Burma: A Fake Constitution for
Suffering People
Written by Rene Wadlow
Thursday, 15 May 2008
The tropical cyclone Nargris which struck
the Burma Irrawaddy delta on 3 May and the incompetent military
response for relief efforts did not prevent the government of
Myanmar from carrying out on 10 May a referendum on a government-drafted
constitution for the country. The referendum for the storm-hit
delta, home for a quarter of the countrys population, is
planned for 24 May.
The delta is populated largely by the Burman
ethnic group which gave its name to the country. About 40 per
cent of the total population are ethnic minorities who live in
higher areas along the frontiers with Thailand, China, India,
and Bangladesh. Population statistics in Burma are rough approximations.
According to some reports, the yes/no option
on the constitution had already been marked yes so
that all that had to be done was to put the ballot in the box.
Thus, there is no doubt that yes will win. Few people
understand the nearly 200-page constitution and commentary, and
no effort has been made to explain its meaning. The country has
been without a constitution since 1988, and this one was drafted
largely because the United Nations thinks that constitutions
are necessary for the rule of law. However for a constitution
to be more than an unread document, it must reflect the needs
of the times and agreement on basic values.
As Thomas Jefferson wrote Some men
look at constitutions with sanctimonious reverence and deem them
like the ark of the covenant too sacred to be touched. They ascribe
to the men of the preceding age a wisdom more than human and
suppose what they did to be beyond amendment. I am certainly
not an advocate of frequent and untried changes in laws and constitutions.
But, I also know that laws and institutions must go hand in hand
with the progress of the human mind. As new discoveries are made,
new truths disclosed, and manners and opinions change with the
change of circumstances, institutions must advance also and keep
pace with the times."
An earlier 1974 constitution had been abolished
in 1988 when a partly renewed group of military officers pushed
General Ne Win into retirement. General Ne Win had ruled Burma
from 1958 to 1960 and then from 1962 to 1988 when a non-violent,
democratic opposition came to the fore in a month of demonstrations,
followed by the coming to power of a group of slightly younger
military officers calling themselves the State Law and Order
Restoration Council (Slorc) which had cracked down on the pro-democracy
demonstrators.
There had been a first constitution drafted
just prior to independence from the UK in 1947, largely influenced
by English law and practice. It was a quasi-federal constitution
with a good deal of authority given to the states where the national
minority population live . This 1947 constitution was made largely
non-operative by the insurgencies that broke out soon after independence
led by militias belonging to national minorities fighting for
the creation of independent states or greater autonomy within
Burma. In addition, there was a strong insurgency of the Burmese
Communist Party helped by the then new Communist government of
China. In order to have a free hand to fight the insurgencies
and to have direct power, the higher military took over in 1958
until 1960 and then from 1962 on.
By 1974 General Ne Win and his Burma Socialist
Programme Party (BSPP) had been in power long enough that they
felt that the country should have a constitution as most countries
have constitutions. The 1974 constitution provided for a more
centralized form of government, but there were seven states to
represent seven major ethnic groups: Karen, Kachin, Kayah, Shan,
Chin, Mon, and Arakanese. In addition there was a heartland
of seven districts in which the Burman were in the majority and
where real power lay. The constitution provoked no great changes
in the arbitrary way in which Ne Win ruled, but the constitution
did exist in case anyone asked on what basis the government was
structured.
In 1988 with the new Slorc in power, in
order to mark the shift in power, the 1974 constitution associated
with Ne Win was abolished, and some talk of drafting a new constitution
started. Some of the pro-democracy leaders of the 1988 demonstrations,
fearing arrest by the military, left the capital Rangoon and
went to Thailand or to the Thai-Burma frontier where they came
into contact with the national minority insurgencies. Representatives
of the pro-democracy groups along with the leaders of the ethnic
minorities, some monks and especially students created an umbrella
organization: the Democratic Alliance of Burma (DAB). The DAB
sent representatives to Geneva to present their positions to
the UN human rights bodies and to testify to abuses of human
rights in Burma. As ideally human rights law is based on both
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and on national constitutions
which safeguard human rights, my discussions with these DAB representatives
turned to a new constitution for Burma. As I am, somewhat, a
specialist on federal forms of government, my discussions with
the Burmese concerned what could be a federal constitution for
a democratic Burma. The Burmese and the representatives of the
ethnic minorities knew what they did not want a centralized
state. They had a less clear vision of what forms a federal alternative
would take. There was a need to have a clear vision of what people
wanted and then to discuss the structures that a government should
take.
