The Lady and The Hague: Myanmar leader Suu Kyi courts home audience
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[December 06, 2019]
By Shoon Naing, Thu Thu Aung and Poppy McPherson
YANGON (Reuters) - The last time Myanmar
leader Aung San Suu Kyi traveled to western Europe, she was feted as the
freshly elected civilian ruler of a fledgling democracy who had brought
an end to half a century of military dictatorship.
When the Nobel peace prize laureate returns next week, her first trip to
the region since a 2017 military crackdown on Rohingya Muslims in
western Myanmar, it will be to face accusations of genocide, alongside
the army she spent much of her life battling.
Gambia, a tiny, mainly Muslim West African state backed by the 57-nation
Organisation for Islamic Cooperation (OIC), lodged a lawsuit at the
International Court of Justice (ICJ) last month against Myanmar for
genocide, including mass murder and rape.
Myanmar denies the allegations, and Suu Kyi's office said she would fly
to The Hague for the first hearings, from Dec. 10, to "defend the
national interest".
"There is a discrepancy between the opinion of Myanmar and the
international community," said Myo Nyunt, the senior spokesman for her
National League for Democracy Party. "She has to explain what has really
taken place in northern Rakhine."
Her decision to attend took some by surprise. People close to her with
strong international connections voiced concerns it could further
tarnish her image abroad, according to two people familiar with the
discussions.
But at home the announcement has unleashed a wave of popular support,
with the leader who spent 15 years under house arrest for defying the
army lauded as once again championing the interests of the people
against a common enemy.
Richard Horsey, Myanmar advisor to the International Crisis Group, said
while her appearance carried considerable risks for Suu Kyi overseas,
"she likely feels that she must do all she can to defend the national
interest against what most people in Myanmar see as biased and
politically-motivated charges".
Suu Kyi was still a heroine to many when she last visited western Europe
and the United States months after taking office in 2016. Her star faded
in office amid sluggish reform and protracted ethnic conflicts, and she
faced increasingly harsh criticism from the West as the Rohingya crisis
unfolded.
'NO GENOCIDE'
An offensive by security forces and local Buddhists in northern Rakhine
state in August 2017 drove more than 730,000 Rohingya into neighboring
Bangladesh, where they created the world's largest refugee camp.
United Nations investigators have said the exodus was the result of a
military campaign executed with "genocidal intent".
Myanmar authorities have strongly disputed that conclusion, categorizing
the military operation as a legitimate response to attacks by Rohingya
militants that killed 13 members of the security forces.
In September 2017, Suu Kyi said terrorists were behind an "iceberg of
misinformation" about the violence.
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Myanmar State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi walks off the stage after
delivering a speech to the nation on the Rakhine and Rohingya
situation, in Naypyitaw, Myanmar September 19, 2017. REUTERS/Soe
Zeya Tun/File Photo
"Myanmar people do not support people being driven from their homes.
But it is different with these Bengalis leaving," spokesman Myo
Nyunt said, using a term common in Myanmar but rejected by the
Rohingya because it implies they are interlopers from Bangladesh who
invented an ethnic identity.
Seven soldiers were jailed for 10 years for killing 10 Rohingya men
and boys in the village of Inn Din, but granted early release last
November after serving less than a year in prison.
Late last month, the military began a court martial of an
unspecified number of soldiers over events in another village, Gu
Dar Pyin, the site of an alleged massacre of 10 Rohingya. The
military said the soldiers were "weak in following the rules of
engagement." No further details were given about the court martial,
which is continuing.
"As far as we know there is Inn Din massacre and Gu Dar Pyin," said
Myo Nyunt. "That's all... As far as [Suu Kyi] knows, there is no
such thing as genocide."
‘EVERYTHING IS POLITICS’
Recent weeks in Myanmar have had the flavor of election season, with
several pro-Suu Kyi rallies in major cities attended by hundreds of
people carrying flags. More are planned for the first day of the
hearings.
"Now there are demonstrations across the whole country. This is an
attempt to make her image stronger," said Ko Ko Gyi, a longtime
democracy activist and former Suu Kyi ally. "There is a saying –
everything is politics."
Myanmar is due to go to the polls again in 2020 and, while an
opinion poll from the People's Alliance for Credible Elections, an
independent group of election monitors, in July showed Suu Kyi
retains tremendous support, her government has faced criticism for
failing to bring an end to worsening ethnic conflicts in the
borderlands or reform the constitution.
Under the charter drafted by the former ruling junta, the military
chief nominates a quarter of lawmakers, giving it a veto over
constitutional change.
In the southeastern Karen state, regional authorities put up dozens
of billboards showing a smiling Suu Kyi flanked by three green-clad
soldiers laughing heartily underlined by the words "we stand with
you".
(Reporting by Poppy McPherson, Shoon Naing, and Thu Thu Aung;
Additional reporting by Sam Aung Moon; Writing by Poppy McPherson;
Editing by Alex Richardson)
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