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    WERE CHIN SOLDIERS MADE SCAPE GOATS?

    By Zaw Htwe Maung

    Chinland GuardianNovember 22, 2007

    The Chin Community (Germany) had issued a statement upon the above mentionedtopic. They mentioned: "Ever since the first massacre of the students in 1962, General Ne

    Win's Military Intelligence Service used to spread words about Chin soldiers shooting at

    demonstrators. The same thing happened during the 1974 Labour and U Thant Strikes and

    again during the uprisings of 1988 after troops mowed down hundreds of demonstrators. This

    is part of Ne Win's stratagem to reduce public hatred towards him or his Burma Army and to

    instil ethnic hatreds among the oppressed peoples".

    The present author is neither a Burmese[1]nor a Chin, but a Rakhaing or Arakanese, hence,also a member of another ethnic minority group of Burma. As a neutral person, I will

    attempt to meet the complaints raised by the Chins looking into all authentic historical facts of

    Burma and its people, and carefully scrutinize the roots of these rumours.

    Traditionally, Chins are warrior tribes and many Chins joined the Burma Rifles since Burma

    was under the British Rule. The bulk of the soldiers in the British-trained Army were of

    minority ethnic groups such as Chins, Kachins and Karens. Most of them were Converted

    Christians from their natural beliefs. It cannot be ruled out that it was part of the 'Tactic and

    Strategy' or 'the Policy of Divide and Rule' of the Colonial Masters then. In any case, the

    British Rulers never trusted the majority Buddhists Population of Burma, especially the

    majority ethnic group, the Burmese. The Burmese were rarely accepted in the armed forces

    before the First World War. Some Colonial Rulers wrote: "Never arm the Burmese! If the

    Burmese have an army they will invade all weaker neighbours, bully other ethnic minorities

    and finally they will kill their own people who won't dance to their tune". Any how, theBritish did not accept the Burmese in the Burma Rifles at the beginning. They used only

    Chins, Kachins and Karens.

    Hence, many Chins were career soldiers and officers when Burma regained her independence

    and they had a very good reputation as 'Loyalists to the Union ', 'Real Soldiers Defending

    Democracy' and so on, under U Nu's Regime. Chins did not accept statehood although they

    were granted. They remained as a 'Special Division' inside the mainland. Only in 1974,

    according to the new constitution 'Chin Special Division' became Chin State, however, as

    everybody knew, the Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma and its 1974 constitution were

    sham ones. The 'States' were only 'Nominal States', incomparable to the States of the 1947

    constitution. Since the Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma was a centralized Nationand a ' One Party State ', the real power was only in the hands of an elite group in Rangoon,

    particularly in the hands of the Party Chairman and the Head of State then, Ne Win. In fact,

    the authorities and powers given to the 'State Councils' were much lesser than the authority

    and power of a Deputy Commissioner of a District under U Nu's regime. However, even

    under the BSPP Regime some persons of ethnic minority groups were appointed as high

    ranking officers in the Burma Armed Forces. As far as I remember, there were two Chins

    and one Kachin Brigadier General in the Army, which was the second highest rank in the then

    army and the Chief of Burma Air force was an Arakanese (Rakhaing). Also some

    colonels were from some minority ethnic groups as well as from Muslims. [2] Only after1988, the bulk of the high ranking officers are from "Burmese Buddhists".

    The statement of the Chin Community: Ever since the care-taker government period in 1958-

    1960 General Ne Win abolished the British-era ethnic based battalions and turned the Burma

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    Army into mixed-ethnic battalions with the majority made up of ethnic Burmans. But Ne Win

    was careful enough not to eliminate the names of these battalions, so the names 1st, 2nd or

    3rd Chin Rifles remain even though these battalions are no longer made up of Chin soldiers.

    Burman soldiers made up the majority in any battalion and if there are any Chin soldiers they

    are only about 20 to 30 or even less in each of these battalions", is correct.

