ကမာၻလံုးဆိုင္ရာတရားမွ်တေရးဌာန
ဥကၠဌေရးလိုက္မွ ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ခမ်ာ တေနကုန္ေအာင္ျဖည့္မွျပည့္တဲ့
အေပါက္က်ဥ္းဗူးေတာင္းနဲ႔ေရခပ္ရရွာတဲ့ မေဗဒါလက္သစ္ျဖစ္ရေတာ့တယ္။ ဒီေဆာင္းမွာ
ကုလသမဂၢပဋိညာဥ္နဲ႔ ဆန္႕က်င္ဖီလာျဖစ္ေနတဲ့ ၂၀၀၈
စစ္ကၽြန္ဖြဲ႕စည္းပံုေအာက္မွာ ဘယ္လို တရာဥပေဒစိုးမိုးေရးမွ
မျဖစ္နိုင္ဘူးလို႔ေထာက္ျပထားပါတယ္။ ဒီေတာ့
လြတ္ေတာ္တရားဥပေဒစိုးမိုးေရးေကာမတီ ဥကၠဌ ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္စုၾကည္ လဲ
ေနကြယ္လဲေရသယ္မျပီးနိုင္တဲ့ မေဗဒါလိုျဖစ္ရေတာ့မယ္ထင္ပါရဲ႕။
It’s time for the int’l community to address Burma’s constitution
By JANET BENSHOOF
Published: 20 February 2013
The international community acts as if development and engagement alone
can secure a democratic future for Burma. The United Nations and donor
countries, with staggering rapidity, are investing considerable amounts
of international and bilateral aid in Burma, including for “rule of
law” projects designed to jettison Burma into the 21st century global
legal community. However, this well-intended engagement, touting ideals
of democracy and the rule of law, is built on a fallacy, which neither
serves the people of Burma nor advances the global security sought by
the international community.
This fallacy is that justice,
democracy, and rule of law can be established in Burma notwithstanding
the fact that the 2008 constitution establishing the “Republic of the
Union of Myanmar” grants the “Defense Services,” under
Commander-in-Chief Min Aung Hlaing, complete and total legal autonomy
over its own affairs, as well as immunity for its actions, however
criminal or corrupt. The truth is actually quite simple: unless and
until the military is placed under civilian control through
constitutional amendment, talk of democracy and rule of law in Burma is
just that, talk.
Autonomy and immunity guarantees in the
constitution give the military a green light to wage war and commit war
crimes; power over the police; and exert a monopoly over all weapons and
disarmament programmes, as well as Burma’s development of nuclear
capability for any purposes.
There are good reasons for the
military to be responsive to international pressure to amend the
constitution so that true democracy can take hold, given that
development and aid greatly benefits the military’s economic interests.
But the international community is not using its considerable power to
pressure the military. Instead, it ignores inconvenient truths such as
continuing military attacks against civilians in ethnic areas, secretive
weapons development, and failure, after some 60 years of armed
conflict, to ever prosecute any member of the military for war crimes
despite evidence of the endemic use of child soldiers and the rape of
ethnic women as a weapon of war.
A nation’s constitution is
usually considered to be a quintessential exercise of sovereignty, and
not typically a matter for international action, but just who has
sovereign power in Burma? The legal definition of “sovereignty” or of a
“sovereign” state requires that the state have complete legal authority
over the military and over the constitutional amendment processes. In
this case, the “Republic of the Union of Myanmar” does not meet the
standard of a sovereign state.
The international community
must recognise, as do democracy activists on the ground that for true
democracy to take hold, the constitution must be amended to reflect the
will of the Burmese people rather than the political designs of the
military. The constitution anoints the military as the “guardian of the
constitution” and gives the military control over passage of any
constitutional amendments. The military drafted and designed the
constitution to preserve its political power rather than foster
democracy and the rule of law, and it will take concerted international
effort to convince the military to open the window to change.
To find evidence of the troubling autonomy of the military – not to
mention the inconsistencies between military action and civilian
government rhetoric – one need look no further than the ordering of the
army not to attack any ethnic minority groups by President Thein Sein on
19 January 2013. Hours after the announcement, the military renewed its
offensive against the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), heedless of any
efforts by the civilian government to negotiate a lasting peace.
On 29 November 2012, the use of white phosphorous against peaceful
protesters demonstrating against Latpadaung, a copper mine in central
Burma, provided additional evidence of the rogue nature and power of the
military. The copper mine project involves a contract between Union of
Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited (UMEHL), a conglomerate run by the
military, and the Chinese company Wanbao, which puts military economic
interests at the center of the controversy. Military-owned corporations,
the greatest source of wealth in Burma, are not taxed as are other
businesses, thereby curtailing a crucial revenue stream that could be
invested in the people of Burma, such as by increased spending on
desperately needed health and education programmes.
“The legal
definition of ‘sovereignty’ or of a ‘sovereign’ state requires that the
state have complete legal authority over the military”
According to a recent investigation conducted by the Lawyers Network
(Burma) and Justice Trust (USA), police used excessive force, “including
military-issue white phosphorus weapons,” injuring more than 100 monks
with severe chemical burns. The use of white phosphorous against
civilians is illegal under international law and in direct conflict with
the promises made by President Thein Sein’s representative on 23
November 2012 to forge a non-violent solution to the protest.
This incident raises serious questions about who authorised the use of
this dangerous chemical weapon against peaceful protesters and about the
contradiction between the civilian government’s promises and the police
actions. The police forces in Burma report to the Minister of Home
Affairs, Lieutenant General Ko Ko, who is an active military officer
reporting to Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Vice Senior-General
Min Aung Hlaing. Under military control, how can police be held civilly
and criminally accountable for its activities?
