From Burma to Myanmar: Land of rising expectations
January 3, 2013 -- Updated 0312 GMT (1112 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Myanmar is undergoing incremental change, welcomed by all, says Parag Khanna
- But he says people still tread lightly, careful not to overstep or demand too much
- Myanmar has survived succession of natural and man-made ravages, Khanna adds
- With sanctions lifted, foreign investment is now pouring in from Western nations
Editor's note: Parag Khanna is a Senior Research Fellow at the New America Foundation and Senior Fellow at the Singapore Institute of International Affairs. His books include "The Second World," "How to Run the World," and "Hybrid Reality."
Yangon, Myanmar (CNN) -- Call it a case for
evolution instead of revolution. While the Arab world continues in the
throes of violence and uncertainty, Myanmar is undergoing incremental
change -- and almost everyone seems to want it that way.
The government is
lightening up: holding elections, freeing political prisoners,
abolishing censorship, legalizing protests, opening to investment and
tourists and welcoming back exiles. But the people still tread lightly,
careful not to overstep or demand too much. Still, the consensus is
clear: Change in Myanmar is "irreversible."
As the British Raj's
jungle frontier, Burma was a key Asian battleground resisting the
Japanese occupation of Southeast Asia during World War II. As with many
post-colonial countries, the euphoria of independence and democracy in
1948 gave way in just over a decade to the 1962 coup in which General Ne
Win nationalized the economy and abolished most institutions except the
army.
Non-alignment gave way to
isolationism. Like Syria or Uzbekistan, Myanmar became an ancient Silk
Road passageway that almost voluntarily choked itself off, choosing the
unique path of a Buddhist state conducting genocide, slavery, and human
trafficking.
The military junta began
its increasingly cozy rapproachment with Deng Xiaoping's China in the
1970s, just as China was opening to the world, and used cash from its
Golden Triangle drug-running operations to pay for Chinese weapons.
Mass protests, crackdowns
and another coup in 1988 led to a rebranding of the junta as the State
Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) and the country's official
renaming as the Union of Myanmar.
The 1990 elections, in
which Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) won a
majority of the seats, were annulled by the SLORC, which continued to
rule until 2011 when it was formally disbanded. Most international
sanctions on Myanmar have now been lifted.
Parag Khanna
In just the past few
years, Myanmar has survived a succession of natural and man-made
ravages, from the brutal crackdown on the Saffron Revolution of 2007
(led by Buddhist monks but more widely supported in protest against
rising fuel prices and economic mismanagement), to Cyclone Nargis
(which killed an estimated 200,000 people in 2008) to civil wars
between the government's army and ethnic groups such as the Kachin in
the north and Shan and Karen in the east, and communal violence between
the Muslim Rohingya (ethnic Bengalis) and Buddhist Rakhine in the west.
There are still approximately 150,000 Karen refugees
in Thailand (and over 300,000 total refugees on the Thai-Burmese
border) and more than 100,000 displaced Rohinya living in camps in
Sittwe. So difficult is holding Myanmar together that even Aung San Suu
Kyi, who helps lead the national reconciliation process, ironically
advocated the use of the army (which kept her under house arrest for
almost two decades) to pacify the rebellions.
Though sectarian
conflict between Muslims and Buddhists in Rakhine underscores the
Myanmar's tenuous search for national unity, the genuine efforts at
religious pluralism are reminiscent of neighboring India: Every religion
is officially recognized, and days are given off for observance.
Surrounding Yangon's downtown City Hall is not only the giant Sule
Pagoda but also a mosque, synagogue, church and Jain temple. The
roundabout is therefore a symbol of the country's diversity -- but also
the place where protesters flock when the government doesn't live up to
promises.
Myanmar in grip of economic revolution
Myanmar's minorities fight for survival
Scarred from decades of
oppressive and ideological rule and still beset by conflict, it is
therefore against all odds that Myanmar would become the most talked
about frontier market of the moment, a top Christmas holiday destination
and a case study in democratic transitions. Myanmar's political scene
is now a vibrant but cacophonous discourse involving the still-powerful
army; upstart parliament; repatriated civilian advisers; flourishing
civil society, including human rights groups, ambitious business
community, the Buddhist religious community, and a feisty media
(especially online).
The parliament is
pushing for accountability in telecom and energy contracts, and its
speaker, Shwe Mann, is already maneuvering to challenge the chairman of
his Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) -- current president
Thein Sein -- in the 2015 elections.
