Myanmar:
A Political Economy Analysis
Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Report commissioned by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Publisher: Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
Copyright: © Norwegian Institute of International Affairs 2018
ISSN: 1894-650X
The report has been commissioned by the Norwegian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs. Any views expressed in this publication
are those of the authors. They should not be interpreted
as reflecting the views, official policy or position of the
Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs or the Norwegian
Institute of International Affairs. The text may not be printed
in part or in full without the permission of the authors.
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Myanmar:
A Political Economy Analysis
Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Report commissioned by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
2018
Contents
Map of Myanmar ..................................................................................................................
VI
About the report .................................................................................................................. VII
Authors ................................................................................................................................. VIII
List of acronyms ...................................................................................................................
IX
Executive summary..............................................................................................................
XI
Risk analysis: Country risks and their implications for engagement in Myanmar ....... XVII
1.
Introduction .................................................................................................................
Purpose, structure and methods of the study ...........................................................
Political-historical background ...................................................................................
Recent interaction between Norway and Myanmar ...................................................
1
1
2
5
2. Politics ..........................................................................................................................
The state in Myanmar ..................................................................................................
Political structures and actors ....................................................................................
Challenges for transformative democratic politics ...................................................
8
8
17
35
3. Economics and social issues ......................................................................................
Economic structure and growth ..................................................................................
Natural resource management ...................................................................................
Trade and FDI ................................................................................................................
Demography .................................................................................................................
Composition of aid and main donors .........................................................................
37
37
38
42
44
44
4. Conflict and stabilization ............................................................................................
Causes of ethnic conflict .............................................................................................
Peace initiatives ...........................................................................................................
The Rohingya crisis ......................................................................................................
46
46
47
52
5. Migration, climate change and humanitarian needs ................................................
56
6. Main human rights challenges ...................................................................................
62
References ...........................................................................................................................
65
Tables
Table 1. The general party system in Myanmar .......................................................................
Table 2. Distribution of seats in the Union Parliament after the 2015 elections ..............
Table 3. Alliances among EAOs and participation in ceasefire agreements .....................
Table 4. Electric power generation mix (installed capacity, 2014) ......................................
21
22
25
39
Figures
Figure I. Classification of risks for external engagement in Myanmar ............................... XVII
Figure 1. Major ethnic groups and administrative units in Myanmar .................................
3
Figure 2. Norwegian aid to Myanmar by sector, 2006–2016 ..............................................
6
Figure 3. Channels for Norwegian aid in 2016 ........................................................................
6
Figure 4. Myanmar’s score on the Fragile State Index and its political
indicators, 2008–2017 ................................................................................................................ 15
Figure 5. Perceptions on present and future economic conditions .................................... 16
Figure 6. Self-identity, by religion and ethnicity.................................................................... 17
Figure 7. The transition discourse on reforms in Myanmar .................................................. 19
Figure 8. Location of active ethnic armed organizations and major
development projects ................................................................................................................. 23
Figure 9. Types and functions of civil society organizations ................................................ 29
Figure 10. Population by religion, 2014 ................................................................................... 30
Figure 11. Myanmar total FDI vs. petroleum and power FDI .................................................. 43
Figure 12. FDI in Myanmar by country of origin ...................................................................... 43
Figure 13. The shifting geography of conflict and ceasefire zones ..................................... 48
Figure 14. Key actors in the Rohingya crisis ............................................................................ 53
Figure 15. Number of migrants by type and host country ..................................................... 56
Figure 16. Displacement of Myanmar population over time................................................. 57
Figure 17. New internal displacement due to natural disasters........................................... 59
Figure 18. Myanmar’s freedom status, 1998–2017 ................................................................ 62
Map of Myanmar
MYANMAR
tr a
Putao
Lijiang
Jorhat
Shingbwiyang
KACHIN
Guwahati
Lumding
Dali
Ch
Tengchong
Hopin
24°
C H I N A
Bhamo
SAGAING
Dhaka
Katha
Mawlaik
Namhkam
La nc a ng
Falam
Kalemya
SHAN STATE
Chauk
Irrawaddy
DIVISION
RAKHINE
STATE
Ched
I.
B a y o f B e n g a uba
l
Taunggyi
Loikaw
KAYAH
STATE
Prome (Pye)
Coco Islands
(MYANMAR)
G
Ma ulf of
rtab
an
MON
STATE
Nakhon
Sawan
Nakhon
Ratchasima
Bangkok
An d a m a n S e a
14 °
(Krung Thep)
Dawei
Major airport
Launglon Bok
Islands
CAMBODIA
TANINTHARYI
DIVISION
Mergui
International boundary
Division or state boundary
16°
T H A I L A N D
Ye
National capital
Town, village
Khon Kaen
Amherst
94°
Division or state capital
ng
92°
Pi
y
18°
m
s o f t h e I r ra w a d d
e
Vientiane M kong
(Viangchan)
Na
u th
Thaton
Pa-an
KAYIN
YangonBilugyin I.
Mawlamyine STATE
Pyapon
20 °
Mae
AYEYARWARDY
DIVISION
DEMOCRATIC
REPUBLIC
Chiang Mai
Bago
YANGON
DIVISION
LAO PEOPLE'S
Lampang
Preparis Island
(MYANMAR)
14°
Houayxay
BAGO
DIVISION
Henzada
Mo
Möng-Pan
Naypyitaw
18°
16°
Kengtung
Taungdwingyi
Sandoway
Pathein
VIET NAM
Muang Xai
Meiktila
MAGWAY DIVISION
Minbu
Magway
Ramree I.
Pongsali
Ta-kaw
MANDALAY
Sittwe
(Akyab)
Jinghong
Myingyan
Pakokku
20°
22 °
)
Mandalay
Sagaing
Gejiu
d)
ng
Maymyo
(Re
ko
Monywa
CHIN
STATE
Yuan
e
(M
Shwebo
S a l we e n
22°
Lashio
I r r a w ad d y
Hakha
Chittagong
24 °
Lincang
DIVISION
Barisal
Kunming
Baoshan
Imphal
BANGLADESH
26 °
Myitkyina
in
ng
STATE
Dukou
in
I N D I A
Shillo
Makaw
dw
°
ng
m a pu
28 °
MYANMAR
M e ko n g
ah
Br
102°
Xichang
100°
a Ji a
Tinsukia
BHUTAN
26
98°
Indian
Line
Chinese
Line
J ins h
96°
94°
12°
12°
Main road
Mergui
Archipelago
Secondary road
Gulf of Thailand
Railroad
The boundaries and names shown and the designations
used on this map do not imply official endorsement or
acceptance by the United Nations.
Kawthuang
10°
96°
98°
VI
Chumphon
0
100° 0
100
200
300 km
10°
100 102
°
200 mi
Myanmar, Map No. 4168 Rev.3, June 2012, UNITED NATIONS
About the report
In June 2016, the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs (MFA) commissioned NUPI to provide
political economy analyses of eleven countries
(Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Haiti, Malawi, Mali,
Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, Somalia, South
Sudan and Tanzania) deemed important to Norwegian development cooperation. The intention
was to consolidate and enhance expertise on these
countries, so as to improve the quality of the
MFA’s future country-specific involvement and
strategy development. Such political economy
analyses focus on how political and economic
power is constituted, exercised and contested.
Comprehensive Terms of Reference (ToR)
were developed to serve as a general template for
all eleven country analyses. The country-specific
ToR and scope of these analyses were further
determined in meetings between the MFA, the
Norwegian embassies, NUPI and the individual
researchers responsible for the country studies.
NUPI has also provided administrative support
and quality assurance of the overall process. In
some cases, NUPI has commissioned partner institutions to write the political economy
analyses.
VII
Authors
has served as project leader in research projects
organized by, inter alia, the Asian Development
Bank, the World Bank, the Global Development
Network and the Natural Resource Governance
Institute (NRGI). He has also worked at the oil
company Shell in Germany. In 2013, Vakulchuk
was awarded the Gabriel Al-Salem International
Award for Excellence in Consulting. Recent publications include ‘The Geopolitics of Renewable
Energy’, ‘Myanmar’s Attractiveness of Investment in the Energy Sector’, ‘Public Administration Reform and Its Implications for Foreign
Petroleum Companies in Kazakhstan’.
Kristian Stokke
Kristian Stokke is Professor of Human Geography at the University of Oslo, specializing in
studies of democratization, peace and civil society
politics in South and Southeast Asia. His current
research focuses on politics of peace and democracy in Myanmar and citizenship politics in
Indonesia. Stokke has published articles, edited
books and written chapters on these subjects. His
edited works include Politicising Democracy: The
New Local Politics of Democratisation (with John
Harriss and Olle Törnquist, 2004), Rethinking
Popular Representation (with Olle Törnquist and
Neil Webster, 2009), Liberal Peace in Question:
The Politics of State and Market Reforms in Sri
Lanka (with Jayadeva Uyangoda, 2011), Democratization in the Global South: The Importance of
Transformative Politics (with Olle Törnquist 2013)
and Politics of Citizenship in Indonesia (with Eric
Hiariej, 2017). See also: http://www.sv.uio.no/
iss/english/people/aca/stokke/index.html
Indra Øverland
Indra Øverland is Research Professor and Head
of the Energy Program at NUPI, holds a PhD
from the University of Cambridge. He started
working on Southeast Asia as a student in 1992,
and has since worked as a long-term political
observer in Cambodia and conducted field-based
research in Indonesia and Myanmar. In 2016, he
was a Visiting Fellow at the ASEAN Centre for
Energy in Jakarta. Øverland has been awarded
the Toby Jackman Prize, the Marcel Cadieux
Prize, the Stuland Prize, and has co-authored
the most-cited article published in the Journal of
Eurasian Studies. Relevant publications include
‘Impact of Climate Change on ASEAN International Affairs Risk and Opportunity Multiplier’,
‘An International Comparative Perspective on
Energy Subsidy Reform in Myanmar’ and ‘A
Match Made in Heaven? Strategic Convergence
between China and Russia’.
Roman Vakulchuk
Roman Vakulchuk is Senior Research Fellow at
the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
(NUPI) in Oslo and holds a PhD degree in Economics from Jacobs University Bremen in Germany. His main geographical specialization is
the countries of Central Asia and Southeast Asia
and major research areas are economic transition,
trade, infrastructure and transport, public administration, natural resource management, investment climate and business culture, as well as
state capitalism in emerging markets. Vakulchuk
VIII
List of acronyms
AA
Arakan Army
ADB
Asian Development Bank
AFPFL
Anti-Fascist People’s Freedom League
AFTA
ASEAN Free Trade Area
ALA
Arakan Liberation Army
ALP
Arakan Liberation Party
ANP
Arakan National Party
ARSA
Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army
BGF
Border guard forces
BSPP
Burma Socialist Programme Party
CEPT
Common Effective Preferential Tariff
CNF
Chin National Front
CPB
Communist Party of Burma
CSO
Civil society organization
DACU
Development Assistance Coordination Unit
DICA
Directorate of Investment and Company Administration
DKBA
Democratic Karen Benevolent Army
DVB
Democratic Voice of Burma
EAO
Ethnic armed organizations
EBO
Euro-Burma Office
EITI
Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative
EU
European Union
FDI
Foreign direct investment
FPNCC
Federal Political Negotiation and Consultative Committee
GAD
General Administration Department
GEN
Gender Equality Network
GONGO
Government organized non-governmental organization
KA
Karenni Army
KIA
Kachin Independence Army
KIO
Kachin Independence Organization
KNPP
Karenni National Progress Party
KNLA
Karen National Liberation Army
KNU
Karen National Union
KSPP
Kachin State Progressive Party
LRC
Local Resource Centre
Ma Ba Tha
Organization for the Protection of Race, Religion and Belief
MATA
Myanmar Alliance for Transparency and Accountability
IX
List of acronyms | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
MIC
Myanmar Investment Commission
MLAW
Myanmar Legal Aid Network
MOGE
Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise
MoHA
Ministry of Home Affairs
MPC
Myanmar Peace Centre
MPSI
Myanmar Peace Support Initiative
MTA
Mong Tai Army
MNDAA
Myanmar National Democracy Alliance
NBC
Norwegian Burma Committee
NBF
Nationalities Brotherhood Federation
NCA
Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement 2015
NDAA-ESS
National Democratic Alliance Army – Eastern Shan State
NGO
non-governmental organization
NLD
National League for Democracy
NMSP
New Mon State Party
NSCN-K
National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Khaplang
NUP
National Unity Party
OECD
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
PDSG
Peace Donor Support Group
PMF
People’s militia forces
PNLO
Pa-O National Liberation Organization
PSLF
Palaung State Liberation Front
RCSS/SSA
Restoration Council of Shan State /Shan State Army
SAD
self-administered division
SAZ
self-administered zone
SLORC
State Law and Order Restoration Council
SMEs
small and medium-sized enterprises
SNLD
Shan Nationalities League for Democracy
SPDC
State Peace and Development Council
SSPP/SSA
Shan State Progress Party/Shan State Army-North
TNDP
Tai-Leng (Shanni) Nationalities Development Party
TNLA
Ta’ang National Liberation Army
UNA
United Nationalities Alliance
UNFC
United Nationalities Federal Council
UNPD
United Nations Population Division
UNPF
United Nations Population Fund
UPDJC
Union Peace Dialogue Joint Committee
USDA
Union Solidarity and Development Association
USDP
Union Solidarity and Development Party
UWSA
United Wa State Army
WGEC
Working Group on Ethnic Coordination
WLB
Women’s League of Burma
X
Executive summary
After almost 50 years of military dictatorship, and
following the 2010 general elections which were
rigged in favour of the military Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), Myanmar
underwent a series of political reforms from 2011
onwards. In November 2015, the first free general elections since the 1990 elections resulted in
a victory for the National League for Democracy
(NLD). The NLD formed a new government in
2016 with Htin Kyaw as the first non-military
president since 1962, and with Aung San Suu Kyi
in the newly-created position of State Counsellor.
However, continued military influence, persistent capacity problems in political parties and
parliamentary politics, weak channels of political
representation and problems of administrative
capacity give rise to critical questions about the
substance of democratization in Myanmar. The
country’s political trajectory remains open-ended,
although the most likely scenario remains a continued, if slow, democratization process, with the
next general elections scheduled for 2020. This
makes it important for international assistance to
design and implement ‘politically smart’ strategies
in support of substantive democracy and peace.
agencies and international NGOs to strengthen
their engagement with Myanmar. Myanmar is
thus a country with long and continued attention to statebuilding – but the state has been
dominated by the military, although some degree
of power has been transferred to a civilian government headed by the NLD, and the authority,
capacity and legitimacy of the state remain fragile.
State autonomy: The persistence of military
state capture. In Myanmar, the military is the
foremost economic and political force in society.
In particular, the autonomy of the state is circumscribed by the economic and political influence
of the military. Constitutional provisions and
other laws ensure that the state still has limited
autonomy vis-à-vis the military. This military
‘state capture’ is the primary explanation for the
character of the state and the persisting challenges of contested state authority, limited state
capacity and weak legitimacy. Transforming civil–
military relations remains the core challenge for
substantial conflict resolution, democratization
and development. The core structure of military
state power and the centralized nature of the
state pose evident obstacles to the peace process.
As civil–military relations are institutionalized
through the 2008 Constitution, changing the
constitution has become a requirement for substantive democratization.
Politics
Myanmar’s current political situation must
be understood with reference to the country’s
long history of military statebuilding. The primary interest of the military has been to protect
national sovereignty, unity and stability. With the
change of government in 2011 came a series of
political reforms in support of basic civil rights,
electoral democracy and economic growth. From
2011 onwards, these reforms also created an opening for Western states to suspend or lift sanctions
and engage in state capacity building, and for UN
State authority: The contested authority of the
unitary state. Myanmar is formally designed as
a unitary state, with modest decentralization to
regions/states and self-administered zones and
divisions. However, the sovereign authority of
the state is contested by multiple ethnic armed
organizations, resulting in a complex mosaic of
XI
Executive summary | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
territorial control and administration by state
and non-state actors. Some non-state actors have
de facto territorial control and provide public
services, displaying a state-like character. This has
an impact on state capacity in policy-making and
public administration, and poses challenges for
external engagement. Lack of authority or access
may limit the effectiveness of political reforms
and aid programmes. Building state authority
has centred on the question of incorporation of
ethnic minorities in the periphery: for Myanmar,
resolving intrastate conflicts remains a pressing
challenge.
category of high-risk countries. Most Myanmar citizens support democracy, although their
knowledge and conception of the idea may vary.
Many acknowledge that Myanmar’s democracy
is flawed, and the level of trust in political institutions is low. The opportunities for popular
participation are limited – a major challenge for
the legitimacy of the state, despite the successful
introduction of electoral democracy, with the
2015 electoral victory for NLD representing a
strong show of support for democratization. People mainly engage in civil society organizations,
and popular support is increasingly contingent
on positive outcomes of democracy. When asked
about what is most important now – democracy
or economy – most Myanmar citizens opt for
economy (Welsh & Huang 2016a).
State capacity: The challenges of policy-making and public administration. The shift to a
democratically elected government has widened
the space for more inclusive policy-making, but
this appears to be hampered by an organizational
culture of hierarchical decision-making within
the ruling NLD, the government and the civil
service. Moreover, there exists considerable mistrust between the NLD government and the civil
service, due to the military background and loyalties of many bureaucrats. In addition, administrative departments are staffed by poorly-paid civil
servants who must still rely on outdated technology and systems. All this means that the transformation towards democratic policymaking and
bureaucratic professionalism may well seem slow.
The 2008 Constitution and subsequent political
reforms brought a degree of decentralization from
the union level to the state/regional level. However, the devolved powers and responsibilities, as
specified in the Region and State Hluttaw Legislative List, remain limited in scope. State/regional
governments also have a constrained revenue base
and continue to rely on transfers from the union
level, even though many ethnic states are rich
in valuable natural resources. While the Constitution grants state/region governments some
authority concerning tax resource extraction, this
is limited to less valuable resources.
The military (Tatmadaw). The Tatmadaw has
long been the most influential political actor.
While its self-perception is that of a professional
army that protects the sovereignty and unity of
the Union of Myanmar, it is not under democratic political control. Rather, the Tatmadaw
in its own right has become the basis for the
formation of an economic elite, and has hence
developed an economic self-interest in the continuation of military rule. Changing civil–military relations, i.e. strengthening the autonomy of
the state vis-à-vis military economic and political movements, is a key challenge for political
reform in Myanmar. After 2011 the Tatmadaw
displayed some flexibility on issues not deemed
to be its primary interests, but little flexibility on
questions of the unity, sovereignty and stability
of the Union. Matters of economic development
seem to fall somewhere between these two poles.
Ethnic armed organizations (EAOs). Myanmar
has many different types of EAOs, highly diverse
in ethnic identity, military strength and engagement strategies towards the Myanmar army and
the government. The key questions among EAOs,
in the past and today, are how to build ethnic
alliances and engage with the state in order to
achieve self-determination and equality within
a federal state.
State fragility and legitimacy. In the 2017
Fragile States Index compiled by the Fund for
Peace, Myanmar is persistently placed in the red
XII
Executive summary | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Civil society organization (CSOs). Myanmar
has a multi-layered civil society with a great
many types of CSOs, ranging from grassroots
movements to more organized and professionalized NGOs. These engage in various roles in
the context of limited state presence and capacity
and armed conflict (mutual self-help, humanitarian relief, public service delivery and political
advocacy), and with complex relations between
CSOs and the state. There has been considerable
growth in CSOs, especially after Cyclone Nargis
in 2008 and the expansion of political space since
2011, but most CSOs still have limited political
access and influence.
China’s Belt and Road Initiative have served to
strengthen Myanmar’s economic links with and
dependence on China. Meanwhile, ASEAN has
incrementally developed a policy of constructive
engagement with Myanmar. The other ASEAN
member countries are more developed than
Myanmar, providing an impetus for the country’s reform-oriented path as it seeks to catch up.
Economic and social situation
Economy and society. Myanmar has one of
the fastest-growing economies in Southeast Asia,
with average economic growth of 7.5% during
the period 2012–2016, and this is expected to
continue for several years. One explanation of
the rapid economic growth is the country’s young
population, which helps ensure high growth in
consumption and incomes during the period
2015–2025. Members of the urban middle class
in areas dominated by the majority Bamar ethnic group have been the major beneficiaries of
the new reforms, whereas the economic benefits
for rural constituencies have been less noticeable,
especially in conflict-affected ethnic states where
land-grabbing has been widespread.
Religious actors. Religious institutions have
long traditions of providing important services in
Myanmar society, especially in education, health
services and welfare support, including humanitarian assistance to displaced persons. The strong
and complex links between Buddhism and politics in Myanmar have underpinned the recent
re-emergence of Buddhist nationalism. The
period since 2011 has seen a wave of anti-Muslim
rhetoric and violence, especially in northern
Rakhine state.
FDI and sources of growth. Myanmar has a
pressing need for foreign direct investment (FDI).
Among other things, Myanmar has the greatest
power-sector investment needs among the countries of Southeast Asia. In 2016–2017, investors
became increasingly cautious and worried about
the slow pace of economic reform (Vakulchuk et
al. 2017). Limited infrastructure remains a major
hurdle to economic growth – for instance, only
37% of the population have access to electricity
(World Bank 2017a). Agriculture is the biggest
contributor to GDP (more than 35% in 2014)
and employs more than 65% of the population,
but the petroleum sector is likely to play a leading
role in generating economic growth.
External actors. Myanmar is heavily influenced
by external actors, where ASEAN, Australia,
China, the EU, India, Japan, Norway, Singapore,
South Korea, Vietnam, Thailand and the USA
are especially important. With the 2017–2018
Rohingya crisis in Rakhine State, Muslim countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan and
neighbouring Bangladesh have also contributed
to shaping Myanmar’s international relations.
The democratic opening has been driven largely
by the military rulers’ interest in changing Myanmar’s relations with Western states (primarily
the USA) and thereby gaining leverage vis-à-vis
China. After the 2015 elections, China regained
greater influence, not least through its active role
in the Myanmar peace negotiations, accompanied by efforts at improving its image through
corporate social responsibility programmes and
engagement with a broad range of stakeholders.
Large dams and infrastructure projects under
Informal economy and corruption. Myanmar’s informal economy is one of the largest in
the world. This economy is upheld by informal
elite pacts that were solidified under the military era, involving many who are members of
XIII
Executive summary | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
the military and crony companies. For example,
half of the multi-billion USD jade trade is illegal. The informal sector is linked to corruption,
drug trafficking, smuggling, illegal migration
and cross-border trade. Although Myanmar has
gradually improved its ranking in the Transparency International Corruption Perception Index,
moving from 157th place in 2013 to 136th out
of 176 countries in 2016 (Transparency International 2017), corruption remains widespread and
pervasive. The lack of an efficient regulatory system and effective laws explains why the informal
system has become so widespread. In addition,
political instability and the Rakhine crisis create
serious concerns for foreign investors.
tial of coastal and ocean fisheries remain largely
unrealized. Poor coastal aquaculture management leads to overexploitation and illegal fishing
in Myanmar’s territorial waters.
Forestry. Myanmar suffers from large-scale
deforestation that has accelerated in recent decades.
The forest industry has been grossly mismanaged:
at the present rate of deforestation, the forests will
disappear by 2035. On 25 May 2017, the Forest
Department (FD) announced that whereas there
had been 39.2 million hectares of forests in 1990,
the figure had dropped to 29 million hectares by
2015. There are two main drivers: unsustainable
logging and extensive agricultural development.
Land rights and land disputes also complicate forest management. The incentives behind deforestation are rooted in the opportunity costs related to
different land uses and land tenure rights. A peace
agreement could put additional pressure on forests and accelerate deforestation: when the armed
groups that previously controlled various forest
areas lay down arms, these areas will be available
for companies involved in illegal logging.
Hydropower. Hydropower generation is controversial in Myanmar. It feeds ethnic tensions
in various parts of the country, and is likely to
remain a major source of domestic social and
political tension in the near future. Large-scale
dam construction projects often cause discontent
among the local population due to lack of proper
stakeholder consultation and coordination, often
leading to displacement and environmental degradation. With the NLD government in place,
Chinese and other foreign companies are increasingly attempting to involve civil society in consultations, but with limited success thus far.
Mining. Control over natural resources has been
a major driver of conflicts in ethnic areas. The government has shown a commitment to adopt international standards in governing the mining sector,
for instance by joining the Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative in 2014. However, there
is a long way to go before real progress in governing the mining sector is achieved. Military-owned
companies and their cronies are heavily involved
in resource extraction, often in conflict-affected
areas. This strengthens the military’s interest in
maintaining control, thereby increasing the risks
of corruption, human rights violations and continued conflict. Some areas that are contested or
controlled by ethnic armed groups have parallel
systems of resource governance. Wealth sharing in
natural resources is thus a key concern for democratic decentralization and conflict resolution.
Petroleum sector. Myanmar is rich in onshore
and offshore hydrocarbon resources. The
upstream petroleum business is open to foreign
investors, whereas downstream is restricted. Due
to limited local processing capacity, Myanmar
continues to import a substantial share of its
petrol and diesel, mainly from Singapore and
Thailand. Gas reserves are more plentiful, with
283 billion cubic meters of proven natural gas,
similar to the reserves of Thailand.
Fisheries. Fish farming plays an important role
in ensuring food security, employment and SME
growth. But the fisheries remain underprioritized
by the government and suffer from poor management as well as the lack of infrastructure, modern
technology and impact assessments. The poten-
Development cooperation. After opening up
in 2012, Myanmar attracted numerous international organizations and donors. Aid soared by
XIV
Executive summary | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
788% within just a year, from USD 504 million in 2012 to USD 4.5 billion in 2013. However, Myanmar is still in a highly critical phase,
and external support can be decisive for the
NLD-government’s ability to carry out planned
reforms. The increasing involvement of foreign
donors also involves risks, as the state has limited
capacity to absorb assistance. Also, some local
actors feel that not all international consultants
who work in Myanmar have sufficient country
expertise. Myanmar needs smart development
aid that can take the many local factors into
account. Despite attempts to improve donor
coordination after the NLD government came
to power, much still remains to be done.
menting UN Security Council Resolution 1325
(UNSCR 1325) on Women, Peace and Security.
Migration, climate change
and humanitarian needs
Migration. In Myanmar, there are three main
general drivers of migration: poverty, violent
ethnic conflict and natural disasters. The political transition has been accompanied by an
increase in labour migration and Myanmar was
also estimated to be the world’s eighth largest
source country for refugees in 2016 (UNHCR
2016: 17). As regards forced migration, the
situation between 2007 and 2017 was actually
worse than before the political thaw (UNHCR
2017). For labour migrants, there could be some
scope for return, and Myanmar needs people
to fulfil the many new roles in its transitioning
economy. However, net outbound labour migration from Myanmar seems likely to increase and
diversify in the coming years, as neighbouring
economies and Myanmar’s linkages with them
continue to grow.
Conflict and stabilization
Causes of ethnic conflicts. Myanmar’s ethnic
conflicts have deep historical roots and revolve
around political grievances about state form,
power-sharing and ethnic equality. According
to the major EAOs, there can be no real peace
without political negotiations on the questions
of ethnic self-determination and federalism.
Core causes of ethnic conflict are political grievances related to ethnic self-determination, representation and equality, war-related security and
development grievances, and the mistrust and
resentment fuelled by failed peace initiatives.
Climate change. Myanmar is one of the world’s
countries most vulnerable to climate change
(Kreft et al. 2017: 6). Government institutions
need a better understanding of climate change
and its effects – both direct impacts on Myanmar and indirect impacts via neighbouring countries such as Bangladesh (Overland et al. 2017).