In 1990, I was going to Cambodia to help
set up some child welfare and educational projects and had to
spend some time in Bangkok. I suggested to the Myanmar Mission
to the UN in Geneva that I could go from Bangkok to Rangoon and
lead a three-day seminar for persons who had been elected to
Parliament on possible federal structures for the country. The
Parliament, in practice, was never called into existence as the
Slorc had been defeated by the unexpected victory of the National
League for Democracy (NLD) led by Aung San Suu Kyi.
The seminar I proposed would have been structured around three
themes: The Spirit of Federalism: Unity, Cooperation and Diversity
- The Structures of Federalism: The State, the Region, the Person
- The Tensions of Federalism: Flexibility in a time of rapid
change: Economic challenges and political responses . This would
not have been a constitution-drafting exercise but an effort
to clarify the aspirations of different groups and to see if
there were structures which could facilitate such aspirations.
The Ambassador replied You may perhaps be aware that there
have already existed two constitutions in the Union of Myanmar,
and hence our constitutional scholars have had considerable experience
in such matters. Moreover, we are at present in the process of
scrutinizing the basic constitutional principles and experiences
of other states in order to obtain a better perspective of the
successes and shortcomings of such undertakings. But admittedly,
it is the citizens of Myanmar, who must discuss and decide for
themselves as to the form and content of the new constitution
to be drawn up. There exist some 135 national races in our country,
and thus the new constitution must necessarily encompass the
views and aspirations of all citizens, for which purpose coordination
will be made among political parties, Hiuttaw respresentatives
(the military), representatives of national races and the people.
Although we thank you for your interest
and your kind offer to hold discussions on the matter, we feel
that it would be best if such discussions be confined to the
people who would be directly affected the citizens of
the Union of Myanmar.
A national convention was hand-picked
to write a constitution. In practice, it consulted no one. Members
of the national convention were not allowed to discuss issues
among themselves outside the rare periods in which the convention
was in session. Members of the convention whose ideas were too
independent were put in jail. Newspapers and media were not allowed
to discuss issues of the convention. From 1991 to 2008 is a long
time to draft a constitution. I do not want to say that it would
have gone faster had the seminars I suggested been held, but
16 years of drafting is slow in any case, even with no debates.
The new constitution still calls for a
centralized state which is basically unacceptable to the ethnic
minorities. It gives a leading role and a form of veto to the
military; it bans election to office of any Burmese married to
a foreigner a clause aimed at Aung San Suu Kyi whose late
husband was an English specialist on Tibet and Burmese culture.
Why the prohibition continues after the death of the foreign
partner is not explained.
The 10 May referendum would be a comedy
if so many Burmese were not suffering. Due to the September-October
2007 demonstrations, the 400,000 Buddhist monks will not be allowed
to vote. Members of the ethnic minorities were rounded up to
vote on a constitution which they do not understand. There has
been no public discussion of the structure and provisions of
the constitution.
Constitutions have played little role in
the way in which Burma has been governed. The 2008 Third constitution
is likely to be no different. Ultimately there is a need to discuss
the ways in which a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic society can
be justly governed. Unfortunately 10 May was not be a step in
that direction.
René Wadlow is also
editor of the online journal of world politics www.transnational-perspectives.org and an
NGO representative to the UN, Geneva. Formerly, he was professor
and Director of Research of the Graduate Institute of Development
Studies, University of Geneva.
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