THE ANTI-SUU KYI MOVEMENT
Ronald Watson
DICTATOR WATCH
May 7, 2017
As far as I know, I was the very first person to
criticize Aung San Suu Kyi publicly. This occurred in my first Dictator Watch
statement, from February 2002 – End the
Dialogue: An Open Letter to Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
At that time, pretty much everyone supported her. I think
a few people from the ethnic nationalities were suspicious, about her lack of
cooperation with them, but this is Burma after all. No one was going to
confront her, and cause her to lose face. I realized that it would be useful to
say what people of the country, because of social form, were too deferential to
mention.
In the statement I was exceedingly polite. I just pointed
out that you can’t negotiate with tyrants, certainly from a position of
weakness. She was involved in a “dialogue” with the dictatorship, which had
released some political prisoners to give her ammunition that the approach
might yield real results. To my knowledge, this was the first time they
“played” her, used her to reduce the domestic and international pressure that
their human rights atrocities generated.
But it was absolutely clear that the regime was not
sincere, that the release was a token step, and that the dialogue would never
change anything. Now, fifteen years later, she is still following the same
failed strategy.
My criticism subsequently became much more pointed, when
she betrayed the pro-democracy movement by reregistering the NLD in 2011,
ending her election boycott; when she ignored the new Burma Army offensives in
the North against the Kachin and other groups, also starting that year; and
when she refused to condemn the Muslim pogroms that were perpetrated the
following year, and which grew into the Rohingya genocide. I called her “the
worst person in Burma,” and then compared her to Dictator Robert Mugabe from
Zimbabwe, who similarly changed from being a resistance leader to an
authoritarian ruler. Now, she has even progressed from surrendering to the
generals to actively covering-up and attempting to justify their crimes.
The people of Burma have to throw off their reservations
and oppose her forcefully. Let your voices be heard in London tomorrow (I wish
I could be there!), elsewhere around the world, and most importantly inside
Burma itself. If she has her way, you will always be dominated by the Tatmadaw.
You will never know true freedom. There will be no peace, and the crimes
against humanity will never cease.
Contact: Roland Watson,