Myanmar state officials have limited technical
capacity to participate in and handle international negotiations on climate change, or to
implement environmental agreements. Myanmar
therefore greatly needs support in strengthening
its technical capacities. Climate change may
appear to be an abstract and remote problem for
a country with many more pressing concerns, but
the impacts of climate change on Myanmar are
proving more immediate than expected, and are
likely to be even greater in the future.
Peace initiatives. The various ethnic groups agree
that only political negotiations on self-determination, federalism and ethnic equality can resolve
the ethnic conflicts in Myanmar. The NLD government’s peace process revolves around ‘The
Union Peace Conference’ (21st Century Panglong
Conference). The key question on process design
concerns sequencing: which should come first,
political negotiations on arrangements for a federal union, or arms surrender in a nationwide
ceasefire as a precondition for political talks?
Inclusivity in the process is essential. Without
the participation and influence of the major
EAOs, the political process is unlikely to yield
substantive and lasting peace. Moreover, women
have played only a limited role in the peace process, and there has been little progress in imple-
Human rights challenges
and women’s rights
During military rule, Myanmar was regarded
as one of the most oppressive countries in the
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Executive summary | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
world. International human rights organizations
confirm improvements since 2011, but also
find that there has been little change in some
important areas. The 2016/2017 annual reports
from Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International highlight human rights abuses in the
context of ethnic armed conflicts; discrimination
and violence against the Rohingya minority;
restrictions on freedom of expression; abuses of
women’s rights and reduced international scrutiny. Aung San Suu Kyi has been criticized by
the international community for inaction and
silence on the Rohingya crisis and for doing
little to prevent grave human rights abuses by
the military, against a stateless community that
is recognized by neither Myanmar nor Bangladesh. Defenders of the NLD government point
to the real power of the military and the risk
of a return to military rule, either through a
coup or by electoral means. The local conflict
in Rakhine has become politicized, both within
Myanmar and internationally. It has the potential
to destabilize the NLD government and further
securitize politics in Myanmar. The conflict may
also be used strategically for the dual purpose of
destabilization and securitization, especially by
actors within the military.
Regarding gender rights and women’s participation in the economy, the period 2006–2016
has seen some improvements. However, many
challenges remain, such as 30% wage disparity
between men and women and low rate of female
participation in the national economy (DFAT
2016: 5). The civil rights and liberties of women
are largely restricted; their freedom of movement
is limited and there are no special legal provisions
for female participation in political processes, at
the local or national levels.
XVI
Risk analysis: Country risks and their
implications for engagement in Myanmar
Here we identify risk factors that may hinder
international engagement and aid from achieving
their objectives, have unintended consequences
or cause harm. The main risks concern political
destabilization, authoritarianism and conflict;
resource exploitation and elite enrichment without poverty reduction. The risks presented here
are formulated with Norwegian engagement in
Myanmar in mind, but are relevant for other
international actors as well. Note that these are
only risks – not summaries of the overall situation
or deterministic predictions of where Myanmar
is headed. We classify the risks according to the
Copenhagen Circles for risk management with
three dimensions of risk: contextual, programmatic and institutional (see Figure I). Each risk
is ascribed to one dimension only. However, dif-
Contextual risks:
State failure, conflict,
economic crisis,
natural disaster,
humanitarian crisis, etc.
Lower
ferent risks can be ascribed to several dimensions:
for instance, they may do harm and also entail
reputational losses at the same time.
Contextual risks
1. Continued and potentially increased military dominance. Myanmar’s transition
from authoritarianism is incomplete and
fragile. The military remain in key positions
of power, and democratic control of the
military is weak, entailing a risk of institutionalized semi-authoritarian rule. There is
also a possibility that political destabilization
due to unresolved, intensified or new conflicts may be followed by greater restrictions
on civil and political rights and weakened
democratic governance. Such a development
Programmatic risks:
Programmes fail to
achieve objectives
or inadvertently
do harm.
Extent of donor control in the short term
Institutional risks:
Risks to the aid provider:
security, fiduciary and
reputational risks.
Political damage in
home country.
Higher
Source: OECD 2011
Figure I. Classification of risks for external engagement in Myanmar
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Risk analysis | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
might bring the return of de facto military
rule through elections, or a military coup in
connection with a crisis situation.
tive and institutional framework is insufficient
for holding human rights violators to account
and ensuring justice for victims. Human rights
remain a key concern despite the promising
democratic opening and political reform initiatives. Given the strong military influence
and continued conflicts, there is a continuing
risk of grave abuses of human rights.
2. Unresolved and potentially intensified
conflicts. Myanmar is marked by protracted
intrastate conflicts with continuing fighting
in Shan and Kachin States and anti-Rohingya
violence in Rakhine State. Substantive conflict resolution is likely to prove difficult and
time-consuming – thereby entailing the risk
of continued and possibly intensified violence,
with human rights abuses, underdevelopment
and authoritarian governance in conflict-affected areas. In addition there is a danger of
political destabilization at the union level and
a possible backsliding towards autocratic rule.
5. Economic growth – but not inclusive and
sustainable development. Myanmar has
seen an economic liberalization and opening
that has been followed by increased investment in key sectors, above all in natural
resource extraction. The lack of redistributive mechanisms and the continuing cronyism hinder inclusive growth and sustainable
development. If these economic structures
persist, domestic investments and external
economic engagement (development assistance, grants, FDI inflow) may fail to boost
inclusive and sustainable development.
3. Stalled democratization and limited
political/technical capacity for democratic transformation. Recent reforms have
brought formal electoral democracy, but
the democratic chain from the citizenry to
governance of public affairs remains weak.
Major institutional barriers impede further
democratization, and the political forces for
transformative democratic politics are fragmented and under-capacitated. The NLD
government is overburdened with urgent
issues: the peace process, the Rohingya crisis,
civil–military relations, poverty reduction,
economic reform, expanding the electricity
supply and managing relations with China
and other major countries active in Myanmar. Each of these areas requires immediate
attention. This puts pressure on the government and complicates strategy elaboration
and policy-making, making it difficult to
deal with matters in an optimal order. It
may also weaken the legitimacy of the government and democracy, providing a pretext
for the return of autocratic rulers.
6. Vulnerability and unpreparedness for climate change. Myanmar is one of the world’s
most vulnerable and fragile countries in terms
of climate change (Kreft et al. 2017: 6). The
ongoing rapid deforestation may exacerbate
the impacts of climate change. Neither the
authorities nor companies in Myanmar are
aware of the possible consequences. Government institutions need a better understanding of climate change and its impacts, both
the direct impacts on Myanmar and indirect
impacts via neighbouring countries such
as Bangladesh. Unpreparedness for climate
change might also affect international development actors and hinder project implementation, for instance by threatening the security
of aid providers in case of natural catastrophes.
7. Unpredictability. The political, social and
economic situation and the level of conflict
in Myanmar are subject to constant change,
and there is limited information and analytical capacity available (this risk also relates
closely to risk 12, below). Unexpected events
4. Human rights abuses and lack of accountability. Human rights abuses in Myanmar are a
function of lack of accountability and institutionalized complaint mechanisms. The legisla-
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Risk analysis | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
may have destabilizing effects due to weak
preparedness among central actors. The combination of numerous risk factors rooted in
the complex local context increases the unpredictability of the consequences of the engagement of international actors in Myanmar.
in negative reactions from the state (see risk
11, below). Moreover, providing assistance
in conflict-prone minority areas may lead to
further tensions between the parties, escalating conflicts.
10. Limited territorial access and engagement
in ethnic minority areas. Access to ethnic
conflict-prone areas in Myanmar is limited,
and that may hamper the effectiveness of aid.
International donors operate only in those
areas where access is allowed. This carries
the potential risk that external engagement
will be unevenly spread, leaving some parts
of the country underdeveloped and deepening existing social and economic inequalities.
These inequalities may in turn feed grievances
among the various ethnic groups. Management of natural resources is a case in point
where international engagement has contributed to rising tensions among local groups.
Programmatic risks
8. Over-reliance on developmental engagement strategies. The current engagement of
Western aid donors revolves around a combination of developmental investments and
administrative state capacity building, in
contrast to more direct political engagement
strategies. This developmental approach
entails the risk of misunderstanding, downplaying and even undermining the key
political actors and the dynamics behind institutional changes for peace, democracy and
development. Well-intended developmental
engagement may inadvertently cause harm
in conflict areas; and state capacity building
may consolidate rather than transform centralized and semi-authoritarian governance
structures. Moreover, political engagement
strategies may fail to address pressing developmental concerns adequately. This situation
calls for well-designed combinations of developmental and political engagement strategies
in support of overarching goals of democracy,
peace and development.
11. A complex environment for engaging with
civil society. Myanmar civil society is not
a monolithic entity. Engagement with and
through civil society requires close attention to this complexity, if goals for service
delivery or political advocacy and transformation are to be achieved. And what of the
humanitarian and development NGOs that
are the main channels of aid: have they the
capacity and competence to foster the political forces and dynamics critical for substantive peace and democracy? A narrow focus
on humanitarian and developmental NGOs
poses the risk of deepening the state–society
divide rather than building broad alliances
for political representation and transformative democratic politics.
9. Reliance on state actors. As state authority
is questioned in Myanmar, engagement that
relies solely on official state structures and
backing from the government may serve to
shift the balance of power among state and
non-state actors and thus intensify conflicts.
According to the OECD (2014a, 45), donors
working in Myanmar should have ‘strong
localised knowledge of contexts and institutions, as well as recognition that minority
leaders and the wider population in many
conflict-affected areas do not regard the government as legitimate’. However, relying on
non-state actors that are in tense and difficult
relations with the government may also result
12. Limited contextual knowledge and weak
knowledge strategies. The increased engagement of Western aid donors in Myanmar has
not been followed by strategies for knowledge production. Not only are there severe
limitations on available data and research
capacity: information about the situation in
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Risk analysis | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Myanmar rapidly becomes outdated, making it critical to minimize the time lapse
between project feasibility assessment and
project implementation. Information and
data should be gathered and analysed continuously. At the implementation stage, projects
might not be implemented according to plan
and/or achieve the intended results because
of insufficient knowledge and attention to
problems such as corruption, lack of local
capacity, political obstacles or escalation of
conflicts. Although not unique to Myanmar,
such risks are of particular concern there.
bottlenecks, such as limited local competence. This may lead some donors to reduce
their efforts, whereas foreign direct investments in resource extraction and other sectors are likely to continue. This raises the risk
that Myanmar will for a long time remain
in a transitional situation with an uncertain
future. External support may therefore have
greater impact on the long-term developments in Myanmar than in other recipient
countries where the situation is less volatile.
Institutional risks
15. Unfavourable investment climate. Investments in Myanmar involve considerable risk.
First, there is a high risk of economic mismanagement and corruption. The economy
is growing, while it remains dominated by
oligarchic structures often connected with
the military. Mechanisms for transparency
and accountability in the governance of
public affairs are weak, and corruption is
widespread. This poses a high risk of mismanagement and corruption impacting aid
and direct investments. Second, the rule of
law is weak and the capacity of the state to
coordinate and absorb aid and investments
is limited and uneven. This creates challenges
for the rapid and successful implementation of aid projects and direct investments.
Third, large parts of the country are affected
by unresolved intrastate conflicts. This poses
risks of economic loss, especially in ethnic
minority states.
13. Insufficient donor coordination and limited country knowledge. Given the limited
state capacity to absorb and coordinate international assistance, it is essential to assist the
government in the effective and transparent
coordination of the activities of international
development actors operating in Myanmar.
Existing formal mechanisms of state–donor
coordination should be supported and further strengthened. Also, Myanmar is a new
place for many donors that have entered the
country since 2011. Many of them have little
experience and poor understanding of how
to address the opportunities and challenges
that have emerged from Myanmar’s democratic opening. Insufficient country knowledge on the part of development actors is a
risk that can potentially do harm. New actors
should partner with those organizations that
have a long track record of engaging with
Myanmar, including both political support
and developmental assistance.
16. Geopolitical complexity. The international
relations in the broader region are changing.
Recent years have seen attempted Western re-engagement and a shifting balance
between US/Western influence and Chinese
influence in Southeast Asia. This represents
both opportunities and risks for external
engagement in Myanmar. For example,
Norway’s increased engagement in Myanmar
is seen as being facilitated by the desire of
the former military rulers to re-engage with
Western states. However, the delicate balance
14. Donor fatigue. Myanmar’s opening drew
the attention of many international donors,
and the NLD has accumulated a large store
of credit over the years. The current period
is, however, marked by continuing conflict
within Myanmar and stalled reforms rather
than rapid progress towards democracy, real
peace and inclusive development. Donors
may become increasingly frustrated, their
frustrations further exacerbated by the many
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Risk analysis | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
of power between China and the USA, and
Norway’s location within a US-led Western
bloc, may make it difficult for Norway to
engage in areas, sectors and processes where
China has strong interests or Western actors
are unwanted. There is also a risk that the
geopolitical balance of power may be altered,
influencing the prospects and constraints for
engagement in peacebuilding or investments
in the strategically important energy sector.
inequalities. To the extent that external actors
are seen as being associated with such tendencies, this carries a high risk of reputational
losses. Norway’s engagement with the USDP
government’s agenda for democracy, peace
and development is a prime example of a high
risk/high gain-strategy. Reputational losses
that have followed from this strategy may pose
challenges for future engagement in Myanmar, as well as constituting a potential legitimacy problem in international relations and
in domestic Norwegian politics. This demonstrates the importance of understanding the
contextual political complexity of contemporary Myanmar in order to minimize risk and
increase the prospects of positive outcomes.
17. Legitimacy concerns. External aid and
investment may inadvertently contribute to
the continuation of semi-authoritarian rule,
centralized state power, external resource
extraction, intrastate conflicts and economic
XXI
1. Introduction
Purpose, structure and
methods of the study
This study is part of a series of studies on Norway’s main development cooperation partner
countries, requested by the Norwegian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs in order to have a better basis
for assistance to these countries. The purpose of
this study is therefore to provide systematic and
synthesized information on the political, economic and social power structures and actors in
Myanmar, so as to strengthen the understanding
of Myanmar among relevant Norwegian actors
and increase the quality and effectiveness of Norwegian development cooperation. We hope that
the study will prove useful also for other international actors engaged in Myanmar as well as for
the Myanmar authorities.
We would like to thank Stein Sundstøl Eriksen,
Sue Mark, Joachim Nahem and Mael Raynaud
for peer reviews of the report. While receiving
extensive and very helpful input from the reviewers, we the authors have retained the prerogative
to make final decisions on the report’s content,
and we alone remain responsible for it. We would
also like to thank Annabelle Heugas for her help
in data collection.
The study has seven sections. The introduction
provides a brief political-historical background
on key developments and challenges in Myanmar
since independence in 1948. It also includes a
review of Norway’s development engagement in
Myanmar.
This is followed by two main sections that
examine Myanmar’s political, economic and
social situation. The politics (section 2) combines
a structural focus on the Myanmar state with an
examination of the interests and strategies of the
main domestic and external actors. The economics and social issues (section 3) first examines the
overall structure and growth of the economy, and
then provides more in-depth information on natural resource management, and on trade, foreign
direct investment and development cooperation.
The next three sections provide specific analyses of key challenges for Norwegian–Myanmar
cooperation. Myanmar’s conflicts and stabilization
(section 4) are examined, with emphasis on the
causes of conflicts and recent peace initiatives.
This is followed by an analysis of challenges in
the areas of migration, climate change and humanitarian needs (section 5). In section 6, the main
human rights challenges are identified and briefly
discussed. Finally, a brief risk analysis of Norwegian and international cooperation with Myanmar has been presented above.
The study builds on the authors’ prior researchbased knowledge on the subject matter and country context, supplemented with a comprehensive
review of the growing body of academic literature on Myanmar. Additional information has
been gathered from applied research and media
reports. New information was collected through
interviews with state and government actors,
political parties and CSOs, development scholars,
practitioners and observers in Keng Tung, Lashio,
Myitkyina, Nay Pyi Taw and Yangon. The political analysis also draws on recent interviews with
ethnic organizations in Chiang Mai. Statistical
information has been included depending on the
availability of reliable data.
1
1. Introduction | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Political-historical background
Military rule
The Republic of the Union of Myanmar, also
known as Burma,1 is a state shaped largely by
war. Its present territory came under British
control through three Anglo-Burmese Wars in
the 19th century, with Burma being integrated
into the British Raj of India in 1886. It regained
independence in 1948 as a result of anti-colonial
struggles, Japanese occupation and armed resistance during the Second World War and the dismantling of the British Empire (Charney 2009).
Independent Burma had democratic governments from 1948 to 1962. Parliamentary politics and government were dominated by the
Anti-Fascist People’s Freedom League (AFPFL)
– a national front formed by political parties
and mass organizations. However, this period
was marked by growing political instability due
to ideological divides within the AFPFL and
between the AFPFL and the Communist Party
of Burma (CPB), and antagonisms between the
central government and ethnic minorities over
state power sharing (Taylor 2009).
This growing political instability created
the pretext for a military caretaker government
(1958–1960) followed by a military coup d’état
in 1962. Burma remained under military dictatorship until 2011 (Callahan 2003; Nakanishi 2013), ruled by the Socialist Revolutionary
Council from 1962 to 1974, and by the Burma
Socialist Programme Party (BSPP) from 1974
to 1988. Both regimes were headed by General
Ne Win and pursued Soviet-style nationalization of private enterprises, strict government
control, central planning, and economic isolation under the slogan of ‘the Burmese Way to
1
Socialism’ (Selth 2001). Under socialist military
dictatorship, Burma became one of the world’s
most impoverished countries. This was also a
period of sporadic protests against military rule,
typically spearheaded by students and violently
suppressed by the military (Fink 2009).
In 1988, political oppression, combined with
economic mismanagement, led to widespread
pro-democracy demonstrations (the 8888 Uprising), which were violently crushed by the security
forces (Lintner 1990a).2 After a second military
coup d’état, the BSPP regime collapsed and was
replaced by the State Law and Order Restoration
Council (SLORC) in 1989. The SLORC held
free elections in 1990 as an attempt at political
stabilization. The National League for Democracy (NLD) and allied ethnic parties won a clear
majority of the seats, but the military refused to
cede power, incarcerated the NLD leader Aung
San Suu Kyi and numerous democracy activists,
and continued to rule – as the SLORC till 1997,
and as the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) from 1997 to 2011 (Hlaing 2010;
Lintner 2011).
The period under SLORC/SPDC rule saw
a reversal of the socialist economic program of
the BSPP, while the involvement of the military
in the economy was strengthened through military-owned enterprises and cronies that controlled strategic industries, construction, natural
resource extraction and tourism (Jones 2013;
Selth 2001). Since then, the militarized and
crony economy has undergone some changes
due to partial privatization and political reforms,
creating powerful oligarchs that display a certain
degree of autonomy while retaining strong links
to the military (Ford, Gillan, & Thein 2015).
The country name was changed from Burma to Myanmar by
the military rulers in 1989. This renaming has been a contentious issue because it was done in an authoritarian manner by
a government not recognized as legitimate (Dittmer 2008).
It is also a name that, like Burma, refers to the Bamar ethnic
majority group. Many political and ethnic opposition groups,
as well as international organizations and states, have thus
continued to use ‘Burma’. Others have accepted Myanmar as
the official name, especially after the democratic opening in
2011. In April 2016, democratically elected State Counsellor
Aung San Suu Kyi told foreign diplomats that they should feel
free to use either name.
2
2
A second major mobilization around demands for democracy and improved livelihoods came in 2007, with Buddhist
monks playing an active role. This ‘Saffron Revolution’, like
the 8888 Uprising, was violently suppressed by the military
(Rogers 2008; Selth 2008a).
1. Introduction | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Data source: Burma News International 2017a; Ministry of Planning and Finance 2016
Figure 1. Major ethnic groups and administrative units in Myanmar
Intrastate conflicts
Myanmar is a multi-ethnic,3 multilingual and
multi-religious society, where the ethnic Bamar
majority is largely concentrated on the plains
in the centre of the country and the non-Bamar
minorities live primarily in the upland border
areas (Figure 1). Throughout its independent years,
Myanmar/Burma has been marked by armed conflicts between the military and the Communist
Party of Burma (from 1948 to the 1980s) and
ethnic armed organizations (since 1948) (Lint3
ner 1990b; Smith 1991, 2007; South 2008). The
closely linked challenges of nation-building and
state-building have been the pivot of Myanmar’s
political history (Dittmer 2010). In 1947, the
‘Father of the Nation’ and founder of the Burmese Army, General Aung San, in his position
as Deputy Chairman of the transitional Executive Council, reached an agreement with Chin,
Kachin and Shan ethnic leaders – the Panglong
Agreement. This established the core principles
of self-determination, political representation and
economic equality for ethnic groups within an
independent Union of Burma (Sakhong 2014).
The agreement paved the way for transfer of power
from the colonial administration to one unified
Burma, despite demands for a separate Karen
state, but the government failed to implement
these principles in the 1947 Constitution or by
other means (Smith 1991; Steinberg 2001).
Myanmar officially recognizes 135 ethnic groups, grouped
into 8 ‘major national ethnic races’: Bamar, Shan, Mon, Kayin (Karen), Kayah (Karenni), Kachin, Rakhine (Arakanese)
and Chin. This classification is problematic and controversial
(Ferguson 2015) and ethnic population figures from the 2014
census have not been released. A common estimate is that the
Bamar make up 68% and the non-Bamar 32% of the total
population, but the government has been accused of overestimating the Bamar population.
3
1. Introduction | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Political reforms
After almost 50 years of military dictatorship,
Myanmar saw a series of political reforms from
2011. Whether this should be understood as a
transition to democracy or a military strategy
for institutionalizing semi-authoritarian rule is
a matter of debate (Egreteau 2016). The process
started after the NLD’s election victory in 1990.
The military rejected the results, but set up a
Constitutional Convention. This was later used
as a basis for unilateral constitution-making by
the military, within their overarching roadmap
for ‘discipline-flourishing democracy’ (Huang
2016). The military rulers made a new constitution in 2008, which opened up for political
liberalization while institutionalizing positions
of power for the military (Williams 2014). The
2008 Constitution provided a basis for elections
to local and union-level Parliaments in 2010 and
2015, and by-elections in 2012. The 2010 elections were deeply flawed, but were used to transfer power to a nominally civilian government led
by President Thein Sein and the military’s Union
Solidarity and Development Party (USDP).
The USDP government initiated a series of
reforms in favour of formal democracy, open
economy and ceasefire agreements (Lall 2016).
Western states that had imposed strict economic
and military sanctions on Myanmar in the 1990s
and early 2000s moved towards normalized diplomatic and economic relations after 2011. Thus,
the government and Western states have found
pragmatic ways of ‘constructive engagement’,
against the regional backdrop of changing USA–
China relations in Southeast Asia (Clymer 2015;
Lintner 2015; Steinberg & Fan 2012).
The first free general election since 1990 was
held in November 2015 (Thawnghmung 2016a).
The election returned a landslide victory for the
National League for Democracy, an equally massive defeat for the USDP, and the general marginalization of most ethnic parties (Stokke, Win, &
Aung 2015). The NLD formed a new government
in 2016 with Htin Kyaw as the first non-military
president since 1962, and Aung San Suu Kyi in a
newly created position as State Counsellor, which
secured her the role of de facto state leader under
The period since 1948 has seen several protracted civil wars between ethnic armed organizations demanding self-determination, and
military rulers seeking uncontested authority
within a unitary and de facto majoritarian state
(Callahan 2003; Cheesman & Farrelly 2016).
In the process, ethnic political grievances have
been joined by security and socio-economic
grievances, as the conflicts have produced largescale violations of human rights, civilian deaths,
the destruction of livelihoods and displacement
(Kosem 2016; Sadan 2016). At the same time,
the development of war economies has created
profit opportunities for the military, the military-supported border guard forces and militias,
and for ethnic armed organizations, thus contributing to the perpetuation of armed conflict
(Jelsma, Kramer, & Vervest 2005; Lintner 1999;
Woods 2011).
Attempts at creating peace have focused
on ending hostilities through ceasefires and by
granting economic concessions to ethnic armed
organizations – however, without addressing the
core political grievances (Lee 2016). This strategy was pursued by the SLORC/SPDC in the
1990s and by the USDP government after 2011
(Petrie & South 2014; Sadan 2016; South 2008,
2014, 2015). Although it managed to pacify
some armed organizations, it has failed to resolve
the conflicts. Ceasefires have been followed by
resumed warfare, as in the case of the on-going
conflicts in the Shan and Kachin states (Brenner
2015; Sadan 2016).
A different kind of conflict is the communal
and state violence against groups seen as ‘foreigners’. Historical examples include anti-Indian
violence in the 1930s and anti-Chinese riots in
1967. The most notorious example has involved
the violence and human rights abuses against the
Rohingya group in the north (Ibrahim 2016).
While the violence has been largely confined to
Rakhine state, the issue has been increasingly
politicized – at the Union level, as a question of
religious identities; internationally, as a human
rights issue (Cheesman 2017; Crouch 2016; G.
McCarthy & Menager 2017; Schissler, Walton,
& Thi 2017; Walton 2017).
4
1. Introduction | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
the 2008 Constitution. This was a major victory
for the pro-democracy forces, given the limited
and regime-led opening for democracy. However,
continued military influence, persistent capacity
problems in political parties and parliamentary
politics, weak channels of political representation,
and problems of administrative capacity all give
rise to critical questions about the substance of
democratization in Myanmar.
The reforms have been followed by considerable scholarly and political debate about whether
Myanmar is undergoing a transition to liberal
democracy, or if the military is merely institutionalizing a semi-authoritarian form of governance with greater domestic and international
legitimacy (Cheesman, Farrelly & Wilson 2014;
Cheesman, Skidmore & Wilson 2012; Egreteau 2016; Lall 2016). At the time of writing,
it seems most accurate to describe Myanmar as
an in-between state that is neither fully authoritarian nor clearly headed towards democracy.
While this might represent a relatively stable
state of semi-authoritarianism, the country’s
future political trajectory remains open-ended, as
demonstrated by the 2015 elections. This makes
it critically important for international democracy assistance to design and implement politically smart strategies in support of substantive
democracy and peace.
Burma Committee, NBC) and humanitarian
organizations providing assistance to refugees.
After Cyclone Nargis in 2008 Norway gained
more access and was able to provide humanitarian assistance to local CSOs that was later used
as a springboard for engaging directly with the
military rulers, in the context of relatively ineffective sanctions and changing US foreign policy
towards Myanmar (Holliday 2011; Lall 2016).
Norway thus became a mediator for Western
engagement with the military-backed USDP
government from 2011. Since then, Norway
has both increased and diversified its engagement
within Myanmar.
First, Norway engaged diplomatically in what
was interpreted as a democratic transition, providing support to the USDP government and functioning as a link to Western actors (especially the
USA and the EU). Norway thus became a facilitator and advocate for greater Western engagement
in Myanmar. It also provided funding for CSOs
that worked closely with the USDP government
and advocated engagement with the military. This
group came to be known as the ‘third force’ and
included Myanmar Egress, Euro-Burma Office
and Vahu Development Institute (Lall 2016).
Second, Norway funded and organized peacebuilding initiatives, notably the Myanmar Peace
Support Initiative (MPSI) and Peace Donor Support Group (PDSG) (Johnson & Lidauer 2014).
These projects were aimed at ethnic groups that
had signed ceasefire agreements with the government. Funding was increasingly channelled
within Myanmar, while there was a reduction in
aid to exile organizations and refugee communities on the Thai border.
