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Accueil > français > Archives du site > Espace Associatif > Aid and Hypocrisy

Myanmar

Aid and Hypocrisy

Vendredi 9 mai 2008, par Marc Johnson

Response to the tropical cyclone Nargis, which hit Myanmar on 3 May
2008 has been hijacked by vested interests on all sides, leaving
millions of Asia’s poorest people without any effective aid.

The greatest responsibility rests with Myanmar’s military government,
which failed to warn the population of the cyclone, and has still not
mounted an effective disaster response programme. The country’s huge
army and police forces were completely absent from the streets of
Yangoon (formerly Rangoon) until two days after the cyclone hit -
leaving most of the city’s four million inhabitants wandering
desperately through knee high water, trying to contact family members
and find something to eat or drink, suddenly deprived of electricity,
telephone or drinking water. Only the City of Yangoon was able to
offer some services to the urban poor - with a fairly efficient free
distribution of drinking water. The semi-governmental Myanmar Red
Cross also provided some assistance and advice. But overall, the
disaster response has demonstrated once again that Myanmar’s junta is arrogant, out of touch and parasitical, and completely unable to meet the basic needs and rights of the population. International media and humanitarian charities have rightly condemned this failure to protect.

But the behaviour of Myanmar’s business and middle classes - the main
supporters of the pro-western opposition around their symbolic leader
Aung San Suu Kyi, has shown that they are completely unfit to take
charge of the country, despite their undeniable popular support.
Commercial enterprises large and small jacked up the prices of all
essential commodities by 200 to 400% immediately following the
cyclone. With most of Myanmar’s 50m inhabitants - small farmers -
living on less than 1 EUR per day, this callous profiteering will
have a terrible effect on nutrition, particularly for the very old
and the very young - already most at risk from the secondary effects
of the cyclone, like malaria, dysentery and water-born diseases.

One of the few public policies that does help the country’s poor -
the provision of government-subsidised petrol and oil, would be
abolished if Aung San Suu Kyi’s pro-western National League for
Democracy took power.

Western interests have also exploited the cyclone to advance their
own agenda - opening Myanmar to western investment on the same
unequal terms as in Cambodia, and imposing a more malleable
government that would revoke recent agreements giving China access to Myanmar’s ports. French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner suggested on 6 May that western powers should invoke their global ’right and duty to protect’ and deploy military-civil aid missions without the consent of the Myanmar government. US officials - coordinating the hundreds of aid workers and journalists now massed in Bangkok waiting for the green light, have started circulating widely exaggerated estimates of the number of victims, in order to marshal the humanitarian charities and journalists behind the US’s aggressive
plans for regime change.

Not that many of the private aid agencies and charities need much
persuading. Closely linked to missionary groups that have been
working in the Burmese border region since British colonial times,
and expecting to receive tens of millions of dollars of easy money
when the Myanmar junta caves in, most of the aid industry is unable
to distance itself from great power interests in the region.

A smaller number of international solidarity campaigns are going
against this depressing general pattern. Buddhist groups across Asia
have found ways to channel support through Myanmar’s monasteries and temples - where many of the cyclone victims have taken shelter.
Others have linked to émigré and underground student and pro-
democracy groups, not all of whom have been fooled by the US charm
offensive and dollar largesse towards the émigré circles.

The coming weeks will not just witness a struggle to aid the hundreds
of thousands of people made homeless by cyclone Nargis, and the
millions now slowly starving thanks to the combination of regime
incompetence, US-led sanctions and local profiteering. We are also
witnessing a struggle to redefine the contours of Myanmar politics,
possibly including the collapse of the country’s foul military rulers.

Marc Johnson was in Yangoon when cyclone Nargis hit. He is currently
engaged in aid coordination efforts in neighbouring Thailand.