Posted By Min Zin
Friday, June 8, 2012 - 2:24 PM
FB: Foreign Policy Magazine
As of June 9, the war in Burma's Kachin
State has been going on for one year. It's a sad anniversary.
In early January 2012, the Kachin
journalist Lahpai Naw Ming was hit by a bullet fired by a Burmese soldier. But
Naw Ming's companions had no way of getting him to a hospital for immediate
treatment, because of the heavy on-going fighting between Kachin rebels and
Burmese government troops. Bleeding profusely, the 44 year-old Kachin
journalist was forced to hide in a trench in the Kachin lines for almost two
hours. By the time he arrived at a hospital in a Chinese border town, the
bullet in his throat had already caused damage to his main nervous system.
"I still
can't move the lower part of my body up to the chest," Naw Ming told me on
the phone from his hospital bed. As the chief reporter for Kachinland News,
Naw Ming filed a series of dispatches from the frontlines of the war between
the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and Burmese government troops, which broke out last June after
17 year of a ceasefire agreement. The journalist also documented on video how
the Burmese army has wantonly killed Kachin villagers and razed their houses.
On May 27, Naw
Ming was honored with the Citizen of Burma Award,
chosen by a public online vote. Although he was not a high-profile figure in
the Burmese public in comparison to other candidates in the final list, Naw
Ming won the award, receiving
51.25 percent of the 513,922 votes cast.
"The voting statistics showed that
Naw Ming won significant and sweeping support from the voting public,"
says Htain Linn, of the Citizen of Burma Award organization. "The ratio of
the votes he received was over two times higher than the runner-up."
The news of the award surprised even
Naw Ming: "I was amazed because this award was not just given to me by my
fellow Kachin compatriots, but by mostly ethnic Burman voters and other
supporters," Naw Ming told me. "I see this prize as increasing
[public] understanding of the ethnic struggle among members of the Burman
majority."
Many
unprecedented things are happening around the war in Kachin state. A group of well-known
musicians go on the road every Sunday to perform at
teashops in Rangoon to raise funds for the support of Kachin war refugees.
Respected Burmese charity organizations, such as the Free Funeral Service
Society, have also been sending aid to those
fleeing the war. Some publications have published interviews with Kachin rebel
spokesmen and featured articles on the war and the resulting humanitarian
crisis. Five journalists are hosting a photo exhibition this weekend to highlight the urgent need
for ending the civil war and bringing peace in Kachin state. And influential
members of the 88 Generation Students group have visited the war zone and
offered to mediate the conflict.
While many
ethnic Burmese are demonstrating their solidarity with the Kachin people, the
Burmese army's continuing crackdown on Kachin rebels shows a very different
picture. According to a recent report by Human Rights
Watch, the Burmese army has indiscriminately attacked Kachin villages, razed
homes, pillaged property, and forcefully displaced tens of thousands of people.
Soldiers have threatened and tortured civilians during interrogations. They
have also raped women. The army has also used anti-personnel mines and
conscripted forced laborers -- including children as young as 14 -- for work on
the front lines.
Combat incidents have been occurring an
average of four times a day since June 2011. The number of refugees has reached
an estimated 75,000 people. Most of them have been seeking refuge in some 30
camps for the internally displaced along the Chinese border in KIA-controlled
areas. With the rainy season around the corner, an imminent humanitarian crisis
is looming in these refugee and IDP camps.
In his open
letter to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, KIA leader Zawng Hra
calls on the UN to "intervene before the conflict becomes even wider and
more complex." Zawng Hra warned that there is strong evidence that the
Burmese army is not only waging war against the KIA and its political wing but
also against the Kachin population as a whole. The war, he said, is turning
from a political conflict into a racial one.
Some ethnic Burman volunteers who
regularly deliver food to the Chinese border-based IDP camps told me they were
recently cautioned by camp leaders not to speak the Burmese language inside the
camp. "Anti-Burman hatred is growing fast among the refugees, because they
do not make any distinction between the government army and Burman ethnic
people," said Aung Kyaw Zaw, a military analyst base on the China-Burma
border. Such sentiment, however, is not confined to refugees.
Gen. Sumlut Gun Maw,
the vice chief of staff of the KIA and one of the most influential Kachin
leaders, also told me that the Burmese army's relentless offensive and
manipulative "peace strategy" has radicalized the urban Kachin
population and some of the key Kachin rebel leaders.
As a journalist, Naw Ming has been
tracking the increasing ethnic tension. He warned that a quick-fix "peace
strategy" is not going to work: "It will take time and patience to
restore trust and ease tensions on the ground. But it's encouraging that more
and more of the general public in the Burmese heartland are taking interest in
the ethnic issue and showing their support.
The one-year anniversary of Kachin conflict is filled
with tragic memories. Yet Naw Ming's Citizen of Burma Award revives the hope
that Burma's many different ethnic groups really have the will to live together
in peace. And that does offer grounds for optimism.
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