Third, Norway has supported economic
development by assisting direct investments
from Norwegian companies. This includes the
engagement of three Norwegian state-owned
companies in Myanmar: Telenor in telecommunications, Statoil in the offshore oil and gas sector, and SN Power in hydropower development.
Other Norwegian companies include Yara (fertilizer) and Jotun (paint).
Fourth, Norway is engaged in state capacity
building, providing assistance at the union level
Recent interaction between
Norway and Myanmar
The years 1988 and 2009–2011 mark two important turning points in Norway’s relations with
Myanmar. Prior to 1988, there was little diplomatic, commercial or aid engagement in Myanmar. In the aftermath of the suppression of the
1988 pro-democracy uprising, Norway followed
the USA and the EU in imposing military and
economic sanctions on the military junta. After
the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Aung San
Suu Kyi in 1991, Norway also became an active
supporter of the pro-democracy movement, and
channelled aid outside Myanmar to the government in exile, the free media (especially the Democratic Voice of Burma, DVB), international
human rights organizations (like the Norwegian
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1. Introduction | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Figure 2. Norwegian aid to Myanmar by sector, 2006–2016
Data source: NORAD 2017
Data source: NORAD 2017
Figure 3. Channels for Norwegian aid in 2016
in particular. Natural resource management is a
focal point for such capacity building (involving, for instance, the Ministry of Environmental
Conservation and Forestry, the Ministry of Electric Power, and the Ministry of Energy). Myanmar joined the Oslo-based Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative (EITI) in 2014. This
support for capacity building runs parallel to
engagement by Norwegian companies like SN
Power and Statoil in exploration and development of energy resources in Myanmar (FAFO
2015). Similarly, Norway has provided capacity
building support to the Ministry of Communications, Posts and Telegraphs in tandem with
engagement by Telenor in telecommunications
development in Myanmar.
Aid statistics from Norad show that Norwegian aid to Myanmar peaked after Cyclone Nar-
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1. Introduction | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
gis in 2008, and has again grown steadily since
2011 (Figure 2). There have been important
changes in the composition of aid. Support for
health and social services, education and emergency assistance has played a less prominent role
since 2011, while there is a stronger focus on
governance, economic development and trade,
and the environment and energy.
Figure 3 shows the main channels for Norwegian aid in 2016, making clear the prominent
role of Norwegian NGOs, and especially a core
group of NGOs used for delivering humanitarian
and development aid. A significant proportion of
aid goes through the public sector in Norway and
in Myanmar: this is a new channel that has been
used since 2011.
Norway thus has an active and visible role
in Myanmar, both as a supporter of the pro-democracy movement in the 1990s and early 2000s,
and as a facilitator for Western engagement and
partner to the USDP government since 2011.
The latter engagement has had high visibility and
has been seen as innovative and flexible. However,
it has also received criticism, especially from ethnic minority organizations and pro-democracy
activists (including Aung San Suu Kyi) (Olsen
2016), who argue that Norway facilitated the
military’s strategy of institutionalizing semi-authoritarian rule, while marginalizing pro-democracy forces and dynamics. Norway has also been
criticized for strengthening the authority and
capacity of the central state, thereby weakening
ethnic demands for conflict resolution through
federal state reforms. Finally, it has been accused
of being overly focused on economic growth,
not least as regards Norwegian business interests
(Irrawaddy 2014).
Norway has relied on a developmental approach to democracy promotion, in contrast to
the more political approach in the 1990s and
early 2000s (Carothers 2009). This strategy converged with the USDP government’s approach to
reforms and may have contributed to the democratic opening, but there are critical questions
about how and to what extent it has contributed
to substantial democratization and conflict resolution. Currently there are signs of adjustments in
Norway’s engagement with Myanmar, including
greater emphasis on peace and democracy promotion (Norad consultation meeting on Myanmar 25.8.2017). Norway seems to be rethinking
its approach to peace and democracy assistance,
combining developmental capacity building with
political support for peace and democracy. This can
give rise to prospects for productive engagement,
but also critical questions about engagement strategies. For instance, there are concerns about capacity and competence among the humanitarian and
development NGOs that are used for channelling,
and whether they can shift their focus to political
capacity building in support of political forces and
processes vital for peace and democracy.
7
2. Politics
The state in Myanmar
Myanmar’s political development, especially in the
period under direct military rule (1958–1960 and
1962–2011) and the USDP government (2011–
2016), has been characterized by a strong focus on
state building.4 Attention has been devoted to safeguarding national sovereignty and political stability through military means, and the military has
dominated public administration (Taylor 2009).
Following the 2010 elections and the change
of government in 2011, Myanmar experienced
various political reforms in support of basic civil
rights, electoral democracy and economic growth
(Lall 2016). These reforms followed a sequential
state-building approach in the sense that building
strong state authority by military, constitutional
and institutional means was seen as a precursor
to political and economic liberalization (Egreteau
2016). What was new after 2011 was the greater
emphasis on state legitimacy, and that it was
sought through democratization and economic
development, in addition to earlier demands
based on the role of the military as guardians
of national sovereignty and political order. This
state-building approach to political reforms
was most explicitly formulated in the military’s
4
roadmap for ‘discipline-flourishing democracy’,
originally presented in 2003 (Huang 2016).
State building in Myanmar also became a priority on the international agenda. The political
reforms from 2011 onwards created an opening
for Western states (the USA, EU member-states,
Norway and others) to suspend or lift sanctions and engage in building state capacity. This
engagement was made possible by the growing
recognition of the need for robust state institutions to mitigate state fragility, and with institution building as a precondition for political
liberalization (Carothers & De Gramont 2013;
Mansfield & Snyder 2007a; Paris 2004). Thus,
there was a certain policy convergence between
the USDP government and the Western international community, also compatible with the pragmatic strategy of ‘constructive engagement’ that
had been pursued by China, Japan and ASEAN.
Myanmar is a country with a long history
of state building dominated by military rulers
and their focus on political stability. But it is
also a country where the authority of the state
has been heavily contested, especially by ethnic
armed organizations. Further, the Myanmar state
has experienced persistent problems of limited
administrative capacity and political legitimacy.
Behind these challenges is the core problem of
limited state autonomy vis-à-vis the military. In
the following sections we identify the principal
issues for each of these dimensions of state building in today’s Myanmar, starting with the fundamental question of state autonomy.
Sisk defines state building as ‘the creation or recovery of the
authoritative, legitimate, and capable governance institutions
that can provide for security and the necessary rule-of-law
conditions for economic and social development’ (Sisk 2013:
1). He identifies four core elements within the state-building
agenda: to strengthen (1) the autonomy of the state in regard
to foreign and domestic interests, (2) the authority of the
state as the sole legitimate source of coercion, (3) the capacity of the state to design and deliver governance service, and
(4) the legitimacy of the state in domestic and international
politics. While these four core elements are interwoven, the
state-building agenda gives priority to strengthening state authority because that can reduce the fragility of the state, help
to secure human life and well-being, and because it is seen as
an instrumental prerequisite for development.
State autonomy: The persistence
of military state capture
State autonomy concerns the state’s ability to
act independently of and even against dominant
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
groups and interests in society. In Myanmar, there
is a paradoxical situation: the foremost constraint
on state autonomy is the military (the Tatmadaw)
– which is also the state’s foremost security apparatus. The justification for seeing this as a matter
of state autonomy is that the military has used its
prolonged control of state power to become the
dominant economic and political force in society: it has become both a powerful state apparatus and the major force in society that limits
the autonomy of the state. ‘State capture’ by the
military is the primary explanation for the character of the state and the persistent challenges of
contested state authority, limited state capacity
and weak state legitimacy today. Transforming
civil–military relations remains the core challenge for achieving substantial conflict resolution,
democratization and development in Myanmar.
The main characteristic of the state in Myanmar
is the heavy dominance of the military throughout
the postcolonial period (Egreteau & Jagan 2013).
The Burma Army led Myanmar’s independence
struggle and formed the basis for APFRL governments in the early democratic period. The military
was strengthened from the late 1950s, in the context of the perceived threat from China and the
emergence of Communist and ethnic insurgencies.
Ne Win’s military coup in 1962 made the military a political force in a totalitarian state. Military
strength was again greatly expanded in the 1990s,
following the 1988 uprising. From 1962 to 2011,
the Myanmar state remained under direct control of a military that gradually expanded its war
capability and gained a chokehold on state power
(Callahan 2003; Nakanishi 2013; Selth 2001;
Steinberg 2001). The reforms since 2011 have
changed the modality of military influence, but
the Tatmadaw continues to hold key positions of
power under the 2008 Constitution (Nyein 2009).
Constitutional provisions combined with
additional laws and institutional arrangements
mean that the state has limited autonomy visà-vis the military, even today (Egreteau 2014;
Huang 2013). Myanmar’s third constitution,
following those of 1947 and 1974, was drafted
by the military-appointed National Convention
and approved after a deeply flawed referendum
in 2008. It contains several provisions that safeguard continued power for the military (Egreteau
2014; Williams 2014). Among the most controversial provisions are the following:
• Non-civilian control of the armed forces:
Section 20(b) gives the Defence Services the
right to independently administer all affairs of
the armed forces.
• Military control of three key ministries.
According to Section 232(b) and 234(b), the
Commander-in-Chief is to nominate military
personnel for Ministers and Deputy Ministers
for Defence, Home Affairs and Border Affairs.
• Military representation in the legislative
bodies. Sections 74, 109(b) and 141(b) ensure
a large military presence in Myanmar’s Parliaments (Hluttaws) at the union and division/
state levels. Army representatives make up 25%
of the representatives in each legislative body.
• Military control of the National Defence and
Security Council (NDSC). Section 201 creates the NDSC as a powerful non-elected body,
consisting of eleven officials. Five of these are
required to be active-duty military personnel,
while the others may be ex-army personnel.
• The President lacks the power of Commander-in-Chief. Section 342 states that the
President is not the Commander-in-Chief:
instead a person is to be appointed who has
been proposed and approved by the NDSC.
• Commander-in-Chief as the highest arbiter of military justice. Section 343(b) gives
extensive power over military justice to the
Commander-in-Chief.
• Loyalty requirement for political parties.
Section 404 requires that political parties have
the objectives of ‘non- disintegration of the
Union, non-disintegration of national solidarity and perpetuation of sovereignty’. Sections 407 and 408 grant further government
discretion for dissolving political parties.
• Immunity for government officials. Section
445 (the ‘immunity clause’) grants amnesty to
any SLORC/SPDC officials who have committed any crime, if that crime was committed as a result of their official duties.
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
• State of emergency and fundamental freedoms. Sections 40 and 419 give the President
and the army extensive power during times
of emergency. Under Section 40(c), the Commander-in-Chief can take full control of the
state (legislature, executive and judiciary).
Section 420 further states that the Commander-in-Chief may restrict or suspend fundamental rights.
non-state actors. This has a decisive impact
on state capacity in policy-making and public
administration, and poses challenges for external engagement. Lack of authority or access may
limit the effectiveness of political reforms and
aid programmes. Engagement that relies solely
on official state structures and government backing may also shift the balance of power among
state and non-state actors, intensifying conflicts.
Conflict sensitivity is a critical concern in state
capacity building, especially if what is built is
the capacity of some actors at the expense of
others in a situation where territorial authority
is contested.
Building state authority in Myanmar has
revolved around the question of incorporation of
ethnic minorities at the periphery. There is a long
history of pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial rulers seeking to extend the authority of the
central state from Bamar majority areas (‘Burma
proper’) to ethnic minority (‘frontier’) areas,
through combined strategies of military conquest and pacifying concessions (Taylor 2009).
Ethnic minorities have at times engaged in transactional relations with the rulers, but have also
evaded or resisted centralized, militarized and
majoritarian authority (Scott 2009; Smith 1991).
Throughout its seven decades of independence,
Burma/Myanmar has been marked by multiple
armed conflicts between the army and EAOs,
producing some of the longest-lasting insurgencies in the modern world (Keenan 2014; Smith
1991, 2007; South 2008). Although Myanmar
cannot be said to be on the verge of dissolution,
resolving its intrastate conflicts remains a pressing challenge.
The period under military rule saw a combination of escalating military confrontations and
attempts at pacifying ethnic insurgencies through
ceasefires and economic concessions. Intensive
counterinsurgency operations during the BSPP
period pushed armed opposition groups into the
borderlands, where they managed to maintain
control over autonomous enclaves. Many EAOs
built up their own state structures within ‘liberated zones’. Unable to defeat these groups, the
government gradually came to tolerate some of
The military leaders have insisted that Myanmar
needs a disciplined kind of democracy in order to
contain the conflicts that have existed in the past
(Huang 2016). This is in broad agreement with the
sequencing argument that has gained ground in
democratization studies and Western democracy
assistance (Carothers 2007; Mansfield & Snyder
2007b). However, David Williams argues that
‘disciplined democracy is especially ill-suited to
Burma because of its dispositions to over-concentrate power’ (2014: 118). Reforming the 2008 constitution has thus been a priority for the National
League of Democracy (NLD) (Zin 2016), who
have held that without constitutional amendments
and genuine rule of law, the democratic opening
will be mere ‘window-dressing’. In 2014, the NLD
and the civil society organization 88 Generation
collected more than 5 million signatures in support of constitutional change. In 2015, the NLD
proposed a constitutional amendment committee,
but the bills were blocked by the military in Parliament. Since then, NLD government has changed
its priorities, arguing that constitutional amendment is possible only after national peace and reconciliation are achieved. That has made their peace
process (the 21st Century Panglong Conference) a
main priority, both as a goal in itself and as a tool
for constitutional reform.
State authority: The contested territorial
authority of the unitary state
Myanmar is formally designed as a unitary
state with modest decentralization to regions/
states and self-administered zones and divisions.
However, the authority of the state is contested,
resulting in a complex mosaic of de facto territorial control and administration by state and
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
their territorial claims, and even accommodated
armed groups that were willing to become subordinated militias.
In the 1990s, the SLORC/SPDC regime
increased the military capacity for counterinsurgency warfare, shifting the military balance
of power in favour of the central government,
despite Western sanctions. They also forged
ceasefires with many EAOs. New infrastructure
and economic projects were started in ceasefire
areas, extending central government authority
and creating economic opportunities for military
and crony enterprises as well as ethnic organizations (Woods 2011, 2016).
This carrot-and-stick strategy was continued
by the USDP government from 2011. Several
ceasefire agreements were signed with individual EAOs, followed by economic concessions
and aid-funded peacebuilding in ceasefire areas.
A National Ceasefire Agreement was signed in
2015, although with the noticeable absence of
the most powerful EAOs. Since 2011 there has
been renewed warfare in Kachin, followed by
major clashes in northern Shan State, in contrast
to the relative pacification of EAOs in Kayin and
Kayah states (Brenner 2015).
This history of military confrontations and
pacifying accommodation has created a highly
complex geography of state authority, where official government structures is but one of several
forms of governance. Starting with the official
system, Myanmar is organized in seven Bamar
regions and seven ethnic states under the 2008
Constitution. These have their own parliaments
and governments led by centrally appointed
chief ministers. The Constitution also creates
six self-administered zones and divisions (SAZ/
SAD) for specific ethnic groups that are minorities within their state/region but a majority
within specific townships: Naga SAZ in Sagaing
Region and Danu SAZ, Pa-O SAZ, Palaung
SAZ, Kokang SAZ and Wa SAD within Shan
State (Figure 1). These self-administered zones
and divisions are under the authority of ‘Leading Bodies’ made up of elected MPs, military
appointees, and representatives of other minorities within the area.
Beyond these formal arrangements, there
are systems of de facto territorial control (Jolliffe
2015). First, there are ethnic territorial claims
that have been met with military hostility, but
where EAOs have nevertheless managed to seize
and maintain control through guerrilla tactics.
This is the case especially in remote and mountainous border areas where the military may be
confined to roads, towns and economic sites. Second, some ethnic claims to territory have been
tolerated by the military, and EAOs have been
allowed to carry weapons. Some of these arrangements were written into ceasefire agreements in
the 1990s or new ceasefire agreements from the
USDP government period. Third, there are areas
where ethnic armed actors have achieved territorial control with the backing of the military,
on condition that they function as state-backed
militias and cooperate with the state administration. The most common forms are ‘Border
Guard Forces’ or smaller ‘People’s Militias’ that
have been formed at the village level by the Tatmadaw, but there are also militias that operate in
understanding with EAOs. Finally, this informal
system of territorial control lacks clear boundaries, in how it maps onto official state boundaries
and how EAOs may influence the governing of
people even in areas they do not control militarily.
State capacity: The challenges of policymaking and public administration
Policy-making: The legacy of military control
over the state constrains policy-making and public administration in multiple ways – including
strong Tatmadaw influence in the Parliament,
control of key ministries and departments, and
military organizational culture and loyalty in
the bureaucracy (especially within the General
Administration Department). On the other hand,
the political reforms during the USDP government have also widened the space for more
democratic, decentralized and de-concentrated
policy-making and public administration, especially after the shift of government in 2016. There
is, however, still a long way to go to build a state
with strong capacity for democratic policy-making and public administration (Blaževič 2016).
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
For a long time, policy processes in Myanmar
were under the direct control of a small group
of senior generals, and based on their personal
and political interests. State ministries implemented policies but had little involvement in
policy-making or review. There was virtually no
input from the public, and also a general lack of
reliable data for policymaking. The capacity and
professionalism of the ministries deteriorated. In
Myanmar’s ethnic states, public administration
was dominated by military commanders or ethnic armed organizations.
The USDP government introduced parliamentary processes and led an active period of
hasty law-making, but policy-making remained
top-heavy, dominated by the president and a limited number of trusted ministers and advisors,
some from government-affiliated CSOs (Egreteau 2017). This meant that decisions could be
implemented swiftly in fields deemed important
– like security, foreign policy, foreign investments
and natural resource extraction. Sectors where
policy attention depends on popular pressure and
administrative capacity received less attention (as
is the case of education and public health). The
civil service has played a limited role in advising
ministers on policy-making. Ministries implement instructions from higher levels, but have
little devolved authority except concerning some
technical issues. Decades of top–down governance have led to a hierarchical and passive organizational culture within the bureaucracy where
officials are often unable to make decisions without instructions from above. In addition, administrative departments are staffed by poorly-paid
civil servants who must still rely on rudimentary
technology and systems.
The shift to a democratically elected and
pro-democracy government has expanded the
space for more transparent and inclusive policymaking, but this appears hampered by an
organizational culture within the NLD, the
government and the civil service of hierarchical
decision-making. Moreover, there is considerable
mistrust between the NLD government and the
civil service, due to the military background and
loyalties of many bureaucrats. All this means that
the transformation towards democratic policymaking and bureaucratic professionalism seems
to be progressing very slowly.
Parliamentarism: The main source of transformation in policy-making and public administration is the re-introduction of electoral democracy
and parliamentary politics (Kean 2014). The
2008 Constitution established the Pyidaungsu
Hluttaw (Union Parliament) as a bicameral legislative body consisting of the ‘lower’ House of
Representatives (Pyithu Hluttaw) and the ‘upper’
House of Nationalities (Amyotha Hluttaw). The
Union Parliament is the basis for the election of
the President, who in turn appoints government
ministers and deputy ministers. The Parliament
is assigned the tasks of law-making, oversight of
the government, and public representation. Policy-making remains dominated by the government,
but the Hluttaw has proven itself more active than
many observers had expected (Egreteau 2017).
For instance, many laws were passed under the
USDP government. The shift to NLD majority
has been followed by a slowdown in law-making,
but a process has been started to review, revise and
replace ‘bad laws’. The extra-Parliamentary Legal
Affairs and Special Cases Assessment Commission led by former Pyithu Hluttaw Speaker Thura
Shwe Mann is instrumental in this process, but
without always leading to progressive results, as
shown by the proposed changes to the National
Land Use Policy (Oberndorf, Thein, & Oo 2017).
The standing parliamentary committees of the
two houses also play key roles in reviewing government policies and proposing bills.
The 2008 Constitution created state/region
parliaments and governments (Nixon et al. 2015).
Importantly, state/division governments are not
formed by the local parliaments, but are headed
by powerful chief ministers appointed by the
president. Each chief minister then nominates
cabinet ministers and assigns ministries, in consultation with the president. Local state/region
ministries serve primarily as coordinating and
advisory union ministries with offices at the
local level. The six self-administered areas have
‘leading bodies’, headed by an appointed chair-
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
person. Below the state/region level are townships
consisting of urban wards, towns and village
tracts. Districts form a middle tier of administration between state/region governments and
townships. The administration of townships and
districts is led by senior officials of the General
Administration Department (GAD), under the
military-controlled Ministry of Home Affairs
(Kyi Pyar Chit Saw & Arnold 2014).
Wealth sharing related to natural resources is a
key concern for democratic decentralization and
conflict resolution in Myanmar (Kramer 2015;
Thet Aung Lynn & Oye 2014). This concerns
both how to manage natural resources and revenues effectively (good governance), and how
to share responsibilities and revenues between
the various levels of governments (devolution of
power) (Kramer 2010). The latter point is closely
linked to the on-going peace process, and involves
debates over whether decentralized resource management within the unitary state will be sufficient
to address ethnic grievances, or if more substantive ‘resource federalism’ is required.
The decentralization created by the former
military/USDP regimes is primarily in the form
of de-concentration to the state and region
departments of central ministries. The devolved
powers and responsibilities are limited, and the
executives responsible for implementing them
are appointed by the chief minister and township/district heads under the president’s authority.
While some argue that the Myanmar state already
has elements of federalism, ethnic organizations
maintain that it is only superficially federal-like:
a case of de-concentration within a unitary state
(Holliday et al. 2015). Such de-concentration
may improve the efficiency of public services
at the local level, but is deemed inadequate for
promoting democratic accountability and peace.
Decentralization: The 2008 Constitution and
subsequent political reforms brought a certain
degree of decentralization from the union to the
state/region level. These reforms contained some
elements of devolution of power, in particular
through the formation of state and region parliaments and governments. State/region Hluttaws
were assigned roles and duties to enact laws, submit budget bills and collect taxes and revenues.
However, the devolved powers and responsibilities as specified in the Region and State Hluttaw
Legislative List have remained limited in scope
(Holliday, Aung, & Joelene 2015).
Moreover, state/region governments have a
very limited revenue base and must rely on transfers from the union level (Nixon et al. 2015), even
though many ethnic states are rich in valuable
natural resources. While the Constitution grants
state/region governments some authority to legislate on resource extraction and collect taxes,
this is limited to less valuable resources. Major
natural resources are predominately managed
and taxed by the central government through
line ministries and state-owned enterprises. Military-owned companies and their cronies are
heavily involved in resource extraction, often
in conflict-affected areas. This strengthens the
military’s interest in maintaining control, thus
increasing the risk for corruption, human rights
violations and continued conflict. Ethnic armed
organizations, border guard forces and pro-government militias are also involved in extractive
industries and related trade. Some areas that are
contested or controlled by such armed groups
have parallel systems of resource governance.
These may conflict, overlap, or coexist with those
of the union government ministries and military.
Institutional de-concentration: The reform
period has seen some de-concentration among
state institutions, as in the fiscal system, where
important aspects of planning and budgeting
have been moved from the military and the
Office of the President to the Ministry of Finance
and Revenue and the Ministry of Planning and
Economic Development. National representative
institutions and sub-national governments are
now involved in the preparation of the budget,
and line ministries and their sub-national offices
play a greater role in spending it (Engvall &
Linn 2014). This pluralization of influence has
been accompanied by a re-orientation of public
expenditure away from the military towards social
spending, and at the local level. However, there
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
remain major challenges in planning and budgeting frameworks as well as financial accountability
(Nixon & Joelene 2014; Nixon et al. 2015).
Conversely, persistent and even increased
concentration of power is also found in the public administration. The most obvious example is
the General Administration Department (GAD),
which is under the military-controlled Ministry
of Home Affairs (MoHA) (Kyi Pyar Chit Saw &
Arnold 2014). GAD is the primary institution
for public administration in Myanmar. It has
a coordinating role among government ministries at the union level and functions as the civil
service at the sub-national level. GAD is thus
omnipresent and has a powerful mandate. As it
is placed within MoHA, together with non-military security apparatuses, GAD also plays a role
in security and places heavy emphasis on political
stability. At the sub-national level, state legislators have been seeking more political power vis-àvis the administrative apparatus of the state, but
remain fully dependent on GAD (Kyi Pyar Chit
Saw & Arnold 2014).
note the gradual improvement in the representativeness and openness of government and the
relationship with its citizenry (‘state legitimacy’).
However, as to the presence of basic state functions to serve the people (‘public services’) and
especially protection of fundamental human
rights and rule of law, the Figure shows that positive improvements associated with the democratic
opening have been followed by worsening conditions after 2013, especially for human rights. This
reflects the stalled reform process, continued warfare and restrictions on media and other freedoms.
The Fragile States Index thus indicates that the
state in Myanmar remains fragile amidst positive
changes. The political and economic reforms
since 2011 have not been sufficient to move
Myanmar out of the ‘red alert’ category. By 2013,
the reform progress seemed to have stalled and
was followed by signs of increased fragility, before
showing some improvements again from 2016.
State legitimacy concerns the relations between
state and society. Bellina and colleagues (2009)
identify four general sources of legitimacy for
the state: (1) input legitimacy (rules and procedures for participation and accountability in
public governance); (2) output legitimacy (state
performance in delivery of public goods and
services); (3) shared beliefs (collective identities
and moral beliefs legitimizing the state), and;
(4) international legitimacy (international recognition for the authority of the state and government). Attempts at systematic analysis of these
four dimensions in Myanmar will be hampered
by the limited data available. Very few public
opinions polls have been conducted, and comparisons are made difficult by differences in survey design. That being said, the opinion polls
conducted by Asia Barometer, Asia Foundation
and International Republican Institute provide
key insights that can be checked against more
qualitative information (Asia Foundation 2015;
International Republican Institute 2014, 2017;
Welsh & Huang 2016a).
First, on the input side, the opinion polls
show that most Myanmar citizens surveyed support democracy, although their knowledge and
State fragility and legitimacy
State fragility: How do these key features of
the state in Myanmar affect state fragility, and
how has this changed over time? One indication
may be found in the Fragile States Index from
the Fund for Peace (2017), which measures a
state’s vulnerability to collapse or conflict.5 As
Figure 4 shows, Myanmar constantly features in
the ‘red’category of high-risk countries, although
the degree of severity has dropped from ‘high
alert’ in 2008/2009 to ‘alert’ from 2010 onwards.
The same pattern is found in the social, economic, political and cohesion indicators that
make up the Index. Figure 4 shows Myanmar’s
score on the three indicators that make up the
political component of the overall index. We can
5
The index is based on twelve indicators of state vulnerability
that are grouped together as cohesion, social, economic and
political indicators. Scores obtained on the basis of content
analysis, quantitative data, and qualitative review are used to
assess a state's vulnerability to collapse or conflict, ranking
states on a spectrum of categories from 'sustainable,' 'stable,'
'warning,' to 'alert.'
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Data source: Fund for Peace 2017
Figure 4. Myanmar’s score on the Fragile State Index (top) and its political indicators (bottom),
2008–2017
conception of democracy vary. Many acknowledge that Myanmar’s democracy is flawed and
the level of trust in political institutions is generally low.6 With the free elections in 2015 and
the change to a democratically elected government in 2016, the input legitimacy of the state
6
has been strengthened. However, the channels
of representation remain weak and only a limited proportion of the population are involved in
party politics. Instead, people engage in CSOs –
especially religious, charitable and local community organizations. The International Republican
Institute (2017) finds that relatively few join a
political party or have direct contact with one.
