. "The refugees will not come back as long as 
			these people think of them as less than humans, and that it is not a 
			crime to kill them."
 
 Khin Sandar, another young activist facing unlawful protest charges, 
			spent months campaigning for the NLD ahead of the 2015 election but 
			lost faith in Suu Kyi over her handling of the Rakhine crisis.
 
 Her family was affected in a wave of communal violence in 2012, when 
			not only Rohingya but members of the Kaman Muslim minority, who also 
			face discrimination but unlike the Rohingya are considered Myanmar 
			citizens, were driven from their homes. They live in crowded 
			internal displacement camps outside the Rakhine state capital Sittwe 
			and are subjected to severe restrictions on movement.
 
 In a speech after last year's violence, Suu Kyi said all residents 
			of Rakhine "have access to education and healthcare services without 
			discrimination".
 
 "My own nephew and nieces are still living in the Sittwe camps and 
			they don't have those rights," said Khin Sandar. "I was shocked. How 
			can she say that in her speech?" Afterwards, she said, she quit her 
			job as researcher for an NLD lawmaker.
 
            
			 
            
 While the youth activists represent only a small segment of Myanmar 
			society they are increasingly influential in the grassroots activism 
			scene, while their protests and public comments have attracted 
			significant attention from media and from their vast social media 
			followings.
 
 Mostly in their 20s and 30s, they highlight the gulf between 
			Myanmar's young population – the median age is 27 – and its ageing 
			leadership, comprised of mostly men in their 60s and 70s.
 
 "Myanmar is a very conservative country, these young people 
			especially from Yangon are now challenging that," said Myat Thu, a 
			political analyst from the Yangon School of Political Science.
 
 "In order to have a revolution of ideas, not many people need to 
			know. They will spread it gradually."
 
 (Reporting by Shoon Naing and Poppy McPherson; Editing by Alex 
			Richardson)
 
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