    In fact, Ne Win did it even earlier than the Era of the Caretaker Government. Since he

    became army chief in 1949, he had this idea. He became Commander in Chief of Burma

    Army after the forced retirement of the Karen, General Smith Dun, because some Karen

    Army units and one company from a Kachin Battalion went underground and fought against

    the central government. Let Ya, who was the Second in Command under Aung San, at thesame time, the Defence Minister and Deputy Prime Minister then, was totally against the

    forced retirement of General Smith Dun, a Karen. And even when the majority of the cabinet

    ministers wanted to pension Smith Dun he recommended another Karen, Brigadier Saw Kya

    Doe, to be given the post of Army Chief. His efforts were all in vain because eventually Ne

    Win became the Army Chief.

    Ne Win and his protgs did not trust the battalions of the ethnic minorities, especially the

    Karens and the Kachins. There were lots of conflict between the Defence Minister Let Ya

    and the Commander-in- Chief Ne Win due to Let Ya's plan to send military officers for

    further studies in the Military Academies Sandhurst (England) and West Point (USA). Ne

    Win never trusted the officers either trained by the military academies of the westerncountries or the officers of ethnic minorities, who at that time became the majority of the

    general staff of the Burma Armed Forces. He wanted to dismiss all of them except Brigadier

    Saw Kya Doe, who had joined the Japanese-trained Burmese Army during the Japanese

    Era. Let Ya was against that plan, but Ba Swe, Kyaw Nyein and all the socialists, who were

    the majority in U Nu's government, backed Ne Win firmly. Let Ya became fed up with

    politics and resigned from both his political and military posts. These were given to Ne Win,

    who became Deputy Prime Minister as well as Defence and Home Minister. He thus could

    manipulate all Armed Forces in Burma as he wished and as soon as he took office he removed

    almost all British-trained persons from their posts, regardless of whether they were of

    Burmese or ethnic-minority descent. The only Sand Hurst-trained Karen, Brigadier Saw Kya

    Doe, mentioned above as Let Ya's preferred successor to Smith-Dun, was allowed to remainin the Burma Army for one or two years, not only because he and his battalion joined the

    Burmese Armies during the Japanese Era but also because he fought against the Karen and

    other rebels. Later even Saw Kya Doe became fed up with war and he resigned from the

    army.

    Since that time, Ne Win shuffled the ethnic battalions of the Burma Army into mixed-ethnic

    battalions with the majority made up of ethnic Burmese slowly by slowly. He used two

    methods. The first method was the immediate replacement of the commander and the bulk of

    the officers of those battalions with Burmese. The second method was replacing the soldiers,

    non commissioned officers and many officers of that battalion with Burmese and also from

    other ethnic groups, if the commander was still from that ethnic group. In that way, all

    battalions of Burma army became mixed-ethnic battalions with the majority made up of ethnic

    Burmese. However, Ne Win was cunning enough not to eliminate the names of these

    battalions, hence; they remained as Chin, Kachin, Shan, Karen, Ghurkha, Kayah Battalions,

    and so on. Some of the commanders were of that ethnic group and some were Burmese. The

    final reshuffling was made during the Era of the Care Taker Government.

    In the case of the shootings at the university campus on the 7th

    July 1962, the commander of

    that battalion was Lt. Col. Sein Lwin who was later well known as the 'Butcher Sein Lwin' in

    1988. The bulk of the soldiers were Burmese and not Chins. Colonel Sein Lwin was not a

    well educated man; he did not even finish his high school. That's why he regarded universitystudents with jaundiced eyes. About more than a year ago, in 1960 still under U Nu'sregime, Sein Lwin had problems with university students. Sein Lwin drove his new

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    Chevrolet Bel Air Sedan recklessly on Prome Road near the University and some students

    were slightly hit. Instead of stopping to apologize to the students, he and a fellow army officer

    speeded up the car and tried to escape. The students followed his car. Just near the

    Windermere Ministers Village ' Sein Lwin could not control the speed and the car hit the

    round-about and stopped. He and the other officer ran into the ' Ministers Village ' and took

    refuge there. One minister came out and consoled the students telling them that he came out to

    apologize on behalf of the driver and his companion so that the students could forgive the

    driver and the other. The angry students did not chase the driver anymore but they set fire to

    Sein Lwin's car. Since that time he was very angry with the university students and waited for

    a chance to give a Vendetta. On the 7th

    July1962 when his troops surrounded the campus, the

    students jokingly asked him whether he wanted to see how the university campus and classrooms looked like because they knew exactly that he had never been inside there in his whole

    life, he felt insulted. It was the best time for him to revenge, hence, he sent Ne Win through

    radio the false information that the situation could not be controlled by peaceful means and

    therefore he had to request for shooting orders. Ne Win who was drunk at that time, wanted

    to show his power and authority to the challengers, permitted the firing orders. However,

    later Ne Win pushed all blames to Aung Gyi, his deputy then, which was vehemently rejected

    by Aung Gyi in his 'Open Letter' in July 1988.