Also the links between CSOs and political parties remain weak. This limits the possibilities for
Welsh and Huang (2016a) find an especially low level of trust
in the police and the courts, which are often perceived to be
corrupt (see also Cheesman 2014).
15
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Source: International Republican Institute 2017
Figure 5. Perceptions on present and future economic conditions
participation and political influence – a major
challenge for the input legitimacy of the state,
despite the successful introduction of electoral
democracy.
Second, in terms of output legitimacy, all
three opinion polls show that livelihoods preoccupy the majority of those surveyed. The Asia
Barometer reports that Myanmar citizens have
not experienced major livelihood improvements
despite considerable changes in the economy.
Many report that economic conditions are more
difficult than in the past, but are still optimistic about the future (Figure 5). This indicates
that poor economic performance has not translated into a legitimacy crisis for the government,
although it may do so in the future. When asked
about what is most important – democracy or
economy – more respondents opted for economic development than for democracy (Welsh
& Huang 2016a). Similarly, the International
Republican Institute (2017) finds that economic
concerns have moved to the forefront while the
state’s economic performance is perceived as
weak. Government performance on inclusive
development is thus a primary concern for the
output legitimacy of the state today This should
be understood in the context of greater achievements regarding democracy than inclusive development, instead of indicating that people value
development more than democracy per se.
Third, as to the identity dimension of state
legitimacy, Dittmer (2010) has argued that
nation-building remains an unfinished task in
Myanmar. The Asia Barometer Survey finds that,
when asked about their self-identity, the majority opted for their religion (53%), followed by a
third who chose the national community (32%),
while the remaining minority opted for ethnicity
(15%) (Welsh & Huang 2016b). It is notable
that Buddhists and Bamar respondents were
more inclined to self-define by religion than were
the ethnic and religious minorities (Figure 6).
Only 25% of respondents from ethnic minorities
saw ethnicity as their self-identity. This indicates
that feelings of belonging to Myanmar are quite
strong among ethnic minorities, and similar to
other categories of respondents.
In opinion polls, Myanmar citizens express
strong preferences for democracy and expect that
democracy will bring about positive changes in
terms of livelihoods and public services (Asia
Foundation 2015). People are generally hopeful about the future, although their optimism
is tempered by the various problems related to
political representation, economic performance
and national inclusion: the input, output and
identity dimensions of state legitimacy.
These three sources of state legitimacy are
also at the core of the legitimacy claims made by
political parties, although with differing weight
16
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Source: Welsh & Huang 2016a
Figure 6. Self-identity, by religion and ethnicity
ascribed to each. During the 2015 election campaign, the USDP relied on its claimed ability to
secure stability and deliver economic improvements (Zin 2016) – in contrast to the NLD’s
primary focus on democracy, human rights and
constitutional reform. Bamar and Buddhist identities were implied, but neither the NLD nor the
USDP explicitly emphasized Bamar/Buddhist
nationalism (Thawnghmung 2016a). However,
the NLD and Aung San Suu Kyi were strongly
challenged on identity credentials, as Daw Suu
was portrayed as being pro-Muslim and hence
less credible as a defender of Buddhism. The ethnic parties, in contrast, relied primarily on ethnic
affiliation and contestation of the centralized and
Bamar-dominated state. Election results showed
the high priority voters placed on democracy and
removing the military-aligned USDP government; economic performance and state services
have become more important after the election
(International Republican Institute 2017).
Fourth, the international legitimacy of the
Myanmar state has improved considerably, especially among Western actors, due to the political
and economic opening from 2011 onwards and
the change of government in 2016. This is manifested in the normalization of diplomatic and
economic relations. With electoral democracy in
place, international actors started to challenge
the NLD government on its development performance, which also corresponds to the economic
and development interests of the international
actors. The international legitimacy of the state
has also been increasingly challenged over human
rights abuses against the Rohingya community
and the slow progress towards a political solution
of this crisis.
Political structures and actors
Political spaces for participation
and representation
The formal political space for participation and
representation has been significantly widened
after 2011, but there remain severe limitations
on actual participation. The spaces and capacities for political participation are also sharply
differentiated between different actors, interests
and strategies.
First, the 2008 Constitution brought a military-designed and -slanted electoral democracy
that included the return of parliamentary politics at union and state/region levels. While there
were concerns, given the disenfranchisement of
large groups and continued military influence
on parliamentary politics, the 2015 general
elections were considered free and relatively fair.
The composition of Union and State/Region
Parliaments has become more reflective of the
population in terms of political interests and
identities, although there is persistent underrepresentation of women as well as ethnic and
religious minorities (Egreteau 2017; Minoletti
2014, 2016). Beyond electoral formalities, there
are major weaknesses at all levels of the democratic chain: 1) the public affairs that come
under democratic governance are limited and
policy-making remain top–down and unaccountable, although there are some openings for
public consultation on certain laws and policies;
2) political parties and CSOs function poorly as
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
channels of political representation; and 3) the
rights and capacities of people to gain access and
influence governance processes are limited and
uneven, and often based on personal networks.
Second, the period since 2011 has also seen
a de-concentration of public administration. This
has created more contact points between the state
and people, especially at the local level, while the
democratic opening has created expectations of
more responsive public administration. However,
the continued dominance of a hierarchical organizational culture, as seen in GAD, means that the
actual openings for making claims and asserting
influence on public administration remain limited (Kyi Pyar Chit Saw & Arnold 2014).
Third, the peace process has created new spaces
for participation of ethnic minorities, although
these spaces tend to favour certain actors and
strategies. The USDP period saw ceasefire negotiations that were largely limited to commanders
within the military and ethnic armed organizations. Parallel peacebuilding initiatives funded by
international aid have been criticized for lacking
inclusive participatory mechanisms. The NLD
government’s 21st Century Panglong Conference
is designed to address core grievances in a more
political and inclusive manner, by including ethnic armed organizations, political parties and
CSOs in plenary deliberations and sector specific
committees. This process has triggered dialogue
on policy among ethnic organizations, thereby
creating new spaces for CSOs with contextual
knowledge of sector-specific issues. However,
concerns remain among ethnic minority actors
as to the extent of political influence on the progress and outcome of the peace process.
Fourth, the reform period has produced a
broader discursive political space. ‘Development’,
‘peace’, ‘democracy’ and ‘federalism’ have become
nodal points in the political discourse, used freely
in various ways by highly diverse actors. These
discursive changes are linked to lessened restrictions on free expression and the mass media.
However, recent arrests and detention of journalists as well as sanctions against expressions in
social media show that major limitations remain,
also in the discursive dimension of political space.
With these and other changes Myanmar has
seen a general widening of political space, but
critical concerns remain about the possibilities
for substantive political influence on issues that
matter to the people. Importantly, the political
space is differentiated according to the actors in
question. While members of the urban middle
classes in Bamar-dominated areas have been
the primary beneficiaries of new economic and
political freedoms, the political and economic
opportunities of rural constituencies have been
less noticeable, especially in conflict-affected ethnic states.
Actor strategies
Actors vary considerably in their strategies and
capacities for engaging within these political
spaces. Since 2011, a key question for many nonstate actors has been the choice of strategy with
regard to the USDP government, creating a general divide between engagement and non-engagement among political parties, CSOs and ethnic
armed groups. This strategic bifurcation reflects
the actors’ differing interpretations of the reform
process as regards the intentions of the military
and USDP government, the extent of change
and the expected future outcomes. Basically, the
debate has revolved around two main discourses: a
‘democratic transition’ discourse dominant among
those who advocate engagement with the USDP
reform agenda, and an ‘autocratic reform’ discourse prominent among those generally averse
to engagement with the USDP government.
The transition discourse argues that Myanmar
is undergoing a transition to democracy, in line
with the transition perspective in democratization
studies (Cheesman et al. 2012). The main driving
force has been an alliance between the reformist
USDP government under President Thein Sein
and a group of engagement-oriented diaspora civil
society actors, the ‘third force’ (Figure 7) (Duell
2014; Lall 2016). These have been supported by
international actors searching for alternatives to
the ineffective sanctions applied against the military regime (Camroux & Egreteau 2010; Hlaing
2014; Holliday 2011). This ‘third force’ functioned as mediators and advisors between the gov-
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Figure 7. The transition discourse on reforms in Myanmar
ernment, international sponsors, and pragmatic
political parties, NGOs and EAOs. The alliance
sought to identify and promote actors who were
willing to engage with the government’s reform
agenda. In the process, they bypassed Aung San
Suu Kyi, despite her role as the foremost leader
of opposition political forces, and deepened divisions and suspicions among opposition parties
and civil society organizations. The transition
discourse argues that there was a political divide
between engagement-oriented ‘softliners’ and
engagement-averse ‘hardliners’ (Pedersen 2014).
The dividing line among political parties was
their willingness or unwillingness to participate
in elections and parliamentary politics under the
2008 Constitution, while ethnic armed organizations were divided on the question of bilateral
and nationwide ceasefire agreements. The transition discourse thus makes a categorical distinction
between ‘engagement-oriented’ parties within
the Nationalities Brotherhood Federation (NBF)
and ‘engagement-averse’ parties in the United
Nationalities Alliance (UNA). Likewise, EAOs
are divided between ‘ceasefire groups’ within the
Working Group on Ethnic Coordination (WGEC)
and ‘non-ceasefire groups’ organized in the United
Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC).
The core position within this transition discourse is that ‘constructive engagement’ centred
on development serves to strengthen reformist
softliners within the authoritarian regime, making possible further expansion of democratic
political space (Cheesman et al. 2012). This
interpretation is primarily the narrative of the
key actors within the approach, including international sponsors. Critical opponents are seen as
hardliners seen as having outdated perspectives
from the period of international sanctions against
the SLORC/SPDC military regimes.
The second discourse argues, in contrast, that
Myanmar has seen an autocratic reform process
whereby the military seeks to maintain its economic and political power with greater domestic
and international legitimacy (Bünte 2013; Egreteau & Jagan 2013; Huang 2013; Jones 2014;
Slater 2014). The military is said to act largely
as a coherent force, showing few signs of internal divisions between hardliners and softliners. It
is emphasized that there is little evidence of the
kind of negotiations and pacts that characterize
the transition approach. The ceasefire agreements
with EAOs are portrayed as a repetition of the
SLORC/SPDC strategy of pacification in the
1990s, falling short of negotiated peace pacts
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
(Lee 2016). Proponents of this interpretation
also point to the importance of geopolitics in
Southeast Asia, holding that the military regime
and Western states sought and found new ways
for mutual engagement in the context of a ‘rising China’, and that this facilitated the military’s
strategy of top–down and limited reforms. Myanmar’s reform is thus seen as an autocratic and controlled democratic opening that is more likely to
yield a relatively stable semi-authoritarian regime
than a transition to democracy (Egreteau 2016).
Engaging with this process on the terms set by the
authoritarian regime thus runs the risk of contributing to the consolidation of semi-authoritarianism rather than democratic deepening.
These two discourses present opposed interpretations of the reform process, the key actors
and strategies, and the likely political outcomes.
As such, they lend support to polarized political polemics and opposed strategies of political
engagement and disengagement. To some extent,
the electoral victory of the NLD in 2015 and
the change of government in 2016 have ameliorated this political polarization, as political
engagement has become a viable option for those
previously labelled ‘hardline opposition’ actors.
But there is still a deep scepticism towards the
central government and state, especially among
ethnic minority actors.
threat of Chinese occupation due to Kuomintang
bases in Myanmar, communist and ethnic insurgencies, pro-democracy mobilization and the
threat of US occupation. Over time, this fear of
actual and perceived enemies has been supplemented with fear for the future of the military
and the threat of revenge following a regime shift,
as reflected in the ‘immunity clause’ in the 2008
Constitution (Gravers & Ytzen 2014).
The Tatmadaw’s self-perception and rationale
is that of a professional army that plays the patriotic role of protecting the sovereignty and unity
of the Union of Myanmar (Haacke 2006; Min
2010). It is not a military organization being used
by a political force to capture the state in order
to protect the interests of a dominant economic
class or ethnic majority in society. However, over
time, it has become a political force that promotes its own core interests. The military has
also become the basis for the formation of an
economic elite, and has developed an economic
self-interest in the continuation of military rule
– as seen in the strong political and economic
role and interests of regional commanders within
the military.
As to ruling, the military has not been adept
at politics, but has used state power and coercion
to construct a society and citizenry conducive to
political stability. Development has become an
additional priority, where the choice of development strategy has been a matter of technocratic
pragmatism rather than ideological conviction.
The military is an actor obsessed with order and
stability created through the use of law, but not
the rule of law (Cheesman 2015). After the 1988
crisis, the SLORC focused on rebuilding what
they saw as a collapsed state, and did so through
sole reliance on the military and its personnel.
In the 1990s, the military expanded massively,
also into the economy. This was accompanied by
the establishment of an array of military welfare,
health, and educational facilities that insulated
members of the Tatmadaw, creating an exclusive social order of privilege for active-duty and
retired soldiers. Modern hospitals and clinics
were built to serve military families. The military’s
industrial base expanded as well, and the regime
The military (Tatmadaw)
The military has long been the most influential
political actor in Myanmar. This gives rise to
questions about how to understand the military and its interests and strategies. In her classic study of military history in Myanmar, Mary
Callahan makes the important observation that
the Tatmadaw is not a ‘political movement in
military garb’ (Callahan 2003: 2). By this she
means that the military is not the armed expression of a political movement or the reflection of
an authoritarian culture in society. The army is
first and foremost an army of fighters who have
been guided by the logic of combating threats to
the unity and sovereignty of the state. The list of
real or constructed enemies has included British
colonialism, Japanese wartime occupation, the
20
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Table 1. The general party system in Myanmar
Burman nationalism
Authoritarian rule
Democratic rule
Ethnic nationalism
Union-wide democracy-oriented parties
that are associated with the authoritarian
legacy (e.g. USDP, NUP)
Union-wide, democracy-oriented parties
that are associated with the pro-democracy
movement (e.g. NLD)
Democracy-oriented ethnic parties (e.g.
Parties within UNA and NBF)
Source: Stokke et al. 2015
launched an import substitution programme in
the critical area of arms manufacturing.
The military’s propaganda revolves around
the threats from divisive domestic politics and
the dangerous geopolitical position of Burma.
Throughout its history runs a narrative that
emphasizes the stabilizing role of the military in
times of crisis. The Tatmadaw is self-portrayed
as a ‘people’s army’ that has kept the nation alive
and intact in the most dangerous of environs – a
history of progress against great odds. The period
since 2011 has forced the military to engage in
political deliberations, especially in Parliament
and in the 21st Century Panglong Conferences.
In both situations, the military has displayed
a degree of flexibility on issues not deemed to
be primary interests, but with very little flexibility on questions of the three national causes:
non-disintegration of the Union, non-disintegration of national solidarity, and perpetuation of
sovereignty. Questions of economic development
seem to fall somewhere between these two poles.
ethnic minority nationalism (Table 1). The many
parties can be grouped into three categories: parties that originate from military regimes but are
now reformist democrats; parties rooted in the
pro-democracy movement since the 1980s, and
ethnic minority parties (Kempel, Sun, & Tun
2015; Stokke et al. 2015). There are two dominant parties: the USDP and the NLD are unionwide parties that enjoy broad electoral support,
membership, and organizational resources. The
National Unity Party (NUP), which originated
in the BSPP, used to be another well-organized
and military-aligned party, but is now less active.
Among the many ethnic parties, only a few
have won seats in national or state/region parliaments (Kramer 2010). Most ethnic parties have
been organized within one of two alliances, the
United Nationalities Alliance (UNA) and the
Nationalities Brotherhood Federation (NBF).
UNA includes parties that contested the 1990
elections but not the 2010 elections because
they were prohibited or refused to participate
under the 2008 Constitution. This non-participation policy was aligned with the NLD. The
NBF primarily organizes parties established for
the purpose of engaging in the 2010 election.
These parties tend to perform poorly in the 2015
elections, when the UNA parties also contested.
Most parties in Myanmar are weak in the
sense of being poorly institutionalized. There
has been a general absence of clear ideological
positions, comprehensive political programmes,
or specific policies, beyond general references
to democracy and the rule of law by the NLD;
self-determination and federalism among ethnic
parties; and unity and development by the USDP
Political parties
Myanmar has a large number of political parties,
but most of them are poorly institutionalized and
have limited capacity to function as channels of
popular representation (Stokke et al. 2015). Starting with the party system, it can be noted that the
parties are not organized around socio-economic
interests or religious identities, despite wide
social inequalities and strong religious identities.
Rather, they revolve around two main cleavages:
an opposition between the legacy of authoritarian rule and demands for democracy, and a divide
between Burman (union-wide) nationalism and
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Table 2. Distribution of seats in the Union Parliament after the 2015 elections
House of Representatives
Pyithu Hluttaw
House of Nationalities
Amyotha Hluttaw
National League for Democracy (NLD)
255
135
Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP)
30
11
Shan Nationalities League for Democracy (SNLD)
12
3
Arakan National Party (ANP)
12
10
Ta'Arng (Palaung) National Party (TNP)
3
2
PaO National Organization (PNO)
3
1
Zomi Congress for Democracy (ZCO)
2
2
Wa Democratic Party (WDP)
1
0
Kachin State Democracy and Unity Party (KSDP)
1
0
Kokang Democracy and Unity Party (KDUP)
1
0
Lisu National Development Party (LNDP)
2
0
Mon National Party (MNP)
0
1
National Unity Party (NUP)
0
1
Independent
1
2
Vacant/Election not held
7
0
Military
110
56
Sum
440
224
Source: Stokke et al. 2015
(Stokke et al. 2015). However, the USDP and the
NLD have union-wide organizational structures
and branch offices in most townships, although
there remain major concerns about the lack of
coherent policies and internal democracy. The
NLD, with its roots in a mass movement, can
rely on the energy and loyalty of a large number
of activists across social, ethnic, and territorial
divides. With the USDP, state resources and the
military apparatus have been decisive factors
behind the construction and capacity of the party.
In contrast, most ethnic parties are hard-pressed
to organize party activities, provide effective
representation, and deliver on ethnic aspirations, despite strong support from their ethnic
constituencies.
These problems of party building mean that
the parties existing in Myanmar today have only
limited capacity to ensure popular representation (Blaževič 2016; Egreteau 2017; Stokke et
al. 2015). Few, if any, have developed strong
relations with local communities. The USDP
and the NLD are union-wide parties, but have
centralized organizations that grant excessive
power to the leadership, in broad alignment with
a hierarchical culture in society. In the case of
the USDP this is attributed to its military and
USDA origins; with the NLD, the main explanatory factors are the iconic status of Aung San
Suu Kyi and the authoritarian repression of the
NLD. Local NLD members often lament that
the party has not done enough to build its local
capacity and internal democracy. It suffers from
weak communication/ coordination between
the leader, members of the Central Executive
Committee, the Central Committee, and local
branches and activists. Likewise, in the USDP
there are reported disconnects between the executive, elected representatives, senior party leaders, and party members. Despite the common
ground for collaboration between the NLD and
civil society organizations (CSOs), the NLD has
generally failed to overcome political and other
obstacles to developing effective broad alliances.
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Data source: Burma News International 2017a
Figure 8. Location of active ethnic armed organizations and major development projects
Building such broad forces for transformative
politics and substantive popular representation
represents a major challenge, including for international democracy assistance. This goes beyond
the focus on capacity building in individual parties and CSOs, which has become a key activity
among many INGOs in recent years.
The 2015 elections resulted in an impressive
large victory for the National League for Democracy (Table 2), an equally big defeat for the
Union Solidarity and Development Party, and
the general marginalization of most ethnic parties in parliamentary politics – with the exception
of the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy
(SNLD) and the Arakan National Party (ANP)
(Than Tun 2016). Voters seemed to reject the
USDP on the basis of its association with the
authoritarian legacy, rather than rewarding the
party for the democratic opening. Surprisingly
many members of ethnic minorities voted for the
NLD and not for ethnic parties, thereby giving
the NLD a strong mandate for democratization
– presumably also hoping that this would prove
to be pro-federalism. After the elections, the
foremost question among ethnic minorities and
CSOs has been whether the NLD will show the
will and capacity to deliver on its promises. One
concern is that the NLD has become a relatively
closed party and not a focal point for popular
representation and substantive political transformation. More fundamental are the core questions of the NLD’s capacities for confronting the
entrenched power of the military in parliament,
government and public administration, and the
military’s spoiler strategies for destabilizing the
NLD government prior to the 2020 elections.
Ethnic armed organizations (EAOs)
Myanmar has a large number of EAOs, highly
diverse in ethnic identity, military strength and
engagement strategies towards the Myanmar
army and government (Figure 8). While there is
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
a group of major EAOs that have a long history
of fighting for ethnic interests, there are also several organizations that have emerged through the
break-up of established organizations. The early
EAOs grew out of political mobilization for ethnic self-determination, political representation
and ethnic equality, which have remained the core
grievances. In the course of protracted warfare,
many EAOs have also become involved in various kinds of war economies revolving around the
extraction and trade of natural resources (timber,
minerals, narcotics, etc.), with the profits being
invested in legitimate businesses. EAOs have
also been shaped by their relations with the state,
where territorial and economic claims have been
confronted, tolerated or accommodated by the
state. Ceasefire agreements have been the medium
through which these relations have been managed.
This has created a situation where Myanmar
has several kinds of armed non-state ethnic
actors: combatant or ceasefire EAOs, EAOs that
have been converted into border guard forces
(BGFs) under military command, and people’s
militia forces (PMFs) that have been set up and
supported by the army (Buchanan 2016). BGFs
and PMFs are often splinter groups from larger
EAOs, or are built around ethnic minorities in
areas dominated by a larger ethnic group. They
are often seen as being driven by economic
opportunism, engaging in illegal business and
taxation activities, and being allies of military
commanders.
Key strategy questions among EAOs, also
today, concern how to build ethnic alliances
and how to engage with the state (Table 3). By
the 1970s, two main opposition alliances had
emerged. Along the Thai border, EAOs set up
the National Democratic Front (NDF), which
maintained a pro-Western, anti-Communist
stance. Many of these EAOs administered their
own areas, and received tacit support from Thailand. The other major alliance centred on the
Communist Party of Burma (CPB), and received
support from China. It was especially influential in Shan State, where the CPB allied with
local Kokang, Wa and Shan leaders. In the 1960s
they controlled a large liberated zone along the
China border. The NDF and the CPB were generally rivals, and never created a formal alliance
(Keenan 2014). These alliances have now disappeared, but the historical constellations continue
to influence ethnic alliance formation today.
At present, the main question regarding
engagement concerns participation in the USDP
and NLD government’s peace processes. EAOs
have arrived at different answers here, generally determined by their political, military and
economic interests; the opportunities and constraints within available political spaces; and their
capacities for making effective use of these spaces.
The diversity of ethnic armed organizations can,
at the risk of oversimplification, be summarized
in the following state-wise way:
Kachin State: The major EAO is the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) and its armed wing,
the Kachin Independence Army (KIA). Founded
in 1961, KIO had a ceasefire agreement from
1994 to 2011 (Sadan 2016). During this period,
it administered a large area, with departments of
health, education, agriculture, development etc.,
funded by revenues from timber, jade and border trade. It was a lead organization within the
United Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC),
but resigned in 2017 after the formation of the
Northern Alliance.
The Arakan Army (AA) was founded in 2008,
when a group left Rakhine to receive training by
KIO. AA remained in Kachin when war broke
out in 2011 and is a member of the Northern
Alliance. AA is a small army in Kachin, separate
from the Arakan Liberation Party/Army (ALP/
ALA) and Arakan Army (AA) in Rakhine.
Shan State: Shan State has the largest and most
ethnically diverse population of the ethnic states.
There are many EAOs, highly diverse relations
between EAOs and the army, complex local war
economies, and active links between some EAOs
and China.
The Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan
State Army (RCSS/SSA) originated in the Shan
State Army (SSA), formed in 1964. The SSA
was allied with the Communist Party of Burma
24
Table 3. Alliances among EAOs and participation in ceasefire agreements
Earlier alliances
National
Communist
Democratic
Party of
Front (NDF)
Burma
(CPB)
25
New Mon State Party (NMSP)
Pa-O National Liberation
Organization (PNLO)
Shan State Progress Party (SSPP)/
Shan State Army (SSA)
Kachin Independence Organization
(KIO)/Kachin Independence
Army (KIA)
Arakan Army (AA)
Myanmar National Democratic
Alliance Army (MNDAA)
Ta'ang National Liberation
Army (TNLA)
Lahu Democratic Union (LDU)
Wa National Organization (WNO)
All Burma Students' Democratic
Front (ABSDF)
National Democratic Alliance
Army (NDAA-ESS)
Nationalist Socialist Council of
Nagaland-Khapland (NSCN-K)
Restoration Council of Shan State
(RCSS)/Shan State Army (SSA)
United Wa State Army/Party (UWSA/P)
Bilateral
ceasefire
agreement
(CFA)
Nationwide
Ceasefire
Coordination
Team (NCCT)
Signatory to
National Ceasefire
Agreement
(NCA)
Member
2012
Member
2015
Member
2012
2011
Member
Member
2015
2015
2012
Member
2015
2012
Member
Member
United
Nationalities
Federal Council
(UNFC)
200+
1500+
Member
600+
2015
Suspended
5000+
2015
Member
Suspended
800+
400+
2012
Member
Member
Member
Member
2012
Member
Resigned
Member
Resigned
Associated
Member
Member
Associated
Associated
Member
8000+
Member
Member
10-12000
Resigned
Resigned
Member
Member
Member
Member
3000
2000+
Member
Resigned
Member
Member
6000+
Member
Member
Member
Resigned
2015
2011
400
Member
2012
Associated
2011
Associated
2011
Current military
strength
(estimated
number
of troops)
200+
2012
2012
2013
Federal Political
Negotiation and
Consultative
Committee
(FPNCC)
Suspended
Member
Member
Member
Northern
Alliance
100
Member
Member
Member
Military
strength
Current alliances
4000+
<500
2015
8000+
Member
30000
Data source: Burma News International 2016, 2017a; Keenan 2014; Smith 1991
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Arakan Liberation Party (ALP)/
Arakan Liberation Army (ALA)
Chin National Front (CNF)
Democratic Karen Benevolent
Army (DKBA)
Karen National Union (KNU)/
Karen National Liberation
Army (KNLA)
Karenni National Progressive Party
(KNPP)/Karenni Army (KA)
Karen National Union (KNU)
Participation in current ceasefires
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
(CPB), and was severely weakened after its
collapse (Keenan 2014). Some cadres joined
the drugs-related Mong Tai Army (MTA) and
formed the new Shan State Army–South when
the MTA was disbanded. The Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) was established as its
political wing in 2000. The RCSS/SSA signed a
ceasefire agreement in 2011, but has remained
militarily strong and has clashed sporadically
with the military and other EAOs (especially the
TNLA and the UWSA).
The Shan State Progress Party/Shan State ArmyNorth (SSPP/SSA). The SSPP was formed as the
political wing of the original SSA. After the collapse of the SSA, the SSPP negotiated a ceasefire
in 1989 and again in 2011. It has, however, come
under attack from the army since 2011. This has
brought the SSPP/SSA closer to the UWSA and
the FPNCC.
Myanmar National Democracy Alliance
(MNDAA) is a Kokang Chinese group founded
in 1989, by former CPB commanders (Hu &
Konrad 2017; Keenan 2014). It was the first
EAO to sign a ceasefire agreement (in 1989),
which enabled it to engage in the opium trade,
and thereafter a broader range of businesses. It
was attacked by the army in 2009 after refusing
to become a BGF. The MNDAA was a member
of the UNFC, but has resigned and is now part of
the Northern Alliance, with links to the UWSA.
The Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA)
originated from the Palaung State Liberation
Front (PSLF), which signed a ceasefire in 1991
and disarmed in 2005. The TNLA operates in
northern Shan State. It is a non-ceasefire group
that resigned from the UNFC in 2017 after joining the Northern Alliance.
The United Wa State Army (UWSA), the military wing of the United Wa State Party (UWSP),
is the largest EAO in terms of troops (Ferguson
2010; Keenan 2014). It was formed after the collapse of the CPB and has had a ceasefire since
1989. In return, the UWSA received territorial
and economic autonomy, and is de facto ruling
‘Wa State’ (Wa Self-Administered Division). The
UWSA has built up major businesses, based on
narcotics and the investment of profits in other
ventures (hotels, gambling, banking etc.). The
UWSA/P has close links to China, and has been
accused of channelling support to the Northern
Alliance. It is, together with KIO/KIA, a leading
member of the new Federal Political Negotiation
and Consultative Committee (FPNCC).
The National Democratic Alliance Army–Eastern Shan State (NDAA-ESS), also known as the
Mongla Army, originated from the CPB; it signed
a ceasefire agreement in 1989 and again in 2011
(Keenan 2014). Together with allies in Kokang
(MNDAA) and Wa (UWSA), it refused to become
a BGF in 2009. The army attacked the MNDAA
in 2010; it also put pressure on the NDAA and
the USWA, but did not attack these two.
The Pa-O National Liberation Organization
(PNLO), the main EAO among the Pa-O ethnic
group, administers the Pa-O Self-Administered
Zone in southern Shan State (Yue 2016). It signed
a ceasefire agreement in 2012 and the NCA in
2015, followed by suspension from the UNFC.
Kayah (Karenni) State: The most important
EAO is the Karenni National Progress Party
(KNPP) and its political wing (Karenni Army,
KA) (Keenan 2014). The KNPP is an old EAO
that has experienced various splits. Splinter
groups have been transformed into militias or
BGFs. The KNPP signed a (failed) ceasefire in
1995 and a new one in 2012. It refused to sign
the NCA in 2015, as did other UNFC members.
Kayin (Karen) State: Karen National Union
(KNU) is the major EAO in Kayin State (Keenan
2014). Founded in 1949, the KNU engaged in
warfare from the beginning. It was a key member
of the UNFC until 2015, when it was suspended
after signing the NCA. The KNU has controlled
large territories and run a de facto one-party state.
However, it has been weakened through breakups, especially due to Buddhist discontent with
the Christian leadership (Jolliffe 2016; South
2008). This produced the Democratic Karen
Benevolent Army (DKBA), which was used by the
army to fight the KNU (South 2010). For financing, the KNU and its splinter groups rely on black
market trade and other economic activities on
26
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
the Thai border. After the signing of bilateral and
national ceasefire agreements, this economic basis
has been expanded to include development partnerships with the government of Myanmar. The
issue of engagement with the government created
deep divisions within the KNU, leading both to
the formation of a KNU/KNLA Peace Council
(KPC) in 2007 and to a divide within the KNU
leadership. The KNU signed a bilateral ceasefire
agreement in 2012 and the NCA in 2015, after
which it was suspended from the UNFC.
in the 1990s due to the army’s unwillingness to
discuss political issues (Keenan 2014). However,
the CNF signed a ceasefire in 2012 and the NCA
in 2015, after which it was suspended from the
UNFC.
Sagaing Region: The National Socialist Council
of Nagaland-Khaplang (NSCN-K) seeks a union
of the Naga populations in Myanmar and India.
It signed a ceasefire agreement in 2012.
Civil society organizations
Civil society organizations (CSOs) have a long
history in Myanmar, starting from pre-colonial
village-level religious associations involved in
social activities and mutual self-help (Hlaing
2007; Kramer 2010). There is also a strong legacy
of CSOs providing public services in the context of limited state presence and capacity, particularly in areas with weak central government
control and armed conflict. Moreover, since the
late colonial period, there has been a vibrant
tradition of collective movement politics, as
illustrated by waves of student mobilization for
independence, democratization, human rights,
education and welfare.
Civil society in Myanmar has long had a
complex and contentious relationship with the
state. The period of military rule was characterized by state suppression of oppositional political
movements, but also saw the emergence of government-organized non-governmental organizations (GONGOs) (Burma Center Netherlands
& Transnational Institute 1999; Hlaing 2007).
During the BSSP period, such organizations
were created to give the military rule a mass
base, exert political control over specific groups
– farmers, workers, youth and monks – and to
prepare for civilian takeover (Charney 2009).
Movements that existed outside these structures
were generally banned or placed under strict
government control. Similar mass organizations
were also organized by the SPDC regime, under
the umbrella of the Union Solidarity and Development Association (USDA). Most of these
organizations have been converted to or replaced
by professional NGOs in recent years.
Mon State: The primary actor is the New Mon
State Party (NMSP), founded in 1958. Mon State
experienced an increase in army activities in the
1990 related to the construction of the railway
link and gas pipelines. In 1995, the NMSP agreed
to a ceasefire, and gained control over large areas
where it has engaged in economic activities (logging, fishing, transportation, mining and trade),
while maintaining a reputation as being democratic and politically adept (Keenan 2014). There
has been continued friction between the NMSP
and the army. The NMSP signed a new ceasefire
agreement in 2012, but not the NCA, and has
remained within the UNFC.
Rakhine (Arakan) State: The Arakan Liberation
Party (ALP), formed in 1968, soon faced suppression by the army (Keenan 2014). The armed
wing, the Arakan Liberation Army (ALA) has
operated as a small mobile force in the Arakan
and Chin Hills, and also has some troops with
the KNU/KNLA on the Thai border. The ALP
signed a ceasefire in 2012 and the NCA in 2015.
It has remained sceptical about the government’s
willingness to address core ALP concerns regarding Arakan identity politics and revenue sharing
from offshore oil and gas extraction.
The reform period has also seen the emergence
of new Rohingya organizations in Arakan, notably the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA).
Chin State: The Chin National Front (CNF) and
its armed wing, Chin National Army (CNA) was
founded in 1988 as a continuation of earlier Chin
mobilization. The CNF rejected ceasefire offers
27
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
There has been noteworthy growth in the
number of CSOs, especially after the 2008
Cyclone Nargis and the expansion of political
space since 2011. Service delivery organizations have proliferated due to the deteriorating
socioeconomic conditions and the lack of basic
state services. Cyclone Nargis was followed by
large-scale mobilization of humanitarian assistance, which then served as the basis for further
growth in the number and reach of service-delivery CSOs. There has also been a general professionalization of civil society, with urban NGOs
with salaried staff and international funding
becoming the most visible and recognized type
of CSOs in Myanmar. While these were better
resourced, many also faced more restrictions
from the demands attached to donor funding.
Some of these also served as coordinators within
various sectors. Prominent examples of such
networks include the Land Core Group (LCG),
Land in our Hands (LIOH), the Local Resource
Center (LRC), the Myanmar Alliance for Transparency and Accountability (MATA), the Gender
Equality Network (GEN), the Women’s League
of Burma (WLB) and the Myanmar Legal Aid
Network (MLAW).
The reform period has seen a clear NGO-ization of civil society, concerning both organizational professionalization and weakened,
top–down relations to local communities. An
important contributing factor has been the
increased presence of INGOs in Myanmar.
In the 1990s and early 2000s, many Western
INGOs advocated sanctions against the military rulers, and focused on assisting humanitarian and advocacy organizations in the Burmese
diaspora, especially in Thailand (Burma Center
Netherlands & Transnational Institute 1999).
Other INGOs emphasized the humanitarian
costs of denying aid and sought less confrontational strategies for engagement inside Myanmar. However, political reforms in Myanmar and
changing policies among Western aid donors
have led INGOs to adapt their strategies: today
they work mainly inside Myanmar and prioritize the delivery of developmental services rather
than political advocacy. The influx of INGOs
looking for local partners has furthered the
growth and professionalization of local NGOs,
but has also brought new challenges as regards
staffing, absorptive capacity and programming
priorities. In particular, it has challenged ethnic
CSOs that continue to work among displaced
ethnic groups in Thailand, where the INGOs’
strategy shift has been experienced as pressure
to return to war-affected areas in order to gain
access to livelihood support.
The reform period has also expanded the space
for political advocacy (Wells & Aung 2014). This
change is reflected in increased numbers and
activities of politically oriented CSOs (Lidauer
2012; Maber 2016). These typically look for
engagement with the state and government at
the local level, where they work with and seek
to influence township, village tract, and ward
officials. USDP government initiatives to create
township committees created a formal framework
for such interactions, but actual implementation
has been limited, and with less participation of
civil society than envisaged.
National advocacy NGOs seek to influence
sector policy-making at the union level. In
some cases at the state/region and union levels,
the government has invited inputs from civil
society into policy-making processes – as with
collaboration in public education in Mon State
and the drafting of the Union Association Registration Law in 2014 (Jolliffe & Mears 2016).
The drafting of the National Land Use Policy
is another example of a policymaking process
with consultations with CSOs (Oberndorf et al.
2017). However, these instances have been few
and far between: in general, CSO competence on
specific sectors and issues (like natural resource
governance, health and education, labour and
land rights, peace building and human rights)
remains underutilized in public policy-making.
This also holds true for the current government,
and many CSOs have been disappointed by
the NLD’s tendency to treat them with suspicion and neglect. These constraints on available
political spaces, combined with the fragmented
character of civil society, make it necessary – but
challenging – to build broad alliances of commu-
28
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Figure 9. Types and functions of civil society organizations
as well as local wildlife (Mongabay 2016; Karen
News 2017).
Thus we see that Myanmar today has a multi-layered civil society with many different types of
CSOs, engaged in a range of roles (mutual self-help,
humanitarian relief, public service delivery and
political advocacy), and with complex relations
among the various CSOs and between CSOs and
the state (schematically represented in Figure 9).
Further engagement with and through civil society will require close attention to this complexity,
in order to reach the goals set regarding service
delivery or political advocacy and transformation.
nity-based movements and political parties with
access to key policy arenas.
In ethnic minority areas, many local CBOs/
NGOs have links to the various ethnic armed
organizations (EAOs). As EAOs have attempted
to consolidate their territorial control and meet
the needs of their ethnic communities, they have
been involved in a range of governance functions
(Lall & South 2013), sometimes placing EAOs
and CSOs in close contact and collaboration
with each other. The signing of ceasefire agreements in the 1990s and 2010s further allowed
CSOs to grow and become key providers of social
and health services. Examples include the Metta
Development Foundation, which has informal
relations with the Kachin Independence Organization. There are also various ethnic environmental organizations, including those that formed
the Burma Environmental Working Group
and Burma Rivers’ Watch, increasingly active
in issues of resource extraction in ceasefire areas
(Kissinger 2017). Here they experience potential
tensions but also possibilities for collaboration
with EAOs, as the latter have focused increasingly on the sharing of revenues from resource
extraction. A prominent example is the collaboration between Karen communities, CSOs
and the Karen National Union in creating an
indigenous-managed reserve, Salween Peace Park,
aimed at preserving the Karen cultural heritage
Religious actors
Myanmar is a multi-confessional society, but
the vast majority of the population is Buddhist:
according to the 2014 census, 87.9% of the population is Buddhist, 6.2% Christian and 4.3%
Muslim (Figure 10). Christians, mainly Baptists
and Roman Catholics, have a strong presence in
Chin (85%), Kayah (46%) and Kachin (34%),
and to lesser extent in Shan and Kayin States. The
Muslim share of the population is high in Rakhine (35%, if the non-enumerated population in
the census is assumed to be Rohingya Muslims).
There are also sizeable Muslim communities in
Yangon and Mandalay (Ministry of Planning and
Finance 2016). The 2008 Constitution includes
provisions for religious freedom (section 34), but
29
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Data source: Ministry of Planning and Finance 2016
Figure 10. Population by religion, 2014*
* The population figure for Rakhine State includes 1 090 000 persons who were not enumerated in the 2014 census. These have been
added as Muslims under the assumption that most of them are likely to be Rohingya.
also ‘recognizes the special position of Buddhism
as the faith professed by the great majority of the
citizens of the Union’ (section 361).
Religious institutions have a long history of
providing important services in society, especially
education, health services and welfare support,
including humanitarian assistance to displaced
persons (Gravers & Ditlevsen 2014). In addition, religious actors and ideas are influential in
politics (Crouch 2016; Walton 2017), as shown
by the political activism found within sections
of the Buddhist Sangha (community of monks),
but also the political role of Baptist and Catholic
organizations in Kachin, Kayah and Chin communities, including support for socio-political
awareness and CSO formation. Although it is
widely held that Buddhist monks should refrain
from political engagement and the Constitution explicitly states that ‘the abuse of religion
for political purposes is forbidden’ (section 364),
there are strong and complex links between Buddhism and politics in Myanmar.
More generally, Buddhism has a Janus-faced
political role in Myanmar, as it has been used to
promote and legitimize democracy but has also
posed challenges for democratization (Gravers
2014; Walton 2015). Throughout its history in
Burma/Myanmar, Buddhism has had close ties
to the rulers, with monks serving as advisors and
mediating links to the people. In return, Buddhism has been promoted and protected, as
demonstrated by the U Nu government in the
1950s (Charney 2009). More recently, Buddhist
ideas and the teachings of the Buddha have been
used both to advocate democratic reforms and
as justifications for nationalist identity politics
targeting Muslims. As Matthew Walton observes,
‘Burmese Buddhists have developed a wide range
of interpretation of the repertoire of “raw materials” that Buddhism provides’ (Walton 2015: 116).
The use of Buddhism in struggles for democracy is illustrated by Aung San Suu Kyi’s writings and by Buddhist monks who argue that
the emphasis on personal freedom and political
morality in Buddhism make it compatible with
and relevant to democracy (Kyi 1995; McCarthy 2007). Liberation from political oppression and liberation of one’s own mind are seen
as interrelated struggles for freedom. This line
of reasoning has been important for grounding
struggles for political freedom in the religious
identity of the majority population in Myanmar.
30
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Buddhist monks have been at the forefront of
prodemocracy movements, especially the 8888
Uprising and the Saffron Revolution (Gravers
2012; Rogers 2008). However, this grounding
of democracy in the religious worldview of the
majority also gives rise to concerns that the political system may privilege Buddhists while alienating non-Buddhists from participation in society
and the polity.
The strong links between Buddhism and
national identity have been the basis for the
re-emergence of Buddhist nationalism, based
on the core argument of the importance of protecting both the state and the religion (Gravers
2015). While the focus on freedom has provided
an ideational common ground between pro-democrats and Buddhist monks, this emphasis on
defending the state and Buddhism has become
a point of convergence between the military and
the Sangha.
The rise of Buddhist nationalism is seen most
clearly in the ‘969 movement’ for protection of
Buddhist interests and values and its successor,
the Organization for the Protection of Race,
Religion and Belief (Ma Ba Tha), led by Ashin
Wirathu (Wade 2017). Ma Ba Tha has sought
political and legal ways of promoting Buddhism
and institutionalizing anti-Muslim policies. The
foremost example is the organization’s influence
on law-making under the USDP government (R.
Lee 2016). In 2013, the Ministry of Religious
Affairs drafted four controversial laws designed
to regulate religious conversion and interfaith
marriage, and enforce monogamy and population-control measures (Frydenlund 2017).
The period since 2011 has also seen a wave of
anti-Muslim rhetoric and violence, especially
in northern Rakhine state but also in towns
across the country (Crouch 2016; McCarthy &
Menager 2017).
These opposing links between religion and
politics highlight how the political use of Buddhism is situational and strategic. Buddhist
doctrine provides resources that can be used
by different actors for different purposes in a
changing political field. Buddhist identity has
strong mobilizing capacity, not least in a period
marked by major political, economic and social
changes. Moreover, Buddhist organizations provide a social infrastructure for mobilization and
leadership. Thus, Buddhism in Myanmar should
be seen not as a fixed feature of politics, but as a
rich source of ideational frames and mobilization
structures that can be used by diverse political
actors and agendas.
External actors
Political and economic development in Myanmar
is heavily influenced by external actors, where
ASEAN, Australia, China, the EU, India, Japan,
Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam, Thailand and the USA are especially important. The
recent democratic and economic opening cannot
be explained solely with reference to domestic
actors and dynamics, but requires attention to the
interplay between domestic dynamics and external forces. For example, it has been argued that
the democratic opening has been largely driven
by the military rulers’ interest and opportunities
for changing Myanmar’s relations with Western
states (primarily the USA) and thereby their
leverage vis-à-vis China. This strategy has been
made possible by the Westerns actors’ own interests in finding alternatives to ineffective sanctions
and in responding to the challenge of China’s
growing economic and military influence. This
strategy is also in line with how the military has
earlier sought to balance the influence of India
and China (Haacke 2006; Lintner 2014).
The past decade has seen some important
changes in Myanmar’s international relations.
Western actors moved from economic and political sanctions in the 1990s and early 2000s, to
pragmatic diplomatic and economic engagement
during the USDP government period. This pragmatic engagement granted a degree of legitimacy
to the military/USDP government’s security and
stability-centred approach to political reforms. It
also altered, to some extent, the balance of power
between China and USA, and gave the government of Myanmar increased leverage vis-à-vis
China. But this should not be taken to mean that
core Chinese interests were threatened to such an
extent that a destabilizing intervention became
31
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
an option. On the contrary, China seems to have
had a primary interest in ensuring political stability and predictability in Myanmar. After the
2015 election there have been indications that
China may be gaining influence again, not least
through a more active role in regulating armed
conflicts and peace negotiations in northern
Myanmar. This contrasts with the USDP government period, when the question of peace
in Myanmar was internationalized primarily
through European aid-funded peacebuilding.
contentious because of the social and environmental impacts or the lack of conflict sensitivity.
The best-known project is the Myitsone Dam in
Kachin State, which was suspended in 2011 by
President Thein Sein in an act of public defiance
to China. Large dams and other investments, like
infrastructure projects (highways, railways and
ports) within China’s Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI), have strengthened Myanmar’s economic
links and dependence on China (Cook 2012).
On the other hand, rich natural resources, geostrategic location and improved relations with
Western states have given Myanmar new leverage
in regard to China.
While this close economic cooperation has
had a stabilizing effect on Myanmar–China
relations, the military has deep-seated concerns
about over-reliance on China and the danger of
military intervention (Zin 2010). The desire to
balance Chinese influence has been an important driver for the Tatmadaw’s normalization
of relations with the West. China has pursued
its own economic and geopolitical interests in
Myanmar (Renwick 2014), but it should also be
recognized that Beijing is more interested in promoting stability than division and destabilization
in Myanmar (Steinberg & Fan 2012). This can
be seen in China’s growing interest and engagement in the current peace process, where China
seems to be both pressuring and facilitating the
northern ethnic armed organizations to engage
in the 21st Century Panglong Conference. This
is also the likely driver for China’s adoption of
public relations strategies, the language of corporate social responsibility, and engagement
with a greater range of stakeholders. That being
said, however, Chinese local authorities in the
regions bordering Myanmar often have their own
interests and pursue an agenda different from the
one promoted by Beijing. This complicates the
analysis of bilateral relations and has also led to
widely differing perceptions of China among
Myanmar’s population.
China has been the most influential external actor
in Myanmar since independence. Formal diplomatic relations between the two countries are
based on principles of non-aggression and peaceful co-existence that have been in place since the
1950s (Li & Zheng 2009; Zin 2010). Within this
overall framework, relations have been complex
and changing, at times with contentious interactions (Steinberg & Fan 2012). During the Ne
Win period, tensions arose concerning China’s
support for the CPB and Myanmar’s expulsion
of Chinese residents in 1967. China–Myanmar
relations improved again during the 1980s, when
China opened and reformed its economy, and cut
its support to the CPB.
In 1988, the two countries signed a trade
agreement that opened up for cross-border trade
and gave China greater access to markets and
resources in Myanmar. China also became the
main supplier for the military build-up under
the SLORC/SPDC. After the 8888 Uprising, in
the context of Western sanctions, Chinese economic engagement in Myanmar (trade, investments, development assistance and technical
cooperation) grew rapidly (Renwick 2014). As
China experienced rapid industrialization and
economic growth, Myanmar became a source of
electric energy and a supply route for oil and
gas through pipelines from the Rakhine coast
to Yunnan in China (Liu, Yamaguchi, & Yoshikawa 2017; Su 2016). Several new hydroelectric power schemes intended in part to supply
China have been planned on Myanmar’s main
rivers (Haacke 2006; Kraas, Spohner, & Myint
2017). Some of these projects are politically
India is also a major actor in the region, with
a long, multifaceted and changing history of
engagement with Myanmar. India’s foreign pol-
32
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
icy towards Myanmar has generally been marked
both by concerns about democratization in
Myanmar and by geostrategic interests centred on
the Indian Ocean. India has provided active support for the pro-democracy forces that emerged
in 1988, while also developing ties to the military
rulers. The period since 1988 has seen a shifting
balance between these primary interests, from the
primacy of pro-democracy support to growing
economic and diplomatic engagement with the
SLORC/SPDC (Egreteau 2011).
This shift from idealism to realism has been
driven by a complex set of concerns. On the one
hand, India is concerned about China’s growing
influence in South and Southeast Asia (Chenyang 2010; Egreteau & Jagan 2013). It also has
security concerns related to potential spill-over
effects from Buddhist nationalism in Myanmar
and cross-border Naga mobilization in Sagaing
Region and northeast India. On the other hand,
India also has economic interests in Myanmar,
including in oil and gas exploration. The lifting
of Western sanctions and the economic opening
in Myanmar has created a space for commercial engagement (Gottschlich 2015). India and
Myanmar have now agreed to strengthen their
relations in both trade and security, but poor
infrastructure development poses a challenge
for the goal of making Myanmar a connector
between India and Southeast Asia. India’s ‘Look
East’ foreign policy aims to address this challenge and may further the integration of India
and Myanmar (Egreteau 2010). However, as yet
the scope of India’s engagement with Myanmar is
far from comparable with China’s political power
and economic influence in the country.
gon. However, this was criticized in Japan and
abroad, and the USA put pressure on Japan to
withhold aid. Japan, in turn, claimed to be using
soft diplomacy to push for a democratic transition and human rights. In the post-2011 period,
the Japanese government and commercial companies have been able to expand investments as
well as aid, including debt cancellation (Peng Er
2016; Reilly 2013; Seekins 2015). This has been
motivated by both the desire to secure new markets for Japanese companies and by geopolitical
concerns about growing Chinese influence in
Myanmar and Asia in general.
Thailand, too, has a complex and changing relationship with Myanmar. Thailand has received
large refugee influxes, especially from the Karen
and Shan ethnic minorities, and many are still
living in refugee camps along the border. Ethno-linguistically, the Shan are closely related
to the Thai, which deepens their linkages to
Thailand. Myanmar and Thailand have a strong
tradition of cross-border trade, and Thai governments and businesses have long been financially
involved in Myanmar. Thailand relies on Myanmar as a major supplier of energy (natural gas and
electricity) and labour power, while Myanmar
receives remittances, investments, loans and aid
in return. Several infrastructure projects serve to
integrate Myanmar and Thailand economically,
strengthening it as a central region within Southeast Asia. Thailand’s primary interests in Myanmar revolve around these economic dynamics,
but security and regulation of the drug trade are
also important.
ASEAN granted Myanmar observer status in
1995 and full membership in 1997, after decades of isolation. This has meant an active role
for ASEAN in influencing reforms in Myanmar,
in contrast to the previous non-intervention
approach (Chalermpalanupap 2010). ASEAN
has incrementally developed a policy of constructive engagement, entailing a pragmatic combination of economic collaboration and demands
for political reforms (McCarthy 2010). ASEAN
has thereby become a frontrunner in develop-
Japan’s relations with Myanmar have been primarily economic. While showing sympathy for
the 1988 pro-democracy movement, Japan recognized the SLORC and normalized relations with
Myanmar soon after the 8888 uprising (Nemoto
2007). Thereafter, Japan engaged in Myanmar
through investments, trade and development aid
(primarily through Japan International Cooperation Agency – JICA) during the SLORC/SPDC
period, most notably the Thilawa SEZ in Yan-
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2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
ing a more accommodating approach, which
can explain why ASEAN was able to lead the
humanitarian response to Cyclone Nargis when
the international community was initially not
permitted to enter. At the time, this approach
was highly contentious, but gained broad international acceptance after the shift to a nominally
civilian government in 2011 (Renshaw 2013).
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2011 and
President Barack Obama in 2012 (Clymer 2015).
Sanctions were eased in 2012, but companies still
had to postpone investments until the sanctions
were formally suspended. This was hampered
by the BFDA requirement that termination of
sanctions could be decided only by the President
upon an expressed wish from a democratically
elected government in Myanmar. That happened
in 2016, when President Obama lifted sanctions
after consultations with State Counsellor Aung
San Suu Kyi. Thus we see that the USA has
been at the forefront of redefining the relationship between Myanmar and Western states, but
has also adopted a more political approach to
democracy promotion than the developmental
approach favoured by European and Asian actors.
The USA has been the main actor behind the
sanctions policies of Western actors in the 1990s
and early 2000s, but also in the relaxation of relations before and after the change of government
in 2011 (Clymer 2015). Following the pro-democracy uprising in 1988 and the subsequent
military suppression, the USA reduced its diplomatic and military relations and gradually escalated sanctions on Myanmar (Kipgen 2013). In
2003, the Burma Freedom and Democracy Act
(BFDA) imposed strict trade sanctions, banned
all support to the military and froze assets in the
USA belonging to the junta. The intention was
‘To sanction the ruling Burmese military junta,
to strengthen Burma’s democratic forces and
support and recognize the National League of
Democracy as the legitimate representative of the
Burmese people’ (U.S. Congress 2003).
Gradually it was realized that the sanctions,
although strict and comprehensive, were an ineffective means for reaching these goals. At the
same time, China and Asia’s rising importance in
the global economy made it increasingly important for the US to engage actively in the region
(Haacke 2015). This was reflected in President
Obama’s 2008 ‘Pivot to Asia’ policy, where rapprochement with Myanmar was a key diplomatic
initiative. However, the ‘Pivot to Asia’ primarily meant reassigning military resources, which
China perceived as a containment strategy. This
fuelled tensions in the Asia-Pacific region, even
as there was simultaneous policy convergence
between the Myanmar government, China, and
the USA/EU on the importance of stability and
security in Myanmar.
After the election of the USDP government,
the USA gradually normalized diplomatic relations with Myanmar, including official visits by
The EU and other European actors (including
Norway) followed the USA in emplacing heavy
restrictions on Myanmar’s military regime and
the businesses supporting it, while also providing recognition and support for the pro-democracy movement, the NLD and Aung San Suu
Kyi (Camroux & Egreteau 2010; Thaung Tun
2012). The EU adopted a Common Position
on Burma/Myanmar in 1996, confirming and
expanding previous sanctions (arms embargo,
suspension of defence co-operation, suspension
of non-humanitarian aid, etc.). Thereafter the
Common Policy was renewed and strengthened
repeatedly. Following the change of government
in Myanmar in 2011, the EU passed several resolutions that gradually suspended sanctions. All
sanctions except the arms embargo were lifted
in 2013. Following the anti-Rohingya violence
in 2017, Western states and INGOs have voiced
strong criticism of the NLD government, and
there have been calls for renewed sanctions.