The white
phosphorous incident must be a reminder that there is no weapon that
will not be used to stop dissent. Perpetrators – be they the police or
military or private thugs hired by the military – are not deterred since
no police or military have been punished nor has any civilian authority
been capable of stopping police or military action since 1962.
The
issue of weapons and nuclear energy development highlights yet another
distressing and pronounced disconnect between government rhetoric and
military action. On 22 December 2012, Vice Senior-General Min Aung
Hlaing speaking to the graduating class of the military’s Medical
Academy, announced plans to use nuclear technology for medical, research
and energy purposes but not atomic weapons development. This
contradicts previous statements by himself and government spokespersons,
such as a June 2012 statement by the commander-in-chief that Burma had
abandoned its nuclear programme and there was no point in having the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) visit because there was
nothing to see.
In November 2012, President Thein Sein
announced he would sign an international protocol requiring declaration
of nuclear facilities and materials and allowing more scrutiny by UN
inspectors. However, how can he enforce this pledge since the
constitution grants the commander-in-chief sole authority to admit
inspectors into military-owned territory, including nuclear facilities?
Finally, the president assured international leaders from South Korea
and the United States in May 2012 that Burma would refrain from military
cooperation with North Korea and abide by international sanctions
against that nation. Yet, three months later, Japan seized a cargo
shipment of materials suitable for uranium enrichment or missile
development destined for a Rangoon-based construction company, which the
US believes is a front for Burma’s military procurement, from North
Korea (via China).
Despite this disturbing evidence of ongoing
human rights abuses, military attacks on ethnic civilians,
inconsistencies between government statements and actions, and
development of nuclear capacity through cooperation with North Korea in
violation of international law, the global community continues to ignore
or downplay both the significance of these violations as well as the
limitations of the constitution.
For example, a December 2012
report by the International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute
(IBAHRI), entitled “The Rule of Law in Myanmar: Challenges and
Prospects,” concluded that the immunity clause of Article 445 of the
constitution should not be interpreted to include immunity for “serious
criminal acts.”
Yet just after the IBA report was released,
officials from the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology
cited the Article 445 immunity clause in the constitution as the reason
to limit the corruption investigation of former officers and Minister
of Telecommunications, Thein Zaw. If the immunity/amnesty clause in the
constitution is being used to curtail investigations for greed and
corruption, how can it prevent similar dismissal of more serious crimes,
such as genocide, crimes against humanity and sexual violence against
women?
On a positive note, some members of the global
community are waking up to the structural impediments and global
security concerns raised by the constitution. The UN Special Rapporteur
Tomas Ojea Quintana noted on 16 February 2013, after a five-day mission
to Burma, that the constitution could “undermine the rule of law and
fundamental human rights.”
The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
(NAPF), an INGO with more than 55,000 members, wrote in November 2012 to
all members of the United Nations Security Council urging them to
consider that military autonomy in the constitution renders the civilian
government incapable of keeping its promises to enforce international
obligations when examining that country’s compliance with Security
Council resolutions involving nuclear sanctions and issues of weapons of
mass destruction.
As stated by NAPF President David Krieger:
“…under the 2008 Myanmar Constitution, which became fully implemented
on January 31, 2011, the civilian government of Myanmar is deprived of
its sovereign powers over the military. This leaves the Myanmar
government unable to comply with, inter alia, Security Council
Resolution, SCR 1540 or SCR 1874, or any of its obligations under the UN
Charter, Geneva Conventions, Genocide Convention, and the
Non-Proliferation Treaty.”
Democracy activists on the ground
consider amending the constitution crucial to achieving their goals.
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and other National League of Democracy (NLD)
leaders emphasise amending the constitution, but recognise that the
constitution itself, “adopted” by a spurious referendum in 2008, derails
these efforts.
Amendments require more than 75 percent
majority vote of parliamentarians and the constitution guarantees that
the military may appoint 25 percent of parliamentarians, effectively
giving the military a veto over all legislation and amendments. Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi is “talking sweet” to the military, as noted by NLD
lawmaker Win Htein, because she and other in-country activists still are
not able to speak freely, openly and forcefully about how the
constitution is holding democracy hostage.
But what is the international community’s excuse?
President Thein Sein could join this call for an independent legal
review of the constitution as a step toward establishing the rule of law
and democracy in Burma. The president could take other actions
indicating a willingness to join the international legal community and
force the hand of the military, such as signing the Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court and bringing it to the parliament for
ratification. And to further confirm his commitment to these ideals, he
could indicate that he stands behind Burma becoming state party to other
international treaties such as the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, the two optional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions,
and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment.
But one thing is clear, if the
international community is truly concerned about installing democracy
and the rule of law in Burma, it should take positive steps towards
pushing for its amendment. At the international level, the UN General
Assembly or Security Council could request an advisory opinion on the
constitution from the International Court of Justice as was done
regarding the legality of the declaration of independence of Kosovo.
Such positive steps must include making reform a part of aid and
development funding, and the international community’s overall
commitment to bringing true democracy and rule of law to Burma.
Janet Benshoof is president and founder of the New York-based Global Justice Center.
-The opinions and views expressed in this piece are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect DVB’s editorial policy
http://www.dvb.no/analysis/its-time-for-the-int’l-community-to-address-burma’s-constitution/26505
No comments:
Post a Comment