    As mentioned earlier, Chins are traditionally warrior tribes and well known to be good and

    disciplined soldiers. In fact, since the BSPP Era many Chins did not join the army as they

    did under U Nu's Era because there were many shortages in Burma due to themismanagement of the economy. Many people had to think for their 'Existence Minimum'

    and had to carry out 'cross border trading' with the neighbouring countries in their nearest

    border. Those traders, though officially paying tax to the government, were named

    'smugglers' and the markets selling these goods were called 'Black Markets'. Many Chins,

    too, were involved in this kind of trading with their nearest border, India. Hence, there were

    not many Chin soldiers inside the Burma Army. However, since the Ne Win Era the name

    Chin Battalions remained although in truth, the bulk of the soldiers of those battalions were

    pure Burmese Buddhists. And since the Chins are well known to be good soldiers who obey

    the commands of their Army chiefs, the various Burmese Military Governments usually stated

    that it was the Chin Battalion who did the shooting. Since most of the Chins are Christians

    and the majority populace of Burma are Buddhists, this also serves as a good tool to confusethe Burmese populace and 'divide and rule' the country between the Chins and the Buddhists

    majority similar to the way the Colonial Masters did earlier.

    Here I would like to point out that the descendents of the People of the Subcontinent had to

    bear the burden of the 'Divide and Rule Policy' of the British Colonial Masters. Until the

    present time, they are neither cordially accepted nor showed affinity by the Burmese

    people. A similar situation can be found in many former British Colonies in Africa.

    During the Colonial Era, the British preferred Indians for public sector jobs. Most of the

    policemen and officers, postmen, railways and other transport workers, prison guards and

    officers, doctors, nurses and hospital workers, clerks, armed forces personnel and even menial

    workers were Indians. Here I would like to cite Ton That Tien [3]who wrote: "That insome form of occupation half of those engaged, and that in other forms of employment over

    40%, should be aliens, would be a remarkable situation in any country".

    On the whole the British were too distrustful of the loyalty of their Buddhist subjects (the

    Burmese and other ethnic groups like Mons, Shans and Arakanese) to become familiar with

    modern science, technology and warfare. All independence struggles, rebellions, boycotts

    and so on, were brutally crushed by the British-Indian Army, Para-Military Police and Burma

    Police which were mainly filled up with Indians.

    Thus there began to rise in Burma an antagonism against Indians in addition to anti-British

    feelings. Many Burmese did have ill-feelings towards the Indians during the colonial era.

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    These feelings are now slowly decreasing, especially among the new generation who were

    born in the post-independence era. However, until the present time, Indians are neither

    cordially accepted nor showed affinity by the Burmese people.

    Aping the Colonial Masters, the various Military Governments have been using the same

    divide and rule tactics with a big difference. Indians were aliens brought by the British to

    Burma and the whole battalion is filled only with Indian soldiers. Chins are indigenous

    minorities of Burma and the battalions are not filled with Chin soldiers but with Burmese

    Buddhists and are named Chin battalions. This shows that the various Military Governments

    are more crooked than the Colonial Masters.

    Nowadays, in Burma if one sees a minority soldier who speaks Burmese with accent they just

    conclude that this is a Chin although they may be a Wa or Karen or Kachin or of other

    minorities, because the reputation of Chin soldiers was totally destroyed since Ne Win's

    Era. There were rumours that these soldiers who shot the monks in Rangoon in September

    2007 were taken from the Thai-Burmese Border. It cannot be ruled out that some soldiers are

    from the 'ceased fire groups' of some other ethnic minorities or the Pocket Army of the Opium

    Warlords, who are for the time being allies of this military regime. When we saw the

    pictures of some soldiers in 'Stern Magazine' their features were with 'Chinky Eyes' and they

    looked more like other ethnic minorities from the Chinese Border rather than a Chin. Hence,

    no wonder, they talked in a much accented Burmese as some monks claimed.