After the 2015 elections, the EU agreed on
ambitious engagement with Myanmar in 1)
democracy, rule of law and good governance; 2)
the peace process; 3) human rights; 4) poverty
reduction and sustainable development; 5) economic engagement; and 6) regional partnership
with ASEAN. Within this comprehensive list of
sectors, the EU is particularly involved in help-
34
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
ing the civilian government to promote social
and economic development (EU External Action
2017). The EU has thus become a key actor, with
a developmental engagement with Myanmar that
also aims at building democracy, peace, human
rights and good governance through inclusive
social and economic development.
ters of democratic politics. The core structure of
military state power is institutionalized through
the 2008 Constitution, making constitutional
change a primary concern for substantive democratization. Today the challenge in Myanmar is
not state building, but building democratic politics that can substantially transform civil–military relations, central–local (majority–minority)
relations, and state–society relations (Blaževič
2016; Zin 2016).
Against the background of a military-led transition to semi-authoritarian rule, the electoral
victory of the NLD in 2015 and the peaceful
transfer of power to the NLD were important
turning points. The new government was given
a strong mandate for ‘change’: to replace the military’s agenda for ‘disciplined democracy’ with
a new agenda for a genuinely democratic and
peaceful Myanmar. However, this will require
participation from a broad range of stakeholders.
The government must secure support or acquiescence from the military, as well as support from
ethnic minorities and popular forces throughout
the country. To succeed, the NLD will need to
create and uphold an inclusive and competent
government, and deliver trust-building changes
in the field of security, peace and development,
as a basis for subsequent constitutional change
towards federal democracy.
The NLD’s governmental power and mandate
are based on a broad ‘people power’ movement.
Given the semi-authoritarian character of the
state and the limitations of formal democracy,
further progress towards substantive democracy
and peace will also depend on popular transformative politics (Stokke & Törnquist 2013). There
are, however, serious concerns about the NLD
government’s interest and capacity as regards
building and sustaining broad popular alliances,
not least its deep scepticism towards CSOs.
While there is now more democratic influence
on policy-making than in the past, most policy
processes have remained centralized, top–down
and non-inclusive. Civil society organizations
with substantive expertise and community support find that they have few entry points into
policy processes. Ethnic organizations likewise
The UN has subjected Myanmar to critical
scrutiny over several decades, especially after
the 8888 Uprising. The UN General Assembly
has passed several resolutions against the military rulers, although attempts at introducing
tougher measures through the Security Council
have normally been vetoed by China or Russia.
Myanmar has also been regularly criticized by
the UNHCR and the ILO (Haacke 2006). There
have been UN Special Rapporteurs on the situation of human rights in Myanmar since 1992,
but their impact on the military rulers was mixed
at best. Most UN special envoys to Myanmar
ended their missions in failure and were later
denied visas to the country. In 2017, according
to UN internal documents prepared for the UN
Secretary-General, the UN’s Myanmar office is
described as ‘glaringly dysfunctional’ (Irrawaddy
2017). We must conclude that the UN has a relatively limited and uneven presence in Myanmar
today. Additionally, there is uncertainty about
the NDL government’s position towards the
UN. Morten Pedersen (2014) notes that the
best results have been achieved by UNICEF and
the WHO in the health sector, where they have
worked together with government organizations
and NGOs. Recently, however, the UN Secretary-General has become more politically visible,
and has voiced concerns about ethnic cleansing
of the Rohingya in Rakhine State.
Challenges for transformative
democratic politics
Any political analysis of Myanmar politics must
begin by acknowledging the strong military
influence on the state and in society. The continued power of the military has a decisive influence on the autonomy, authority, capacity and
legitimacy of the state, and defines the parame-
35
2. Politics | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
experience that substantive inclusion in democratic politics and peace negotiations remains
a major challenge. While there are converging
interests and opportunities for collaboration
among democratic parties, CSOs and ethnic
minorities, there is a general lack of functional
links between these actors and the NLD government. These concerns about the NLD’s weak
links to civil society and weak performance in
government give rise to questions about how to
ensure substantive popular representation and
transformative democratic politics. There is an
initiative underway to form a new political party
by some 88 Generation leaders, and some ethnic political parties are also discussing how to
develop effective parties. Both sets of actors are
preparing for a situation where the NLD might
lose its electoral base in 2020, because Aung San
Suu Kyi is unlikely to contest the elections and
the NLD government is unlikely to meet the
public’s high expectations for change, and also
because the military is seen as undermining the
capacity and legitimacy of the NLD government.
Historical and contemporary examples of successful transformations demonstrate the importance of broad-based political forces. It is through
continuous transformative politics – where
pro-democracy parties, popular mass movements,
interest organizations, and local issue-mobilizations use and transform political spaces – that
minimalist democratic institutions are gradually
moulded into substantive democracy (Carothers
2007; Stokke & Törnquist 2013). This makes
it crucial for democracy promoters to develop
strategies for political democracy assistance, in
addition to more conventional developmental
assistance, to further transformative political
forces and alliances for substantive peace and
democracy.
On the input side, political democracy assistance may be deployed to 1) strengthen popular
political capacity, to empower citizens to engage
politically and exert influence on policy-making
processes beyond formal elections; 2) strengthen
popular political organizations as mediating links
for participation and representation, by building
the capacity of politically oriented CSOs, political parties and broad alliances; and 3) promote
governance committed to popular participation
and representation by strengthening institutional
spaces and policy processes as nodes for political
inclusion (Webster, Stokke & Törnquist 2009).
Developmental democracy assistance may be
used in combination with political assistance, to
strengthen the output side of democracy – for
example, through capacity building in public
administration in support of democratic and
legitimate governance. In the case of Myanmar,
where the authority of the state is contested, it is
especially important to ensure that both political
and developmental assistance is not limited to
the unitary state at the union level, but also serves
to support democratic politics and developmental outcomes at the sub-national levels.
36
3. Economics and social issues
Economic structure and growth
Since opening up in 2012, Myanmar has become
one of the fastest-growing economies in Southeast Asia, with an average economic growth of
7.5% during the period 2012–2016. This growth
trajectory is expected to continue for several
years (ADB 2017). Myanmar’s GDP is forecast
to grow by USD 200 billion by the year 2030,
quadrupling the present level (McKinsey 2013:
5). Myanmar will need to attract a total FDI of
USD 650 billion by 2030 to meet its growth in
demand: USD 170 billion to be attracted from
foreign investors and the remainder from domestic sources (McKinsey 2013: 9). Nearly half of
650 billion is required to cover infrastructure
development. The country will have considerable growth potential, if a suitable legal and
regulatory framework for the private sector can
be adopted and enforced (ADB 2017). One reason for the high level of economic growth is the
country’s young population, which will help to
ensure high growth in consumption and incomes
during the period 2015–2025. However, achieving sustained economic growth will require social
reforms, particularly in education.
Limited infrastructure remains a major hurdle
to economic growth (Verbiest and Naing 2017:
204). Only 37% of the population has access to
electricity; moreover, there are only 220 kilometres of road per 1000 square kilometres of
surface area. Myanmar is one of the most underdeveloped countries in Asia in terms of infrastructure (World Bank 2017a). It has also the greatest
power-sector investment needs of the countries of
Southeast Asia (Vakulchuk et al. 2017: 9).
Moreover, the massive role that military plays
in economic governance should be recognized
as an obstacle to further economic reform and
growth. Not only does the military have administrative control of the economy – but senior military officers also own shares in the most profitable
extractive businesses, and have formed two business conglomerations (still active): The Union of
Myanmar Economic Holdings Ltd (UMEHL) in
1990 and the Myanmar Economic Corporation
(MEC) in 1997.
The petroleum sector is likely to play a leading role by generating FDI, taxes and economic
growth. On the other hand, agriculture (crop
production, hunting, fishing, and forestry) is
the biggest single contributor to GDP (more
than 35% in 2014) and employs over 65% of
the population. Since 2011, the government has
accorded priority to the agricultural sector, along
with education and health. Although significant
in economic and employment terms, agriculture
is severely affected by the problems of resource
grabbing and lack of secure land rights. For the
next few decades at least, agriculture is set to
remain the main economic sector in terms of
employment and human livelihoods.
Regarding gender rights and women’s participation in the economy, the period 2006–2016
has seen some improvements in women’s social
and economic inclusion: the maternal mortality
rate has been reduced and literacy has improved,
as have labour participation rates. Moreover,
women are now increasingly employed in the
non-agriculture sectors (DFAT 2016: 5). However, many challenges remain, including the
30% wage disparity between men and women,
women’s low participation rate in national
industry working groups (trade, SME development, taxation, etc.) and female underrepresentation in company top management and
decision-making processes (ibid.).
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3. Economics and social issues | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Informal economy and corruption
Myanmar’s informal economy is one of the largest in the world, far exceeding the average for
other developing economies. The average share of
Myanmar’s informal economy between 1999 and
2006 was 50.7%, and Myanmar was ranked by
Schneider (2010: 20) as 82 out of 88 countries
in formalization of the economy. Amin (2016)
notes that the situation had not improved significantly by 2016 and is likely to continue in
the near future.
Even though Myanmar has gradually improved
its place in the Transparency International Corruption Perception Index, moving from 157th place
in 2013 to 136th out of 176 countries in 2016
(Transparency International 2017), corruption
remains widespread and pervasive. Informality is
generally linked to corruption, drug trafficking,
smuggling, illegal migration and cross-border
trade, so formalizing informal practices is viewed
as a necessary reform step for a developing economy. In the case of Myanmar, however, where
complex relations involving various stakeholders,
and the many conflict-prone areas and ongoing
ethnic tensions, attempts to formalize informal
practices may have detrimental effects and should
not always be seen as the best available solution
(see Case in Point, 1).
Most small and medium-sized enterprises
(SMEs) belong to the informal sector. This is a
natural consequence of the weak and inefficient
regulatory environment for SMEs. However, in
a World Bank enterprise study of the informal
sector, informal firms in Myanmar were found to
perform well in terms of labour productivity and
turnover compared to informal firms elsewhere
(Amin 2016). Formal-sector firms are more profitable, but, given the relatively high productivity and
profitability of informal firms in Myanmar, it will
be difficult to create incentives for them to shift to
the formal sector. In general, the lack of an efficient
regulatory system and effective laws explains why
the informal system has become so widespread.
Natural resource management
Hydropower
Myanmar is one of the most water-abundant
countries in Asia, the three major rivers being
the Irrawaddy, Salween and Sittoung. However,
due to weak resource management, there is no
Case in Point, 1
Cross-border trade is a main component of the
informal economy in Myanmar (Aung 2011). There are
15 border trade zones in Myanmar, connecting it with
Bangladesh, China, India and Thailand. The Myanmar–China border areas are home to various ethnic
minorities who engage in small-scale informal crossborder trade – a vital source of income for many local
communities. In 2014–2015, the central government
requested international donor organizations to provide assistance and formalize cross-border trade with
China and Thailand. This elicited negative reactions
from the local communities, as formalized trade would
benefit only big state-controlled firms and deprive
local traders of any opportunities to participate in
trade. This trade formalization process is also seen
as an instrument for the central government to gain
leverage over various ethnic groups by cutting their
sources of income. Thus, formalizing cross-border
trade in conflict zones where ethnic tensions remain
unresolved can be risky and premature, perhaps even
leading to conflict escalation.
On the other hand, ethnic armed groups in such
areas control the illegal trade in prohibited goods and
smuggling, and use the income to fuel their military
spending. For instance, this is the case in Myawaddy
(in Kayin State), the second-largest trading zone on
the Myanmar–Thailand border. Accord to the Myanmar
Times (2014), ‘continued conflict with ethnic groups in
the area has resulted in much of the cross-border commerce being done over 17 illegal border crossings along
the Moei River to Mae Sot, Thailand…Such activities are
being helped by some of the 33 ethnic armed groups
in the area, which include the Karen National Union
(KNU) and its armed wing, the Karen National Liberation
Army (KNLA).’ Thus, in order to deal with informality, the
government must first gain control over the territory,
and ethnic conflicts need to be resolved (see also subsection on state authority).
38
3. Economics and social issues | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Table 4. Electric power generation mix
(installed capacity, 2014)
Source
Total MW
Hydro
3005
Gas
1236
Coal
120
Oil
56
Minihydro and solar
Total capacity
On the other hand, one trend is clear – with a
new government in place in Myanmar, Chinese
companies are finding it difficult to disregard
civil society, and are increasingly attempting to
involve it in consultations, albeit with limited
success thus far (Kirchherr et al. 2017). Hydropower generation is likely to remain a major
source of domestic social and political tension.
It will also be an important factor shaping Myanmar–China relations in the next few years.
5
4422
Data source: Nam et al. 2015: 9, in: Vakulchuk et al. 2017
Petroleum sector
The country’s oilfields may have reserves on a
level with those of the British sector of the North
Sea (currently estimated at 50 billion barrels),
perhaps even greater (The Economist 2014; US
Department of Commerce 2016). The upstream
business is open to foreign investors, whereas
downstream is restricted (Vakulchuk et al. 2017).
Due to limited local processing capacity, Myanmar continues to import much of its petrol and
diesel, mainly from Singapore and Thailand
(UKTI 2015: 5).
Mainly because of the US-imposed sanctions,
only a few international oil firms were operating in Myanmar before 2012 (Vakulchuk et al.
2017: 11). After the sanctions were eased in 2012,
many European and Asian investors entered
the market. These companies include British
Gas, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, ENI, Oil India,
Ophir, PetroVietnam, Shell, Statoil, Total and
Woodside. Onshore petroleum companies are
active in almost every part of Myanmar, in Bago
and Magway in particular (NRGI 2016).
The structure of government bodies responsible for management of the petroleum sector is
similar to that in many other countries. Myanma
[sic] Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) is a state
monopoly in the petroleum management sector and has a distinct role that should be noted.
MOGE suffers from numerous weaknesses and
combines several conflicting roles: onshore operator, partner in offshore production-sharing contracts, regulator and human resource supplier;
this “excessive concentration and monopolization of functions in MOGE leads to conflicts of
interest and biased decision-making” (Vakulchuk
reliable supply of clean water in many parts of
the country (Kattelus et al. 2015: 45). There are
almost 200 dams, and most electricity is generated from hydropower (see Table 4). Myanmar’s
total installed power generation capacity of 4422
MW is lower compared to that of other ASEAN
member states: for instance, Thailand has 32,600
MW (Oxford Business Group 2015: 89).
Hydropower generation has been controversial in Myanmar, feeding ethnic tensions in various parts of the country. China has been a major
investor in dam construction, often causing
discontent among local populations due to lack
of feasibility/impact assessments, proper stakeholder consultation and coordination, which
often lead to displacement and environmental
degradation (Kirchherr et al. 2017; Kattelus et
al. 2015; Middleton 2008). Dam construction
has also fuelled activism: several activist groups
from civil society have been formed to oppose
the construction of dams by Chinese and other
foreign companies.
In 2013, China signed contracts with the previous political regime to build five mega-dams
in Shan and Karen states on terms unfavourable
to Myanmar, and has continued lobbying their
construction, causing further discontent among
various ethnic groups (Fawthrop 2017). Part of
the problem is that 90% of the electricity will
be channelled to China and Thailand. However,
given the overwhelming Chinese presence and
economic influence in Myanmar, Aung San Suu
Kyi and the Myanmar government have limited
options for renegotiating the terms with Beijing.
39
3. Economics and social issues | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
et al. 2017: 28). This in turn poses certain risks
and has negative implications for the industry as
well as for foreign investors.
Myanmar has vast potentials in natural gas.
Gas reserves include 283 billion cubic meters of
proven natural gas, similar to the gas reserves of
Thailand (Vakulchuk et al. 2017: 8). Currently,
more than 70% of its offshore gas is exported to
China and Thailand. If new gas reserves are discovered in Myanmar, there will be a significant market
for gas, not only in China and Thailand but also in
India; taken together these countries represent the
market of more than 550 million people (McKinsey 2013: vii; Vakulchuk et al. 2017: 23).
aquaculture management and lack of regulations
trigger overexploitation and illegal fishing in
Myanmar’s territorial waters. For instance, Thai
fishing vessels in Kawthaung waters are regularly
seized and arrested by the Myanmar authorities.
The fish sector remains underprioritized by the
government. The sector also suffers from limited
state capacity to govern it, as the government
deploys some of its best and skilled cadres to
more strategic sectors like energy, FDI and others.
The Department of Fisheries under the Ministry
of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development
of Myanmar is the major public decision-making body in the fisheries sector. Bissinger (2016:
7) notes that, in regions where fish production is
important, the Department of Fisheries plays a
visible township-level role: this holds true in the
Ayeyarwaddy Region, for instance; by contrast, in
Shan State, with insignificant fish production, the
Department of Fisheries plays a less important role.
Fisheries
Fish farming plays an important role in ensuring
food security, employment and SME growth in
Myanmar (Belton et al. 2015). Fisheries have
been the fourth largest contributor to GDP, and
the fourth largest source of foreign exchange
revenues between 2012 and 2016 (Open Development 2016). More than half of the population live close to the four main rivers and delta
regions, so fish products are their daily staple
as well as forming the basis of small-scale trade.
Myanmar’s fisheries are booming. Belton et al.
(2015: 4) found that fish production in the Delta
grew 250% between 2005 and 2015. Since 2012
fish production has expanded significantly year
by year, a trend expected to continue (Ministry
of Agriculture, Livestock and Irrigation 2017).
Aquaculture now accounts for 22% of annual
fish production (Open Development 2016). Many
European investors and fish producers are currently exploring the market in search of potential
investment projects.
However, the industry suffers from poor
management and lack of infrastructure, modern
technology and impact assessments (Thein 2015).
Moreover, production technologies and farmed
species have not been diversified, with indigenous carp species accounting for nearly 70% of
all fish produced (Belton et al. 2015: 4). Still,
Myanmar has considerable underutilized potential as a seafood exporter not only regionally but
also internationally (CBI 2014). Poor coastal
Forestry
The Greater Mekong Sub-region (Cambodia,
Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand and Southern China) has some of the world’s largest forests, and has become an international focal area
for environmental conservation (EIA 2015: 4).
However, the entire region is experiencing environmental crisis. Myanmar is no exception: it
suffers from large-scale deforestation that has
accelerated since the turn of the millennium
(Wang and Myint 2016). On 25 May 2017,
the Forest Department (FD) announced that,
whereas there were 39.2 million hectares of forests in 1990, that figure had dropped to 29 million hectares by 2015 (Eleven 2017). The forest
industry has been severely mismanaged (Khaine
et al. 2014); Myanmar’s annual deforestation rate
has been among the highest in the world, reaching 0.9% during the decade 2000–2010 (Kyaw
et al. 2014). According to Wang and Myint
(2016: 1), at the current rate, Myanmar’s forests
will disappear by 2035.
The two main drivers behind this deforestation are unsustainable logging and extensive
agricultural development. In addition, the lack
of sustainable energy sources means that most
40
3. Economics and social issues | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
households use firewood (69%) or charcoal
(12%) for cooking and lighting (Ministry of
Immigration and Population 2014). The illegal
timber trade has surged since 2014, affecting both
forestry and wildlife (EIA 2015). Many actors are
involved and benefit economically from illegal
logging activities. A major challenge is that illegal logging is classified as an environmental issue,
not as a criminal offence or organized crime: thus,
it is the Forestry Department (FD) that conducts
investigations instead of the criminal justice system (Mongabay 2017). The FD lacks capacity and
capability to formulate legal cases against illegal
traders. Although 99% of those apprehended for
illegal logging are nationals (UNODC 2015: 18),
these are mainly low-profile players (e.g. truck
drivers, loaders) among the local people: the foreign and local companies behind the illegal trade
often remain off the radar.
China is deeply involved in the informal
timber trade, which has been facilitated by the
political disorder in Kachin since 2011; Chinese
illegal workers cross Kachin state and ‘go so far as
to build their own roads to access valuable forests’
(TakePart 2015). In 2014, nearly 1 600 Chinese
workers entered Myanmar illegally in connection with the timber trade, causing a diplomatic
scandal between the two countries. Around 150
workers were arrested and sentenced to life in jail,
but were later released as part of a diplomatic
settlement between the two countries.
Land tenure rights and land disputes are serious problems that complicate agricultural and
forest management (Mark 2016; FAO 2015).
Various categories of land tenure rights are officially recognized by law, posing a challenge for
national- and district-level governance. Stephen
McCarthy (2016: 3) holds that, under the previous government, it was easy to reclassify land
as ‘fallow or waste land, to be appropriated and
redistributed, usually for the benefit of government-linked corporations and cronies’. Such
land reclassification has been used since the colonial period and still takes place today. Myanmar
will have to solve land-rights issues while dealing
with deforestation. The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA 2015) recommends that the
country reduce or ban its logging activities and
conduct a proper environmental impact assessment of its forests, as Malaysia did with its log
export ban.
The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation, which succeeded the
Ministry of Environmental Conservation and
Forestry in 2016, is the main regulatory and
decision-making body in forestry in Myanmar.
As with hydropower generation, community
activism has been widespread in forestry, and
civil society actors have been vocal in reacting
to deforestation.
Mining
Myanmar has vast geological resources, including copper, gold, jade, marble, nickel, tin, tungsten and zinc. Control over natural resources is
a major driver of conflict in ethnic areas, where
most of the country’s natural resources are concentrated (BEWG 2011). The NLD government
has shown a commitment to adopt international
standards in governing the mining sector. Myanmar joined the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) as a candidate country in
2014 (EITI 2014).7 However, it still has a long
way to go before real progress in governing the
mining sector is achieved. Moreover, the mining
industry causes enormous environmental damage that poses numerous long-term risks (Aung
2017; Aung et al. 2017; Mining 2016).
Mining is the third largest sector for FDI in
Myanmar, but access to jade and ruby mining
is permitted only for domestic investors. The
mining sector operates under a complex regulatory regime with three dominant entities: the
state-owned No. 1 Mining Enterprise, and the
military-affiliated quasi-state-owned companies MEC and UMEHL. In addition, there are
many others still in the hands of military cronies
(NRGI 2016). Since 2016, the sector has been
governed by the Ministry of Natural Resources
and Environmental Conservation.
7
41
The government collected USD 460 million in mineral revenues in 2013–2014; gemstones and jade accounted for nearly
88% of this (EITI 2015).
3. Economics and social issues | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Mining-sector governance is further complicated by the fact that the Myanmar government is not the only tax collector in the country:
several ethnic armed groups collect taxes from
mining firms in areas not under full government
control. For example, the Kachin Independence
Army (KIA) has established a formalized tax-collection system in the Hpakant jade mines (NRGI
2016: 19). According to Major Teng Seng of
the KIA, ‘There are about 40 to 50 joint venture companies from China and Myanmar. We
regularly take tax from them. We have a good
relationship.’ (BEWG 2011)
During the sanctions period, China was the
main source of FDI for the Myanmar mining
sector (Tang-Lee 2016). Such dependence on
one investor limits the government’s ability to
promote its own terms and interests, so the government is currently courting other international
investors to invest in various mining sub-sectors.
Inclusion List, meaning that the tariff range for
these products is not to exceed 0–5% in trade
between ASEAN members. In 2016, the Ministry of Commerce of Myanmar also proceeded
with the adoption of ASEAN standards when it
comes to installing trade facilities on the borders
(Mizzima 2016a).
In 1997 Myanmar joined ASEAN, which
consists of 10 member-states. After opening up,
Myanmar has become increasingly interested
in learning from experiences of other ASEAN
members. The fact that many of them are more
developed provides an impetus for the country’s
reform-oriented path as it seeks to catch up with
them in order not to be seen as a laggard.
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)
FDI policy is coordinated by the Directorate
of Investment and Company Administration
(DICA), which serves as a one-stop shop for
foreign investors in Myanmar (Vakulchuk et
al. 2017: 27). Following the adoption of the
Foreign Investment Law in 2012, the Myanmar government has shown its commitment to
attracting FDI and has prioritized its investment
policy, resulting in growing interest among foreign investors. However, that interest may prove
counterproductive for the country’s business
climate, if it induces the government to slow
down in its reform efforts: ‘when the novelty of
Myanmar wears off, that may become a problem’
(Vakulchuk et al. 2017: 3). Since 2016, investors
have become increasingly cautious, concerned
about the slow pace of economic reforms compared to their high expectations in 2012–2014
(DVB 2016). This highlights the potential risks
and shows the importance of working constantly
to improve the business climate and remain in
close contact with investors.
Myanmar requires significant FDI for its
development (Vakulchuk et al. 2017: 9). According to the OECD FDI Regulatory Restrictiveness
Index, Myanmar was the second most restrictive
economy for foreign direct investment in 2012
(OECD 2014b: 97–98). However, between 2012
and 2016, Myanmar attracted USD 28.33 billion
of FDI – as against only 40 billion USD of FDI
Trade and FDI
Trade
Due to its limited infrastructure and closed economy, Myanmar traded mainly with its neighbours
before 2012. After the country opened up, its
trade geography has expanded. Oil, natural gas
and other natural resources are the main exports;
other important export items include vegetables,
wood, fish, garments, rubber and fruits (Trading
Economics 2017). In turn, Myanmar imports
fuel products, vegetable oil, vehicles, pharmaceutical products, construction equipment, tyres
and machinery. The country is likely to remain
a raw commodity exporter for the next decade.
Myanmar’s main trading partners are China,
India, Japan, Indonesia, Germany and Hong
Kong, with China as the largest single trade
partner (Gelb et al. 2017). Officially, ASEAN
countries are priority countries for Myanmar,
and it follows ASEAN standards in terms of
trade promotion. These standards are part of
the established ASEAN Free Trade Area (AFTA)
framework aimed at reducing intra-regional tariffs by means of the Common Effective Preferential Tariff (CEPT) Scheme. In 2016, 80% of
Myanmar’s products were included in the CEPT
42
3. Economics and social issues | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
10
8
6
4
2
0
2009
2012
2013
Petroleum FDI
Total FDI
2014
2015
2016
Power FDI
Data source: DICA 2013: 15; DICA 2016; Reuters 2014 in Vakulchuk et al. 2017
Figure 11. Myanmar total FDI vs. petroleum and power FDI (billion USD)
450
400
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
al
a
m
da
ss
na
Da
ru
Ca
la
ai
Th
ay
nd
si
a
s
al
M
la
er
th
ei
un
Th
e
Br
Re
Th
e
pu
bl
Ne
ic
nd
di
In
Ko
a
a
re
n
of
Ja
Ko
ng
pa
ng
K.
U.
ap
ng
Si
Ho
e
or
m
na
et
Vi
Ch
in
a
407,318
Data source: DICA 2016 in Vakulchuk et al. 2017
Figure 12. FDI in Myanmar by country of origin (million USD)
for the entire period 1989–2012 (with China as
the biggest contributor) (Vakulchuk et al. 2017:
9). Incoming FDI to Myanmar reached 9.5 billion USD in the fiscal year 2014/2015, compared
to only USD 4.1 billion in 2013/2014. This
“increase is due largely to the greater involvement of foreign oil and gas companies that were
awarded concessions in 2013 and have invested in
the country since then” (Vakulchuk et al. 2017: 9).
Petroleum FDI has grown since 2012, after
the new Foreign Petroleum Law was adopted
(see Figure 11). This law was further revised and
improved in 2017. In 2014/2015, the share of
oil and gas in total FDI was 35% (Vakulchuk et
al. 2017: 9). FDI in renewables has remained
negligible. Tourism, real estate and mining are
seen as the most promising sectors in terms of
future FDI; each of these sectors attracted more
than USD 1 billion between 2010 and 2017 (De
2017: 186).