In the meantime,
however, the establishment in Yangon and the new capital of Napyidaw
need to focus much more on building capacity. Thein Sein, who traded in
his uniform for indigenous attire in 2011, has reshuffled the Cabinet to
make room for functional experts in the energy and economic portfolios.
He's even spearheaded an anti-corruption drive, admitting recently that
Myanmar's "governance falls well below international standards." By
many accounts he is also very open to advice on investment and other
reforms.
He will need it, as
Myanmar faces crucial tests of its international credibility in the
coming years. In 2013, Myanmar will play host to the World Economic
Forum (WEF) as well as the Southeast Asian Games. In 2014 it will chair
the ASEAN regional group, and in 2015 it is expected to enter a new
ASEAN Free Trade Area.
The military's power is
still pervasive, placing it somewhere on the spectrum between Indonesia,
where military influence has been rolled back, and Pakistan, where the
military still dominates. On the streets, it's often difficult to know
who is in charge.
One numerological fetish
led to the driving side being unilaterally changed, making Myanmar the
rare place where the steering wheel is (mostly) on the right, and cars
drive (mostly) on the right. At least a dozen official and private
newspapers (though private daily papers are not allowed yet) are on
offer from meandering street hawkers, while you inch through Yangon's
increasingly dense daily traffic jams.
At this time of year,
visitors to Burma enjoy crisp, smoky morning air and dry, starry nights.
Yangon is undergoing a construction boom, with faded colonial embassies
turned into bustling banks, the national independence column being
refurbished and redesigned with a park, and tycoons building columned
mansions near downtown -- and seeking Buddhist blessings by pledging
lavish donations for the construction of even more monasteries and
pagodas.
By 2020, the population
of Yangon could easily double from the current 5 million, at which point
it may look like a mix of Calcutta and Kuala Lumpur.
Thant Myint-U, the
grandson of former U.N. Secretary-General U Thant and noted historian of
modern Burma, now wears several hats related to ethnic reconciliation,
foreign donor trust funds and urban conservation. He says that as
foreign aid flows grow from trickles into a flood, they have to be
systematically focused on sustainable employment creation and
infrastructure. USAID has pledged to spend more than $150 million in
Myanmar in the next three years.
Myanmar's opening, however, is strongly motivated by an
anti-Chinese sentiment that is part of a much wider global blowback
against China's commercial and strategic encroachment
Parag Khanna
Parag Khanna
Outside of Yangon, the
pace of Burmese society slows to a timeless pace -- as do Internet
connections. On village roads, cycle rickshaws and monks with parasols
amble by fruit vendors and car part stalls. Whether at the Dhammayazika
Pagoda in Bagan or Mandalay Hill in that city, locals enjoy watching
sunrises and sunsets as much as tourists.
Traveling around
Myanmar, one observes the paradox of a country that has massive
potential yet still needs just about everything. Yangon's vegetable
market is a maze of tented alleys overflowing with cabbage, pineapples,
eggplant and flowers, but they are still transported by wheelbarrows and
bicycles. Ox-drawn ploughs still power farming in much of the country,
meaning agricultural output of rice, beans and other staples could grow
immensely through mechanization.
Similarly, the
British-era light-rail loop circling Yangon takes about three hours to
ride once around, with no linking bus services into downtown. But with
cars already clogging the city, a major transport overhaul is essential.
The communications sector actually needs to be re-invented. At present,
the country's Internet and mobile phone penetration are only just
growing; both are still governed by India's 1886 Telegraph Act. Mobile
penetration is only 3 million but could easily grow to 30 million (half
the population) within the next couple of years, as the price of SIM
cards come down (so far from $2,000 to about $200), and foreign telecoms
are allowed in to provide data coverage.
With sanctions lifted,
foreign investment is now pouring in from Western nations, in addition
to the players who have been making inroads for years such as China,
Thailand and Singapore. The paradox, however, is that Myanmar lacks the
infrastructure (physical and institutional) to absorb all the investor
interest.
Major nations have thus
focused on special economic zones that they themselves effectively run.
The way Japan has moved into Myanmar, one would think that its World War
II imperialism has been forgotten. After their major bet on the Thilawa
special economic zone south of Yangon, Japanese contractors have plans
to deepen the Yangon River's estuary so that cargo ships can sail
directly up to the city's shores and offload more containers of cars
that are already being briskly snapped up at busy dealerships.
Besides natural gas and agriculture, everyone agrees that tourism will comprise an ever-larger share
of the country's GDP. Especially with much of the country off-limits to
foreigners due to security restrictions and the military's economic
operations, tourists already clog all existing suitable hotels in
Yangon, Bagan and Mandalay, meaning a massive upgrade is needed in the
hospitality sector.