    However, one cannot deny the fact that the majority soldiers in the division stationed in

    Rangoon, which crushed the demonstrators in September 2007, were Burmese Buddhists. In

    any case, these soldiers were recruited from some minorities as well as from the

    Burmese. Many young boys from their childhood were taken or bought from their poor

    parents and trained to become soldiers. According to the latest surveys, there are about

    70,000 'Child Soldiers' in the Burmese Army, the highest in the world. They were taught or

    better say 'brain washed' to be faithful and loyal to the Burmese Military and their leaders

    only. They were taught they had no parents anymore, only the Burma Army was their parents

    and because of the Burmese Military and their leaders, they could survive and therefore they

    had to respect 'their parents' had to listen to them and obey their orders. It is very similar to

    the way the Japanese Imperial Army trained Koreans and Manchus about 25 years before theSecond World War. Most 'Japanese soldiers' stationed in South East Asia were the so-called

    "Manchukos". Only officers were Japanese. One cannot neglect the fact that, Ne Win, the so-

    called 'Second Father of the Modern Burmese Army' was a Japanese-trained soldier who

    turned down the plan to send military officers to go for further studies in the Military

    Academies Sandhurst (England) and West Point (USA). Hence, there is no doubt that many

    ideologies of the modern Burmese Army were influenced by the Mentalities and Ideas of the

    Second World War's Imperialist Japanese Army!

    Sometimes the Burmese are too ethno-centric. They had and have an illusion that pure

    Burmese Buddhists soldiers won't shoot and kill their own people, especially the monks even

    if they are ordered by their officers. They would rather become renegades and so on. In

    fact, since the time of the Burmese Royal Army; all Burmese soldiers did kill, loot, rape, and

    destroy everything which their 'He who must be obeyed' commanded. The past history of

    Ayuddiya (Siam) and Mrauk U (Arakan), then the present history of U Thant's funeral riots in

    1974, then again in 1988 had proven that Burmese soldiers did not respect the clergy and the

    religion they supposed to practice. There is no doubt that these Burmese soldiers did kill

    monks, loot monasteries, temples, destroyed Buddha statues and even loot the Buddha statues

    as booty to take home during the crushing of these demonstrations in September 2007.

    The history of the Holy Maha Muni Image in Mandalay has proven it! The Burmese Royal

    Armies looted this colossal statue from the Arakan City or Mrauk U after the Burmeseconquest of the Rakhaing Kingdom in the late 19th

    Century. They used the Arakanese

    prisoners of war, about thirty thousand including the last King of Arakan, as slave labour to

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    carry that colossal image across the mountain range and for other slavery works. Till now

    some Arakanese from Sittwe call the Burmese as "Robbers and Thugs of the Holy Image,

    Maha Muni". I am sure; Thais must have been naming the Burmese some similar

    names. There were rumours in Thailand that the Burmese king Hsinphyu Shin of the

    Konbaung Dynasty had robbed the gold from Ayuddiya and donated that gold to the (former)

    umbrella[4]of the Shwe Dagon Pagoda in Rangoon.

    After 1988 many Chins left the country because of economic, social, political and other

    problems. It can even be called as the 'Chin Exodus' and therefore, nowadays there are very

    few Chin soldiers in the Burma Army. Aside from that, almost all ethnic minorities in Burma

    are bilingual speakers. Apart of their mother tongue, they also have to speak and learnBurmese which is the Lingua Franca of the whole Union of Burma. As Christians the Chins

    learned the English language from the Christian Missionaries. That's why; generally their

    command of the English language is much superior to many Burmese who start learning this

    only from the 5th

    grade where their teachers are also not native speakers but Burmese. After

    the nationalization of all schools in Burma in 1965, Burmese replaced English as the official

    language used in the schools. Teaching the minority languages such as Shan, Karen, Mon

    and so forth was also forbidden. Only in the early 80s, when Ne Win's favourite daughter

    Khin Sandar Win failed the entrance examination in Singapore, did English once again

    become an official language. It was rather too late because there was then a shortage of

    experienced teachers able to teach the required subjects in English. Many experienced

    teachers and scientists who had been trained under U Nu's government began to leave Burmaand settle abroad. The Burmese people have had to suffer under this burden until the present

    time. Hence, if a normal Burmese goes abroad he/she has language difficulty but many

    Chins speak English fluently and rarely face language difficulty.