China, Vietnam, Singapore, the UK, Hong
Kong and Japan (in that order) are the biggest
investors in Myanmar (see Figure 12). The US
companies often invest in Myanmar through
branch offices established in Singapore or South
Korea, so FDI from these two countries may
include investments originating in the USA
(Vakulchuk et al. 2017: 10).
43
3. Economics and social issues | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Demography
Myanmar’s youthful population (see below) creates opportunities for a long period of savings,
investment and economic growth. Statistical
data on demography are only partially accurate,
however, with considerable gaps regarding ethnic
groups in conflict areas. The Myanmar Department of Labour announced that the population
reached 60 million in 2010, but the United
Nations Population Division (UNPD) has estimated it as closer to 52 million (May and Brooke
2014; Ministry of Immigration and Population
2014). The largest ethnic group are the Bamar,
accounting for 68% of the total population. The
disclosure of ethnic results of the Population and
Housing Census in 2014 was perceived as having
a destabilizing effect on the peace process, and
the issue has remained sensitive (Callahan 2017).
Myanmar has the lowest life expectancy and
the second-highest rate of infant and child mortality of the ASEAN countries (World Bank
2017a). The country has a substantial share of
youth among the population: average age is 27
and around 55% are under the age of 30, according to the Population and Housing Census
(Ministry of Immigration and Population 2014).
However, a United Nations Population Fund
assessment (UNPF 2017) finds that reproductive
and sexual health are taboo topics, which restricts
young people’s access to information that could
help them in planning and building their future.
JICA, the Swiss Agency for Development and
Cooperation and USAID have been the biggest
and most active donors. Most aid actors have
offices in Yangon.
Myanmar is now in a critical period where
development aid can make a difference, for two
reasons. First, Myanmar is heavily influenced by
one actor: China. Continued presence and assistance from Western and other Asian countries can
help to balance this dominance. Second, Aung
San Suu Kyi and the NLD government have an
important and challenging mission to complete –
the transition from a military-dominated political
system to a more democratic one, through difficult political and economic reform measures. This
becomes even more challenging in light of continued strong influence of the military, with its guaranteed political representation and wide-ranging
vested economic interests. This emplaces significant limitations on the scope of government action
and complicates implementation of the reform
process. External support and development aid
can be crucial in enabling the NLD government
to carry out the planned reforms.
However, increasing donor involvement also
involves risks, as the capacity of the Myanmar
government to absorb this assistance is limited.
Lex Rieffel and James Fox (2013a) argue that
the ‘stream of visitors is diverting key officials in
Myanmar from crucial work on policy formulation and implementation.’ For instance, according to a UNDP (2016) study, the Environmental
Conservation Department, which is Myanmar’s
main environmental agency, is under significant
pressure to manage incoming support projects
from development partners.
In addition, donor competition may result
in limited transparency, which local government
agencies may use to their advantage. Further,
local actors hold that some international consultants who work in Myanmar have limited country knowledge and expertise, often bringing in
pre-conceived ideas and patterns in their work
(Global New Light of Myanmar 2016). In turn,
when dealing with international consultants,
public officials may feel constrained in their ability to emphasize on their own local perspectives.
Composition of aid and main donors
After opening up in 2012, Myanmar has attracted
numerous international organizations and
donors: aid saw a 788% increase in the course of
one year, from USD 504 million in 2012 to USD
4.5 billion in 2013 (Devex 2015). As of 2015,
20 international donors, 59 international NGOs
and more than 600 domestic CSOs were operating in the country. Since 2012, the aid agenda
in Myanmar has been dominated by the ‘big five’
group of donors: the EU, Germany, Japan, Norway and the UK. Japan is the biggest single donor
country and seems set to play a leading role in
the future as well. Among the major multilateral
organizations, the ADB, Global Affairs Canada,
44
3. Economics and social issues | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Therefore, while Myanmar needs more development assistance, this must be ‘smart’ development aid that takes into account the extremely
complex local context and the country’s weaknesses and vulnerabilities.
The military government of Thein Sein created an institutional framework for collaboration
with international donors including the Myanmar Development Cooperation Forum, Development Partners Working Committee Meetings
and 16 Sector Working Groups (SWGs) – for
which, according to Rieffel and Fox (2013b), the
military deserves credit. After the NLD government came to power, some attempts have been
made at streamlining donor coordination. In
January 2013, there was a meeting where all
major donors discussed the coordination plan
and the parties recognized the need to adhere to
the 2005 Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness.
Further, in 2016 the Development Assistance
Coordination Unit (DACU) was created. Its
first meeting, chaired by State Counsellor Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi, was attended by more than
100 government officials and more than 100
representatives of international actors. DACU
aims to improve the coordination and effectiveness of development assistance to Myanmar and
consists of high-level representatives of various
ministries and government agencies (Global
New Light of Myanmar 2016). However, even
with this formal institutional framework in
place, the Myanmar aid environment remains
complex and challenging, and much remains to
be done to improve development assistance and
donor coordination.
45
4. Conflict and stabilization
Myanmar is a multi-ethnic, multi-lingual and
multi-religious society that officially recognizes
135 distinct ethnic groups. These are aggregated
into eight major ethnic groups, with the nonBamar population making up approximately
32% of the total population. Ever since 1948,
Myanmar has experienced many intrastate conflicts, especially between ethnic armed organizations (EAOs) and the military.
the four main links between ethnic communities
and armies: food, funds, intelligence and recruits.
In practice this meant that the army was waging
war on ethnic minority populations as well as
their EAOs.
Protracted warfare with military targeting of
civilians has had severe impacts, both within and
outside conflict zones. Myanmar’s ethnic states
are underdeveloped – as shown in the lack of
infrastructure like roads and electricity; the high
incidence of poverty; low education/literacy levels; high drug abuse among youth; land confiscation; the severe environmental and social impacts
of development projects; unfair distribution of
revenues from natural resources; injustices in
regard to political rights; the high incidence of
violations of basic human rights; and cultural
discrimination and lack of minority protection
(Kraas, Spohner & Myint 2017).
On top of these political and war-related
grievances are new grievances in the wake of
ill-conceived and failed peace initiatives. The
seven decades of conflict have seen a whole range
of initiatives to terminate warfare through coordinated or individual ceasefire agreements (especially in the 1990s and after 2010). While these
ceasefire agreements have reduced the frequency
and intensity of armed hostilities, none of them
have addressed the core conflict issues properly
(J. Lee 2016). In the absence of political conflict
resolution, periods of ceasefire agreements have
often been followed by ceasefire violations and
the resumption of military campaigns.
Moreover, ceasefire agreements have been
accompanied by intensified natural resource
extraction and large industrial projects. This has
created economic opportunities, but has also
strengthened local demands for fair distribu-
Causes of ethnic conflict
Myanmar’s ethnic conflicts have deep historical
roots in the strategies of pre-colonial and colonial
rulers for exerting authority and governing ethnic
minorities in border areas (Charney 2009; Taylor 2009). There are historical parallels between
earlier strategies of top–down state building
through armed coercion and indirect rule, and
the way the post-colonial military rulers combined forceful and divisive military campaigns
with clientelist ceasefire concessions to pacify
EAOs. Likewise, there is strong historical continuity in the ethnic minorities’ core demands for
self-determination, political representation and
ethnic equality, as stated in the 1947 Panglong
Agreement. According to the major EAOs, there
can be no real peace without substantive political
negotiations on these core issues of ethnic self-determination and federalism (Smith 1991, 2007).
The root causes of Myanmar’s armed conflicts
are thus the political grievances of ethnic minorities when confronted with a militarized, unitary
and majoritarian state. New grievances have been
added through decades of warfare (Laoutides &
Ware 2016). Especially important is the military’s
‘four cuts policy’, first used in the early 1960s and
again in the late 1990s. This strategy aimed at
supressing popular support for EAOs by cutting
46
4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Ceasefire initiatives prior to 2010
The SPDC regime negotiated several ceasefire
agreements in the early 1990s, most notably with
KIO in 1994 and with Shan, Mon and Karenni
EAOs. These ceasefires involved two types of
EAOs: those with previous links to the CPB,
and those associated with the NDF. Whereas the
former bloc focused on achieving autonomous
zones modelled after China, the latter group
advocated the formation of a federal Union of
Burma (Smith 1999). The ceasefire agreements
were followed by what has been described as
‘ceasefire capitalism’, where military commanders, business tycoons and armed organizations
engage in extraction, trade and taxation of natural resources (Sadan 2016; Woods 2011). However, there were no political negotiations on the
core grievances. Instead, this prolonged ceasefire
period culminated in the military demand that
all ceasefire groups be transformed to Border
Guard Forces (BGFs) before the 2010 elections,
in practice becoming small ethnic units under
regional military commanders. This demand was
in agreement with Section 338 of the Constitution: ‘all the armed forces in the Union shall
be under the command of the Defence Services’
(Union of Myanmar 2008). However, it meant
that the EAOs would have to give up their autonomy and leverage as armed organizations, without the promised political discussions being held.
None of the major ceasefire groups agreed
to become BGFs, except the Democratic Karen
Benevolent Army (DKBA). The deadline was
postponed repeatedly until September 2010, after
which the government cancelled all post-1990
ceasefire agreements. Thereafter, it took comprehensive hostile measures against the KIO (Lahpai
2014). Economically, the military blocked Chinese border trade through KIO’s Laiza headquarter.
Politically, the military closed KIO liaison offices
and barred the Kachin State Progressive Party
(KSPP) from registering and participating in the
2010 elections. And militarily, the small Myanmar
National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA)
in the Kokang region was attacked, presumably
as a warning to other EAOs also facing military
build-up in their areas (Hu & Konrad 2017).
tion of revenues from natural resources in ethnic states (Bauer, Shortell, & Delesgues 2016;
Woods 2011). This pattern is clearly illustrated by
the ceasefire with KIO/KIA in 1994, which was
followed by large-scale resource grabbing by the
military and their cronies, as well as major economic benefits for KIO from resource extraction,
trade and taxation (Sadan 2016).
The core causes of Myanmar’s ethnic conflicts
are thus of three kinds: 1) political grievances
related to ethnic self-determination, representation and equality; 2) war-related security and
development grievances; and 3) mistrust and
resentment fuelled by failed peace initiatives.
These grievances have produced a series of interwoven and protracted conflicts (Smith 1991,
2007). Issues of natural resource extraction and
management often feed these ethnic grievances,
leading to further escalation of ethnic conflicts
around the country (Asia Foundation 2017).
Peace initiatives
The long period of intrastate warfare has been
interspersed with attempts at ending hostilities.
Throughout the period of military rule, there was
a persistent pattern in the approaches followed.
The military rulers pursued a security-first strategy,
with military campaigns followed by ceasefires
and clientelist concessions to ethnic organizations, commanders and groups. Political conflict
resolution was conceived as the final step in the
sequence, but there were no cases of substantive
political negotiations between the 1947 Panglong Conference and the NLD government’s
21st Century Panglong Conference in 2016.
By contrast, the EAOs have insisted on political conflict resolution. The various ethnic groups
and organizations agree that only political negotiations on self-determination, federalism and
ethnic equality can resolve the ethnic conflicts
in Myanmar. Ceasefire agreements and developmental peacebuilding may be useful tools
for mitigating the humanitarian impacts of war
and creating economic opportunities for civilians and EAOs, but ceasefires and peacebuilding
can be no substitute for conflict resolution (J.
Lee 2016).
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4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Source: Burma News International 2017b
Figure 13. The shifting geography of conflict and ceasefire zones
The USDP government’s peace process
The aggressive stance of the SPDC regime was
seemingly changed when President Thein Sein
pledged to make the ethnic issue a national priority, offering dialogue with all EAOs and dropping the BGF requirement as a precondition for
talks (although it remained part of the government peace plan). Thereafter, the government
signed a series of bilateral ceasefire agreements
in 2011 and 2012. This meant that there was
a shift in the geography of conflict and ceasefire zones from the SPDC period to the USDP
government (Figure 13). Whereas earlier conflict
zones in Chin, Kayin, Kayah and Shan States
came under ceasefire agreements, Kachin State
and northern Shan State went from a situation
of relative pacification to become the most active
conflict zone in Myanmar. The war zone thus
shifted from the south-eastern to the northern
part of the country.
The USDP approach to peace was similar to
that of SPDC, as it emphasized ceasefires and
developmental concessions, without any clear
and joint framework for political negotiations.
There were, however, two major additions to the
SPDC approach, both associated with the democratic opening.
Political mainstreaming: The 2008 Constitution and the introduction of elections offered
a framework for political transformation and
inclusion of those EAOs who were willing to
become political parties and enter the political
mainstream (Farrelly 2014). The Constitution
includes provisions for ethnic nationality rights,
decentralization and democratization (including
the House of Nationalities in Parliament) that
were presented as a political space for negotiating
ethnic demands through parliamentary politics.
The government’s Union Level Peace Team advo-
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4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
cated a step-wise transformation of armed groups
(Aung 2016). EAOs were asked to 1) lay down
arms and transform into BGFs; 2) set up political
parties; and 3) contest in elections.
However, the EAOs found this approach
unacceptable. The Constitution provides limited
space for addressing their core grievances regarding devolution of power, revenue sharing and the
continued power of the military, so most active
EAOs demanded that there should be political peace talks outside the sphere of the Parliament. The dominant ethnic alliance, the United
Nationalities Federal Council (UNFC), insisted
on the following sequence: 1) political talks on
the basis of the 2008 Constitution; 2) union
accord on power and resource sharing (amending
the Constitution); and finally, 3) approval from
the Parliament.
Ceasefire agreement groups outside the UNFC
were organized in the Working Group on Ethnic Coordination (WGEC), which was administered and financed by the Euro-Burma Office
(EBO). The UNFC and the WGEC disagreed on
the question of engagement in the USDP peace
process: the WGEC promoted engagement with
the USDP peace agenda, including signing ceasefire agreements and the NCA, and participating
in aid-funded peacebuilding. In contrast, the
UNFC held that political negotiations should be
the foremost priority, and a precursor to disarmament, political transformation and peacebuilding.
The USDP government did not accommodate
the UNFC’s demand, but insisted instead on the
completion of a national ceasefire agreement as
a precondition for political talks. The NCA was
negotiated with the ceasefire agreement groups
in 2015, but was signed by only eight EAOs (see
Table 3). Most of the major EAOs, except the
Karen National Union (KNU) and the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army
(RCSS/SSA), refused to sign. The USDP peace
process thus ended in a complex mosaic of bilateral ceasefire agreements, a ‘National’ Ceasefire
Agreement that did not include most major
EAOs, a range of BGFs and army-related militias, and renewed military campaigns against four
EAOs in Kachin State (KIA and AA) and north-
ern Shan State (MNDAA and TNLA). These
four have now joined in a Northern Alliance,
postponing political negotiations while facing
military aggression.
Internationalized peacebuilding: The USDP
continued the practice of offering economic
incentives to armed groups to persuade them to
sign ceasefire agreements, transform into political parties and enter parliamentary politics. This
practice was scaled up through partnerships with
international aid donors, who seemed to understand EAOs as being driven by economic opportunism rather than political grievances. The peace
process thus became internationalized through
aid-funded peacebuilding in war-affected areas,
foreign investments in resource extraction in ethnic states, and associated state capacity-building
in resource governance at the union level.
Norway has played an active role as a funder
and coordinator of peacebuilding, in close dialogue with the government of Myanmar and its
Myanmar Peace Centre (MPC). In 2012, Norway launched the Myanmar Peace Support Initiative (MPSI) as a pilot project for providing
humanitarian and development assistance to
war-affected communities in ceasefire areas (Lall
2016). The Norwegian government has also led
consultations with international stakeholders to
mobilize support for further delivery of aid, especially through the Peace Support Donor Group
(PSDG). The MPSI was later terminated, but has
been followed by similar initiatives, including a
Joint Peace Fund intended to serve as a platform
for coordinated international financial, technical
and advisory assistance for peace in Myanmar.
Thus, international actors have been involved in
Myanmar’s peace process mainly as peacebuilders,
rather than facilitators or mediators for political
negotiation. Aid donors have provided material
rewards for EAOs willing to sign bilateral ceasefire agreements, and support for the Working
Group for Ethnic Coordination (WGEC). The
Euro-Burma Office (EBO), with financial support from Norway and other donors, has played
a central mediating role between the government,
the army, EAOs and international donors.
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4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
However, the role of Norway and other aid
donors has also been controversial and contested
(Olsen 2016). The MPSI, EBO and the donors
have been criticized for lack of transparency and
for being biased in favour of the government
and its approach to peace, while undermining
the EAOs’ demands for negotiations and state
reforms. They have also been said to contribute to
a divide between armed groups seen as ‘constructive’ (often associated with the WGEC) and those
deemed uncompromising or ‘hardline insurgents’
(typically associated with the UNFC). Some
interview respondents held that donor support
for the government peace agenda may actually
have hampered conflict resolution, by allowing
the USDP government to pursue peace through
pacification rather than by political negotiations.
Another controversial form of international
engagement in ethnic states is the increased
inflow of direct investments in resource extraction (Kramer 2015). Many ethnic states are rich
in natural resources – and, in the context of
ceasefires and national economic reforms, these
have been opened up for investments. While
most bilateral ceasefire agreements have included
sections that allow resource-based development,
many ethnic CSOs have argued that making
investment agreements prior to a peace settlement is problematic because that consolidates the
power imbalance and wealth-sharing structure
favouring the central government. International
support for state capacity building at the union
level is seen as contributing to this consolidation
of the unitary state structure at the expense of the
federal state agenda concerning ethnic minorities.
International peacebuilding and direct investments have become politicized because of their
links to centralized and unitary state building.
an instrument for constitutional change and
federal democracy. The Panglong Conference
might become a pivot for substantive conflict
resolution, democratic deepening and sustained
development, but there remain numerous constitutional, institutional and political obstacles.
The Panglong Conference is scheduled to meet
every six months until a full agreement is reached
(Mizzima 2016b). Its sessions include deliberations
in plenary meetings and sector-specific committees on politics, security, economics, social issues,
land rights and natural resource management, and
‘general issues’ (Burma News International 2017a).
Between conferences, the stakeholders review the
negotiations, hold consultations and develop policies for further negotiations.
The first Panglong Conference, held in August
2016, was attended by some 1800 invitees from
government, political parties, EAOs, civil society organizations and international observers
(including UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon).
In October 2016, the NLD government
announced its Seven Steps Roadmap for national
reconciliation and union peace – however, without prior consultations with ethnic organizations.
The roadmap defines the following sequence of
activities:
1. reviewing the political dialogue framework
2. amending the political dialogue framework
3. convening the Union Peace Conference – the
21st Century Panglong – in accordance with
the amended and approved political dialogue
framework
4. signing a union agreement— the 21st Century Panglong Conference Agreement based
on the results of the 21st Century Panglong
Conference
5. amending the Constitution in accordance
with the union agreement, and approving
this amended Constitution
6. holding multi-party democracy general elections in accordance with the amended and
approved Constitution
7. building a democratic federal union in
accordance with the results of the multi-party
democracy general elections.
The NLD government’s peace process
The NLD government’s peace process revolves
around ‘The Union Peace Conference’, also
known as the ‘21st Century Panglong Conference’. Initiated soon after the shift of government,
this process reflects the importance of peace and
national reconciliation for the NLD and the
State Counsellor, both as a goal in itself and as
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4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
The NLD roadmap prioritizes political negotiations as a basis for constitutional amendment, in
distinct contrast to the military/USDP approach.
The key difference concerns sequencing: Which
should come first – political negotiations on
the arrangements for a federal union, or arms
surrendering through a nationwide ceasefire
as a precondition for political talks within the
framework of the Constitution? Whereas the
USDP government peace process opted for the
second approach, the NLD government has foregrounded political negotiations, while upholding the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA)
as a precondition for including EAOs in peace
negotiations. Although the military has seemingly come to accept the notion of federalism and
has shown some willingness to compromise on
issues not directly related to security, it remains
adamant about defending the Constitution and
about the NCA as a precondition for political
negotiations (Wilson 2017; Zin 2016). Similarly, the major EAOs generally see no prospects
for peace without constitutional change. It also
seems unlikely that active non-ceasefire groups
will sign the NCA as long as they still face military aggression.
The NLD, while taking quick action to initiate political negotiations, has not removed the
precondition that EAOs must sign the NCA
before being included in political negotiations
(Wilson 2017; Zin 2016). This has made inclusivity a major bone of contention between the
EAOs, the government and the army. It has also
deepened the divide between NCA signatory
and non-signatory groups, and between EAOs
that have bilateral ceasefire agreements and
non-ceasefire agreement groups still facing military aggression. The latter divide has led to a split
within the UNFC and the formation of a new
Federal Political Negotiation and Consultative
Committee (FPNCC), consisting of AA, KIA,
MNDAA, TNLA, NDAA, SSPP and UWSA.
Ethnic stakeholders thus face mutually reinforcing challenges of constrained spaces for participation at the Panglong Conference, and weak and
fragmented capacities for effective representation
in negotiations. This fuelled frustrations at the
May 2016 conference, where many ethnic actors
denounced the content and outcome of the
deliberations, which they held had been defined
top–down by the government and the military
while ethnic minority representatives had limited
ability to make substantive changes.
The Panglong Conference re-convened in May
2017. EAOs within the FPNCC were invited as
‘special guests’ at the last minute, probably due to
diplomatic intervention by China. Equally significant: the UNFC did not attend because they
had not been accorded full rights to participate.
The Conference reached agreement on 37 out
of the 41 points proposed by the Union Peace
Dialogue Joint Committee (UPDJC). The list
of issues agreed on includes the establishment of
a Union of Myanmar based on democracy and
federalism, one which grants ethnic minorities
the right to self-determination and allows states
and divisions to write their own constitutions
and laws within the 2008 Constitution. Interestingly, the army representatives thus agreed in
principle to issues that would require changes to
the 2008 Constitution.
However, there were principles proposed
where consensus could not be achieved, as well
as major remaining issues to be taken up in future
discussions – including such overarching principles of federalism as equality and self-determination. Furthermore, agreement could not be
reached on the questions of a federal army and the
right to secession, both of which were also contentious issues in the negotiations on the Nationwide
Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) (DVB 2017).
A first critical issue is the ethnic demand for a
federal army. A federal army would allow EAOs
to retain forces to protect themselves against military aggression. The military, however, insists
that there should only be one army. In their
view, separate ethnic armed units would pose a
constant threat to the territorial integrity of the
union, and the central government’s control of
state and region government.
A second key issue concerns secession. According to the text of the NCA, all signatories have
agreed to uphold the principles of non-disintegration of the union, non-disintegration of
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4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
national solidarity, and perpetuation of national
sovereignty – the core concerns of the military.
Nevertheless, the concept of secession remains
important for the ethnic actors, due to its place
in the 1947 Panglong Agreement and because
secession remains a last resort if ethnic self-determination is not granted.
Women have played only a limited role in the
peace process, and there has been hardly any
progress with implementation of UN Security
Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and
Security. As noted by May Sabe Phyu, women’s
rights and peace activist, ‘there is no mechanism
to monitor or follow up on the implementation
of those resolutions by the UN. It very much
depends on member states’ own commitment.
In Myanmar’s case, even though they have signed
and ratified some of the UN conventions, they
never follow [these] conventions’ (quoted in The
Guardian 2016). Women’s participation in the
peace process has remained limited, with only
few female representatives involved in organizations participating in the process (NORAD
2015: 86). The UN considers that there has been
only little progress with the implementation of
the UNSCR 1325 Resolution, because women
remain underrepresented in the peace process
and the country lacks a national action plan for
proper realization of the Resolution (UN 2016).
These and other core issues will be decisive for
the success or failure of the NLD government’s
peace process. Resolving these contentious questions in a situation with deep and mutual suspicions between EAOs and the army will require
trust and dialogue between the protagonists,
making inclusivity in the process a critical factor.
It is especially important to ensure the participation of the major EAOs that have not signed
the NCA and are organized within the UNFC
and FPNCC. Otherwise, the political process is
unlikely to result in a substantive, lasting peace.
Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), large-scale
abuses of human rights, and internal and international displacement of large numbers of civilians
(Ibrahim 2016). For heuristic purposes, this violence can be seen as two different kinds: communal
violence between Rakhine Buddhist and Rohingya
groups, and armed clashes between the military
and armed Rohingya groups that also involve military violence against civilians.8 These two forms
of violence are closely related, and some observers
argue that ‘communal violence’ is only a cover-up
for military violence (Zarni & Cowley 2014).
The long history of contentious interaction between the Buddhist majority and the
Rohingya Muslim minority in Rakhine State
is often traced back to the late colonial period
when the Rohingya population expanded due to
immigration. During the Second World War, the
Rakhine Buddhists and Rohingya were on opposing sides and formed armed units that attacked
each other. These and later clashes deepened the
cultural and political cleavages as well as the spatial segregation within the state. The Rohingya
are now found largely in the north, while the
Buddhist majority is concentrated in the central
and southern parts of the state.
In 2012 a series of communal clashes erupted
in northern Rakhine State, as did several anti-Muslim incidents across the country (Crouch 2016).
These were followed by a state of emergency that
placed the region under military administration
and brought mass arrests and arbitrary violence.
Both communities are generally impoverished,
as Rakhine State is marked by chronic poverty
and relative underdevelopment compared to the
national average. Communal antagonisms and
violence are thus rooted both in the local political economy of underdevelopment and in the
antagonistic politicization of ethnic and religious
identities at the local and national levels (Advisory
Commission on Rakhine State 2017).
The Rohingya crisis
Rakhine State has experienced escalating violence
against the Rohingya minority since 2012, including communal and military violence targeting
civilians, military campaigns against the Arakan
8
52
There is also a history of armed clashes between Rakhine organizations and the military. Two Rakhine EAOs are currently
active: the Arakan Liberation Party (ALP) and the Arakan
Army (AA). ALP is considered to be weak. The AA is inactive
in Rakhine State, but is involved in the Kachin conflict as an
ally of KIA and the Northern Alliance.
4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Figure 14. Key actors in the Rohingya crisis
There is also a history of armed clashes between
Rohingya armed organizations and the military.
After independence, the northern parts of the
state experienced a Mujahedeen rebellion, as well
as both White Flag and Red Flag Communist
insurgencies (International Crisis Group 2009).
In the 1970s and ‘80s there were various attempts
to organize armed groups, such as the Rohingya
Solidarity Organization (RSO), but these were
fragmented and suppressed, and had largely
become defunct by the early 2000s. The most
active armed organization at present is the Arakan
Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), also known
by its former name Harakah al-Yaqin (the Faith
Movement). ARSA is a poorly equipped militant
group that became known after attacks on border
guard posts in October 2016 (International Crisis
Group 2009). It claims to represent the Rohingya
community, but respondents from the Rohingya
diaspora deny this, seeing ARSA as more influenced by its links to international Jihadist groups
than to the local Rohingya community (personal
communication, September 2017).
Perceived threats from militant organizations
and actual clashes have been used as pretexts for
large military campaigns in northern Rakhine
state, especially in 1978, 1991–92, 2001 and
from 2012 (Zarni & Cowley 2014). The army
has launched clearance operations against armed
groups that have also victimized the Rohingya
civilian population, thus resembling the ‘four
cuts’ strategy employed against EAOs elsewhere
in the country from the 1960s onwards. Such
military offensives have brought large-scale
human rights abuses against Rohingya civilians:
arbitrary killings; internal displacement to refugee camps with strict restrictions on movement;
deprival of livelihood, healthcare and other services; and international displacement overland
to Bangladesh or by boat to Indonesia, Malaysia
and Thailand (Ibrahim 2016; Parnini 2013).