Annual tourist visits
are climbing 25% annually to an estimated 400,000 for 2012. Daily
flights arrive packed from around the region, with longer-haul routes
beginning from as far afield as Istanbul and Doha.
Still, Myanmar is a
traveler's dream come true. In Bagan, you can walk or take a sunrise jog
around countless pagodas that feel like they haven't been touched in
800 years -- some actually haven't. There is also the sacred and
enchanting Golden Rock; the pristine beaches of Ngwe Saung, which rival
the best of Thailand and the Philippines; the temperate climate of Inle
Lake; the Himalayan foothills near Putao in far northern Kachin state
where one can trek; the rich dynastic history of Mandalay; and the
languorous Irrawaddy River cruises that harken to George Orwell's
"Burmese Days."
Yangon has a pleasant
charm and gentle energy, with vast gardens and riverside walks, the
grandeur of centuries-old monuments such as the Shwedegon Pagoda, a
fast-growing cultural scene of art galleries and music performances, and
a melting pot population of all Myanmar's tribes as well as industrious
overseas Indians and Chinese, who make up 5% of the nation's
population.
Mandalay in particular
is where one feels the depth of China's demographic penetration into
Myanmar, owing not only to recent decades of commercial expansion from
gems trading to real estate but also centuries of seasonal migrations
across the rugged natural border with Yunnan province. Some have begun
to call the Shan region "Yunnan South."
The combination of the
Saffron Revolution, civil strife, sanctions, its economic lag behind the
rest of ASEAN, and the status of becoming a captive resource supplier
to China all played crucial roles in Myanmar's opening. China has
traditionally been a kingmaker in isolated and sanctioned countries and
well-placed to capitalize on the infrastructural and extractive needs of
emerging economies as well.
For China, Myanmar
represents a crucial artery to evade the "Malacca trap" represented by
its dependence on shipping transit through the Straits of Malacca. In
2011 China was still far and away the largest foreign investor
in Myanmar, bringing in $5 billion (of a total of $9 billion) across
their 2,000-kilometer (1250-mile)-long border. The massive ongoing
investments include 63 hydropower projects, a 2,400-kilometer
(1500-mile) Sittwe-to-Kunming oil pipeline from the Bay of Bengal and a
proposed gas pipeline to China's Yunnan beginning at Myanmar's Ramree
Island -- not to mention an entire military outfitted with Chinese
tanks, helicopters, boats and planes.
Myanmar's opening,
however, is strongly motivated by an anti-Chinese sentiment that is part
of a much wider global blowback against its commercial and strategic
encroachment. Even well-kept generals are fundamentally Burmese
nationalists and awoke to the predicament of total economic and
strategic dependence on China. The government has taken major steps to
correct this excessive tilt, suspending a major hydroelectric dam
project at Myitsone and re-evaluating Wanbao Mining company's giant
copper mine concession near Monywa.
Myanmar is now deftly
playing the same multi-alignment game mastered by countries such as
Kazakhstan in trying to escape the Soviet-Russian sphere of influence:
courting all sides and gaining whatever one can from multiple great
powers and neighbors while giving up as little autonomy as possible.
India sees Myanmar as
the crucial gateway for its "Look East" policy and is offering
substantial investments in oil and gas as well as port construction and
information technology; Europe has become a larger investor, especially
Great Britain; Russia is being courted as a new arms supplier; Japan is
viewing Myanmar as its new Thailand for automobile production; and of
course, U.S. President Barack Obama visited in December, paving the way
not only for greater U.S. investment but even for Myanmar to potentially
participate in the Cobra Gold military exercises held annually with
America's regional allies.
Obama was not only the
first U.S. president to visit Myanmar but also the first to call it by
that name, conceding ground in a long-running dispute. The
administration hopes that North Korea, Asia's still frozen outcast, will
learn the lessons from Myanmar's steady but determined opening.
But countries that are
playing multi-alignment don't have to thaw domestically -- witness Saudi
Arabia and Kazakhstan. Myanmar is simultaneously undergoing political
liberalization and international rehabilitation -- a tricky and laudable
feat for sure but not one North Korea is likely to emulate entirely.
What the two do have in common, however, is the growing realization that
having China as a neighbor is both a blessing and a curse.
During my visit to the
"Genius Language School," where university students go for professional
English tutoring, I asked the assembled round table whether they were
happy that Obama came to visit and whether they considered America a
friend. All giggled and chanted: "Yes."
Then I asked, "Are you afraid of China?" And the answer came in immediate, resounding unison: "Yes!"
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