    As the way, the Chin Community claims: "The Chin youth are very clever and intelligent

    and very much globalized. In response to the military regime's persecution and hardships and

    sufferings imposed upon them, the Chin youth are temporarily leaving behind their beloved

    land in the thousands to study political science, economics, and theology and so on in the

    western countries. At this very moment there are already about 500 Chin students in the

    universities in the western world and the number is increasing. This makes the racist military

    regime very nervous". According to population ratio, the Burmese and Chins are 40:1,however, based on this population ratio, nowadays there are comparatively more Chins

    studying abroad than Burmese.

    As a conclusion, I would like to say that I share the view of the Chin Community. There is

    no doubt that the Chins were made Scapegoats by the Burmese Military for their propaganda

    purposes as well as for their further 'divide and rule policy' because all opposition groups,

    whether they are Burmese or ethnic minorities, have the same and single goal which is to

    topple down the Military Dictatorship in Burma and the Junta is afraid that they will be

    united. Hence, the Junta instead of admitting their mismanagement, tried to divert by

    pushing blames on Chin soldiers thereby 'shooting two birds simultaneously with one stone'.

    So for those in the opposition camp inside or outside Burma, and especially the Burmese

    media in exile, should think twice before they write or speak so as not to unwittingly echo the

    junta's words but rather scrutinize the reality inside the Burma Army and avoid becoming a

    mouthpiece of the enemy they claim to fight against.

    [1] The word Burmese or Burman is also only for the Bamas, the biggest ethnic group inBurma and not for the citizens of Burma, because if one asks a Karen or a Shan or even a

    Tavoyian who speaks a dialect of the Burmese Language, "Are you a Burmese or a Burman"

    his answer will be no doubt, " I'm neither Burmese nor Burman, instead I am a Tavoyan,Chin, Shan and so forth. " The word Arakanese or Rakhine/Rakhaing is also only for the

    majority ethnic group in the Rakhine State, the people who are called Yakhines by Burmese,

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    and not for the other groups living in Rakhine State such as Mro, Dainet, Kamans, Kamwee,

    Myedu, early Bengali settlers who came after the British occupation and the group who

    named themselves "Rohingyas". I used the word Indian in this paper to represent not just the

    people of India, but rather the people from the Subcontinent, which means Indians, Pakistanis

    and Bangladeshis who are called Kala by the Burmese.

    [2]Muslim is a religion. Regardless of any ethnic group, every body could be Muslim if theybelieve in this religion. Hence, what I meant was not only the Buddhists who are majorities

    but also the believers of the minority religion could also get higher positions.

    [3]Ton That Tien, India and Burma, in:India and South East Asia 1947-1960, Geneva , 1963,

    p. 152.

    [4]The present Umbrella of Shwe Dagon Pagoda was donated by King Mindon in the secondhalf of the 19

    thcentury. The Umbrella donated by King Hsinphyu Shin is kept in the Pagoda

    Museum since that time. King Hsinphyu Shin donated that umbrella due to his body weight

    one or two years after the Burmese conquest of Siam. That's why, the modern Thais

    suspected it to be made of the gold taken as booty from Siam. About 90 years later, at the

    second half of the 19th

    century, his great grand nephew, King Mindon, replaced that umbrella

    with the new one due to his body weight again. Since Hsinphyu Shin was a warrior and

    Mindon was a fat man, it is sure that Mindon was heavier than his great grand uncle. Apart

    from that, Mindon was the king only of Upper Burma. Lower Burma had already become a

    British Colony and King Mindon had to ask permission from the British Government for hisdonation. When even the king of the half of Burma could donate more gold to the new

    umbrella than the first one; it must be taken for granted that the ruler of the entire Burmese

    empire then, Hsinphyu Shin, could easily donate such gold amount without using the gold

    from Siam taken as booty, though there was a very unfortunate incident. The present author

    has seen that umbrella many times in the museum. The names of other donors from the Ava

    City were written on the gold banyan leaves and small gold bells attached to that umbrella,

    though the king was formally known as the main donor.

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