The Rohingya crisis can be understood as a
conflict over citizenship – both as a question of
formal juridical status for the Rohingya, and in
a broader sense as an issue of cultural inclusion,
civil, political and social rights and political participation and representation (Holliday 2014).
Myanmar Rohingya are denied formal citizenship due to their exclusion from the national
community. They are seen as ‘foreigners’ from
53
4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Bangladesh (‘Bengalis’), despite the complex
history of long-term residence as well as more
recent immigration (Thawnghmung 2016b;
Ullah 2016). The Rohingya are not among the
135 ethnic groups that are recognized by the state
and granted formal citizenship under Myanmar’s
1982 citizenship law (Schissler et al. 2017; Ullah
2016; Walton 2015). This cultural and judicial
exclusion means that they are also excluded
from the social and political rights that would
follow from citizenship. An example here is the
disenfranchisement of Rohingya prior to the
2015 elections, in sharp contrast to the strong
representation of ethnic Rakhine through the
Arakan National Party (ANP) (Than Tun 2016).
The militarization of the conflict also means that
basic civil freedoms are poorly protected and
often severely violated.
The localized and multifaceted Rohingya crisis is being politicized by different domestic and
international actors with diverse interests, strategies and constraints (Figure 14). A foundational
premise for domestic politics on the status of the
Rohingya is the hegemonic idea that they constitute a ‘foreign Other’, in terms of both their
geographic origin and their Muslim identity. This
position is most strongly advocated by Buddhist
nationalist actors, but nationalism also defines
the boundaries of political discourse and practices
for other actors, including the NLD government
and the military. Buddhist nationalists, such as
members of the Ma Ba Tha movement, with possible links to the military, have forcefully emphasized the cultural Otherness of the Rohingya and
the duty to protect the Buddhist faith and the
state against invading foreigners (Gravers 2015;
Schissler et al. 2017; van Klinken & Aung 2017).
This duty is congruent with the military’s concern with the non-disintegration of the union and
national solidarity. But the hegemony of nationalist discourse is also demonstrated by the position
of the NLD leadership and government. While
Aung San Suu Kyi had previously argued that
the Rohingya crisis should be addressed through
the rule of law, her recent statements have come
close to Buddhist nationalist representations of
the Rohingya as foreigners and the military lead-
ers’ insistence on the primacy of security in the
face of militant insurgency. Whether these are
expressions of the State Counsellor’s own political sentiments or if she is held political hostage
by the military and Buddhist nationalists remains
a matter of debate (Lee 2014).
The violence, human rights abuses and displacement of Rohingya civilians has drawn criticism from the UN, from international human
rights organizations, Western states, and the
governments of Bangladesh, Malaysia and other
countries. Aung San Suu Kyi in her position as
State Counsellor has been strongly criticized for
her silence on the issue and for doing little to
prevent human rights abuses and ethnic cleansing against a community that is recognized by
neither Myanmar nor Bangladesh. This strong
criticism of the State Counsellor and the NLD
government has to some extent been nuanced by
an increased emphasis on the lack of democratic
political control over the military, especially
in situations that can be defined as matters of
national security. This has allowed the military
to conduct operations with almost full autonomy. It is also increasingly recognized that the
Rohingya crisis has the effect of destabilizing the
NLD government while legitimizing the military. This means that the Rohingya crisis may
be used strategically to increase the chances of a
new military-affiliated government with the current Commander-in-chief as a strong Presidential
candidate (South Asian Monitor 2017).
This humanitarian and political crisis has been
politicized in various ways at the international
level as well. While Western states and INGOs
have voiced strong criticism of the NLD government and Aung San Suu Kyi for not upholding the principles and promises of human rights
and the rule of law, the governments of Indonesia, Malaysia and other countries with large
Muslim populations have called for protection
of Rohingya as a Muslim minority. China, in
contrast, has stated that it considers the matter
a Burmese internal affair, thereby providing a
degree of support for the NLD government.
The local conflict in Rakhine is a very sensitive issue that has become politicized at the
54
4. Conflict and stabilization | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
national level in Myanmar and internationally.
It has the potential to destabilize the NLD government and further securitize politics in Myanmar. The conflict could also be used strategically
for this dual purpose of destabilization and
securitization, especially by actors within the
military. In this situation, the Advisory Commission on Rakhine State was appointed as a
political countermeasure to escalating militancy.
As stated in their final report, Towards a Peaceful, Fair and Prosperous Future for the People of
Rakhine (2017), the current situation must be
understood and addressed as a combined crisis
of development, human rights and security. The
Advisory Commission calls for a prompt and
calibrated political approach that addresses all
three crises in order to avoid further militancy
and conflict escalation. A political process to
promote self-determination, development and
citizenship is required to avoid further militarization on both sides. This report was issued in
August 2017. The recommendations were positively received by Aung San Suu Kyi, but this
was soon overshadowed by clashes between the
military and ARSA, and by military attacks on
civilians in northern Rakhine State. What had
seemed to be a positive political opening was
overtaken by escalating confrontations between
militant actors and strategies on both sides of
the conflict. The initiative must be shifted back
towards political conflict resolution, where the
triple challenge noted by the Advisory Commission – security, citizenship and development –
remain the core of the Rohingya crisis.
55
5. Migration, climate change
and humanitarian needs
There are three main general drivers of migration
in Myanmar: poverty, violent ethnic conflict and
natural disasters. This section examines all three.
Figure 15 shows that the great majority of Myanmar emigrants are in Thailand, Saudi Arabia and
Bangladesh, in that order, and that most of them
are classified as labour migrants.
national ethnic community with considerable
cross-border contact (Jirattikorn 2017: 75; Wittekind 2016: 180). This situation is not related
solely to the history of conflict in Shan State, and
may persist or expand in the future.
The second-largest recipient country is Saudi
Arabia. Saudi Arabia’s approach to people from
Myanmar has oscillated between treating them
as labour migrants, as refugees, or simply throwing them out (Wagner and Schatz 2017). If the
oil price remains low over a protracted period,
Saudi Arabia might be forced to send more people back to Myanmar. Saudi Arabia’s relations
with migrants from Myanmar are complicated
by the fact that most of them are Rohingya (and
Muslim). Saudi Arabia and its Gulf neighbours
are involved in the petroleum sector in Rakhine
State, and Rohingya groups that have attacked
Myanmar border forces are alleged to have linkages to Saudi Arabia and Pakistan (Hindustan
Times 2016).
Labour migration from Myanmar
Unsurprisingly, Myanmar’s political transition
has been associated with an increase in labour
migration (Wagle 2016: 536). As a result,
remittances play a growing role in Myanmar’s
economy. In 2016, the share of remittances in
Myanmar’s GDP was 4.9% (World Bank 2017b).
Many labour migrants to Thailand are Shan or
Shan-speaking: the Shan language(s) are related
to Thai, so it is easy for the Shan to learn the Thai
language. Although they are mostly employed in
low-paid jobs, some Shan feel as much at home
in Thailand as in Myanmar: the result is a trans0
500 000
1 000 000
1 500 000
2 000 000
2 500 000
Thailand
Saudi Arabia
Bangladesh
Malaysia
USA
Pakistan
India
Japan
China
Australia
Refugees
Asylum-seekers
Labor migrants
Data source: UNHCR 2016: 19; World Bank 2015
Figure 15. Number of migrants by type and host country
56
5. Migration, climate change and humanitarian needs | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
Conflict in Kongang (Shan),
floods and landslides in
Chin and Rakhine
Inter-communal violence
in Rakhine
1 000 000
Conflict in Kachin and
Northern Shan
900 000
800 000
Cyclone Nargis
700 000
IDPs
600 000
500 000
400 000
300 000
200 000
Asylum seekers
100 000
Refugees
2016
2015
2014
2013
2011
2012
2010
2009
2007
2008
2005
2006
2004
2002
2003
2001
1999
2000
1997
1998
1995
1996
1994
1992
1993
1991
1989
1990
1978
1988
1972
0
Data source: UNHCR 2017
Figure 16. Displacement of Myanmar population over time
Refugees and IDPs
Estimates from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugee place Myanmar as the
world’s eighth largest source country of refugees
in 2016, behind DRC Congo and the Central
African Republic, and ahead of Eritrea and
Burundi (UNHCR 2016: 17). Myanmar has a
been in a state of conflict since independence
in 1948, with armed conflict flaring at regular
intervals. However, as shown in Figure 16, displacement has increased significantly in recent
years. Data on internal displacement from before
the political thaw are less reliable than those
from recent years, and the figures may be too
low. However, refugee data gathered in other
countries than Myanmar are likely to be accurate
further back in time.
Armed conflict may drive displacement
through the following mechanisms (after McAvoy and Bloomfield 2017: 2):
• physical assaults by police, border guards and
military forces
• people-smuggling and -trafficking across
international borders
• displacement due to hostilities between military forces and non-state armed groups
• appropriation of land by the military for commercial use
• repeated displacement due to fighting around
IDP sites
• protracted displacement, with few prospects
for return or durable solutions, because of
ongoing hostilities, landmines, land grabs and
the risk of inter-communal violence
• destruction of civilian property, including
sources of livelihood, land and property take
over by military forces
• loss of access to farmland and property, as well
as death and maiming, due to landmines and
other explosive remnants of war
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5. Migration, climate change and humanitarian needs | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
• restrictions on movement, compounded by
lack of personal documents, affecting access
to resources and services, including emergency medical care
• bureaucratic restrictions on humanitarian
local and national NGOs, complicating transport of goods, movement of personnel, etc.
• restrictions on the activities of humanitarian
personnel, international staff in particular.
conflict in Syria in particular. Aid organizations
have been accused of reducing rations and other
benefits to camp dwellers in order to pressure
them to return to Myanmar (Phan 2014). At the
same time, there is a high level of aid dependence
in the camps (Tschirhart et al. 2017).
The Myanmar government sees the Rohingya
as Bengali Muslim immigrants and does not recognize them as citizens of Myanmar. They are
thus de facto stateless, which puts them in an even
more problematic situation than other Myanmar
forced migrants. Many Rohingya refugees living
in refugee camps in Bangladesh suffer from stress,
depression and trauma, due both to experiences
in Myanmar and to conditions in the camps
(Riley et al. 2017: 304).
Given the depth of ethno-religious animosity
and the prevalence of the idea of national races
(taingyintha) in Myanmar society today, the
Rohingya forced displacement issue is unlikely to
find an easy solution in the near future. Prospects
for solutions are further weakened by the entanglement of the interethnic relationship with the
ongoing complex political processes involving
the military, other political forces, and civil society more broadly (van Klinken and Aung 2017:
353; Cheesman 2017). Ethnic tensions with the
Rohingya are a card that the military can play
against the NLD and other actors, who cannot
do much about the problem at the moment.
Aung San Suu Kyi remains ambivalent about
the Rohingya. Probably the first step towards
changing this situation is to limit the activity
of religious and civil society organizations that
contribute to interethnic animosity.
Turning now to the ethnic Chin, the majority today are Christian, not Buddhist or Muslim.
Sexual- and gender-based violence (SGBV) is
widespread in the various conflicts in Myanmar,
but especially many Chin women and children
have experienced sexual abuse and exploitation
in India (Zahau and Flemming 2014).
Despite the election of Aung Sang Suu Kyi and the
ongoing peace process, these mechanisms persist.
The only countries near Myanmar that are
party to the 1951 Refugee Convention are Cambodia, China and the Philippines; and of these,
only China is a direct neighbour sharing a border
with Myanmar. All other countries in the area
– Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia,
Nepal and Thailand – are non-signatories. This
increases the vulnerability of refugees and may
also complicate relations among the states in the
region, as it did in the case of Rohingya boatpeople in 2015, whom none of the states were
interested in accepting (Ullah 2016: 285).
Groups of migrants
Conflicts in five parts of Myanmar contribute
to forced displacement: Chin, Kachin, Kayine,
Rakhine and Shan states. This is reflected in the
various groups of displaced persons, discussed
briefly here.
Camps on the Thai side of the Myanmar–
Thailand border house some 104 000 people from
Myanmar (as of September 2016: MPM 2016).
Almost all refugees in these camps belong to the
Karen and Karenni ethnic groups, with a few of the
Burman, Mon and other ethnicities. While many
Myanmar IDPs and refugees have been displaced
in recent years, the Thai camps have existed since
1984, first as loosely organized village-type settlements and from 1995 as controlled, large-scale
camps. Support from international organizations
has waned over the years, for several reasons: the
long duration of the problem, the political transition and peace process in Myanmar, dwindling aid
budgets – and dramatic new crises of forced displacement elsewhere in the world, related to the
Climate change and natural disasters
Myanmar has been ranked as the world’s second-most sensitive country to climate change
(Kreft et al. 2017: 6). It is also one of the 15
58
5. Migration, climate change and humanitarian needs | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
2 500 000
2 000 000
1 500 000
1 000 000
500 000
0
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Figure 17. New internal displacement due to natural disasters
countries where 80% of the world’s population
exposed to severe flooding is located (Brakenridge et al. 2017: 81). The monsoon brings
heavy rains to mountainous and river delta areas
from May to October, displacing many people
every year. In cities, the situation is exacerbated
by under-dimensioned and badly maintained
drainage systems; in the countryside, river and
dam erosion are the main problems.
The worst natural catastrophe to have struck
Myanmar was Cyclone Nargis in 2008 (Figure
17). In addition to widespread material damage,
it left over 380,000 people dead and even more
injured, traumatized, homeless and without
access to food (Brackenridge 2017: 81). Poor
governance was a key reason for the impact
of Cyclone Nargis (Howe and Bang 2017: 58;
Seekins 2009: 717), exacerbated by the refusal
of the military government to allow foreign aid
organizations access to affected areas (Junk 2016:
78; Barber 2009; Selth 2008b).
Was Cyclone Nargis caused by climate change?
If so, more devastating cyclones may be expected
in the future as the climate continues changing.
On the other hand, it is important to avoid drawing broad inferences about climate change on the
basis of one or a few weather events; moreover,
what research does exist on this topic is largely
based on theory and models (Knutson et al.
2010: 157). There is a long history of tropical
cyclones in the Bay of Bengal (Espejo et al. 2016:
379). Other than Cyclone Nargis, recent tropical cyclones in the area include Cyclone Laila in
the Bay of Bengal and East India in 2010, and
Cyclone Gonu which started West of India in
2013
2014
2015
2016
Data source: IDMC 2017
2007. Historically, it is often Bangladesh that has
been hardest hit, for example by Cyclone Bhola
in 1970, Cyclone Gorky in 1991 and Cyclone
Sidr in 2007 (Mallick et al. 2017). However,
as Bangladesh and Myanmar are neighbouring
countries, the experiences of Bangladesh are also
relevant for Myanmar (Tasnim et al. 2015: 1619).
Climate change is expected to reduce the frequency but increase the intensity of tropical cyclones
(Walsh et al. 2015; Climate Council 2017: 1). This
is because cyclones are caused by differences in
temperature between warm sea and cold air. With
the earth’s atmosphere heating up more than tropical seas, this difference is expected to become less
(DeMaria et al. 2001; IPCC 2012). However, the
peak wind speeds and precipitation of cyclones are
driven by the heat of the ocean (Emanuel 2000;
Wing et al. 2007). As oceans also become warmer,
cyclones may become more intense. A scenario
of fewer but harsher cyclones is not positive for
Myanmar: it would probably be better to have the
impact spread across many smaller storms instead
of gathered in a few massive ones that cause devastation on the scale of Cyclone Nargis.
Sea level is an important factor in the damage caused by cyclones in Myanmar and neighbouring countries. Much of the damage done
by Cyclone Nargis was related to a tidal storm
surge of 3 to 4 meters, which extended 50 km
upstream on the Yangon River (Tasnim 2015:
1619). As the world becomes warmer, the ice in
Antarctica and Greenland is expected to melt,
leading to rising sea levels. Regardless of the frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones, rising
sea levels are likely to exacerbate their impact.
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5. Migration, climate change and humanitarian needs | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
It should also be noted that Bangladesh is characterized by a combination of large population,
small surface area, low elevation above the sea
and even greater frequency of extreme weather
than Myanmar (Stojanov et al. 2016; Saha 2017;
Islam and Shamsuddoha 2017; Roy 2017; Bose
2016). Independently of shrinking surface area
due to rising sea levels, should the population of
Bangladesh continue to grow at the current rate,
it will have another 40 million people to house
and feed in twenty years. Also Bangladesh’s other
neighbour, India, is heavily populated, and its
entire eastern seaboard is low-lying and prone to
flooding. India is thus not likely to welcome large
numbers of Bangladeshis. Should sea levels rise
significantly, Myanmar will be affected some way
or another. Moreover, Myanmar’s exposure to climate change poses significant risks in terms of rising tensions with the neighbouring countries and
within the ASEAN region (Overland et al. 2017).
Here it may be helpful to note experiences
from other countries, such as Afghanistan after
2002 and South Sudan after 2011 (McAvoy
and Bloomfield 2017: 3). In both places, the
diplomatic push for a transition from humanitarian relief to development aid led to lack of
attention to the continuing conflict, with failure
to recognize escalation and limited response to
the humanitarian effects of conflict. Certainly,
there has been significant progress in Myanmar;
however, it is essential to find a balance between
recognizing and supporting change, and avoiding premature disengagement from humanitarian issues.
Conclusions
As regards forced migration, the situation
between ca. 2007 and 2017 become even worse
than before the political thaw. Myanmar still
ranks among the 36 countries in the world with
the highest levels of chronic malnutrition, with
much of the problem concentrated in Rakhine
State (OCHA 2017: 8). In the context of Myanmar’s opening to the outside world, and the election of Aung Sang Suu Kyi as State Counsellor
and the peace process, it is easy to overlook this
disturbing fact (OCHA 2017: 3).
There should be considerable scope for the
return of migrants, especially from the refugee
camps in Thailand. However, such return must
be based on pull and not push measures (Thet
2016: 995; see also Moretti 2015). Also for
labour migrants, there could be some scope for
return, as Myanmar desperately needs people to
fill many new roles in its transitioning economy.
In practice, however, it seems more likely that
net outbound labour migration from Myanmar
will grow and diversify, with the growth of neighbouring economies and the wages paid to their
local workforces.
Cyclone Nargis was a uniquely severe event.
However, in a country and a region where harsh
weather is frequent, the government should be
better prepared than it is. Lack of openness is
much less of a problem now than it was in 2008,
and should make a great difference. However,
the authorities still have a way to go as regards
The humanitarian effort
From 2016 to 2017, OCHA (the UN Office for
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs) reduced
the estimated size of the Myanmar population
in need of humanitarian aid from over 1 million to 525,000 (OCHA 2017: 3). Local and
national NGOs play an important role in providing humanitarian relief in Myanmar: they are
familiar with local conditions, are sometimes
well coordinated among themselves, and cooperate well with international organizations. OCHA
(2017: 3) recommends giving them increasing
responsibility.
Both the displaced Muslim population in
Rakhine and the people living in refugee camps
in Thailand have become highly dependent on
humanitarian aid (McAvoy and Bloomfield 2017:
3). Some actors argue that humanitarian action
must give way to long-term development aid in
Myanmar in order to support the peace process
and normalization, as well as to encourage greater
responsibility on the part of the Myanmar government. This is a type of discussion that takes
place in many countries in transition. Should
views among aid actors become overly divergent,
it may pose a challenge for coordination.
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5. Migration, climate change and humanitarian needs | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
change negotiations;9 likewise with implementation of environmental agreements in the country
(UNDP 2016: 64). Climate change may seem to
be an abstract and remote problem for a country
with many more immediate concerns – like the
peace process, poverty and the Rohingya issue –
but that impression may be misleading. Moreover,
the problems of climate change, migration and
the Rakhine crisis are all deeply interconnected.
proactive management. New forecasting methods enable better warning of imminent cyclones
and their geographical impact, thereby also making it possible to mitigate damage (Ozcelik et
al. 2012). However, utilizing such capacities
will require good governance on the part of the
Myanmar state.
Myanmar government institutions need a
better understanding of climate change and its
impacts – both the direct impacts on Myanmar,
and indirect impacts via neighbouring countries
such as Bangladesh. Moreover, Myanmar state
officials have limited technical capacity to participate actively in and handle international climate
9
61
According to UNDP (2016: 64), ‘This applies both to negotiation capacity regarding implementation of existing agreements as well as design of new agreements and amendments
to existing agreements. Capacity needs include language skills,
negotiation skills and technical skills concerning the topic
areas concerned by the agreements.’
6. Main human rights challenges
During military rule, Myanmar was seen as one
of the worst countries in the world in terms of
human rights. Severe and large-scale violations of
civil, political and social rights were documented
in numerous reports from international and
local organizations (Buzzi 2016). Throughout
the period 1998 to 2011, Freedom House gave
Myanmar the worst score (7 out of 7) on civil
liberties and political rights, persistently labelling the country as ‘not free’ (Figure 18). Their
key indicators showed some improvements under
the USDP government, when the restrictions on
public debate, media and public assembly were
relaxed while the possibilities for political participation improved, especially after the 2012
by-elections. The USDP government also made
progress in ending hostilities through ceasefire
agreements, thus reducing war-related human
rights abuses in ceasefire areas.
However, the 2011–2015 period was also
marked by weak enforcement of the rule of law,
arrests of political activists for ‘unlawful demonstrations’, and new restrictions on media freedom,
including arrest and imprisonment of activists
and journalists. Additionally, the country was
shaken by resumed and intense warfare in the
Shan and Kachin States, as well as discrimination
and violence against Rohingyas and Muslims
(Kyaw 2015). The government failed to protect victims and punish perpetrators. Freedom
House thus notes a worsening of civil liberties
in its 2015 report. Lastly, the USDP government
period was marked by widespread land-grabbing
and socially irresponsible business projects.
Freedom House further notes that Myanmar
has seen new improvements associated with the
successful conduct of the 2015 elections, notwithstanding the disenfranchisement of the
Rohingya minority (Lidauer 2016). The change
of government has been followed by promising
policy initiatives – but also the persistence of
deep-rooted impediments, including constitutional empowerment of the military, repressive
legislations and weak rule of law. In 2017, the
status for civil liberties and political rights has
improved to 5 out of 7 on the Freedom House
scale: Myanmar’s freedom status was ‘partly free’,
for the first time.
Figure 18. Myanmar’s freedom status, 1998–2017
62
Data source: Freedom House 2017
6. Main human rights challenges | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
International human rights organizations like
Human Rights Watch (2017) and Amnesty International (2017) confirm these improvements
since 2011, but also find that there has been little or slower progress in key areas, and that there
are many persistent and serious human rights
concerns. In particular, the 2016/2017 annual
reports from both organizations point to human
rights abuses in the context of ethnic armed conflicts; discrimination and violence against the
Rohingya minority; restrictions on freedom of
expression; abuses of women’s rights; and lessened international scrutiny of human rights.
deteriorated after attacks by the Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) on border police posts in
northern Rakhine State in October 2016. This
was followed by ‘clearance operations’ in which the
armed forces collectively punished the Rohingya
population through random shooting, unlawful
killings, arbitrary arrests and sexual violence. The
area was sealed off, denying access for humanitarian aid groups, independent media, and rights
monitors. In August 2017 there were new clashes
between the army and ARSA, after the report
from the Advisory Commission on Rakhine
State (2017) had been issued. This was followed
by large-scale human rights abuses and forced displacement of Rohingya. While the NLD government has announced a repatriation process based
on a 1992 agreement between Myanmar and
Bangladesh, there are serious concerns about how
the verification process can be conducted when
most Rohingya lack the required documentation
for citizens or residents of Myanmar. And even
if displaced Rohingya are allowed to return, they
are likely to face continued discrimination and
abuses, despite promises from the government
that the recommendations in the report of the
Advisory Commission on Rakhine State regarding
security, development and human rights will be
implemented. The 2017 crisis in northern Rakhine is thus a grave human rights crisis that also
might deepen anti-Muslim sentiments and violence, destabilize the government and remilitarize
government and public administration.
Ethnic conflicts and army abuses: Continued
warfare between the army and EAOs in northern
Myanmar has resulted in human rights violations
against civilians and large-scale displacement.
Government forces have been responsible for serious abuses, including extrajudicial killings, torture, sexual violence, and destruction of property
(Lahpai 2014). There is also fighting in Northern
Shan State between the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) and the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army (RCSS/SSA),
at times supported by the army. Armed clashes
in Kayin State, between a splinter group of the
DKBA and the army/BGFs, have also resulted
in displacement of civilians. The NLD government has engaged armed groups and other ethnic
stakeholders in the Panglong peace process, but
the war on the ground has continued unabated.
Human Rights Watch (2017) thus concludes:
‘violence over the past five years has left 220,000
people displaced nationwide – 120,000 in Rakhine State and 100,000 in Shan and Kachin States’.
Freedom of expression and assembly: After
the 2015 elections, the new NLD government
released political prisoners and detainees in a
series of amnesties. The new government also initiated a review of repressive laws, including those
that had been used to imprison peaceful critics of
former governments. However, other repressive
laws have remained in force: for instance, restrictions on the rights to freedom of expression and
assembly. Human rights defenders, lawyers and
journalists continue to face intimidation, harassment and surveillance by the authorities.
While relaxation of press censorship has been
a key hallmark of the democratic transition, laws
Abuses against the Rohingya: The Muslim
minority, the Rohingya in particular, continue
to face discrimination and violations of human
rights (Kyaw 2015). The denial of citizenship
for the Rohingya is a core concern behind the
continuing abuses of rights, including restrictions
on movement; limitations on access to healthcare,
livelihood, shelter, and education; arbitrary arrests
and detention; and forced labour (Mahmood,
Wroe, Fuller, & Leaning 2017). The situation
63
6. Main human rights challenges | Kristian Stokke, Roman Vakulchuk, Indra Øverland
remain that can be employed to restrict media
freedom. Several activists have been arrested
under section 66(d) of the Telecommunications
Act for defamation of the army or the government in social media. Arrests and prosecutions
for participation in peaceful assemblies have also
continued, although on a smaller scale, and have
included arrests of student leaders, environmental demonstrators and labour rights activists.
sions for female participation in political processes
at the local or national levels (NORAD 2015: 96).
Lack of accountability: Dealing with human
rights abuses is hampered by the near-total lack
of accountability, and there is no institutionalized complaint mechanism. The institutional and
legislative framework is insufficient for holding
human rights violators to account and delivering
justice to victims, so most perpetrators continue
to evade punishment. International scrutiny of
human rights in Myanmar has become weaker, as
the political opening has been met by wide and
enthusiastic support and a reluctance to voice
criticism. For the first time in 25 years, the UN
General Assembly refrained from adopting a resolution on Myanmar, after the EU decided not
to submit a proposal.
In this situation – with continued abuses of
human rights, a legal framework that still facilitates restrictions on civil and political liberties,
and inability to prosecute violations of human
rights – human rights remain a key concern,
despite the promising democratic opening and
political reform initiatives.
Women’s rights: Justice for women and girls
remains elusive, particularly with regard to
violence related to armed conflict (Hedström
2016). Sexual violence by the armed forces has
been frequent and exacerbated in the context of
renewed violent clashes in Kachin and Shan States
(Ying 2016). Women in conflict zones and displaced or stateless women are especially vulnerable to abduction, sexual violence, and exploitation.
Despite their central role in human rights and
democracy activism, women and their concerns
have also been marginalized in the various peace
process initiatives. Moreover, the civil rights and
liberties of women are restricted; their freedom of
movement is limited, and there are no legal provi-
64
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